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jwb 10-11-2022 12:54 PM

I live in statesville nc which is an hour north of Charlotte NC. I'm not from NC though I've just sorta been stuck here like purgatory for the last decade.

TheBig3 10-11-2022 12:54 PM

Can I help you get out? I'd want someone to help me if I were stuck there.

jwb 10-11-2022 12:56 PM

Yes I accept PayPal venmo and cashapp

The Batlord 10-11-2022 02:12 PM

I thought you people abandoned PayPal?

jadis 10-12-2022 07:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marie Monday (Post 2218145)
Whoop
I'll have to be on the US East coast in the middle of November for work reasons, but I'm planning to take a bit of time off to go around and see as much of America as I can, New York at the very least. Let me know if you have any tourist recommendations, survival tips, or if you want to meet up and have a beer

IMO: there are so many things to see and do in NYC that it dwarfs whatever other attractions there are in the tristate area.

I’m assuming you know about the museums and Lincoln Center and the ferry and all that so I’ll recommend the spots I personally enjoyed.

I would take a day to just stroll through Harlem, it’s a really charming neighborhood full of history. There’s this place I used to go to for jazz shows on Sundays, superb musicians and amazing home atmosphere.

I loved just walking through Manhattan, by night or day. Above all lower Manhattan, places like Soho and Tribeca and Chelsea. Midtown is much more touristy and the closer you get to Times Square the more crowded the sidewalks get. But still lots and lots of things to see there, I love Bryant Park for one. I once met one your finest, Clarence Seedorf, in Times Square!

NYC isn’t famous for Mexican food to put it mildly but one place you must patronize is Toloache. Their grasshopper taco, a Oaxacan staple, makes the “you will eat the bugs” meme sound very tempting. A top five protein.

One of the city’s loveliest streets is Arthur Avenue (little Italy) in the Bronx BUT each time I ate there it was middling cafeteria level food. If there’s a good restaurant there I’m not aware of it. I’d go there cause it’s really charming, esp during the fall, but just get an espresso or something. Bronx has an great zoo btw.

Brooklyn: Williamsburg, obviously, is a big one but also all the neighborhoods around Prospect Park are gorgeous and full of great places to eat. Two of my faves are Werkstatt in Prospect Park South and the Ample Hills creamery in Prospect Heights, though I maintain that Haagen Dazs does a better salted caramel.

My favorite neighborhood of all though must be Astoria, Queens. Lots of great memories. This is a decent guide

If for some reason you decide to visit the museum of the moving image, you could then grab something to eat at the Villa Brazil Cafe Grill buffet (great food but only makes sense if you eat meat). If you do, could you hop by the Delicatessen bodega on the corner? It has to be the most unpleasant bodega in the city, run by a very aggressive Chinese lady. Everything is covered in a thick coat of dust. I was lowkey fascinated with it. Curious if it’s still the same, that's all.

Psy-Fi 10-12-2022 09:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jwb (Post 2218738)
Also, you can buy illegal fireworks right on the other side of the SC border and bring them back to NC.


Marie Monday 10-12-2022 03:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jadis (Post 2218840)
IMO: there are so many things to see and do in NYC that it dwarfs whatever other attractions there are in the tristate area.

I’m assuming you know about the museums and Lincoln Center and the ferry and all that so I’ll recommend the spots I personally enjoyed.

I would take a day to just stroll through Harlem, it’s a really charming neighborhood full of history. There’s this place I used to go to for jazz shows on Sundays, superb musicians and amazing home atmosphere.

I loved just walking through Manhattan, by night or day. Above all lower Manhattan, places like Soho and Tribeca and Chelsea. Midtown is much more touristy and the closer you get to Times Square the more crowded the sidewalks get. But still lots and lots of things to see there, I love Bryant Park for one. I once met one your finest, Clarence Seedorf, in Times Square!

NYC isn’t famous for Mexican food to put it mildly but one place you must patronize is Toloache. Their grasshopper taco, a Oaxacan staple, makes the “you will eat the bugs” meme sound very tempting. A top five protein.

One of the city’s loveliest streets is Arthur Avenue (little Italy) in the Bronx BUT each time I ate there it was middling cafeteria level food. If there’s a good restaurant there I’m not aware of it. I’d go there cause it’s really charming, esp during the fall, but just get an espresso or something. Bronx has an great zoo btw.

Brooklyn: Williamsburg, obviously, is a big one but also all the neighborhoods around Prospect Park are gorgeous and full of great places to eat. Two of my faves are Werkstatt in Prospect Park South and the Ample Hills creamery in Prospect Heights, though I maintain that Haagen Dazs does a better salted caramel.

My favorite neighborhood of all though must be Astoria, Queens. Lots of great memories. This is a decent guide

If for some reason you decide to visit the museum of the moving image, you could then grab something to eat at the Villa Brazil Cafe Grill buffet (great food but only makes sense if you eat meat). If you do, could you hop by the Delicatessen bodega on the corner? It has to be the most unpleasant bodega in the city, run by a very aggressive Chinese lady. Everything is covered in a thick coat of dust. I was lowkey fascinated with it. Curious if it’s still the same, that's all.

that's very useful, thanks so much!

goldendoodle 10-18-2022 03:22 AM

Omg pls stop by New Orleans (I live like 45 minutes away from it so I would for sure come there to visit if you do and figure out a whimsical new orleans itinerary for you if you wished)

TheBig3 10-18-2022 06:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by goldendoodle (Post 2219186)
Omg pls stop by New Orleans (I live like 45 minutes away from it so I would for sure come there to visit if you do and figure out a whimsical new orleans itinerary for you if you wished)

This is one of the cities I'm dying to get to. I'd like to see a lot, but New Orleans is a non-major city that's still iconic. I'm told they have jazz bands at the airport...remarkable.

rubber soul 10-18-2022 08:23 AM

When I was in New Orleans (this was the 90s, long before Katrina), you could take a beer from one bar to another and no one batted an eye. Watch out for price gouging at souvenir shops though.


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