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Old 04-11-2012, 12:29 PM
 
Location: Portland, Oregon
206 posts, read 260,148 times
Reputation: 294

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Which large sized U.S. cities (200,000+),have a unique physical and cultural makeup based on a varied mixture of regional influences? Some cities seem to be solidly ingrained in their regional character, (Dallas/Seattle), And some define their regions, and the entire country (LA/NY). State lines and size of the city seem less important than physical locations for a city to be considered multi-regional.
Some examples:
Pittsburgh - Midwest, Atlantic, Appalaichia
Cincinnati - Ozark, Midwest, Appalaichia
Denver - Rocky Mountain, Midwest, Southwest
Buffalo - Midwest, Canada, New England, Atlantic
My list is obviously incomplete, and wholly debatable.
Thanks for playing.
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Old 04-11-2012, 12:34 PM
 
Location: The City
22,378 posts, read 38,946,875 times
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Houston and DFW would seem to have multiple influences

Also Miami
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Old 04-11-2012, 12:47 PM
 
8,276 posts, read 11,927,566 times
Reputation: 10080
Quote:
Originally Posted by Winnyard Bletch View Post
Which large sized U.S. cities (200,000+),have a unique physical and cultural makeup based on a varied mixture of regional influences? Some cities seem to be solidly ingrained in their regional character, (Dallas/Seattle), And some define their regions, and the entire country (LA/NY). State lines and size of the city seem less important than physical locations for a city to be considered multi-regional.
Some examples:
Pittsburgh - Midwest, Atlantic, Appalaichia
Cincinnati - Ozark, Midwest, Appalaichia
Denver - Rocky Mountain, Midwest, Southwest
Buffalo - Midwest, Canada, New England, Atlantic
My list is obviously incomplete, and wholly debatable.
Thanks for playing.
Good list, although I don't think "Ozark" when I'm told about Cincinnati; too far away, in my opinion..

Oklahoma City might qualify, as South/southern Great Plains/Western..
Washington, DC, as Eastern, MidAtlantic, Southern, etc..
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Old 04-11-2012, 02:42 PM
 
Location: Jefferson City 4 days a week, St. Louis 3 days a week
2,709 posts, read 5,099,912 times
Reputation: 1028
Quote:
Originally Posted by Winnyard Bletch View Post
Which large sized U.S. cities (200,000+),have a unique physical and cultural makeup based on a varied mixture of regional influences? Some cities seem to be solidly ingrained in their regional character, (Dallas/Seattle), And some define their regions, and the entire country (LA/NY). State lines and size of the city seem less important than physical locations for a city to be considered multi-regional.
Some examples:
Pittsburgh - Midwest, Atlantic, Appalaichia
Cincinnati - Ozark, Midwest, Appalaichia
Denver - Rocky Mountain, Midwest, Southwest
Buffalo - Midwest, Canada, New England, Atlantic
My list is obviously incomplete, and wholly debatable.
Thanks for playing.
Cincinnati has NO Ozark or Appalachian influences.
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Old 04-11-2012, 03:17 PM
 
976 posts, read 2,244,594 times
Reputation: 630
Quote:
Originally Posted by stlouisan View Post
Cincinnati has NO Ozark or Appalachian influences.
disagree. cincinnati has more appalachian influence than any major city north of the mason-dixon. the city borders kentucky. pittsburgh would be a close second, with its proximity to west virginia.
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Old 04-11-2012, 04:01 PM
 
14,256 posts, read 26,957,786 times
Reputation: 4565
Austin/Dallas/San Antonio.

Miami

DC

Denver

Buffalo

Pittsburgh

Cincinnati
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Old 04-11-2012, 04:08 PM
 
37,891 posts, read 41,990,657 times
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Louisville, St. Louis
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Old 04-11-2012, 04:35 PM
 
2,563 posts, read 6,062,220 times
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Orlando comes to mind as being the metro on the border of "Florida Culture" and "Southern Culture"
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