America's Fallen Cities: Atlantic City

  Рет қаралды 763,054

Alexander Rotmensz

Alexander Rotmensz

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 2 100
@maximilianbreall
@maximilianbreall 13 күн бұрын
The before and after photos are so wild. So much architectural beauty has been lost. Truly sad to see
@JC-nl3nh
@JC-nl3nh 12 күн бұрын
its called ethnic cleansing, look at the people who took over the city.
@katobrucelee08
@katobrucelee08 12 күн бұрын
sadly, this realy applies up and down the Jersey Shore
@michaeltischuk7972
@michaeltischuk7972 12 күн бұрын
@@katobrucelee08 Used to be the Philly / Camden area was the manufacturing capital of the world, Atlantic City was their playground, those days are long gone.
@cycologist7069
@cycologist7069 10 күн бұрын
@@katobrucelee08 Good learning experience.
@katobrucelee08
@katobrucelee08 10 күн бұрын
@@cycologist7069 very much so!
@jayzandstra1830
@jayzandstra1830 13 күн бұрын
you know,i can be very emotional about the destruction of architecture and culture here in europe since alot of it was bombed etc,but everytime a new video comes out and shows how the US just nuked their own cities to replace it with grey,concrete is beyond crazy,this is a crime in so many ways i cannot even begin,these cities will take so long to feel even remotely alive again.
@LeftysLefty
@LeftysLefty 12 күн бұрын
A huge difference is the huge and vast amounts of land in America. There's no real incentive to keep things in one place. So much of everything is considered just disposable in America - and not in a good way.
@hellostove
@hellostove 12 күн бұрын
It's easier to imagine the end of the world than a beautiful New Jersey
@HelenEk7
@HelenEk7 10 күн бұрын
I am frequently seeing photos from eastern Europe where they renovate ugly Soviet style buildings to beautiful old looking buildings. So they upgrade rather than tearing them down. I think that is the better way.
@hughestodd
@hughestodd 9 күн бұрын
American, and predominately the youth, don’t give one f.
@davehughesfarm7983
@davehughesfarm7983 9 күн бұрын
@@hughestodd hey cousin..Sometimes I dont give a fuck either.
@coldbelowfroze
@coldbelowfroze 13 күн бұрын
Wow Atlantic City was so GRAND. So many American cities were. To think that so many of these gilded structures were knocked down for cars and parking... 😔
@Momo_Kawashima
@Momo_Kawashima 12 күн бұрын
I find it ironic how just a bit of money and right friendships made it possible to put a whole nation on its knees. No car? Well good luck on... life, it's safe to say
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 10 күн бұрын
The Jersey shore was the first developed seashore.
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 10 күн бұрын
​@@Momo_KawashimaIt's amazing how you forgot an illness that killed thousands in less than a year( 2020/ half of 2021)
@Momo_Kawashima
@Momo_Kawashima 10 күн бұрын
@@yvonneplant9434 I'm talking about auto companies pushing buttons to make cities car-only areas since the day cars became cheap, the hell does covid have to do with it? What are you scared to get covid if you go for a walk?
@edu7979
@edu7979 9 күн бұрын
@@Momo_Kawashimasorry buddy cant hear your broke ass
@simonsays2774
@simonsays2774 6 күн бұрын
This would probably be one of the most architecturally beautiful American cities today.
@brian752
@brian752 Күн бұрын
Most architects today only know one boring design style. Glass and steel, glass and steel, taller and taller. The older brick and stone works like those in Europe cathedrals and the old Atlantic City were wonderous and beautiful artistic statements to see.
@naggersgonnanag
@naggersgonnanag Күн бұрын
Nah, come to York PA, everything looks better here
@erejnion
@erejnion 7 күн бұрын
As an European, I can't even imagine anybody wasting precious beachfront space on parking lots. WTF.
@zikemdg
@zikemdg 4 күн бұрын
The water is cold and uninviting most of the year.
@meesterdinglefritz2064
@meesterdinglefritz2064 4 күн бұрын
As an American, I can’t imagine not living in a free country.
@Suroundedbyenemies
@Suroundedbyenemies 4 күн бұрын
Yall just started getting replacement by pocs, enjoy your bleak, depressing future
@RytheCodplayer
@RytheCodplayer 4 күн бұрын
As an American, I can’t even imagine getting arrested and sentenced to multiple years in prison for offensive social media posts. WTF.
@krzysztof4583
@krzysztof4583 4 күн бұрын
@@RytheCodplayer What does this have to do with Atlantic City and how America routinely razes its own urban areas? Why can't we accept actual on topic criticism instead of deflecting and bringing up something completely random?
@daveweiss5647
@daveweiss5647 12 күн бұрын
The real America was destroyed in the 1960s and 1970s... we now live in McAmerica... its ugly reanimated corpse... what a tragedy...
@1972Ray
@1972Ray 12 күн бұрын
Yes, for us whites, it was great.
@languageobserver6433
@languageobserver6433 11 күн бұрын
Yes. America has been for sale for decades or more. Now It's sold!
@SWExplore
@SWExplore 11 күн бұрын
@user-otzlixr You are so funny with that drama queen comment...
@anamarvelo
@anamarvelo 10 күн бұрын
lol more like the 80;s when the reganots privatized evreything
@yvonneplant9434
@yvonneplant9434 10 күн бұрын
I agree with you.
@trainglen22
@trainglen22 12 күн бұрын
Americans don't understand anything about keeping classic buildings. Thank god that Grand Central Station in NYC was saved from destruction.
@Faceplant_Horticulturist
@Faceplant_Horticulturist 12 күн бұрын
I was just in Grand Central a couple weeks ago. What an amazing block with which to spend an afternoon (I love the adjacent Chrysler Building as well), and the station also serves as a convenient hub for pedestrians (not just train passengers) who are passing through the area. But unfortunately it took the sacrifice of another breathtakingly beautiful train station in Manhattan to spur the historic preservation movement - we have known for decades that modern developers only have $$ in their eyes and have no regard for cultural heritage. Even though we have finally started to value our older, more beautiful buildings, it still seems like new developments are still only built featuring planned obsolescence. I think developers know that they can depend on renewal projects coming their way every thirty years in the same spots. As a result we have a few remaining grand reminders of what could have been, among a landscape of constant churn and completely lacking in any cohesive culture or heritage. It's quite depressing. In Chicago recently I was staring at the gorgeous Tribune Tower, wondering why we don't build more gothic skyscrapers. A city full of those would look like something out of a fantasy novel. But instead we have just a few remaining specimens, their dignity diminished as they are dwarfed on all sides by towering glass boxes.
@paulmaartin
@paulmaartin 12 күн бұрын
That's all they do in San Francisco
@Peter-z9t
@Peter-z9t 11 күн бұрын
Grand Central Station was spared thanks to former First Lady Jackie Kennedy and her collaborators who began the preservation movement after the original, glorious Penn Station was destroyed.
@trainglen22
@trainglen22 11 күн бұрын
@Peter-z9t I have read about the destruction of Penn station. It was sad for the Pennsylvania station to be destroyed.
@tomd1434
@tomd1434 9 күн бұрын
Americans do. We realize beauty too. Builders don’t. All about costs and how much they can squeeze out of the building for example. Then repeat. No appreciation for anything beyond money
@newdefsys
@newdefsys 12 күн бұрын
"No redeeming aesthetic qualities". The last 45 years of commercial architecture, summed up in four words.
@garryferrington811
@garryferrington811 12 күн бұрын
Brutalism. Inhuman, forbidding, grim. Perfect for our conformist, consumerist, corporatist society.
@Arctic740
@Arctic740 10 күн бұрын
It's so buildings are easy to resell
@timanderson5981
@timanderson5981 9 күн бұрын
I feel the worst period for architecture was the 1950s-1970s. Architecture in the last 30 years has actually improved as people have given more thoughts to ambient light, open floor spaces, energy efficiency, etc. I have seen many examples of modern architecture in the Middle East, China and other parts of Asia that actually look good. Still, all the 21st century buildings are glass, concrete and steel, and won't last 100 years.
@andyperkins7226
@andyperkins7226 9 күн бұрын
@@Arctic740 built for failure
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 9 күн бұрын
@@garryferrington811 You have no idea what Brutalism is do you?
@Jacky-xd2rt
@Jacky-xd2rt 7 күн бұрын
This video felt incredibly well put together. Not too flashy overproduced nor low budget. Seemed well researched too. Well done
@DrBernon
@DrBernon 6 күн бұрын
I'm Spanish, and I have an old neighbor that always says America's only care about making money, and the second something stops being profitable, gets dumped like a pile of crap. And he recalls several local factories and businesses that were bought by Americans and after decades of thriving, under the founders, the American investors just closed them at the first economic downturn, sadly making everyone poorer. And this video reminded me of how right he is.
@detectif1061
@detectif1061 21 сағат бұрын
well yea, money is important.
@DrBernon
@DrBernon 15 сағат бұрын
@@detectif1061 But it's not everything. There are other things with value. That is the concept Americans lack.
@sitarart7449
@sitarart7449 10 күн бұрын
Growing up here in the 60s & early 70s, and getting depressed after returning there for a visit, I can honestly tell you this was probably the most precise explanation for what happened to this place. Thank you.
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 8 күн бұрын
Not even close. The change in the demographics killed AC.
@genevieve730
@genevieve730 5 күн бұрын
@@JokrMetaayes, once the lower class minorities moved in, AC was doomed.
@BrianDiBello-nh6sw
@BrianDiBello-nh6sw 5 күн бұрын
​@@JokrMetaayea there is a common denominator in every fallen American city
@moniesincere5083
@moniesincere5083 3 күн бұрын
Sad but true ​@@JokrMetaa
@Dima-jz2qv
@Dima-jz2qv 13 күн бұрын
America today and America 100 years ago are two completely different countries. Unfortunately!
@DinoCon
@DinoCon 12 күн бұрын
In more ways than one...
@tsb7911
@tsb7911 12 күн бұрын
In some ways I'm sure I agree, but 100 years ago poverty and discrimination were through the roof.
@Cassandralathan9448
@Cassandralathan9448 10 күн бұрын
Not sure what is so appealing about 1924. Is it the children working in coal mines? Mentally challenged people being lobotomized? The severe poverty?
@timanderson5981
@timanderson5981 9 күн бұрын
Yep! Despite its supposed wealth, it has built incredibly little that will stand the test of time. In 100 years, virtually everything which exists today will be ruins because nothing in the US has ever been built to last.
@leechjim8023
@leechjim8023 9 күн бұрын
​@@timanderson5981And what is well built is still torn down just the same!!👎 Two examples: Penn Station and the Kingdome!😢😢
@Kevin-yh9yt
@Kevin-yh9yt 12 күн бұрын
Two things not mentioned: A soaring crime rate....and the utter neglect by the casinos of anything beyond their footprint...despite millions of dollars flowing thru them for decades. Even in the 80s if you walked one block off the boardwalk you were in a rundown streetscape of pawn shops, porn stores and drugged out loiterers. Its a shame what it ultimately became.
@babayaga2977
@babayaga2977 12 күн бұрын
The casinos offered good paying jobs but, well, people would rather not be employed when it's easier to get paid to not.
@stuartlee6622
@stuartlee6622 11 күн бұрын
Segr gation
@okigi-wo5zm
@okigi-wo5zm 11 күн бұрын
​@@babayaga2977so your argument is that there were enough jobs for locals and they refused them?
@cycologist7069
@cycologist7069 10 күн бұрын
@@babayaga2977 Stupid argument.
@Creativehotdog
@Creativehotdog 10 күн бұрын
​@@babayaga2977So locals didn't want the "good paying jobs" because they already had better paying jobs? Sounds like the casinos aren't paying enough then. Gotta pay enough to entice employees
@rocksnot952
@rocksnot952 6 күн бұрын
I remember Atlantic City in the 80's. What a difference a few decades can make.
@LCattarin
@LCattarin Күн бұрын
From Niagara Falls, my parents honeymooned in A C. In 1951 were married over 50 years.
@MrReymoclif714
@MrReymoclif714 23 сағат бұрын
Still had an atmosphere.
@orionl7406
@orionl7406 7 күн бұрын
360p is wild, but I respect it.
@SouthJerseySchnitz
@SouthJerseySchnitz 5 күн бұрын
artsy
@nordrheinwestsaarland
@nordrheinwestsaarland 3 күн бұрын
this should be printed on a tshirt
@elkabong5547
@elkabong5547 12 күн бұрын
Very well done! As a child, I visited AC many times in the 50s and 60s. Your point about AC becoming an automobile destination instead of a rail destination was interesting. Parking back then was a big problem. My wife and I went back to visit around 2010. It was heartbreaking.
@cycologist7069
@cycologist7069 10 күн бұрын
Good learning experience.
@dojocho1894
@dojocho1894 4 күн бұрын
The rise of the automobile through Ford and the Firestone tire company with the US govt destroyed cities local trolly on off trains so the people would be forced to buy cars and thus tires........even today there is no inter locking train systems for then country its for the car companies....
@DavidSmith-xs3or
@DavidSmith-xs3or 12 күн бұрын
Those cold, impersonal looking modern buildings next to those old, Victorian houses makes the landscape look dystopian.
@garryferrington811
@garryferrington811 12 күн бұрын
It doesn't _look_ dystopian, it _is_ dystopian.
@p2p104
@p2p104 5 күн бұрын
Lack of urban planning
@dubvuchyea502
@dubvuchyea502 12 күн бұрын
Damn i got str8 nostalgic for a place and time I've never been
@c.l.9344
@c.l.9344 11 күн бұрын
For real.
@genevieve730
@genevieve730 5 күн бұрын
So sorry you missed the best of America.
@vagabon5130
@vagabon5130 2 күн бұрын
Those were some of the most brilliant architecture iv seen in this country. And I’ll never get to see them in person. Absolutely heartbreaking.
@grobanna
@grobanna 7 күн бұрын
It's amazing that the days of almost no building codes and zero design standards, people created our favourite buildings, many of which are still standing.
@0zfer
@0zfer 4 күн бұрын
and NO zoning. Remove 90% of building codes, 100% of permits, 100% of zoning, and let's get America building again. Building codes should be for literal safety only as in the floor needs to support the weight not how many outlets in every room or we must have x sq ft.
@geograficmanodm1408
@geograficmanodm1408 13 күн бұрын
America has treated its historic cities the way it treated Hiroshima…
@petergray2712
@petergray2712 12 күн бұрын
Atlantic City was built on an alluvial spit that would have been destroyed in a large hurricane. It's sad, but abandonment would prevent an even greater tragedy.
@umarmujaahid1136
@umarmujaahid1136 11 күн бұрын
😂 too hard.
@rickposter3534
@rickposter3534 11 күн бұрын
While US cities have suffered because of various policies, i.e. urban renew, the Interstate Highway System, systemic racism, none of that comes close to the inhumane destruction of Hiroshima.
@geograficmanodm1408
@geograficmanodm1408 11 күн бұрын
@@rickposter3534I know… it was just sarcasm because of the level of destruction and demolitions in Atlantic City…
@timmyasikin4177
@timmyasikin4177 10 күн бұрын
Wakakak.....😮😮😮
@kenb735
@kenb735 11 күн бұрын
My family lived in Pittsburgh PA. I went to Atlantic City in 1964 at age 15yrs along with my 16yr old brother, lied about our ages & got work for the summer. Looking back, it obviously wasn’t quite the gem it once was. But all the old-time charm was still there. I would walk the Boardwalk every night. The historic Democratic convention that nominated LBJ for President met in the AC Convention Hall. The Beatles performed their 1st concert there as well; they stayed at the hotel across the street from where I worked. The following year I went back to work the summer. The Ins-&-Outs Coffeehouse had opened right in the shadow of Convention Hall. We’d listen far into the night the mesmerizing folk music that had just come into its own. It inspired me to become a folk singer myself. Only once, many years later, after the family had moved to South Jersey, did I go in to see the casinos. It was a terrible culture shock even then. They hadn’t quite torn down all the hotels…
@Peter-z9t
@Peter-z9t 11 күн бұрын
The Beatles' first concert in the U.S. was February 11, 1964 at the Washington, DC Coliseum, also long ago abandoned.
@kenb735
@kenb735 8 күн бұрын
Oh well, just a silly 15 yrs old’s erroneous memory… But you could hear the screams of the hysterical girls a mile away during the performance at the convention hall! I also hitch-hiked to NYC for the World’s Fair in Flushing that summer. Michelangelo’s Pieta was at the Vatican Pavilion. They were so afraid it’d be damaged in transit, but traveled without incident. (But it was partially smashed into pieces a few yrs later when it was in situ at St. Peter’s.)
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 8 күн бұрын
Yeah the “culture” sure got a lot darker and violent.
@itwasntme947
@itwasntme947 4 күн бұрын
@@JokrMetaa ayooo
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 4 күн бұрын
@@itwasntme947 they ruin every place they take over.
@stgermain6488
@stgermain6488 13 күн бұрын
Watching Boardwalk Empire made me search up AC. I searched it up on google maps and was utterly confused
@yux.tn.3641
@yux.tn.3641 7 күн бұрын
i loved that show👍👍, except maybe the last season
@amblincork
@amblincork 5 күн бұрын
I also looked upo Google maps and there are sure a lot of empty spaces...
@rhino2949
@rhino2949 4 күн бұрын
Finally someone talking about boardwalk empire in the comments section 🎉🎉😂
@martyrivera9621
@martyrivera9621 7 күн бұрын
We lived in Bronx/Queens 60’s-80’s. Used to take express bus on w/es. I think it cost $10 R/T trip and they gave adults $10 in quarters on top of it. Those quarters went quick on the slots at casino! My dad took me previously on a greyhound bus in the 60’s as a kid and I was in awe of the steel pier and the ocean front hotels. You could stay/ eat cheaply away from the boardwalk too! Thanks for this video!
@hughejass9461
@hughejass9461 3 күн бұрын
My family bought a home here in 1963 and I spent a lot of summers in AC. Our home was built in 1920 and the craftmanship was beautiful. Unfortunately the population of the town changed, the house was broken into twice, one of our cars was stolen, and I had enough and sold it in 2012. I bought a home in OC and it's like night and day. The one thing that was not mentioned in the video but every citizen of AC was aware of was the rampant corruption. It's a shame what the city has become.
@JamesUnderwood-tu2dl
@JamesUnderwood-tu2dl 10 күн бұрын
As someone who vacationed in Ocean City, NJ; our family would drive to Atlantic City to dine at the Knife and Fork Restaurant and loved driving in Margate and Ventnor cities and charm of the old NJ beaches can be seen at all three of those older cities. The traditional beauty of the AC hotels can be scene in OC with the Flanders Hotel and the Resorts International in AC. Much of the charm of the Jersey shore comes from the mom and pop businesses on the boardwalks and towns where generations of families can go to the same businesses and eat or shop at the same place they did when they where a child and no their children and grandchildren can experience the same things. It’s the joy of sharing memories and seeing your child and or grandchildren enjoying the same place.
@Hiller013
@Hiller013 13 күн бұрын
What a beautiful place it once was. You would never guess by only seeing its current state.
@Schlipperschlopper
@Schlipperschlopper 8 күн бұрын
It now looks like Berlin after the war!
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 8 күн бұрын
Before photos, all white people. After photos all black people. It’s obvious what went wrong.
@AbstractEntityJ
@AbstractEntityJ 13 күн бұрын
It's interesting how most of the cities in this series have the worst crime rates in the US today
@lorenzosammarco1056
@lorenzosammarco1056 12 күн бұрын
I see a pattern....a black one
@AbstractEntityJ
@AbstractEntityJ 12 күн бұрын
@lorenzosammarco1056 And also a pattern of "urban renewal" through gutting the inner cities and destroying historic neighborhoods for the sake of building roads and parking.
@cloroc
@cloroc 12 күн бұрын
That's right Lorenzo. The dog whistle is blowing. Much like your wife when you leave to work.
@languageobserver6433
@languageobserver6433 11 күн бұрын
@@lorenzosammarco1056 Indeed, resonant echoes of a disguised black soul...
@fewkeyfewkey5414
@fewkeyfewkey5414 10 күн бұрын
@@lorenzosammarco1056yea the unfortunate reality
@dystopian..
@dystopian.. 7 күн бұрын
This was a very well done video. I’m glad I found you. Cheers.
@Ziggy27
@Ziggy27 4 күн бұрын
Just discovered your channel. This was fascinating, well assembled, and concise. I look forward to watching more videos when I can.
@johnherr9589
@johnherr9589 12 күн бұрын
Great video. I lived in Northern NJ from 2011 to 2021. I visited Atlantic City a few times, and was struck by how sad the whole situation was. But interesting, while Atlantic City is faring so poorly, another spot just to it's south, seems to be doing pretty well. Ocean City has a terrific boardwalk. It was packed even in Oct of 2021 during Covid. There is also a more inland street, Asbury Ave, which is quite hopping. No, it's not nearly as big as Atlantic City once was, but it's a pretty great place to spend a weekend. It gives a little of what it must have been like on the boardwalk in AC 100 years ago. Another interesting spot on the Jersey Shore is Asbury Park/Ocean Grove. Asbury is up and coming again after having fallen apart, and it's downtown and waterfront are doing well. You can also walk over to Ocean Grove, to see an old Camp Meeting town, with cute houses and small, interesting shops.
@timanderson5981
@timanderson5981 9 күн бұрын
Ocean City and Wildwood cater to families, while Atlantic City caters to gambling. The latter is full of crime and dangerous. The other cities much less so.
@JohnMulvihill-f3j
@JohnMulvihill-f3j 15 күн бұрын
Love the series. Very excited for this.
@j887276
@j887276 10 күн бұрын
Atlantic City was still a thing in the 2000's my mother went on a "girl's weekend" with a couple female coworkers around 2005. She said she loved it & had a ball. It was her 1st time having a "vacation" in her whole life. She still laughs and tells stories when I bring it up.
@brybryguy6314
@brybryguy6314 8 күн бұрын
Ya I'm from the region and yes it was still a place to go back in the 90s and the 2000s. It was when the 2010s came around and all the casinos started to pop up all over Philadelphia region and Delaware that AC started to fall apart.
@Dalt21
@Dalt21 7 күн бұрын
@@brybryguy6314but I feel like arguably AC is better now than the 2000s. I’m also from the area
@Dalt21
@Dalt21 7 күн бұрын
AC is still a thing , don’t get it twisted.
@nineixb616
@nineixb616 6 күн бұрын
AC is definitely still a thing, it’s definitely not a vacation spot for the wealthy, but I went there this summer. Most of the hotel/casinos have everything you need, nobody goes to AC to explore the city, but there aren’t any other cities on the east coast that have the large hotel/casinos with shopping and restaurants all in one place.
@Bennysol
@Bennysol 4 күн бұрын
She definitely got rode hard down there
@NoirMorter
@NoirMorter 13 сағат бұрын
KZbin recommended this video and I have never seen you before. It was an interesting watch. I'll check out more on your channel but I subscribed.
@maxi-me
@maxi-me 2 күн бұрын
@9:56. _"Or San Francisco moving away from shipping to tech"_ and then to the homeless industry 😂
@vanimaladventures
@vanimaladventures 10 минут бұрын
exactly.
@flyphone1072
@flyphone1072 12 күн бұрын
I don't think a lot of developers have a soul, I've seen too many core landmarks in an area demolished for me to believe otherwise. They think they're God and will do anything to turn the built environment into their awful vision. This hasn't even stopped, this summer a developer in New Jersey demolished Brick Church in East Orange. Which was the building that the neighborhood was named after! They named *their development* "Brick Church" and then had the audacity to *Illegally* (!!!) demolish the building! They just can't get away with demolishing a whole city anymore (I hope...)
@DerSohnDesAlvaters
@DerSohnDesAlvaters 9 күн бұрын
Brick Church - the oldest church in the city; in fact, it predates the city itself - had a crane-made gash in the rear of the sanctuary, revealing that the owner, David Scharf, never even bothered to salvage the religious relics left inside.
@jonathanstensberg
@jonathanstensberg 12 күн бұрын
Atlantic City is still a great place to visit for a fun day/weekend trip. It’s just not as nice as it was in the golden age.
@tonybell4651
@tonybell4651 6 күн бұрын
Not many places are...I'll still go to visit...
@SincerelyFromStephen
@SincerelyFromStephen 12 күн бұрын
Suburbanization and car dependency is one of the biggest killers of architectural beauty in the world
@garryferrington811
@garryferrington811 12 күн бұрын
It's also one of the biggest killers of sheer convenience! Living in Glendale, CA, the nearest Trader Joe's was two blocks away, my auto mechanic was half a mile, our hospital just down the block...in the (deleted) burbs it's all drive, drive, drive! Anything to make Big Oil richer!
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht 9 күн бұрын
guy mad commie blocks didn't become the norm
@txquartz
@txquartz 9 күн бұрын
​@@garryferrington811glendale is a suburb
@buttlesschap
@buttlesschap 9 күн бұрын
Yup the last remnants before the car took over the USA was the gilded age and art deco.
@Irvinlopez-v9s
@Irvinlopez-v9s 9 күн бұрын
Suburbinization and cad dependency were just ways to deal with urban lifestyles
@Thelastetherborn
@Thelastetherborn 4 күн бұрын
Thank you for being gracious with Santa Cruz, CA. And yes, you are totally right about that magical place 👍
@MichaelOsmers
@MichaelOsmers 20 сағат бұрын
You absolutely nailed this.
@chopper218_
@chopper218_ 13 күн бұрын
Great work great video that truly captures what was of this city
@william_at
@william_at 12 күн бұрын
Excellent video. The old Atlantic City was a delicious extravaganza. Nowadays is a horror. Americans have a several problem about heritage's preservation.
@SKa-tt9nm
@SKa-tt9nm 7 күн бұрын
Americans don’t have that problem. I guess you’ve never visited San Francisco, historical sections of Boston, Philadelphia, Richmond, etc. “Americans didn’t save every bit of cool architecture they could have” isn’t the same as “Americans have no respect for history”
@DanYellowTheeMan
@DanYellowTheeMan 10 күн бұрын
Atlantic City is one of the most depressing cities I ever visited. Yeah, the boardwalk is there but its just too close to all the depression, you just can't escape it.
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 8 күн бұрын
Depression is a good word for black 🤣🤣🤣
@timmmahhhh
@timmmahhhh 3 күн бұрын
You were probably able to park right next to it, which was the unfortunate priority in post-war America: designing everything to make it convenient for the driver and not the pedestrian.
@philmabarak5421
@philmabarak5421 2 күн бұрын
@@JokrMetaa You are a coward that doesn't understand causation! It was and is your demographic that caused those conditions in the first place! You are at cause! History proves this. Only cowards refuse to admit their coward character.
@DanYellowTheeMan
@DanYellowTheeMan Күн бұрын
@@timmmahhhh Its not like other cities where you can be a few blocks away from all the depression. All the glitz and glamour is surrounded by it. So yeah, so I parked right in the ghetto. And its a WONDER to me why the NJ Transit train doesn't go to AC. Such a missed opportunity.
@stevenseguro
@stevenseguro 8 күн бұрын
I'm so glad this video went so well for you. It's very well done just as most of you others. I haven't thought about this childhood home of mine in many years and you have rekindled my interest. Thank you.
@gabrielmarks154
@gabrielmarks154 6 күн бұрын
Fantastic video. Really loved how you put things into perspective, and it’s also so crazy to see how Atlantic City is just one of the towns where classical architecture was destroyed in the US.
@pietervoogt
@pietervoogt 13 күн бұрын
Thank you. The destruction still continues around the world and architecture snobs are still in power in the important institutions, demanding minimalist city deserts.
@nycmitch
@nycmitch 13 күн бұрын
The Santa Cruz comparison was great. As someone from Long Beach, Long Island, there are many common themes. This work was really nicely done and released at quite a timely moment in history.
@TrenchReynolds
@TrenchReynolds 12 күн бұрын
I grew up near AC during the casino boom of the 80s. For years, the city was nothing but a mess of demolition and construction. That's not even taking into account the casinos that failed before they even opened, leaving empty husks of girders and beams.
@SportyOtterPop
@SportyOtterPop 5 күн бұрын
Like your low-key style, and unique topic! Thanks
@h.washingtonsawyer6614
@h.washingtonsawyer6614 5 күн бұрын
Minute 6:08. The Chalfont and Haddon Hall, Chalfont on the left. Stayed there with my family at age 9 in the 1960s. I remember climbing up and down the fire escapes. Both buildings were owned by a family of Philadelphia Quaker businessmen names Leeds. They were designed by Philadelphia architect Addison Hutton, also a Quaker. And I remember one night climbing to the rooftop of the Haddon Hall next door. wonderful wind coming off of the sea. The Chalfont was demolished in 1980 and is now a parking lot. Haddon Hall survived (sort of) it is now Resorts Casino.
@r.pres.4121
@r.pres.4121 11 күн бұрын
Urban renewal ran amok in Atlantic City NJ just like it did in New Haven CT. Once something is completely destroyed, there is no bringing it back. Urban renewal, car dependency, and redlining by banks destroyed the older northern US city.
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 8 күн бұрын
Can’t have “urban” renewal until the demographics shift back. Considering joe biden let 20 million illegals invade the country there is zero chance of that. America is over.
@guydreamr
@guydreamr 8 күн бұрын
They paved paradise and put up a parking lot. - Joni Mitchell
@OfSoulAndSin
@OfSoulAndSin 6 күн бұрын
😢
@RevolvoDoOr
@RevolvoDoOr 12 күн бұрын
I think AC still has potential (if they do it right)... for example, they could make a series of canals (one first) heading from somewhere north like flagship resort, or the Claridge hotel to surf city..., make it wide enough for medium sized boats for people to park and reside there, instead of complete cars along the canals, turn it into something of an Amsterdam situation, where there are residential apartments, medium rowhomes(with character), do SOMETHING with Bader Field instead of leaving it as an abandoned airport/ballpark, invite the Hot air balloons to come and dock, more residential towers, borrowing that from Miami(in fact taking much of Miami's tourism because it's just boring now down there), providing waterskiing, sea-doo riding, a lot can be done, with some capital, government ease/assistance, and motivation instead of letting itself rot, there's even space for several impressive water/amusement parks, grand hotels, racetracks, and more, people need to be coaxed into coming outside! why bother being outside if it's boring and unimpressive
@RevolvoDoOr
@RevolvoDoOr 12 күн бұрын
Oh yes and have a better train station., current one looks like a utility more than a luxury...
@RevolvoDoOr
@RevolvoDoOr 12 күн бұрын
And a well carved monorail system would also do wonders!
@javierclyburn5688
@javierclyburn5688 12 күн бұрын
Also, the airport needs more airlines and direct flights that arrive and departs from there. They only have one airline and that's spirit airlines. Everybody don't want to travel with spirit airlines. Also, people don't want to always have to fly into Philadelphia either. It's frustrating trying to get there. If they worked on expanding their airport, more people would be willing to travel there.
@daveharrison84
@daveharrison84 11 күн бұрын
There are a lot of manmade canal towns on the Jersey shore. People buy houses there to live on the water but they are nothing special and they don't attract tourists.
@jeffreyg201
@jeffreyg201 11 күн бұрын
That idea is passe. Major airlines don't locate to an area without ample first class hotel rooms. Perhaps a few major non casino hotel brands in the city would attract the airlines but that isn't going to happen because the casino industry is a shadow government and won't allow any competition.
@emperorofghost
@emperorofghost 5 күн бұрын
This series is amazing!
@johnhathaway7319
@johnhathaway7319 8 күн бұрын
I moved to A.C in 1980 to work in the casinos. I moved away in 1993. At the time A.C had 1/3 of the U.S. population within a 6 hour drive. 4 mayors in a row got in trouble ( and prison ) for accepting bribes, embezzlement and a lot more. The handwriting was on the wall in the late 80s when Foxwoods opened, paving the way for out of state casinos in Connecticut, N.Y ,P.A Baltimore and more. In the dozen years I lived there, Atlantic and Pacific Ave were pothole laced and never ONCE paved. When Hurricane Bob came through in the 80s, the boardwalk was damaged and easily fixable . Mayor Ursey diverted funds and the Miss America pageant had to break off the boardwalk and drive the contestants though undesirable neighborhoods where they were pelted by bottles. The A.C Police were as corrupt as the day is long and I have personal stories about that. And lastly, after they opened gaming in Pennsylvania, they STUPIDLY approved the Revelle casino, which was doomed from its conception. I could go on all day long. They got what the deserved by mismanaging and squandering casino profits .
@dlewis9760
@dlewis9760 6 күн бұрын
Sometimes casino's are approved in certain locations to be a road block. I'm in Mass. MGM in Springfield Mass. has never done well. But, when it was going through the process of state approval, Connecticut approved a casino on the site of an old movie theater property about 12 miles south. They did the whole golden shovel, move the dirt thing. MGM has never done gangbusters business and the Connecticut site never built the casino. If MGM had done well, that casino would have been built to siphon off gamblers from heading further north. "Everybody" has casinos these days. Because there's so many, they tend to suck up the money of the locals. The whole point in the cities and state's eyes was to suck up the money from people not in the area.
@memeteam2692
@memeteam2692 3 күн бұрын
Sounds just like Bruce Springsteen’s song
@phoenixjim0527
@phoenixjim0527 11 күн бұрын
Two suggestions for episodes: Wilkes-Barre, PA and Binghamton, NY - They both have center squares with stillborn skylines, City-Beautiful bridges, industrialist mansions, and architectural gems. In common, universities helped each stop more ruin; both are on Susquehanna River branches; and both have a Boscov’s. Passaic, NJ - Also has stillborn skyline downtown. Wonderful factory buildings but many lost.
@pittstonjoma
@pittstonjoma 11 күн бұрын
I would love to see Wilkes-Barre on here!
@jcollins1305
@jcollins1305 5 күн бұрын
I was just in Binghamton NY for a a weekend recently. A very bipolar town. BEAUTIFUL buildings, next to brutalist eyesores (looking at you city hall) downtown was near empty during the day. It looked like a ghost town! Friday night filled up with college kids, but Saturday night was a ghost town again. I liked my time there, and I hope it can continue to improve.
@lensiax9276
@lensiax9276 11 күн бұрын
New Jersey is a case study in urban decay. Camden, Newark, Atlantic City, Trenton, Elizabeth, and, in the past at least, all the cities in Hudson county. I-95, I-78, and I-280 decimated the northern cities. In the south, I-676 destroyed Camden. The "road gang" and the true organized crime groups in New Jersey sold the state away. Hudson county has been an exemplary study of city rebirth, that would perhaps make a great series on your channel about born again cities. Though, I wonder if this rebirth is due to the proximity of NYC and the sheer mass of wealth that exudes from NYC. NJ politics is the manifestation of corruption, back door dealings, and bureaucracy. A lovely state with so much potential (twin cities to Philly and NYC, entire beach cities), completely crippled for no good reason.
@PeruvianPotato
@PeruvianPotato 10 күн бұрын
Question, do you actually live in Jersey itself? Or did you watch 3 episodes of The Sopranos and concluded that it was pure fact.
@thehighllama8101
@thehighllama8101 9 күн бұрын
I grew up in Bergen County, New Jersey, right along the Hudson County border, in the 70s and 80s. I lived in NJ for 32 years. Hispanic immigration hurt Hudson County tremendously, basically turning most of it into a third world country. Is that racist? Nah. The Cubans and Puerto Ricans, among other immigrants, I went to school with would have told you the same thing. They thought Hudson County was a dump too, and they knew why. We would ride our bikes through towns like West New York, Union City, and Jersey City, and it was like we were in Nuevo Havana, Some areas have been getting better since the 90s, but not for average people. I think the rebirth is precisely due to the proximity of Hudson County to NYC and, in significant part, to the redevelopment of the Hudson River waterfront. As for cities like Trenton, Camden, Newark, etc., Blacks have made those cities unlivable for most Whites.
@PeruvianPotato
@PeruvianPotato 9 күн бұрын
@@thehighllama8101 Yeah as someone that lives in Hudson County right now, the last time any shooting has happened here was around 2 years ago and that was over some stupid gym beef. Do you still live in Bergen County? Or did you move out because you're scared of people speaking Spanish? By the way, No Sabos that can't speak a word of Spanish don't count as being Hispanic, sorry.
@lensiax9276
@lensiax9276 9 күн бұрын
​@@PeruvianPotato Lived in New Jersey for 20+ years. Volunteered for two years in Camden. Lovely people who are trying to rebuild. We would build gardens on barren lots (homes that got knocked down). Spent time in Newark, New Brunswick, Elizabeth, etc. Funny enough I have yet to watch sopranos. A lot of these cities are rebounding. Jersey City is a poster child now for the street safety movement. New Brunswick is building up a lot, drawing in a good amount of business too (Nokia Bell Labs headquarters is moving there). Been here to see all the bullshit that goes on in our government. Everyone knew Menendez was corrupt way before 2024. Took NJ 2+ years to be able to buy legal weed, even after they legalized it. And they wouldn't even include homegrow. Had to make sure the buddies got their fair share. Maryland made it legal on a Saturday in July last year and sales on Monday. Murphy choosing his donor's expensive building for the NJT headquarters... it goes on. Drive up to the Meadowlands and all you see is concrete and automobiles all around you. People call NJ a dumping grounds for a reason... And I love my state. I am proud of it. Its got so much to offer, I just wish our government wasn't so sleezy.
@lensiax9276
@lensiax9276 9 күн бұрын
@@thehighllama8101 Cool it with the racist remarks man. Blacks didn't do shit to Camden, Trenton, Newark. White people ruined those cities to spite black people. I suggest you read Color of Law by Richard Rothstein. The proximity to NYC is definitely what is revitalizing hudson county so fast. Case in point, Newark is much farther behind. It has a ton of potential and I am sure it will improve with time. After all, Jersey city started their transition some 30 years ago. I don't know how you can claim hispanic immigration ruined the county. They were not the ones building the shit infrastructure for the past 100 years.
@JohnWilson-wg4gk
@JohnWilson-wg4gk 12 күн бұрын
If you plan on moving to Atlantic City, Baltic Avenue and Mediterranean Avenue have the lowest rents in town...
@1972Ray
@1972Ray 12 күн бұрын
I would move to Longport, if I wanted to live near AC.
@JohnWilson-wg4gk
@JohnWilson-wg4gk 11 күн бұрын
​@@1972Ray 🙂 I Googled Longport, New Jersey. 🐘 I'd go there just to see Lucy the Elephant !
@MrDino1953
@MrDino1953 9 күн бұрын
And you get $200 every time you walk past GO.
@JohnWilson-wg4gk
@JohnWilson-wg4gk 9 күн бұрын
@@MrDino1953 🥺 Not me. I go directly to jail. I do not pass go. I do not collect $ 200....
@elvirarustamova3013
@elvirarustamova3013 7 күн бұрын
If you plan on moving and not living too long then those avenues should be fine 😂
@rayurlich
@rayurlich 5 күн бұрын
What a great video. Thank you.
@Lrkjdk
@Lrkjdk 4 күн бұрын
Growing up 35 minutes from here I loved going to AC during the early 2000s until 2008.
@BrodericHH
@BrodericHH 12 күн бұрын
Could you do Kansas City next ? It had the 2nd most extensive streetcar system in the first half of the 20th century. Once the interstates were constructed and redlining took effect, entire high density blocks were demolished to make room for parking lots, highways and car dependent infrastructure.
@helixator3975
@helixator3975 12 күн бұрын
I’m from Melbourne Australia, and while other cities around do the world were busy dismembering their tram/streetcar networks we managed to keep ours, due to a combination of being too broke after the war to replace it and some solid campaigning by far sighted public servants. Today we enjoy the largest tram network in the world, with 160 miles of double track tramways and 1800 stops across 24 interconnected lines traversed by a fleet of around 500+ modern trams, plus a few of the old ones for nostalgic value. And we wouldn’t dream of shutting it down - it’s brilliant. I wish Kansas City had been able to keep yours too.
@cloudkitt
@cloudkitt 10 күн бұрын
I went to Kansas City for the first time this year from the northeast to see a baseball game and the city. The people were extremely nice but my goodness it's scarcely a city at all. Because we were from the northeast our first inclination was to walk between places and so we often did, but it was usually a 30 minute walk with nothing along the way. And failing that you had to uber everywhere. And those two stadiums right next to each other and absolutely no way to get there but by car? I shudder to think what it's like when the Royals and Chiefs play on the same day. I know even the Northeast cities pale in comparison to some others around the world, but it definitely made me appreciate having trams and subways that actually go to the stadiums.
@davehughesfarm7983
@davehughesfarm7983 9 күн бұрын
We have a street car again and a rebirth in downtown.
@davehughesfarm7983
@davehughesfarm7983 9 күн бұрын
@@cloudkitt we like it like that
@cycologist7069
@cycologist7069 9 күн бұрын
@@helixator3975 Can you take your bike on the tram?
@terrystrahl6006
@terrystrahl6006 11 күн бұрын
This is so very sad, yes all the charm and beauty is gone, AC was a very beautiful place to go to and enjoy. 😮‍💨☹
@99somerville
@99somerville 9 күн бұрын
The video fails to say that all that “grand” architecture and charming wooden hotels were literally falling apart and rotten. They were firetraps that where literally empty since no one wanted to stay in them. With no guests and no upkeep they were beyond saving.
@jeffreyg201
@jeffreyg201 8 күн бұрын
I was fortunate enough to have stayed at the Traymore in 1971 as a boy. So sad what happened to it the following year.
@john-carlosynostroza
@john-carlosynostroza 2 күн бұрын
Great video. Nice job!
@tonygrajales2465
@tonygrajales2465 46 минут бұрын
Great video, I was in Atlantic City recently, for my kid’s indoor soccer tournament at their convention center. It was a sad experience, I was looking forward to it my first time in Atlantic City, and it just felt like a cheap forced secondhand Vegas experience. Half of the shops on the boardwalk were closed, no easy form of transportation from the convention center to the boardwalk, other than Uber. And then the hotel rooms were $400 a night, and the most affordable place on the boardwalk was at Courtyard Marriott for that much. Sad, my experience was, I couldn’t wait to leave.
@noherekruger3738
@noherekruger3738 9 күн бұрын
Another thing to realize is that south east PA killed AC too. Before casinos were legal in mostly the Philly area, this is where everyone went for gambling (and fine dining, which Philly is now fantastic for). Now, there's a casino almost every few miles in and around Philly, so no one wants or needs to drive the AC expressway for 45 minutes to an hour to gamble. Losing the majority of people in Philly is/was a HUGE chunk of revenue lost in AC. The dominoes were already falling, but this drastically increased the pace 10 fold. Also don't forget all the online gambling that's now out there that has increased drastically the last few years.
@GenericYoutubeGuy
@GenericYoutubeGuy 12 күн бұрын
I know this ‘city’ doesn’t have much magnificence at all left, but I would really like you to make a video on Terre Haute, Indiana. It has a grand court house, a few really nice surviving classical urban buildings, multiple surviving theatres and churches, etc. It has about the same population that Atlantic City had at its peak. But it has no boardwalk to survive off of. It really has nothing to survive off of, except for the interstate, and a few giant industries in the outskirts that nobody knows much about at all. It has probably taken the biggest blow of all of the small American cities, excluding ones that are in actual decay such as Gary.
@garryferrington811
@garryferrington811 12 күн бұрын
I went through West Terre Haute. It was one of the most terrifying experiences of my life, not quite up there with Russians pointing Kalashnikovs at me, but close.
@GenericYoutubeGuy
@GenericYoutubeGuy 11 күн бұрын
@ the town, or the section of Terre Haute?
@williamwintemberg
@williamwintemberg 9 күн бұрын
Beware of false promises from politicians and developers.
@TheLastTrueDacian
@TheLastTrueDacian 6 күн бұрын
very good video! keep up the work!
@sunrise3216
@sunrise3216 8 күн бұрын
In terms of tourism they are trying to make place more family oriented. They added Dave IN Busters and Indoor Water park in Showboat hotel. Many people still go to shop at outlets too.
@arandominternetperson4462
@arandominternetperson4462 9 күн бұрын
American city planners seem to give 0 f*cks about historical buildings
@milan1969
@milan1969 12 күн бұрын
I remember how crazy Atlantic City was in the nineties! Holy crap was it wild!
@okigi-wo5zm
@okigi-wo5zm 11 күн бұрын
Crazy how?
@indianapatsfan
@indianapatsfan 12 күн бұрын
The beginning of the end for AC was when that Indian tribe in CT won their court case and were allowed to open Foxwoods. That got the dominoes falling. After that, state after state after state after state legalized casino gambling i order to capture that revenue instead of losing it to tribal casinos or casinos in neighboring states.
@1972Ray
@1972Ray 12 күн бұрын
Not the case in Maryland, and we have two casinos, one that's draws people from MD and DC, because they don't have to drive to Jersey.
@joelspliffbeaudette3750
@joelspliffbeaudette3750 Күн бұрын
Very informative video thank you for sharing
@markvandenberg4606
@markvandenberg4606 5 күн бұрын
Wow, very interesting video the algorithm delivered to me this morning. Thank you! The only possible argument against your premise I could think of in this particular case is that the sheer scale of prior development made it unable to reimagine these properties as is. It’s one thing to repurpose town houses in the center of Amsterdam or Paris, but how do you repurpose a gargantuan 1,000-room hotel built in classical style and make it somehow profitable again amidst rapidly falling demand? It’s perhaps easier to judge in hindsight, as you yourself admit. In any case, as somebody who’s all in on classical architecture I support this video! 🙌🏻 Thumbs up and subscribed.
@porterijsseldijk3953
@porterijsseldijk3953 11 күн бұрын
We've progressed in many ways, but have also fallen back to medieval times in other ways
@russell-di8js
@russell-di8js 9 күн бұрын
Over here we still have a lot of the medieval City of York & i can tell you without fail that it looks better for 500 yrs than those ginormous gigantic eyesore of AC do for 50 yrs!!
@FalconsEye58094
@FalconsEye58094 13 күн бұрын
I love this series. our cities once were on par with Europe, but we willingly destroy them
@haraldisdead
@haraldisdead 12 күн бұрын
We didn't. The capitalists did
@BariNapach
@BariNapach 12 күн бұрын
@@haraldisdead actually it was government who incentivize the automobile not capitalism
@angelovalavanis2314
@angelovalavanis2314 11 күн бұрын
​@@haraldisdead It was the free market that made Atlantic City the beacon of the Jersey Shore back then.
@Kodeb8
@Kodeb8 11 күн бұрын
@@haraldisdead Wrong. It was the government via eminent domain. Politicians began using it to "revitalize" older cities by taking people's private property by force and building car-centric infrastructure over it.
@anthonyflambard6472
@anthonyflambard6472 10 күн бұрын
Sorry, but your cities were never on par with European cities.
@manchild111
@manchild111 7 күн бұрын
I work In AC at one of the casinos. Been employed in the city for 22 years and lived there when I was a kid for a short time. I also used to work at Ballys where the old Traymore was. That place was ENORMOUS! The architecture of this city was absolutely gorgeous. It saddens me what this city has become. Great video.
@PokrPro21
@PokrPro21 6 күн бұрын
How would you describe Atlantic City today? Is the casino business still good? I saw some other videos where AC didn't look bad at all. Do you recommend anywhere to live that's nice in Atlantic County? I also heard that it's better to live in Ocean City and drive 30 minutes to Atlantic City..
@jeffreyg201
@jeffreyg201 5 күн бұрын
Where The Traymore was is still an empty lot. Bally's is where the Marlboro-Blenheim, Dennis and The Shelburne was. Dennis is still standing. Merchant to the rich, Reese Palley owned the Marlboro = Blenheim.
@elvirarustamova3013
@elvirarustamova3013 Күн бұрын
@@PokrPro21 there are plenty of nice towns close to AC. Brigantine, Ventnor, Margate, Longport, Ocean City and Linwood are all great if you can afford the property taxes.
@PokrPro21
@PokrPro21 Күн бұрын
@@elvirarustamova3013 For you to say that, NJ must have some crazy high property taxes lol. Thanks for responding! I'll be sure to check it out.
@elvirarustamova3013
@elvirarustamova3013 19 сағат бұрын
@ well NJ has the highest property tax in the whole country unfortunately.
@mustlovepretzels
@mustlovepretzels 9 күн бұрын
I saw Chicago when they were Chicago Transit Authority in Atlantic City. 68 or 69? Great show. At Steel Pier. Cheers! 🥨
@scrollop
@scrollop 5 күн бұрын
Great video, thank you.
@Risteard156
@Risteard156 11 күн бұрын
So sad to see all these big cities go down in America 😢
@Peter-z9t
@Peter-z9t 11 күн бұрын
Atlantic City's peak population in 1930 was only 66,000 so it was never a big city. In 2023 it is only 34,000 and still slowly declining.
@daniellehaskins7500
@daniellehaskins7500 8 күн бұрын
I think the worst is behind. We just took an end of summer, mini family vacation to the Ocean Casino Resort and it is absolutely beautiful! The arcade at the Showboat next door is a lot of fun and the Hard Rock (formerly Trump Taj) has tons of great restaurants. The north end of the boardwalk is actually a great place to be.
@curtisjones400
@curtisjones400 2 күн бұрын
That is the only nice part of Atlantic City boardwalk once you past the Resorts Casino hotel there is not too much excitement. They need to make the whole boardwalk like the North End.
@garytorresani8846
@garytorresani8846 12 күн бұрын
We had a family home in AC for years. Then, AC began falling apart when the casinos came in. The old family home on Texas Ave is a mess now. The Trump casinos were by far, the ugliest. When I was back in Philly in July 2024, my brothers told me not to visit AC, it would make me cry to see how far down it’s gone. I went to Ocean City instead. It’s become what AC used to be. Family oriented, a beautiful shore town.
@JokrMetaa
@JokrMetaa 8 күн бұрын
The casinos were there long before it went bad. It went bad because white people left. It happens every single time. The lessers are the problem.
@notoriouslite
@notoriouslite 7 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this video. Living just only around two hours away from Atlantic City on the other side of the Delaware Bay, I have visited Atlantic City a few times before, and it is 100% different than all the other boardwalk towns in the area. It feels so corporate, little to no charm, and dystopian. The suburbs that separate the boardwalk casinos from the ones at the back of the city is honestly one of the saddest things I have ever seen. I hope my beach town never meets the same fate as Atlantic City.
@laurentderrien
@laurentderrien 6 күн бұрын
thank you, this was very interesting. All I knew about Atlantic City was from Boardwalk Empire, it's stunning seeing how it fell. Nice picture from Strasbourg at the end ! Cheers from Alsace.
@gregoryferraro7379
@gregoryferraro7379 10 күн бұрын
The US should elect one of the heartless developers responsible for Atlantic City's destruction as president. This will only do wonders for the economy!
@russell-di8js
@russell-di8js 9 күн бұрын
I saw that on the contract thing stating Trump was selling at the lowest price for an AC casino that was then demolished. Yikes!
@Kevin-zz9nc
@Kevin-zz9nc 5 күн бұрын
What could go wrong!!!
@gregoryferraro7379
@gregoryferraro7379 3 күн бұрын
@Kevin-zz9nc only one way to find out!
@noahguerra8847
@noahguerra8847 13 күн бұрын
Please do Springfield ma next!
@ashleymariee420
@ashleymariee420 11 күн бұрын
There is a lot of factors you missed out on. I live right outside the city and also work in one of those casinos. Your wrong in saying no one comes here. All the new or re renovated ones are doing well and people come regularly from Philly, north jersey, Ny, and del. It’s outside the casinos that need help. No one feels safe leaving the resorts. So they don’t and the city suffers.
@joellamoureux7914
@joellamoureux7914 8 күн бұрын
ATL city had the coolest go kart track I ever rode. Indoor outdoor multistory with fast cars. Never forget it. Was right on the beach too.
@BigChungus-u3f
@BigChungus-u3f 7 күн бұрын
Can you do Rochester, NY next? Place was huge back then
@alexeynekrasov429
@alexeynekrasov429 4 күн бұрын
Everyone knows the reasons, but no one dares to voice them here.😊
@Knight_Kin
@Knight_Kin 2 күн бұрын
N
@bar95900
@bar95900 Күн бұрын
@@Knight_Kin what do you call those poeple who controls money, diamonds, and gold ?
@NevSau
@NevSau Күн бұрын
Greed, immorality and sinful behaviour is what always brings cities to their knees. Pray for America to Trust in God again 🙏
@InteristaS5
@InteristaS5 12 күн бұрын
I was born in Atlantic City and raised in a suburb about 15 minutes outside of the city. Its a sad place i mostly avoid. The casino industry destroyed the city and extracted all of the wealth. They made it impossible for small business to thrive outside of their casinos and continually cut benefits and pay rates for their workers. Like mentioned in the video, the suburbs around Atlantic City are decent and most of the work force live in those towns. The people who were left behind living in Atlantic City are the poorest people that couldnt make it out, hence the high crime rate. This is not surprising for a gambling town, but truly the only thing that Atlantic City offers you is degeneracy. If you want drinking, gambling, drugs and prostitution then come to AC baby!!
@rentslave
@rentslave 12 күн бұрын
Blame the NBA for not ending their long ago territorial draft one year sooner. Had they done that,the Knicks would not have been able to draft Bill Bradley,his connection to NJ would have faded, he would not have become a US Senator here,would not have taken a bribe from Las Vegas interests to get passed an anti 49 state sports betting bill,allowing Vegas to get back on its feet. A side effect of all of this is that Trump would have been making so much money,he never would have ran for President. And that's the rest of the story.
@dave_407
@dave_407 4 күн бұрын
Great video! I guess I never really knew anything about Atlantic City
@desiolle2874
@desiolle2874 6 күн бұрын
I work on old buildings like these. The kind of money required to maintain them and retro fit them to modern standards is astronomical. It would require serious commitment and resources from governments and owners to see it done. And they won't. It's mostly about function now and the cheapest possible route there. Beyond the huge showpieces nothing is really exempt.
@Theon435
@Theon435 8 күн бұрын
Nucky Thompson would be dissapointed.
@joeg4655
@joeg4655 9 күн бұрын
I was there in 92 and I was in awe the beaches the amount of events all the people…to see what it is now actually broke me in my heart
@kimeiga
@kimeiga 10 күн бұрын
0:47 what's this song it sounds so familiar?
@kimeiga
@kimeiga 10 күн бұрын
Acid jazz by Kevin MacLeod
@msergio0293
@msergio0293 8 күн бұрын
@@kimeiganice
@laccless
@laccless 7 күн бұрын
it is one of the songs in bit city
@Fuxser
@Fuxser 7 күн бұрын
SimCity ?
@TrentAdam
@TrentAdam 6 күн бұрын
Sounds like menu music for a video game or DVD menu
@andreaallsopp7043
@andreaallsopp7043 8 күн бұрын
At the end you have a photo of Battersea Power station, derelict for years, now it's a place of shops cafe and bars on the river Thames, changed the area around it too. Nice video!
@jacksrandomreviews7064
@jacksrandomreviews7064 5 сағат бұрын
I worked at the sands dealing blackjack in the early 80s at that point it appeared that it would be a boom town like the good old days it’s very sad to see what it’s become thank you for doing a update great job
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