Illinois - The US Explained

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That Is Interesting

That Is Interesting

Күн бұрын

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Пікірлер: 488
@ThatIsInterestingTII
@ThatIsInterestingTII Жыл бұрын
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@vopvoopone
@vopvoopone Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the north suburbs of Chicago and it is such a wonderful city. Nothing beats the variety of food, activities, architecture, cleanliness, cost of living… I could go on and on. I moved to Cleveland for school then decided to stay (most underrated city in the country IMO), but Chicago will always have my heart.
@juliadwiggins-jo3fo
@juliadwiggins-jo3fo Жыл бұрын
Yeah all those murders and crack deals are great
@jeremiahmerritt7463
@jeremiahmerritt7463 Жыл бұрын
​@juliadwiggins-jo3fo thats not common
@bpekim1
@bpekim1 Жыл бұрын
@@juliadwiggins-jo3fo Stoopid uneducated comment!
@JakeVanderPloeg
@JakeVanderPloeg Жыл бұрын
@@juliadwiggins-jo3foAh a classic case of someone who’s never been
@ZachJ-0
@ZachJ-0 Жыл бұрын
​@@JakeVanderPloegor just saying something inflammatory baiting a response
@bpekim1
@bpekim1 Жыл бұрын
Long time Chicagoan - really appreciate the conglomeration of all the early history of Illinois and the territories and populations throughout the ages. Enjoy your site!
@Madaboutmada
@Madaboutmada 9 ай бұрын
As a Chicagoan from Uptown, I approve this research. You have done a truly thoughtful piece on my beloved city. 🙂
@FeltNokia
@FeltNokia Жыл бұрын
Excited to see my state finally featured! I really enjoyed this one, and learned a lot that I feel like I should've already known. A few bits: 15:38 "Elgin" is pronounced EL-jin, with a soft G. 18:08 Confusingly, there are actually 5 quad cities. Seriously. On the IL side are Rock Island, Moline, & East Moline, along with Bettendorf & Davenport on the IA side. I was surprised to see you didn't mention the Haymarket Riots & Chicago's role in the American labor movement in your Chicago history section. I feel like the Burnham Plan & its effect on the city we see today also deserved a quick mention. Awesome video!
@christopherarchuleta3669
@christopherarchuleta3669 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, especially for Haymarket.
@jenniferm.9191
@jenniferm.9191 10 ай бұрын
I also thought the Haymarket Riot deserved a mention, but overall the creator (and his brother) did a great job, especially for an out-of-stater. P.S. El-jin with *hard g*
@pocketsnickers
@pocketsnickers 6 ай бұрын
@@jenniferm.9191 really curious what "El-jin with hard g" means
@jenniferm.9191
@jenniferm.9191 6 ай бұрын
@@pocketsnickers "hard g" means the g is pronounced like it is in the word "giraffe", i.e. like a J. Soft g would like pronounced like it is in the word "good."
@ludecom-cz1wz
@ludecom-cz1wz Жыл бұрын
Illinois, where the governor does 2 terms. One in office the other in prison.
@davidaustin535
@davidaustin535 11 ай бұрын
Technically only blagovech finished his term in prison. And I can’t wait for Madigan to finally answer for his 40 years of crimes
@certified-businessgroup6015
@certified-businessgroup6015 Жыл бұрын
WELCOME BACK SIR.. 🎉 I appreciate the time and respect you put into each and every one of these state history videos. We know it takes a lot of time and research. Thank you and blessings to you and your family.
@Ben-jq5oo
@Ben-jq5oo Жыл бұрын
Definitely. I love learning about the US from the channel. Thankyou and greetings from Australia.
@ehartatak
@ehartatak Жыл бұрын
When talking about agriculture, you left out that we're the number one producer of pumpkins by a landslide as well. Great video though! Our state has a lot of problems, but overall it is a great place.
@bathroomstahl
@bathroomstahl 11 ай бұрын
As an Illinois resident, I truly did enjoy the video. Personally, I've lived in Illinois for most of my life, and in three seperate, yet distinct, parts of it: southern, south-central, and north-central. I grew up in southern Illinois, and much of what you said about it was correct. While I understand that its importance in the state is rather low, I sorta wished you had gone into more detail about it lol. I will say, it was a little surprising to not hear Carbondale mentioned once, considering how it is one of the largest cities (if you can call it that lol) in southern Illinois. That, and how much of the coal industry has moved away from the state. While obviously it still is there, much of the southern portions of the state (where I was from at least) are filled with abandoned strip mines that are now filled with water, making extremely deep lakes pocketing the landscape--at least one of which areas was even turned into a state park. Shawnee National Forest is also something deserving of mention I believe. While you did talk about the Garden of the Gods and southern Illinois's rocky landscape, the Shawnee National Forest expands much of southern Illinois has quite a few beautiful locations for hiking and camping. Again, I really did love the video--please do not take my criticisms as the only thing I took away from it. As many have said, it is hard to talk about this state without mentioning the sheer importance of Chicago to it. I just like to see more light shown on lesser known areas of places, as there are so many beautiful places throughout the world and especially the US :)
@SirTrollerDerby
@SirTrollerDerby 11 ай бұрын
One of the mysteries regarding the native people of Illinois is why Cahokia was abandoned, which happened before the arrival of Europeans.
@psychosteve6647
@psychosteve6647 2 ай бұрын
Everyone is mystified by this. Even historians. No one can explain why they just inexplicably "left." Quite strange!
@hankhillsnrrwurethra
@hankhillsnrrwurethra Жыл бұрын
My extended family was divided between the city folk around Chicago and the farm folk west of Peoria. They hated Chicago with a passion. Cardinals and Packers were their teams. All gone now, one cousin left on a farm in an empty county. Rural Illinois is in a hard place.
@jesus_is_mylord777
@jesus_is_mylord777 Жыл бұрын
better than crime filled shit-cago
@pacoramirez7363
@pacoramirez7363 Жыл бұрын
Rural Illinois is where you find all the morons that dream about moving to Y'allquaeda shithole states despite demonstrably worse human development there, hense the population decline. The idiots moving across the river to Methssouri have made by formerly deep red town purple and edging towards blue, so I guess I can't complain too much.
@dan665_
@dan665_ Жыл бұрын
My experience is mainly in the northern rural areas west of Rockford (and I like in the nw burbs) but man I fuckin love it. The rolling hills meeting huge flat areas. Reminds me of Colorado and the rest of the Midwest at the same time. (Glaciers... fuck yeah) Trees and corn everywhere. About a month ago I drove through a swarm of dragonflies somewhere near the Kishwaukee river and it literally brought me to tears. Both because I probably killed hundreds of them with my delivery van but also because it was just fucking jaw dropping and you'd never ever see something like that living in the city.
@TigerOtter86
@TigerOtter86 Жыл бұрын
As a Minnesota man i LOVE Chicago!!!
@jesus_is_mylord777
@jesus_is_mylord777 Жыл бұрын
shit-cago
@maryjones8741
@maryjones8741 Жыл бұрын
We love you back!
@Steveofthejungle8
@Steveofthejungle8 Жыл бұрын
Hoosier by birth that also loves Chicago
@somatia350
@somatia350 Жыл бұрын
Champaign Urbana 😍😍😍
@highlymedicated2438
@highlymedicated2438 Жыл бұрын
Move there
@Tsaki1425
@Tsaki1425 Жыл бұрын
Great job and thanks for your work. I was constantly thinking "he should mention this or that" and then you do mention it. Of course you missed famous people, but you did a great job. I grew up in the Chicago area and was amazed when I moved away and saw the skyline of other major cities and also the small size of other city's museums. Made me appreciate where I grew up even more. Keep up the good work.
@70sHulkFan
@70sHulkFan Жыл бұрын
Great video! I’ve been really looking forward to seeing Illinois, and you certainly delivered.
@murrmen1977
@murrmen1977 Жыл бұрын
It’s interesting, illinois is really a great state that punches above its weight both agriculturally and economically and stands out from the rest of the country. Yet, living here for my whole life, Illinois seems to be the least “stateriotic” state in the country. If you ask someone in Illinois to describe the state they would most likely say something negative right off the bat and I wonder why. The results can be seen in the population decline. Perhaps it is because of the fierce rural vs. urban cultural divide. I grew up in an area close to Iowa, and many people associate themselves with Iowan culture over Illinoisan culture. To them the government of Illinois is a corrupt regime that only cares about the affairs of Chicagoland, leaving the rest of the state (which really needs a lot of help) behind. They don’t feel represented by Illinois so instead they choose to associate themselves with a neighboring states culture that is more relatable to their rural lives. I’m sure that the issue is even more profound in the Deep South of the state. And to Chicagoans, I’m sure the culture of rural Illinois seems backwards, irrelevant, and too conservative so they don’t want to associate themselves with the rest of Illinois. I believe we need a leader to unite these sides of Illinois because we are a dying state and we face many of the same problems, but there is hope. As an industrial and agricultural juggernaut the infrastructure is present to sustain great population and economic growth, I believe we need people to be proud to be an Illinoisan and we need to vouch for the State instead of constantly crap talking it, and a leader that can unite the two cultures would certainly help that.
@aimxdy8680
@aimxdy8680 11 ай бұрын
It’s because of corrupt governors and mayors, Governor after governor getting caught in misallocations of funds, not maintaining roads, shitty road infastructure and so many tolls to still have shitty roads. Moved out naperville, IL for carmel, IN and even indiana has better roads. When you take I-74 from indiana into illinois you can see where road maintenance stops at the Illinois border 🤣
@phobospotato
@phobospotato 11 ай бұрын
the rural culture to most chicagoans/ suburban chicagoans feels like most of the midwest, the city is there to support them.
@GaryLASQ
@GaryLASQ Жыл бұрын
When trying to figure out why the state is losing residents, take a look at property taxes.
@Honest_Abe1
@Honest_Abe1 Жыл бұрын
Every Illinois resident flocking to this video right now
@MikeyLikesIt89
@MikeyLikesIt89 Жыл бұрын
😁
@jakeellman7447
@jakeellman7447 Жыл бұрын
Working from home is not the cause for the population decline in the state. Its the taxes!!! We’re one of the highest taxed states in the country
@bford71
@bford71 Жыл бұрын
Born and raised in Rockford! Great video - great to see pics of my hometown and Chicago.
@cubmutt33
@cubmutt33 11 ай бұрын
I've lived in Central Illinois my entire life, and when people only know our state for Chicago, it's gets pretty annoying. We have so much history, but it all goes to Chicago and not places like Peoria, Kankakee, Chillicothe, Decatur, etc
@barbarasteigerwaldcerceo2288
@barbarasteigerwaldcerceo2288 2 ай бұрын
Very thorough and well done. Thankyou and thanks to Quinn as well.
@pascalfriedmann1479
@pascalfriedmann1479 Жыл бұрын
No place is home for me like Charleston/Chucktown, so I'm incredibly excited for this episode!
@marthaloven9385
@marthaloven9385 11 ай бұрын
You did miss a few people that I know have lived in Illinois on your list. Abraham Lincoln, but you mentioned him elsewhere, so I'll forgive it. Also, Dick Van Dyke who grew up in Danville, IL.
@csedits12
@csedits12 3 ай бұрын
I live in the north suburbs of Chicago and the area is very beautiful. Love chi town
@DPF61008OConnor
@DPF61008OConnor Жыл бұрын
Lived in Illinois all of my 15 years on Earth and I gotta admit I adore my state, live in the far western part of Chicagoland and Chicago has always been my favorite city on the North American continent. I love the diversity, the culture, the nightlife, the food, the attractions, the entertainment, and of course, the skyline. Chicago has some amazing history from the Chicago fire to immediately becoming a transportation hub to the invention of the skyscraper and even had the tallest building in the world from 1973-1998 to becoming an alpha world class megacity to becoming one of the richest cities in the world. I am easily impressed with all the accomplishments Chicago has made over the years. Now obviously Illinois does have its problems such as corruption, the insane taxes, and the crime which does get overexaggerated by the media. Chicago isn't even in the top 30 in the US and theres actually much more dangerous cities in Illinois than Chicago like East St. Louis for an example. You just gotta do accurate research and have common sense when you visit Chicago and you're all good. Ive never seen violence or heard gunshots once in Chicago. But we have Naperville, which has been ranked constantly as one of the best and safest places to live in Illinois and the country. Not only to mention, but we have a $1T GDP. Theres so much to love about the Prairie State. Would i say is it the best state in the US, no, but its definitely on the podium. At the end of the day, I love Illinois and i appreciate spending my childhood here. One tiny mistake you made: you said Chicago has a metro population of "8.67 million people" its actually 10.04 million people.
@acajudi100
@acajudi100 10 ай бұрын
Hola from Queretaro. I live in Corregidora, and order groceries online for home delivery. Happy I relocated to Queretaro in 2021 at 79. You still must be ALERT, wherever you move. I have been coming to MEXICO for over 61 years, and all 50 states of the USA, and foreign travel on my own dime. Love all your videos, and thank you so much.
@kevinmichael2538
@kevinmichael2538 Жыл бұрын
Cool this explanation of this geography of American cities
@sethh9158
@sethh9158 Жыл бұрын
i liked it man. been in this state all my life. im a coal miner too love the coal talk
@tommymaxey2665
@tommymaxey2665 2 ай бұрын
Very interesting video. As someone who has lived in Illinois my entire life you did a good job. You actually mentioned a city in Illinois outside of Chicago. I'm surprised you got Cairo pronunciation right, although we still need to work on Elgin. Overall though you did your research and came to the same conclusion most people in Illinois have. The state is pretty good compared to the rest of the union. Chicago is a good city. Does it have its homelessness, drugs, and violence yes but so does every other city. The city does a good job of working on it and keeping it away from the main downtown area. And it's affordable compared to west and east coast cities. Lots of parks for people to get outside. Actually in Ferris Beauler day off you can see what Millennium park & Grant park were in the 80s. Kinda a mess of rail lines and dump. So what does Chicago do best? Use that dump as an infrastructure and build stuff on top of it. Some things you missed on Chicago though. They may of changed it but last i knew all the Willis family did was buy all the rooms in the Sears tower, not the actually building it self(i could 100% be wrong about this) so technically calling it the Sears tower is still correct. Also you'll get lots of funny looks if you call it the Willis tower. 42:54 The Great Chicago fire started in a barn by.... Mrs.O'Learys cow, come on every one knows that one. The history you covered was good. More than what most knew. I'm surprised you added the fact of the french first fort bring at Starv Rock. That's why the town and county name for the area is La Salle-Peru. But yeah, Illinois town names are funny. We have a Normal town, Sandwich, Ottawa, Peru, and Cairo. I think you could of have also included a list of parks and forrest preserves. Starv Rock, Matthiessen, and Rock Cut are favorites of mine to hike at. And i don't think you gave Galena and the North West portion of the state enough credit. The ride out to Dubuque on 20 is breath taking once you get past Rockford(for good reason Rockford sucks). Jo Daviess and Stephenson county have some extreme hills. Galena is also a nice town. Grant lived there for a portion of his life and you can still vist his house. The last weekend of April they do a Grant Pilgrimage mainly for Boy Scouts but the town has a parade and civil war reenactments. It's a busy time for a small town. Also, there are so many steps. They have one star case that is about 120 or so steps. You got the style of Illinois down. Honestly south of I-80 you start getting grits for breakfast and at thay point you are pretty much in the south. And unless you live in chicago you hate chicago. The state captiol may be in Springfield but everything that matters happens in Chicago. Even with all the chicago sports team most people in the state go for teams in other states Something you missed or were wrong. Even though Illinois is called the Prarie state less than 1% of thd state was prarie(i want to say even before Europeans arrived).That political map at 8:38 shows Dekalb county as being blue, thats wrong Dekalb is as red as a ruby. You also didn't include how Chicago got its name. I believe it was the Miami or Alquongin tribe who called that area "smelly swamp" and we took their name for it and got Chicago out of it. 10:59 That's because Gary. IN suffered from all of that industry collapse. Also Illinois has one of the few rivers that flow from south to north, the Kishwaukee. 15:28 Yep been there, nothing else around Scales Mound. 16:42 Yep that's a big one. Mainly because of people from Naperville, ifykyk. 17:29 Also Rockford does not have 276,000 people in the city or even in the surrounding area. I haven't seen posting for the census but it is maybe 150,000 for the city. Not sure for the srounding area but maybe 225,000. Rockford has lost a lot of population. All the manufacturing jobs have slowly been shipped overseas or relocated to other states. There's still a small presence with Woodward, Collins Aerospace, and ingersol machine tools/ cutting tools(two different companies, but they do similar stuff). This is a shame because at one point in our history, every single screw made in america was made in Rockford. 18:13 Yep also have the Rock Island Armory there. There is a whole lotta guns there for the national guard and army. 19:02 Heh guys its a Normal town and there a Normal McDonalds in it. And then theres Sandwich. And a few miles to the east is a town called Plano. And there was a plan to make a town in between them called Balogna so then it would go Plano Balgnoa Sandwich(peak midwestern humor). Another cool native site(even though it was made by white guys in the early 1900s) is the Cheif Balckhawk statue in Oregon(Not pronounced like the state or game. Its orr-ig-on not orr-ig-ghen). It overlooks the Rock river, also called the Sinnissppi by the natives. You could go up and look through his eyes but the statue is pretty old and they don't do that anymore. Still a very cool mounument. 34:18 Oh yeah thay was a big thing when i went to elementary school. The focus on John Deere and Mccormick were pushed heavily. I guess when your teacher grew up on a farm, she wanted you to know the good stuff. 35:38 yep good ole Joseph Smith. We covered this in my APUSH class, and it was kinda crazy to read about. 39:01 Those Lincoln v Douglas debates were a pretty big deal back then and even now when you learn about the Civil War. The cities that held them are proud that they had them. 40:46 Oh yeah Chicago is know for the slaughter houses and stockyards. Upton Sinclair wrote about in The Jungle. He was true about it all, just put whatever we have in the hopper and have it all be turn to chuck or sausage. 44:03 Oh yeah thats a funny one. We reversed the flow of a river, sent all our shit down to New Orleans, New Orleans got pissed and sue, but Chicago had better lawyers and won. 45:57 Yeah that's a fun fact. UChicago helped to make the bomb and we started experimenting with it in the middle of a hevaily populated city. Thankfully we went "hey maybe we shouldn't do this in a city and should go out to the middle of nowhere, New Mexico.". 49:58 He also had his one project, Falling Water, built in Rockford. 50:16 St.Regis and Aqua were designed by the same women Jeanne Gang. She's from Belvidere, IL which is about 80 miles from Chicago. They renamed part of Bus 20 for her father Jim Gang. Pretty big deal for someone from Belvidere, not a whole lot comes from Belvidere besides some Jeeps. But even now Stelantis is trying to get rid of the Chrysler plant there even though its one of the most "modern" car plants in the US(modern for a car factory is built after the 1950s). 53:50 I didnt know the Bean "official" name till i was about 16, still never use it. 54:14 You missed the Museum of Science and Industry! Its the only building left from the 1893 worlds fair. It has a bunch of real space craft and suits in there, most of a 727, a Messerschmitt Bf 109, Spitfire, Train Engine, Teslas coils, baby chicks, and the U-505 that we captured during WW2. For a while the navy used it in training exercise, then they gave it to chicago and they had it sitting outside the museam for a couple years. Then they finally decided hey we should probably move this thing indoors. So they dug a hole in front of the museum, slowly moved the sub acorss Lake Shore Dr, put the sub on jenga blocks, and slowly lowered it into the hole. It barely fits in there but its cool to tour. Its my personal favorite museum in Chicago. 56:28 The only restaurant to get deep dish from is Lou Malnati. Also, I genuinely didn't know pot belly was an illinois chain. I never have gone there and probably won't. Also another Illinois fast food chain is Beef-a-roo. A pretty good american style restaurant from Rockford. 59:27 You could of also talked about the Baha'i teample in Evanston too. Its a massive temple on the lake. 1:00:35 Yep Boeing is in Illinois not Washington. And we just say BeeMO for the BMO bank. 1:01:00 Also Rockford is #13 for cargo. It has the 2nd largest UPS sorting facility. #1 is in Louisville, KY. So its pretty important when it comes to air cargo and getting packages moved. Rockford is good for that. Close enough to chicago to drive it over, but far enough away to not deal with all the other traffic on the road and in the sky. 1:02:54 New Salem is really cool historic site, definitely a good visit if you go to Springfield. 1:03:23 He's mainly know to have lived in Dixon. All over the high school are stuff about him. He was also a lifegaurd on the Rock River when he was younger. Also i thought he moved to California to start his acting career? I think that's everyhting. Very good video its fun to see what people from an outside perspective see the state i live in
@MikeyLikesIt89
@MikeyLikesIt89 Жыл бұрын
I live in the suburbs now but i will forever be from chicago, I was born and raised in the city. I have a CPS high school diploma. Where ever I go I will always state that I am from chicago.
@rowerewolf
@rowerewolf 11 ай бұрын
On Illinois politics, it should be said that the state is one of the most gerrymandered in the nation.
@leviwortman6632
@leviwortman6632 11 ай бұрын
the map in the video from the Nations Online Project has the towns of Vandalia and Effingham switched.
@akaviral5476
@akaviral5476 Жыл бұрын
I would recommend if you do more in person showcases to get B-Roll footage of what you are describing rather than turn towards it and lose that audio. Making the camera person turn to those hastily is janky. Love the video!
@dinibo
@dinibo Жыл бұрын
The camera work was pretty jarring. A slow pan or cut to the images would be much easier to watch for sure.
@VenomMTG
@VenomMTG 10 ай бұрын
I've lived in Illinois my entire life. It has its problems. But it really has been nice living here. I am in Central Illinois. It is very nice being in the middle of many of the countries population centers. I have many options for concerts and amenities if my city doesn't have them. I would encourage you to visit Peoria, Bloomington-Normal (BloNo), and Champaign-Urbana. They are all very different from Chicago and have charms of their own. I also noticed that you did a good job mentioning southern Illinois, but focused on Chicago for most of the video (This felt mostly a video about Chicago that mentions some other parts of Illinois.). Remember Chicago does represent a massive portion of the population, but we are down here too! I once had an Uber driver in Chicago ask me where I am from, I said "Central Illinois", and he goes oh yeah the Springfield - Bloomington area. I just went with it. Bloomington-Normal is 2 hours south of Chicago and Springfield an additional hour south. It really made it clear to me just how Chicagoans view anything outside of Chicago vs inside Chicago. Chicago is overall a very safe city to visit. I go there multiple times a year and have never felt in danger more than any normal person would in any US city. Thanks for all the research you put into this video overall. I quite enjoyed it! Maybe focus on smaller towns for another video? Small tidbit: The State Farm building picture you showed was the original headquarters. No longer owned by them in downtown Bloomington. They now have Corporate and Corporate South both located in Bloomington still.
@DavidScarpaci
@DavidScarpaci Жыл бұрын
thanks! very informative, thorough and accurate!
@ilahildasissac1943
@ilahildasissac1943 Жыл бұрын
Life long Chicagoan, I get tired of it at times.But living learning new things .
@AquaStockYT
@AquaStockYT 3 ай бұрын
46:23 we've actually a family story of this since we're actually related to the late Mayor.
@rogangalaway6377
@rogangalaway6377 Жыл бұрын
How you got a playlist about the Great Lakes and no video on Michigan it high key can’t even have that name
@trey5747
@trey5747 Жыл бұрын
I was born in Chicago, Illinois!!
@onenightstan3635
@onenightstan3635 Жыл бұрын
Well done sir
@tommymaxey2665
@tommymaxey2665 2 ай бұрын
15:38 Did he just say Elgin as "Elgan"? Man I swear I will go about my life thinking there's no way someone would mispronounced a town name, and now here I am. First time was when I overheard a random person say Capron as "Caporen". I wanted to rethink everything with my life at that point
@psychosteve6647
@psychosteve6647 2 ай бұрын
Absolutely great geographical representation! I really appreciate the political and social divide. I live 29 miles from Cairo and anyone of Southern Illinois can agree that we feel "helpless" against the viewpoint of Chicago. Thank you for your production.
@psychosteve6647
@psychosteve6647 2 ай бұрын
Great historical value too!
@PriceCheckMeBro
@PriceCheckMeBro Жыл бұрын
Hello from Elgin,illinois
@jesus_is_mylord777
@jesus_is_mylord777 Жыл бұрын
how's the rising crime?
@juanrojas2595
@juanrojas2595 Жыл бұрын
​@@jesus_is_mylord777really dude?
@jesus_is_mylord777
@jesus_is_mylord777 Жыл бұрын
@@juanrojas2595 i mean I been there visited several times, is true
@PriceCheckMeBro
@PriceCheckMeBro Жыл бұрын
Lol, crime seems the same in Elgin
@virginiansupremacy
@virginiansupremacy Жыл бұрын
@@jesus_is_mylord777 youre from arkansas bro
@STREFT7
@STREFT7 Жыл бұрын
WONDERFUL
@albieh2563
@albieh2563 Жыл бұрын
You do an amazing job. I can't imagine the amount of time it takes you to do all the research. Your videos would be the best on You Tube if you would slow down "just a little bit" and enunciate. I realize that you are trying to be concise, but some of your wonderful writing is missed. I will continue to enjoy your fantastic video content.
@ShummaAwilum
@ShummaAwilum 4 ай бұрын
Quick note, Reagan's birthplace, "Tampico" is pronounced "TAM-pi-co" with a short "i" as in "hit".
@Fireball_
@Fireball_ Жыл бұрын
Metropolis was built to be a 2nd Washington dc
@Neosoul_prima
@Neosoul_prima 8 ай бұрын
I'll always be proud to be from the south side of Chicago, Illinois is beautiful!!!
@jessicabell5372
@jessicabell5372 3 ай бұрын
as a true Chicagoan (not the burbs) there is absolutely ways to remain safe in a city, so long as you know how. and if you do, you can enjoy so many things that small town living just cannot provide plus northern Illinoisians also hate the state politics
@awesometon
@awesometon 11 ай бұрын
Fun fact, the treaty of paris that ended the 7 year war in 1763 was actually the 13th of the 31 treaties of paris that have been made throughout history.
@jacksnyder-tj3mt
@jacksnyder-tj3mt 11 ай бұрын
The bridge that you used for the quad cities aren’t in use anymore and they’re in the process of being demolished now
@jacobkonkel6793
@jacobkonkel6793 Жыл бұрын
No way! You included a photo of downtown Columbia, IL! That's where I live.
@J-ge7qe
@J-ge7qe 2 ай бұрын
Born and raised in Cook county. After 60 years l got out. Illinois sux. Property taxes, gas taxes, pension taxes, and everything else is the worst. Down state pay the same amount for property taxes. Never going back.
@Stache987
@Stache987 9 ай бұрын
If the Des Moines River is the border between Missouri and Iowa, Des Moines is at the state line, it's courthouse is across the state line, many signs and maps would be wrong, I'd hate to owe taxes to Missouri this late in the game, and just now find out. You are the second KZbinr that has spoke those same words I wish your source could be notified. Otherwise good book report.
@ShaqElliot
@ShaqElliot Жыл бұрын
Nice to see you are doing good in Illnois, but the Keystone State awaits your return.
@Aaron-sk4jy
@Aaron-sk4jy 11 ай бұрын
I love hiking in starved rock
@stewlittle13
@stewlittle13 Жыл бұрын
Love this video, can you do Michigan next?
@zach2382
@zach2382 Жыл бұрын
He’s doing them in order of a mission to the union
@garvinbenjamin7124
@garvinbenjamin7124 7 ай бұрын
Do one about Trinidad and Tobago
@leeatterberry1239
@leeatterberry1239 Ай бұрын
Another interesting fact about Illinois is you get more time in prison for a speeding ticket then you do murder
@garvinbenjamin7124
@garvinbenjamin7124 7 ай бұрын
Real Talk
@anagonyaowusu3119
@anagonyaowusu3119 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, but I don’t really support the narrative (as is so common with Americans) have negative expectations from the get go. This project was over-budget and over due, but now that we have it ridership and it’s extension only improves over time, but let’s be honest, Hawaii’s isolation and Covid-19 did not help. So I cant personally fathom recognizing the rails issues then going out of ones way to pray for it’s down fall (not to mention asking for more American style car centric oriented development around it, no, parking spaces for cars are apart of Americas problem with public transit to begin with?)
@michaelstovall23
@michaelstovall23 11 ай бұрын
Kentucky is definitely in the Midwest.
@jamesgilpatric264
@jamesgilpatric264 Жыл бұрын
Bishop Fulton Sheen is another famous Illinoian
@urbanasupernova562
@urbanasupernova562 Жыл бұрын
One of the most culturally important states in the entire country.
@DMBVR4
@DMBVR4 10 ай бұрын
I was super excited that this was an hour episode about my state, until i realized 45 minutes of it was specifically about Chicago. Would've been much more appropriate to make Chicago a seperate episode while putting more effort into the other metro areas.
@drewseth_is_h
@drewseth_is_h 3 ай бұрын
LGIN???? man you did us dirty
@puddleofbooks
@puddleofbooks 11 ай бұрын
You are calling many stand alone citys suburbs of chicago.... I'm from joliet and i even checked i can't find anything saying its a suburb of chicago or even a suburb at all
@Paul71H
@Paul71H 10 ай бұрын
I think that people who study geography and who classify metropolitan areas might include cities like Joliet, Aurora, and Elgin as Chicago suburbs, but many residents of those cities don't think of themselves as living in a suburb of Chicago, as I understand it. Historically, those cities were separate from Chicago and the suburbs, but urbanization has spread to the point where a visitor could be forgiven for thinking that those cities do in fact appear to be Chicago suburbs. I think of those cities as suburbs, or maybe more appropriately exurbs, of Chicago, but I know that many people don't. Bottom line: It's a touchy subject! 🙂
@puddleofbooks
@puddleofbooks 10 ай бұрын
@@Paul71H if we are we are, and i can see the idea of exburbs, i was just wondering if there was something stating we were
@Paul71H
@Paul71H 10 ай бұрын
@@puddleofbooksI doubt that there's really any "official" designation one way or the other. If I look at a map, the cities that I mentioned look like suburbs/exurbs of Chicago, but that doesn't take into account the unique history of each of those cities, and that's important too.
@iknownothinguknow
@iknownothinguknow 11 ай бұрын
Us cheese heads laugh at FIBs when they say Lake Gevena is the "Up North".
@Paul71H
@Paul71H 10 ай бұрын
In my opinion, you should really change it to FCBs, since most of the "IB"s you're complaining about are from Chicagoland. 🙂 Illinoisans from the southern half of the state rarely visit Wisconsin anyway.
@iknownothinguknow
@iknownothinguknow 10 ай бұрын
@@Paul71H true ive been in southern IL and loved it. South of Champaign and near effingham great views.
@Rryki
@Rryki Жыл бұрын
Big W
@GrantLeeEdwards
@GrantLeeEdwards Жыл бұрын
69th here & i’m gay Shy Town Big Town
@Frankenspank67
@Frankenspank67 Жыл бұрын
Getting late in the video and i still havnt heard about Chester IL and Popeye the Sailor Man. Please dont tell me you missed it.
@jeepmega629
@jeepmega629 Жыл бұрын
I didn’t realize how beautiful Chicago was before, this video really opened my eyes!
@cbjm36
@cbjm36 Жыл бұрын
I’m from Columbus, but a lot of my friends from college have moved to Chicago since graduating, whether they were already from there or from elsewhere. Needless to say I am very jealous of them as Chicago seems like an amazing city for young people
@beasley1232
@beasley1232 Жыл бұрын
Yeah Chicago has a very young population
@UserName-ts3sp
@UserName-ts3sp Жыл бұрын
im from columbus as well and it’s where i want to move after college
@lilkuhn-fortnite1297
@lilkuhn-fortnite1297 11 ай бұрын
dont let the media fool you it is a top 10 city in the world especially during the warm days!
@DaLatinKnight
@DaLatinKnight 3 ай бұрын
Now if we could only retain older people and working class people in the south.
@justamaninTN
@justamaninTN Жыл бұрын
Illinois certainly has its problems and downsides, but you cannot deny its place as one of the most influential and accomplished states in the country! I was born in Aurora, IL. Only lived there 3 years total, but I go back to Chicagoland all the time. The history of Chicago is absolutely fascinating. Like many great cities of the world such as Rome or London, it came from the humblest of beginnings. A festering swamp in the most sparsely populated area in the country to the national rail hub of the US to a global economic power teeming with skyscrapers, art and some of the finest universities in the world. How many cities do you know that have raised the city up a story, reversed the flow of a river or rose like a phoenix out of one of the most devastating fires in history? It’s only Chicago. Chicago is excellence and innovation personified! And what’s hilarious is I find most Illinoisans I know to be a self-deprecating folk, but they have to always be thinking they have something very special in Illinois. Illinois and Chicago in particular are under a lot of scrutiny by the media and people of the US outside of Illinois, but if you just go to downtown Chicago in June and experience it for yourself, I don’t see how you don’t just fall in love with that city. You may be able to tell, I really like Illinois! Illinois rocks!
@baileescott401
@baileescott401 11 ай бұрын
Your description of why Illinois is so good only includes seeing Chicago, and the Chicagoan achievements.... Where I live, we all hate our state. We feel like everyone pays attention to Chicago while forgetting about the people who live in the rest of the state. Hospitals are closing, schools are underfunded, essential services are breaking down. The median income for Illinois is floated pretty high by Chicago. If you take a look at the state while excluding Chicago, we're in a very very sad position. I'm a Democrat and all for taxes, but a lot of our state taxes go toward funding Chicago, the rural areas of Illinois see little to no benefit from state taxes because they're funneled into Chicagoan programs. In my small town of less than 10k people, our elementary schools are legally owed 10's of thousands of dollars by the state. Illinois doesn't pay it's schools or hospitals like they're legally supposed to, the taxes are commonly misappropriated for Chicago. The "Education Budget" turns into "Chicago Education". From a Democratic Rural perspective, Illinois is sucking us dry while propping up a failing city. I've lived 2hrs from Chicago my whole life, and I've only been there twice, because I cannot barely afford to stay alive.
@aimxdy8680
@aimxdy8680 11 ай бұрын
⁠@@baileescott401Moved out Naperville IL and Into Carmel, IN. Illinois has very bad roads outside of chicago and bloomington. It’s funny taking I-74 into danville, IL because that’s where road maintenance stops 🤣
@aimxdy8680
@aimxdy8680 11 ай бұрын
@@baileescott401and Chicago I-94 on the southside is garbage and full of potholes, they haven’t even bothered to fix the southside I-94 since I lived there in the 2000s, I still occasionally take I-65 into chicago and I-94 southside is still a shitty road.
@aimxdy8680
@aimxdy8680 11 ай бұрын
@@baileescott401Also, the governor of Illinois got caught in Misallocations of funds which explains why roads are so bad, It’s a corrupt state
@JR-playlists
@JR-playlists 11 ай бұрын
Garden of the Gods and the Shawnee National Forest. Many good fishing lakes and rivers. Many beautiful State Parks like Starved Rock, Jim Edgar Panther Creek and Rock Cut. Great Mushroom hunting, farmers markets and many Breweries. It's state government doesn't impose religious beliefs of a few fanatics on the entire populace. Individual civil rights, equality and American history ALL OF IT is protected and Cannabis is legal in Illinois.
@dinibo
@dinibo Жыл бұрын
I've lived in central Illinois my entire life but have been lucky enough to travel the country extensively and still feel for your money it is the most balanced and perfect state. Yes, down state whines about Chicago but deep down we know we are extremely lucky to have her and her $. We are lucky to be just a couple of hours from St. Louis, Indianapolis and Chicago so we can enjoy rural life or city life whenever we like. The state is perfect for raising a family and overall very safe. I have visited Chicago hundreds of times and never once felt in danger. Don't go looking for trouble and you won't find it.
@urbanasupernova562
@urbanasupernova562 Жыл бұрын
Well said 👏
@mickeygallz5483
@mickeygallz5483 Жыл бұрын
Spent my first 22 years of life there and have to say it is truly as you described. Now that I've spent 8 years away I can see it's true balance
@PrairieKass
@PrairieKass Жыл бұрын
I love Peoria
@frojo9
@frojo9 Жыл бұрын
This 1000 times: I lived in Atlanta for 7 years because it was the hip and trendy thing to do but the quality of life just isn't the same as Illinois. I moved back and felt my time in Georgia was a learning experience that went on too long. From living in Chicago or going to the state fair every year in Springfield, to taking the Amtrak to explore different parts of the state I feel like Illinois is a very underrated state with terrible PR. It has its many problems but so do other states; the others are just better at covering them up with glitzy cover stories.
@robertwilliams4682
@robertwilliams4682 Жыл бұрын
love central Illinois - from a Californian living in Chicago (now an Illinoisan, I suppose)
@Steveofthejungle8
@Steveofthejungle8 Жыл бұрын
Chicago is hands down my favorite city in the country. Such a cool city that manages to still be Midwestern at its core. Chicago in the summer is the best city in the world
@venomlink2033
@venomlink2033 Жыл бұрын
Having lived here all my life, I personally disagree. But I’m glad someone else likes it
@hamburglar83
@hamburglar83 Жыл бұрын
@@venomlink2033, but you don’t live here. You live in the wasteland that is indiana. You are a troll who hates his life. I lived in Hawaii, Kansas, Chicago and a couple places but for short times for work. Chicago is dope. With its rough edges (I admit). Hawaii was obviously better because it’s freaking paradise. But $3k just for a studio and having to make new friends every 3 years lost it for me. It’s all relative.
@adurpandya2742
@adurpandya2742 Жыл бұрын
@@hamburglar83you could have been less insulting
@MikeyLikesIt89
@MikeyLikesIt89 Жыл бұрын
Yes summer time Chi ain’t no where in the world that compares. You can literally feel the energy. If you never lived here you won’t understand.
@MightBeAPizza
@MightBeAPizza Жыл бұрын
I wish I could agree with Chicago summers being the best but I can't at the moment. I moved here about two months ago and it's been rain, wildfire smoke, and tornados lol
@scygnius
@scygnius Жыл бұрын
Illinoisans hold the title for the most state-hating people in the country. It's an incredibly rare thing to hear an Illinoisan say "it's pretty good here, actually!" Our self-loathing has got to be the #1 reason we've lost so many people. It's seen as cool to "escape Illinois," frequently moving west to states like Colorado. Often joking that the Brewers' stadium is "Wrigley North," I now add that the Rockies' stadium is "Wrigley West." I was amazed to discover that Denver has a Lou Malnati's, to support the massive Illinois exodus. (Every single person I know who's left the state says the same thing to me: "I miss the pizza.") As a lifelong Illinoisan who's had the blessing of seeing a lot of the country, I've began to realize how privileged we are for our state-hate. I shudder at the housing prices in America's currently "hot" markets. I couldn't imagine living in the South (Illinois summers are humid enough). Illinois truthfully is not a bad place. You can do a lot worse choosing a state to live in. My personal take is that much of the Illinois hate comes from a sentiment, deep down in our hearts, of knowing how good Illinois *could* be. Whether it be national decisions like the Jones Act or state politicians kicking our state while it's down, it is largely a case of self-destruction. Politicians here run on platforms of "I'll give you candy now so you'll get cavities later," putting us in a politician-induced death spiral. Despite the fact that the "Rust Belt" moniker is running out of style and manufacturing continues to re-grow, most Illinoisans still have this sentiment that we're in a state of decline; in large enough consensus, this becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. I have strong faith that Illinois will rebound. With plenty of cheap land, a diverse economy, climate change affecting other parts of the country, and our state's geographic importance as the shipping, transport, and agricultural hub of the nation, it's only a matter of time before Illinois becomes a desirable place to live again. Great video! I couldn't have described my home state any better.
@wolveslair766
@wolveslair766 Жыл бұрын
Grew up in Chicago Lived in outlying burbs 2 blocks from Chicago and I'm close to 70 It's the politics That's why people are leaving Former Dem here of 45 years They have lost their minds Many people I know say "Can't fight them might as well leave" This is my state My home they are destroying Hope I live long enough to see it go back to the way it was 😊
@FlashTriggr
@FlashTriggr Жыл бұрын
As a southern illinoisan who has spent a good amount of time in Chicago, it’s hard to diminish the importance of Chicago on the state, yet it is endlessly annoying to be treated as “the rest of illinois”. You did a fantastic job highlighting all aspects of Illinois in a balanced manner and I wish more people would explore more corners of the state. You nailed it when you talked about the diversity of the state, it’s really staggering and I don’t thing Chicago natives like to acknowledge it like they should.
@Paul71H
@Paul71H 10 ай бұрын
In my experience, many Chicagoans have little awareness of southern Illinois or even central Illinois. I once told a Chicagoan that I was from southern Illinois, and he asked if I meant Joliet.🙂 I've also heard a Chicagoan say that it's hard to imagine Illinois extending further south than Mattoon. (Credit to him for at least being aware of Mattoon though!)
@renegadetenor
@renegadetenor 9 ай бұрын
I lived half my life in Chicagoland. As I grew up and matured, I learned to hate cities generally, and regret never having learned much about the rest of my state. You're right; none of us city folk know a damn thing about real Illinois. Of course city folk don't know a damn thing about anything anyway..
@deangraves7462
@deangraves7462 8 ай бұрын
As a Chicago native, the treatment of the "rest of Illinois" is not an intentional thing. After all Chicagoans, provides most of the State's revenue and our property taxes subsidize a lot of spending in Central and South Illinois. The truth is the divide is purely political. It is easy to say it is Chicago fault when the local politician fails to deliver for his constituents while fundraising in the Chicago market. There is a reason that splitting Illinois is forgotten after every election. If they did that Chicago would be one of the richest states in the Union, while greater Illinois would emerge one of the poorest.
@Paul71H
@Paul71H 8 ай бұрын
@@deangraves7462The idea that central/southern Illinois is benefiting from Chicago taxes is something that I think many residents of central and southern Illinois would be surprised to hear (and I'm skeptical as to how much it's true). I grew up in southern Illinois and still have relatives there. Over the past 20 years or so, I have seen a significant degradation in basic road maintenance, extended closures of interstate highway rest areas, and a failure of Illinois state employee medical coverage to pay bills in a timely manner. And all of this has happened while the state income tax increased from 3% to 5%. Federal Covid stimulus money may have led to some improvements, but my perception is that southern Illinois residents (and probably all Illinois residents) are paying higher taxes and getting less for those taxes. I think a substantial number of Illinoisans from the southern and central part of the state would be OK with splitting off from Chicago, with the south/central part of the state becoming more like Indiana, politically and economically. But the process of splitting a state is so difficult that I don't think it will happen, and I don't know of anyone who is seriously pushing for it (mainly because it's probably not achievable). But having said that, I'm not anti-Chicago. I have family in Chicago too, and I love visiting Chicago. The many cultures that have combined in that one city have resulted in some of the greatest food and greatest music of any city anywhere, and there are lots of interesting things to see and do.
@timothykeith1367
@timothykeith1367 3 ай бұрын
​​@@deangraves7462Your property taxes are 100 percent local. Your property taxes do not go to other parts of Illinois. The city of Chicago is in debted $43,000 per capita - that's why Cook County property taxes are high. Here in Texas the state debt in Austin is only $1,500 per capita, but local Texas government is indebted $15,500 per capita. Texas property taxes are high - to avoid the debt burden that Illinois has acquired. It can be difficult to find a low property tax County in Texas - the TX counties that I can find lack any towns greater than 2,000 population. There are very low property tax counties in far southern Illinois - some of the lowest in the U.S. Pulaski County, Illinois has very low property taxes. If initially only Cook County was a separate state, and the new Illinois was low tax, it could soon look like Tennesee. Chicago business would move to suburbs. It would be very bad for Chicago over the long term.
@CortexNewsService
@CortexNewsService Жыл бұрын
It was pretty well done and balanced. Nice job. You did forget a few famous people from Illinois, but there's so many that I'm really not gonna hold that against you. I'm Indiana-born, but moved to Illinois in 1997. It is my home now. Lived for 23 years in Chicago, LOVED the city. It's big, loud, beautiful, violent, vibrant, world class, arrogant and diverse. Part of the reason I loved living there for so long. I loved being able to hear five different languages (English, Spanish, Russian, Vietnamese and Hindi) just walking to the corner store. The only reason I did leave was because of a major personal loss. As much as I love the city, it held too many memories and wasn't home anymore. I do still visit though. I'm in Central Illinois and have fallen in love with it too. The culture is very different, more similar to what I grew up with in Indiana, but still surprisingly welcoming and dynamic. It's great that the different areas of the state are so different. Illinois does have a lot of problems. Trust me, we are VERY aware of them. But it's home. I honestly wouldn't change that for the world.
@pauldavis1943
@pauldavis1943 Жыл бұрын
Needed 1/2 hour on STYX! ;-)
@aimxdy8680
@aimxdy8680 11 ай бұрын
I moved out Naperville, Illinois for Carmel, Indiana. Illinois is corrupt, governors getting caught in misallocations of funds and shitty roads. It’s funny taking I-74 in Illinois because that’s where road maintenance stops
@Sudique1
@Sudique1 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video. I'm an Army brat and grew up in Washington, D.C., by way of other places. My ex and I visited to Chicago to check out the University of Chicago, where he had been accepted in the MBA program. We flew into Midway Airport. After the plane taxied to the gate, we walked down the jetway. When my feet hit the ground, I looked around, turned to my ex and said, "This is the place". That was in 1978 and I've been here ever since. My family and college friends think I'm nuts, but I love the mid-west, and I love Chicago. From here I've been able to visit the beautiful eastern shore of Minnesota, the Apostle Islands in Northern Wisconsin. In fact, I've been able to see much of what the rest of the country considers 'fly-over' country. Illinois and Chicago do have serious problems but, I would rather live here than any other state EXCEPT Montana and Wyoming. Can't move cuz I'm too old now! Thanks, again.
@AFNick
@AFNick Жыл бұрын
Chicago is my second favorite American big city (San Diego #1). Great architecture, lots to do, good food, and friendly people. I would live there if it was not so cold 🥶 in the winter.
@Antonio_Serdar
@Antonio_Serdar Жыл бұрын
Chicago is a hell hole. Watch out for the "locals".
@Earth1218
@Earth1218 6 ай бұрын
@@Antonio_Serdarding, ding, ding! We found the “hell hole” troll !! There’s always a few lurking in the woodpile. 🙄
@Antonio_Serdar
@Antonio_Serdar 6 ай бұрын
@@Earth1218 Not trolling. Chicago is genuinely the worst place I have visited after Detroit. I haven't been to San Francisco though
@Earth1218
@Earth1218 6 ай бұрын
@@Antonio_Serdar Yeah, no. I’m thinking it’s more political than anything else. “Hell hole” and “Locals” were the giveaways.
@Antonio_Serdar
@Antonio_Serdar 6 ай бұрын
@@Earth1218 Nah, I have been to Boston which is pretty liberal as well and didn't have issues. But Chicago is really, really bad.
@rafaelbarrera2612
@rafaelbarrera2612 Жыл бұрын
Wow, as a former tour guide atop Chicago’s double decker buses, that was a lot of details on Illinois, if this was a college project I’d give you an A+. From southern Illinois with its beautiful views of Shawnee National Forest , historic Springfield with its Abraham Lincoln sites, Cahokia Mounds (ancient pyramid like structures), charming Galena in the northwest to Chicago. Illinois has an abundance of rich diversity, and rich farmland.
@brandoncameron2686
@brandoncameron2686 Жыл бұрын
When the Chicago suburbs started to move left politically, that was a game changer in favor of the democratic party. Seven decades ago, Chicago had 3.6 million people in the city limits. Today, the cities population is 2.7 million, but somewhat “stabilized.” There was a time when Republicans did quite well in the Chicago suburbs, but not anymore. The combined voting power of the city of Chicago and the Chicago suburbs helps Democrats stay in control of Illinois. The votes of so-called downstate Illinois for republicans is not enough to win. Without being able to win a bigger share of the Chicago suburbs, the math is just not there.
@wolveslair766
@wolveslair766 Жыл бұрын
Wrong Outlying Cook County burbs here My Mayor is Republican and there are lots of us here Mail in ballot's/Dominion machines vote for us now Heck I got 3 mail in ballots last election 😂 I will use them this time 😉
@wolveslair766
@wolveslair766 Жыл бұрын
Btw I'm close to 70 This is what I see when I vote now
@raloufen4292
@raloufen4292 4 ай бұрын
I got a sack load of those ballots​@@wolveslair766
@stewlittle13
@stewlittle13 Жыл бұрын
Wow, Chicago was almost in Wisconsin? I can only imagine how much more intense the sports rivalries would be than they already are.
@tylernaturalist6437
@tylernaturalist6437 Жыл бұрын
FINE… I’ll go see Chicago 🙄… you’ve convinced me that it’s worth a peek. I’m a New Yorker born and raised, which means I’m very critical of smaller cities. Even cities like Philadelphia feel puny compared to NYC. I’d love to see a city that feels as alive and NY. I’ve resisted going to Chicago for years because it didn’t seem worth my time, but you’re video definitely changed my perception of it.
@DPF61008OConnor
@DPF61008OConnor Жыл бұрын
You'll love it here, enjoy your visit 😁👍. Chicago is smaller than NYC but it doesn't make Chicago "puny," it's actually a big city in total area.
@MikeyLikesIt89
@MikeyLikesIt89 Жыл бұрын
Get now, gone on with that second city bs😊
@Jeschitown
@Jeschitown Жыл бұрын
yikes you shouldn't have to be convinced to visit a world class city like Chicago lmao and we are very proud Chicagoans so if you come here with all that NYC attitude oh boy lmao
@josielynn6369
@josielynn6369 11 ай бұрын
So many people come to Chicago and say "wow it's like a clean NYC." I have to roll my eyes every time because I think the main similarity is that it's a huge population center and has that kind of energy you don't find outside of metropolises 😂 Both cities have their own unique history and architecture. If you go, there's a speedboat architecture tour that can be neat when you're visiting
@KandiceKan
@KandiceKan 11 ай бұрын
Chicago is not that much smaller than NY. NYC is approximately 302 square miles, so not that much greater than Chicago’s 234 square miles. NY just has almost 3 times the ppl. Chicago: 2.7 million NYC: 8.2 million So NY has way more ppl but not a lot of space. Being born and raised in Chicago and going downtown where it’s most crowded, I thought I could handle Manhattan with no problem. I was wrong. Way too many ppl and it gave me anxiety. It’s way too crowded for me. It also smells in some areas there and the garbage is right on the street. Not here. It’s far more expensive there but the apartments are way smaller…crazy. We have lakefronts, clean beaches, beautiful parks (though Central Park was absolutely amazing to visit, hands down), and the probably some of the best food in the world. I didn’t care for the food in NYC and I was shocked how expensive it was, as compared to the taste. But I must say, I absolutely LOVE NY and would visit there more frequently if I was able. Bottoms line, come visit and you may wanna stay forever. Great neighborhoods: Hyde Park, Wicker Park, Magnificent Mile, River West, Bucktown, West Loop, South Loop, River North, Logan Square, Pilsen, Bronzeville, Edgewater, Greek Town, Roscoe Village and many more.
@BRMSATXSTLOKCMKE
@BRMSATXSTLOKCMKE Жыл бұрын
Milwaukee resident here. I love being so close to Chicago and having frequent train service to get there. Illinois is one of my favorite states. Like others have said in the comments, people from Illinois seem to not have much state pride. People that live there should be proud of their state. Illinois has great history, decent politics, a world class city, friendly people, nice beaches along Lake Michigan, respected universities, important exports that help the US and the World, and more!
@MikeyLikesIt89
@MikeyLikesIt89 Жыл бұрын
That’s them other Illinois folks who don’t have pride, but have you met a true Chicagoan? Pride in our city is an understatement. We love it all, even the bad parts.
@kurtsalm2155
@kurtsalm2155 Жыл бұрын
Decent politics??????????? Chicago is the corruption capital of the world. Illinois has had more 20th century governors land in jail than any other state. Time for little education.
@lookitsvane
@lookitsvane 2 ай бұрын
I think the reason why Illinois doesn’t have much state pride is because Chicagoans have too much Chicago pride. As we should best city in the union!!
@Paul71H
@Paul71H 10 ай бұрын
As someone who grew up in southernmost Illinois, went to college in central Illinois, and has spent lots of time in the Chicago area and the St. Louis area, I think you did a great job of fairly covering the various parts of the state, and of making the very important point that Illinois is essentially two different states, with the Chicago area having very different culture and politics from the rest of Illinois. Some other observations as I watched through the video: * I was impressed by your correct pronunciation of Cairo, though I've always heard Elgin pronounced with a "j" sound rather than a hard "g". * I grew up in the hilly part of southern Illinois, but I've never heard that area called the Illinois Ozarks. * I'm glad that you mentioned Garden of the Gods; it's a beautiful geographical formation. * Collinsville with an "s", not Collinville * I was sorry to see modern-day Cairo featured prominently, considering what a wasteland it has become. But it was correct to include it, given its historical and geographical significance. * Population loss across Illinois can be largely explained by politics and taxes, in my humble opinion (based partly on personal experience). * The only way that the Petronas Towers are taller than the Sears Tower is if you count the decorative spires on the top of the Petronas Towers, but don't count the broadcast antennas on top of the Sears Tower. If you find an image that shows the buildings side by side, you can see that it's very questionable to count the Petronas Towers as taller. * I was glad to see the Superman festival get a mention. * "Guaranteed Rate Field" for the White Sox -- ugh! It seems like they're constantly changing the name of what ought to be called Comiskey Park. * It would have been nice to see more about the history of blues music in Chicago, though I know it was briefly mentioned. Chicago is immensely important to the history of blues music, and Chicago blues music heavily influenced many of the early British rockers, like the Rolling Stones, Led Zeppelin, and Eric Clapton. Overall, you did a great job, and I think you covered all the most important aspects of Illinois. The biggest thing I would recommend to improve future videos is to include more on-site, in-person video footage, like you had for parts of Chicago. But I'm sure that's expensive and time-consuming.
@reeveetalk1907
@reeveetalk1907 Жыл бұрын
As much as illinoisans rag on our own state, and often times deservedly so, it still has many wonderful parts and a fascinating history in the Nation’s Heartland
@jacobkelley7762
@jacobkelley7762 Жыл бұрын
Those 7 counties are a completely different culture. Lived in and out of there my entire life. Cost of living is astronomically different. I can pay all my bills in lasalle county for less money than rent alone will cost you in the 7 counties. Its the taxes imposed by the 7 counties that has forced the rest of the state to flee.
@piolit06
@piolit06 11 ай бұрын
at 6:15 didn't you mix up how you said that? Illinois is smaller than Wisconsin and bigger than Iowa, but how you worded it in the video sounds like it is the other way around.
@jeremiahallyn4603
@jeremiahallyn4603 Жыл бұрын
Great job as always Carter. Every episode I watch I learn something new about the state you are covering. Can't wait for the next one 🙌😁
@HighHolyOne
@HighHolyOne 11 ай бұрын
Interesting --you made me research the term 'driftless region' and I learned a lot. You've done an exceptional job really exploring the identity of the State of Illinois.
@tatedavis2016
@tatedavis2016 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago, which is a great area to settle down and raise a family.
@goingmerry123
@goingmerry123 Жыл бұрын
I spent 21 years of my life in Illinois, it is a good state filled with a lot of good people.
@brend2718
@brend2718 Жыл бұрын
15:38 The "g" in Elgin is pronounced like a "j".
@walterglomp1035
@walterglomp1035 Жыл бұрын
This is the best history of Chicago I have ever heard! Thank you! Seriously!
@kigas24
@kigas24 Жыл бұрын
Cant believe you didnt mention the architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe who lead the School of Architecture at IIT in Chicago. He's up there with Frank Lloyd Wright. edit: and you left IIT off the list of universities in Chicago. Why?
@harktischris
@harktischris Жыл бұрын
great video as always. surprised though that the Second City in Chicago didn't get mentioned in the more cultural discussion, not even here in the comments. in terms of comedy, I don't think anything punches above its weight nor has such national and international influence as that improv venue. a partial list of alums of Second City (some of the names were mentioned in the celebrities section, but these are all specifically Second City folk): Chris Farley, Tim Meadows, Stephen Colbert, Steve Carrell, Tina Fey, Dan Castallaneta, Jim Belushi, Dan Aykroyd, Eugene Levy, John Candy, Mike Myers, Amy Sedaris, Bill Murray, Fred Willard, Amy Poehler, Aidy Bryant. List could keep going on.
@grahambarton4394
@grahambarton4394 11 ай бұрын
Bro I’m from Chicago and I never even knew abt the pedway wtf
@RsSooke
@RsSooke Жыл бұрын
Excited for this one. I love learning about different parts of the world and especially our continent. I grew up in Alberta, Canada and used to work briefly on a project with a team from Chicago. Now I live on the Canadian side of the southern border with Washington state. I’ve been to over 20 states, but it’s been years now since I last travelled.
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