@@467076 The largest rat I’ve ever seen was on 6th street. It must’ve been a NYC refugee.
@4670762 ай бұрын
@@AFTER_MIDNITE lmao cold blodded
@youMatterItDoesGetBetterАй бұрын
$600k for a 650sq ft loft in one of the new sky rises off 6th street. It’s a paradise in Austin now, but you’ve gotta make $200k+ to live.
@smoovkillaАй бұрын
@@467076wow what a thrill i get to buy a rodentless place
@tooajittoquit2 ай бұрын
Wow… I’ve been here a long time! It’s so crazy to see how much Austin has grown! It’s now the 10th largest city in the US!
@davidgmaloof2 ай бұрын
It was the 10th largest, but that honor now belongs to Jacksonville, FL. Either way, Fort Worth is going to blow past both Austin and Jacksonville in a year or less.
@Aggie4life772 ай бұрын
When you enter the big leagues amongst cities, you realize that city size is meaningless outside of taxes. It’s metro population that truly determines the size of an area.
@thatsTylerDurden2 ай бұрын
And it’s trash!
@PolishBehemoth2 ай бұрын
@@thatsTylerDurden lol you sound bitter and mad bro. Nothing about austin is trash.
@gh0ulgirl052 ай бұрын
its the #1 trashiest city in texas now! thanks californians ❤
@OB-DoingWork2 ай бұрын
If you live long enough everything will change.
@dlazo326962 ай бұрын
Couldn’t have said it better myself ^
@Max-zv8hm2 ай бұрын
astute observation. you must have been in special classes.
@brianmeen21582 ай бұрын
Yes but some changes are much better than others
@xx1332 ай бұрын
Nothing changed for the better, just aesthetics.
@blakesteenrod47652 ай бұрын
Nature doesn’t change
@swagistan694202 ай бұрын
0:43 that chick's quad separation is insane
@Liface2 ай бұрын
Best comment I've read in a long time
@divinecomedian22 ай бұрын
Dayum!
@SlugSage2 ай бұрын
Good eye
@jimmyconway80252 ай бұрын
What
@stikkippy14812 ай бұрын
I can’t really tell, but it doesn’t seem like she has a ton of definition elsewhere, so seeing such a huge leg is pretty interesting. She probably does a lot of leg exercises, and walking I presume.
@mstyles26672 ай бұрын
Austin used to be so cool and unique. Now it looks and feels like every other city of its size. Cold and corporate.
@jimmyconway80252 ай бұрын
I'd say it's almost universal now NYC, Miami, London
@Sam_T20002 ай бұрын
I hate both.
@jaehparrk2 ай бұрын
go away sosialist
@SulferDragon2 ай бұрын
That was my first thought when watching this. A lot of the colorful appeal and uniqueness vanished!
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
Austin was only kinda unique in comparison to most American towns. That’s a very low bar.
@mariusfacktor35972 ай бұрын
The Capitol Mall looks fantastic! Austin has a great downtown and it's getting more lively which is great! A lot of this growth looks really good, and economists have said the housing growth brought down rent and home prices because there is so much more supply now than there was 4 years ago. Please don't let the downtown i35 expansion happen. They want to demolish 1,000 homes and businesses for it. We don't need more traffic going right through the middle of downtown.
@Cycology_Major2 ай бұрын
The city fought the law of TXDOT and the law won
@chriswren18252 ай бұрын
South Park’s SoDoSoPa irl. Happened here in Seattle, too.
@dlazo326962 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@Dave....2 ай бұрын
This might be the best comment in here lol
@Sam_T20002 ай бұрын
have you ever been to Ci-Pa-Town?
@Akac3shАй бұрын
So real
@alexlestatАй бұрын
Ironically enough, whole foods was founded in Austin
@cs2922 ай бұрын
Austin was a tiny little town when I was a kid growing up in San Antonio..and they passed us up pretty fast after BRAC..gave them an Airport.
@Hoes_Mad2 ай бұрын
SA is still bigger population wise but Austin definitely surpassed our skyline!
@KayentaRojo2 ай бұрын
Why are so many cities loosing color and vibrancy to be replaced with grey, depressing, monotone colors..
@eldebtor69732 ай бұрын
🏳🌈
@marcusinfinity93862 ай бұрын
Uniformity and rainbow agenda
@c0rnichon2 ай бұрын
@@marcusinfinity9386 You do realize that uniformity and "rainbow agenda" are the absolute opposite ends of the spectrum, right?
@marcusinfinity93862 ай бұрын
@@c0rnichon not in June
@checkoutmyyoutubepage2 ай бұрын
@@marcusinfinity9386You’re a bot account.
@PSTXFL2 ай бұрын
Great video 👍 I first went to Austin as a kid in 1979, it sure has grown up since then!
@baller84milw2 ай бұрын
They in fact did not keep Austin weird lol. I love how at 0:26 it literally looks like "The Lofts at SoDoSoPa" from the South Park episode about gentrification 🤣
@unknowncurlz2 ай бұрын
Dude my exact thought with South Park 😂
@BradThePitts2 ай бұрын
1:05 Good to see that the Daniel Johnston mural has been preserved!
@pibbitybibbity2 ай бұрын
It’s a shame. Austin used to be a wonderful, quirky city. Now it’s just a big city with all the big city problems and very little, if any, of the quirky charm that made Austin Austin.
@miseendriste63372 ай бұрын
Yall are fucking miserable
@jdos56432 ай бұрын
Like what?
@alm58512 ай бұрын
Boomer alert
@pibbitybibbity2 ай бұрын
@@alm5851 Sorry, incorrect.
@sheepherder9112 ай бұрын
@@alm5851 brainlet alert
@Commonwealth96Ай бұрын
Wild to see so much soul evaporate in front of your eyes
@SolotociusАй бұрын
What? I only see progress here, no "evaporation".
@atticustay1Ай бұрын
A lot of it is an improvement
@propoop6991Ай бұрын
I'm not from austin so I really don't have a say in the culture, but it looked like a sad city 20 years ago (the horrible roads, undeveloped land, lack of trees) so I'd say a lot of it is improvement
@LIFEWITHTHEJONESES12 ай бұрын
Looks like what's happening here in Nashville.
@SulferDragon2 ай бұрын
Oh no! I hope it doesn't go too far.
@josephsantoy11072 ай бұрын
And 35 looks the same lol
@divinecomedian22 ай бұрын
Lmao bumper to bumper
@camodown2 ай бұрын
Wow. That 2010 skyline is what I know. Haven’t been back since moving away and didn’t realize it changed that much.
@rodnroll30962 ай бұрын
What happened to KEEP AUSTIN WEIRD
@TexaSurvival2 ай бұрын
Somebody bought it and slapped it on t-shirts for nostalgia only.
@fosty.2 ай бұрын
It's too weird.
@realSamAndrew2 ай бұрын
They didn't keep it.
@Tea4Texas2 ай бұрын
It became a bumper sticker
@MikeBarbarossa2 ай бұрын
The color and old artistic flair got replaced with bland light and dark gray architecture
@franand2 ай бұрын
Austin is like LA without the nice weather and beaches
@uberenthusiasts2 ай бұрын
Lmao not even.
@Weshopwizard2 ай бұрын
But still all the californicators.
@cameraman6552 ай бұрын
@@WeshopwizardCommifornians…👎👎👎
@microbios85862 ай бұрын
There are lots of ugly people in Austin though, unlike LA
@c0rnichon2 ай бұрын
@@cameraman655 lol tech bros are pretty right-wing mostly. They belong in Texas more than in California
@alejandrohernandez73402 ай бұрын
Damn Austin was such a vibe before the 2020s now it’s just a mini California
@DiegoMendoza-bg5oh2 ай бұрын
Blame Elon Musk and Joe Rogan, it lost its uniqueness
@Nilbog-Hunter2 ай бұрын
Blame yuppies for gouging out the identity of austin
@destinfarr2 ай бұрын
@@DiegoMendoza-bg5ohNowhere close. The city was significantly changing its flavor many years before Elon and Joe became a household name.
@austin337852 ай бұрын
It's not elons fault
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@DiegoMendoza-bg5oh I get it, you hate Elon, but Tesla Austin has only been in operation for 3 years. And Joe has only lived there 4 years and his podcast/club didn’t have any impact on Austin’s growth. Blame SXSW, it put Austin on the national map.
@Nemo713402 ай бұрын
The gentrification seems very corporate. Like you can tell the people who are gentrifying it aren't Texas natives, it's just what they think "Texas" should look like. It doesn't feel like a natural development it feels forced.
@jdos56432 ай бұрын
You rather have nothing. A flat town with nothing but houses. Ppl like you is why we can’t nice things.
@tvviewer45002 ай бұрын
Dude the people who flocked to Austin from all over the state, like the preacher’s sons who were gay, the lesbians who didn’t want to marry men, the kids who couldn’t cut it on the farms/ranches/oil fields have all been filling up Austin for decades. You are discounting the bulk of Austin’s population
@Nemo713402 ай бұрын
@@tvviewer4500 you can meet someone that is gay and still tell if they are from Texas. This just feels like somebody came in from a design studio from out of state and was like “make it look more Texas.”
@jdos56432 ай бұрын
@@tvviewer4500 what do you mean the lesbians who didn’t want to marry men? A lesbian does not like men nor are attracted to men. Why would they need to marry one?
@Abandonsoyciety2 ай бұрын
Lol that's every city, Denver used to have an iconic skyline, now all the new skyscrapers just make it look like a blocky corporate mess. Cities are awful looking.
@stickynorth2 ай бұрын
Nice to see Austin both grow up and fill in... Now get that LRT system built!
@1995texasaggie2 ай бұрын
I helped by giving up my space when I got the "F" out.........$38k per year property taxes on my corner lot in 78702 was more than I could bear.
@Cycology_Major2 ай бұрын
@@1995texasaggie Monstrous taxes here. One never really owns their property in Texas when the threat of increasingly high property tax looms over you
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@1995texasaggie Wow, $38k on the bad side of town! Your house was probably demolished and now there are 4 tiny cookie cutter homes on the lot that bring in $38k each.
@1995texasaggie2 ай бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 I "proofed" the property to keep needle-lovers out.....property hasn't changed yet as I still visit Dan's Hamburgers on Airport Blvd. The area had been changed to Opportunity Zone so there's no telling what it'll become.
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@1995texasaggie Wow, I just looked at some housing prices for that area. Old unimproved homes have gone up in value 400-500% in just 12 years!!! That’s great if you want to reap a profit, but for anyone that lived there for a long time and wanted to stay, the property taxes forced them out. It’s so messed up. Politicians always complain about broken communities, but then longtime residents get forced out of their homes.
@mrchopsticks32 ай бұрын
Last time I was in Austin was for SXSW in 2004. It was a fun, weird city oozing with charm. Now it just looks like any other city.
@lakin8r2 ай бұрын
I remember when the frost building was built it towered over the other buildings for a little while now it’s hard to find surrounded by skyscrapers
@02nupe2 ай бұрын
change is the only constant. Interesting to see all the growth and progress.
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
No poop, Sherlock. What rapper shared that kernel of knowledge with you that everyone else already knows? Was it Tupac? 🤡
@SolotociusАй бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777wrong, it was Heraclitus
@LuckyCharms777Ай бұрын
@@Solotocius No poop, Sherlock. You failed to grasp my point.
@SolotociusАй бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 just say shit lol
@LuckyCharms777Ай бұрын
@@Solotocius My comments are constantly censored by KZbin so I have to moderate my language and subject matter.
@TucoJames2 ай бұрын
the drive on 35 was beautiful during the 80s.. green pastures, fields with cattle ..now you sees is asphalt n car lots
@jakeinstereo16702 ай бұрын
The “Hi, How Are You” mural hurts the most (to me) because there used to be a Thai restaurant called “Thai, How Are You” and the food was so good. 😢 Oh how the city has changed. I don’t even recognize SoCo anymore. 😕
@Sam_T20002 ай бұрын
the mural is still there… and I’m pretty sure it’s much older than any restaurant inside.
@AFTER_MIDNITE2 ай бұрын
Anybody who uses terms like SoCo is an outsider to me. That’s trendy terminology introduced by carpetbaggers. It’s just as foreign as people who say uptown and midtown.
@euphoricmonkАй бұрын
Super Thai in south lamar is just as good, for reals.
@jakeinstereo1670Ай бұрын
@@AFTER_MIDNITE well I also call the lake Town Lake, but I digress.
@jakeinstereo1670Ай бұрын
@@euphoricmonk ayyy!! Locals know the best spots! I gotta check that one out!!
@portcybertryx2222 ай бұрын
That clip of downtown Austin’s transformation had me gobsmacked. Like literally what happened 😮
@jswishdaman2 ай бұрын
Being born and raised in Austin, seeing this is bittersweet. I tell people all the time the Austin you see now isn’t the Austin I grew up in. It’s a whole different place now I can’t even recognize it.
@shazamdeal2 ай бұрын
Austin was more fun 20 years ago
@mstyles26672 ай бұрын
Yes it was.
@seatstitcher36362 ай бұрын
Absolutely!
@euphoricmonkАй бұрын
Everything was more fun 20 years ago. Before "smartphones"
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
@@euphoricmonkyou know, you can choose to stop using a smartphone at any time. No one forces you to use one. Flip phones still exist.
@euphoricmonkАй бұрын
@@BrilliantHandle Of course and I do. My point is still valid, no need to argue.
@blank.9301Ай бұрын
I miss 2006, life was still chill.
@tbc9096Ай бұрын
Very much so. To be honest, even the mid-2010s feels radically different than now. I really detest the present.
@John-ct9zs2 ай бұрын
Some of these changes were not that long ago, 2017, 2018, 2019 is all very recent history. But Austin has changed so much in only 5-7 years. Amazing. And I forgot how everyone still read newspapers in the 2000s and you could buy newspapers publicly at the time. I told a kid that recently and he looked at me like I was talking about living in 1935 with a kid selling papers and yelling "extra! extra! read all about it, Hitler on the move!"
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
So you support journalists and newspapers? You don’t deride them as fake news?
@John-ct9zsАй бұрын
@@BrilliantHandle Dude are you high? Stop drinking and smoking crack man. I have no idea what you are talking about.
@jvillalaz442 ай бұрын
Amazing at the transformation 👏
@SURENITY2 ай бұрын
R.I.P Historical Rainey District. All to make way for soulless apartment Californians…
@nicelol52412 ай бұрын
Half of your city is single family homes and highways that went through vibrant majority black neighborhoods lol, anyways, this is the best to solve the current housing crisis we're in, because a tiny apartment can cost you 2000-3000$, the only issue i think is the gentrification.
@eldebtor69732 ай бұрын
@@nicelol5241 there were no blacks in austin
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
@@eldebtor6973Austin is 8% black with more in the Suburbs wtf are you on about
@eldebtor69732 ай бұрын
@@azulaquaza4916 they were kicked out. keep Austin weird
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
@@eldebtor6973 Nah they're still there, literally just came from down there
@BradThePitts2 ай бұрын
Has it ever been proven that the majority of new residents in Austin are from California?
@eschiedler2 ай бұрын
They're from all over, New York, Georgia, other parts of Texas, etc. I've seen estimates that over 50% are from within Texas and about 8% from California, the rest from elsehwere. But remember people might move first to Dallas from Califronia, then Texas, so it depends.
@bryanspilner73702 ай бұрын
Only the morons
@asu56322 ай бұрын
They are from all over Texas too calm down. Most are from all parts of Texas
@somapersona2 ай бұрын
If they aren't Californians they're still Texans that vote like Californians, hence the result
@anon24142 ай бұрын
Austin is liberal like California buddy. And the people that think the Californians that are moving to Texas are liberals are dummies. All the conservatives are moving out. WHICH IS WHY THEY ARE MOVING OUT
@robl3262 ай бұрын
I'm not 100% certain it's the right building because it was 1997, but I'm pretty sure the last time i was in Austin, that Willy Nelson mural was a dragon mural.
@kurtwillig42302 ай бұрын
Loved Austin the way it was in 1975. Now, tho.......
@dcooper11152 ай бұрын
Yeah, well everything was better in 1975.. you could drive drunk and the cops would escort you home. The music was better than it’s ever been since. We peaked. Austin has to change
@TonyGueАй бұрын
Wow, austin really was a quiet and simple town a long time ago
@DMagician62 ай бұрын
We need to terraform Austin again 😂😭😭
@EulianDaxАй бұрын
That's how you upgrade a city the right way.
@Mickey-iv6nfАй бұрын
1:48 cyber truck lol
@ralphseewald40692 ай бұрын
When I lived in Austin in the early 1980s there was a big campaign to preserve the state capital views
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
You can still see it from plenty of angles my guy. It’s literally the signature of congress avenue
@Yilver4992 ай бұрын
It was part of the law until the law makers were incentivized $$$$$
@DioTheGreatOne2 ай бұрын
@@azulaquaza4916 Damn you replied to almost every single comment in this video. Why U so mad bro?
@SpongeBob5000_2 ай бұрын
@@azulaquaza4916You’re doing tricks on it
@divinecomedian22 ай бұрын
Well, it was bound to get obscured. It ain't worth blocking high density buildings so we can see an old building where a bunch of crooks work.
@Mindyourbusiness00272 ай бұрын
Imagine Austin 20 years later
@Syvern.Ай бұрын
Probably will be a derelict old town burning down
@Mindyourbusiness0027Ай бұрын
@@Syvern.I mean who knows btw
@jimjim01938Ай бұрын
I like how the city is getting some much needed densification and development, but they at least could’ve made everything look a little more rustic and not so grey and corporate
@Tea4Texas2 ай бұрын
Make Austin Normal!
@jimmyconway80252 ай бұрын
Seriously
@gregvandell2 ай бұрын
I lived in Austin 20 years ago (technically 25), and visited 3 months ago for a work conference. Everywhere I looked there were homeless people, why was that not in this video? Like compared to 25 years ago it was at Lear 100x more homeless.
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
Supply and demand. Demand goes up but supply doesn’t match it. Fewer people can afford that product. Therefore, more are homeless.
@xfloodcasual8124Ай бұрын
It's because when they gentrify, the people hanging on to the lowest rung of apartments all end up on the street. I remember seeing a family of latinos evicted on the front lawn of an apartment with all their luggage and personal items strewn about while demolition began on the back end. A year later, millennials were having a party on the balcony of new "luxury" apartments in their place.
@Dangermouse8645Ай бұрын
It looks like it had a sense of place that has since been removed.
@lord_of_love_and_thunder2 ай бұрын
Landed in Austin in 2003. Left for California in 2021. Saw Austin grow in front of my eyes.
@bryanspilner73702 ай бұрын
Now stay
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
@@bryanspilner7370This person moved to California in 2021. Trust me, they are plenty wealthy enough that they can stay. Almost all of those who left California for Texas were those who couldn’t afford Californian home prices.
@Quicks1lvrАй бұрын
@@BrilliantHandleah yes. Only the poors left this proudly democratic state. I'll be sure to tell my uncle, a millionaire, that he would be better off staying here in California paying 2/3 more for housing than where he is now in Tennessee. Go step in some human feces like we do in San Francisco. Luckily we have apps to avoid such things
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
@@Quicks1lvr wow! A millionaire?! So rich! Maybe the richest person in your town! Oh wait, that’s just middle class in San Francisco.
@alexanderdelarge51032 ай бұрын
Same thing happened to St. Petersburg in Florida.
@vishnuramia21402 ай бұрын
Nice. Damn it’s changed a lot
@MidnightRider103419 күн бұрын
The downtown skyline transition at 1:29 is actually quite depressing because it gives off a symbol of isolation. In the 2010 pic it shows people are outside in the park, socializing, engaging in activities, exercising and just enjoying life because this was really before social media took off in consuming everyone’s lives, and the 2024 pick shows the park completely empty like no one wants to be outside anymore and everyone’s inside buried on their phones and computers living life completely digitally and isolated
@yupyup4209Ай бұрын
If you actually go to Austin right now you will see homeless tent cities everywhere even along side nice suburbs. They had to go out of their way to not capture any of that in their shots for this video 😂
@trojanhell76392 ай бұрын
I like it …. Luxury the city up and fill it with beauty …. Give it class
@shaybapple2 ай бұрын
Now people are leaving because its gotten too expensive
@thatguydylan314Ай бұрын
1:46 GODDAMMIT I GOTTA GO CATCH MY FRIDGE
@bigt41352 ай бұрын
Looked better 20 years ago.
@FleagleSangriaАй бұрын
Lived there for a bit in the 80s. That was the time Austin was unique.
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
As much as people complain about Austin not being like its old self well which is no duh since it’s a million person city now. Its downtown is one of the most healthy and walkable in the country and it puts education, health and parkland front and center unlike its parking lot covered siblings in Houston and Dallas
@mstyles26672 ай бұрын
So, it's just another generic looking mid sized city now. Lost it's uniqeness which was what made it what it was.
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
@@mstyles2667 Wtf is this “uniqueness loss” you’re crying about?? Congress Avenue is still there, Lady bird lake is still there, Food scene is still there, Hill country is still there, Live music is still there, 6th street is still there, Rainey, SoCo, Ann Roy & Butler, Barton Creek, The Greenbelts, Hamilton pool, ACL & SXSW are STILL THERE. It still looks and feels a lot different from any other Texan city so no it has never lost its uniqueness, just has a bigger skyline.
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
Austin’s downtown is only walkable for people who can afford to live there, and those people certainly aren’t native Austinite’s, or Texans for that matter. I used to live just north of campus and ride my bike across downtown for both work and play. I later had an apartment off the drag. There’s no way I’d be able to afford that now. Downtown Austin has become just another rich person’s playground.
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 Wanna know a hard truth? If Austin had cheap housing then it would attract cheap people and it wouldn’t look anywhere as nice as it does. Is it taking you long to figure this out?
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@azulaquaza4916 Wanna know a hard truth? Central Austin used to have reasonable housing costs and it attracted students, along with the lower/middle class. The cheap people stayed where the housing was more inexpensive.
@aliadam575Ай бұрын
🇺🇸🍻✨️🍻🇺🇸 Ideal growth & development cheers 2 Austin down in the lone star state!.....
@Technovore882 ай бұрын
What a shame!
@johnerwin90242 ай бұрын
Brings jobs but loses character like so many other cities. 👍👎
@381delirius2 ай бұрын
@@johnerwin9024it's more like character development.
@smoovkillaАй бұрын
As someone who’s lived in Austin since I was born (thankfully I move the end of this year) this place started declining hard in the 2010s. It was nice in the 2000s. Already was like it is today by 2012. Glad I’m leaving this city lmao. Aint gonna miss it
@mrhoach22292 ай бұрын
Welcome to anywhere USA.
@maryanncastro60112 ай бұрын
And the Willie Nelson mural shows a Tesla truck driving by, that's another thing I now see almost every day in Austin. Moved here in 1989, seen these changes but this was amazing to watch. You can barely see the Capital.
@GueroMexicanGTАй бұрын
Turned into another soulless metropolis 😒
@antonbonin5003Ай бұрын
Still remember back in 2012 when I drove to Austin with a friend. Some homeless dude was trying to shake me down for $3 because that's how much a whopper costs, and he had to feed his kids. Not a kid in sight, not a McDonald's in sight, and after giving him $3, he remembered that they were actually $4... He was the "parking manager" of that area btw. That's why he was charging me the price of a whopper. I'm glad to say that moving back after 20 years, it's exactly the same. Except the homeless now have guns, and enough rights to execute people on the sidewalk without accountability.
@divinecomedian22 ай бұрын
The saddest thing is how everyone is on their phone in 2024. I miss when people would actually look at you and smile on the sidewalk.
@misterb11322 ай бұрын
Was born there, but went out in '95 for teaching interviews and scouting. Everyone was always so kind and polite, even on the phone long distance to southern Cal, that that made a huge impression on me. Never did move my young family back to my roots (parents graduated UT), but the days of almost everyone you pass walking saying hello are long gone with the phone-staring for sure.
@Sam_T20002 ай бұрын
because you never look at your phone in public, right?
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
A lot of people are answering business emails, reading books, etc. they aren’t all just on Facebook getting angry over memes like you.
@Quicks1lvrАй бұрын
@@BrilliantHandleno they go on KZbin and try to convince strangers of something like you do
@lionlikemessenger2 ай бұрын
Is Nashville the next Austin?
@crypticmystic34892 ай бұрын
All the shit does tend to pile up in one place…
@noodletribunal9793Ай бұрын
the skyline looks markedly worse. those new highrises look atrocious
@12GAFL2 ай бұрын
Slowly destroying itself. Thanks city “leaders”
@INDKFGC2 ай бұрын
The magic has been gone since 2011-ish?
@microbios85862 ай бұрын
Austin is so interesting. It's uniquely Texan yet nothing like Dallas and Houston. It's a western and hilly and close to the border but not like Laredo or San Antonio. It's a weird place.
@RealDavidN2 ай бұрын
People used to ask me how i enjoyed living in the austin area. After some thought, i responded “it’s great if you can get near it”.
@portcybertryx2222 ай бұрын
It’s nice to see the city moving forward with some unique architecture styles. Yes people in the comments feel nostalgic about the past. Come on change is a part of a city’s growth. We should be happy that the city is at least preserving certain landmarks and still has a character to it. Soon we will be nostalgic for what exists now.
@Semper_Ай бұрын
Idk how that architecture can be unique. It's all the same. People are voicing their grievances 'cause Austin is soulless now. Sure Austin has a bigger economy now, but at the cost of it's culture. It had a very unique vibrant culture, and now it's soulless and corporate. Not all progress is good progress
@juanzuniga76162 ай бұрын
Basically another ruined city
@RGE_Music2 ай бұрын
song name please and thank you
@02nupe2 ай бұрын
shazam it
@RGE_Music2 ай бұрын
@@02nupe i already did. Never gave me this exact song
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
@@RGE_Music”Wrightwood” - 5Alvo. Shazam works better if it is directly integrated in your computer’s internal audio.
@Ben-0Ай бұрын
Why is nobody talking about the cybertruck in the thumbnail?
@oldschool96992 ай бұрын
Austin use to be such a beautiful town. USE TO!!! Austin, California
@everythingisfine99882 ай бұрын
1:26 people playing outside. To nobody outside 🫤
@azulaquaza49162 ай бұрын
It’s a picture you dodo brain 😂 the park is still plenty like that every evening
@MalleusSemperVictor2 ай бұрын
People will live in a sterile, corporate wasteland and exclaim that their metropolitan hellscape is better than other metropolitan hellscapes.
@BrilliantHandleАй бұрын
Have you seen metropolitan areas outside of the U.S.?
@meatballmeatwad5730Ай бұрын
I love how alot of the issues people are complaining about here are caused by capitalism and big monopolistic companies and old billionaires and oligarchs just following the market flow. But when you point it out, you get accused of being a gay communist from California.
@SolotociusАй бұрын
You guys just love throwing those words around
@xfloodcasual8124Ай бұрын
Living through this was like being in a war, complete with PTSD.
@chase_modugnoАй бұрын
Nice
@westrimАй бұрын
KZbin 'steps' in increments of 5 seconds. It would have been nice if this was timed for that to easily flip back and forth.
@SkillardWillard-t4iАй бұрын
Austinite born and raised. It’s not Austin anymore and hasn’t been for decades, it’s whatever these people who moved here have turned it into. Change is inevitable, all the original Austinites moved away. Time for me to move on as well. Good luck with this new Austin everyone. Genuinely.
@aaronseth2 ай бұрын
they ruined Austin tbh 😢
@superslayerguyАй бұрын
Austin used to be actually weird. Now it’s just become corporate.
@mexidraw2 ай бұрын
Oh, wow
@thetexanladd2 ай бұрын
It's interesting that Austin's downtown 2 decades ago was relatively modest, before exploding and pretty much becoming like Houston. Whether or not that's a good thing is none of my business.
@hdfjg2 ай бұрын
very true! its the business for the city and new jobs.
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
It’s a bad thing.
@thetexanladd2 ай бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 Again, not my business, as I don't live there and, at this point, I'm now unlikely to move there.
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@thetexanladd It is your business because if you live in Houston, you live in the rapidly growing Texas Triangle, which is going to change our communities forever. Dallas to San Antonio to Houston to Dallas is going to become just as congested and expensive as greater LA.
@thetexanladd2 ай бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 I don't live in Houston, either. I'm in DFW. If there's really no where else left to go, then why should I bother? I'm done with this convo.
@theirishbandit73012 ай бұрын
The thing that did it for me is when they dismantled the original TCM house on quick hill back in 1998 and now the whole area is unrecognizable in 2024.
@shahuronghe51012 ай бұрын
Khatarnak growth 🎉
@ToopidPonayАй бұрын
I don’t like the Frost building being hidden. 🥺
@chrisdacey6586Ай бұрын
Cybertruck in thumbnail
@Pepe19992 ай бұрын
That lake is destroyed now 🤮🤢
@adityaganjoomechАй бұрын
But why? Hardly seven people live in the entire Texas
@OwjdnskoakansbskkАй бұрын
Over 30 million but ok
@alm58512 ай бұрын
Looks like theyre getting stuff done
@cameraman6552 ай бұрын
Back when Austin was….TEXAN! Not the enclave of California that it has become… Make Austin Texan Again
@hadriangonzalez6072 ай бұрын
Austin has always been weird and not Texan.. it's what makes Austin Austin. Keep crying about change.. you'll eventually realized the only constant in life is that it changes .
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@hadriangonzalez607 Except Austin isn’t weird anymore, it’s been corporatized. Go to Brownsville and spur change there. With a poverty rate of 22%, it certainly needs it more than Austin.
@hadriangonzalez6072 ай бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 congratulations.. you've described the end goal of every city in America since the industrial revolution.
@LuckyCharms7772 ай бұрын
@@hadriangonzalez607 Nope, only mid-large cities. Plenty of cities are content with being “bedroom communities”.
@hadriangonzalez6072 ай бұрын
@@LuckyCharms777 yes I'm sure their chamber of commerce are thrilled at the idea of not increasing their cities revenue.
@factitarian2 ай бұрын
What's up with all the dead bodies in the lake?
@liamcoolcoolАй бұрын
they're finally trying to fix it
@j.p.1967Ай бұрын
Blame it on Joe Rogan
@iLikeMyOwnPosts2 ай бұрын
It makes me want to puke. When I got here in 2013 the city was still amazing - but long time austinites told me I missed the golden years. I can only imagine how amazing those were. This new austin... it's terrible. The soul of Austin has been completely sucked out of it, and this is a corporate husk of what it once was. If you disagree - you're lying to yourself or ignorant of what it was before - just like I used to be. Seeing this happen to TWO different cities I've lived in now... it's disgusting. All for the almighty dollar. Nothing for the people.