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Originally Posted by alki
First, lets get clear......this is hardly OT. This has been your meme since I've been posting on this thread..
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alki, my reference to OT was about the declining amt of TV & movie filming in LA. although alot of that does take place in dtla, I do admit that debating about that in this thread is stretching the subj of devlt.
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Secondly, people trash cities all the time. Here in Seattle......people complain it rains too much and that we are the last to get fashions. So what? Frequently, people who are unhappy with themselves will take it on their environment.......its human nature.
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personally, I'd find your hometown to be rather boring.

Although boutique type cities, inc portland, do score high in certain ppl's eyes & surveys, they to me represent the preference of, strangely enough, the superficial over substance. But ymmv. IOW, ppl like the cuteness & comforts of a boutique city. In some ways, in local terms that would be similar to santa monica. I say that's strange cuz ppl often equate LA----& not cities like seattle, SF or portland, as being favored by those who like gloss over substance.
as for ppl who take on their environment, but in an overly unhappy way, that does remind me of a certain SSPer----who shall remain nameless---who is so over the top or trollish in his negativity about LA, that I often think there must be something wrong with him. that he's the type who might be even borderline suicidal.
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LA is never going to be 'pretty' like Prague. Why? Because the two cities grew up at different times in history.
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but san diego is no older than LA----& is very typically car centric & californized----& yet I've seen more ppl acting less

towards it, or even feeling more

about it than LA. I remember seeing a rating of CA cities, based on the POV of tourists, & SF was listed first, SD was listed second, LA was listed third. I think saying LA is the way it is cuz of cars, fwys or its newness is taking the easy way out.
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Now you are getting to the crux of the problem. I believe there is an anti urban attitude in LA. Because LA sees itself as cutting edge in all things, it decided decades ago it was going to reinvent the city.
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some of that is correct, but I think some of that is stretching the point. I bet if dtla had a long history of being a very nice hood, the anti urbanism you mention would never have gotten so strong in the first place. for instance, bunker hill was described as becoming

over 80 yrs ago. I've seen alot of old pics of dt back in the 50s, 40, 30s & before, & my overall impression is that it was a mostly sad & tired looking place. If there was or is an anti urbanism in LA, it probably originates in things like that.
and thanks losangelesdreamin for your comment about thinking graffiti not only doesn't bother you, it even makes you think LA is more interesting than SD. I say that cuz when I've posted pics here of dt, it's in the eyes of the beholder to determine whether those pics should be taken as a

or

towards LA.
If I had posted pics showing a fwy with lots of graffiti & then the exact same location without graffiti----photoshopped or as it really is----it is up to the viewer to determine whether the "before" of before & after is better, or whether the 'after' of before & after is better.
this all comes back to my question of: it's 2012 &
why don't many companies still want to move their offices to dt? As to why that's important to the main purpose of this thread? Look at the wilshire grand proj. It originally was going to be a very impressive 2 tower devlpt, with the office tower being the 2nd tallest in LA. but the devlpr said the lack of demand for new space in the hood has forced them to change their plans.
how about everyone wondering why the hood can't get really great dept stores, inc nordstroms? while the growth of the number of ppl living in dt is a good sign, 39,000 still isn't enough ppl to create the huge demand for stores that in other cities allow something like SF's union sq to do well, or certainly the big stores of NY to be crowded with shoppers.
Beyond even the total size of the number of ppl living in dt, that 39000 has to be qualified to around 20,000 or so. iow, how many of the 39,000 are ppl living----& barely surviving----in SRO apts? Ppl living on skid row? Those are the ones who definitely won't have the $$ to be supporting nicer stores in dtla or any other hood.
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Downtown Los Angeles can stake its claim to being the most multicultural part of a racially diverse metropolis. Two researchers from Loyola Marymount University have found that the population of downtown L.A. –- the area bounded by the Los Angeles River and the 10, 110 and 101 freeways –- rose 50% between 2000 and 2010, from 26,000 to almost 39,000 residents. The researchers analyzed data from the 2010 census.
"Downtown L.A. was almost perfectly balanced in the 2010 census," Guerra said. "It may not stay that way, but we happened to capture a moment with this census. And it’s symbolically important that, for right now at least, downtown Los Angeles belongs to everyone."
The analysis shows that non-Hispanic white residents are now the largest share of the downtown L.A. population, climbing from 18% of the total in 2000 to about 26% in 2010. Latinos declined from 32% of downtown residents in 2000 to 25% in 2010. African Americans also dropped, from 24% in 2000 to 22% in 2010, and Asians gained, from 22% in 2000 to 23% now. Those who identified their race as "other" and said they were not Hispanic went from 3% of downtown residents in 2000 to 4% in 2010.
And most of the newcomers to downtown L.A. are young, as anyone who has been to the area's popular bars and dog parks lately is likely to know. The LMU researchers found that although the largest share of downtown residents is between the ages of 30 and 44, with the second biggest group aged 45 to 64, the fastest growing part of the community is made up of 18- to 29-year-olds. Their numbers jumped 79% over the decade, the analysis showed.
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