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Originally Posted by Docere
Given the patchwork that is (and isn't) Los Angeles, what is considered "urban" and "suburban" there? Do Valley residents see themselves suburbanites? How about Beverly Hills and Santa Monica residents?
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"Suburbanite" doesn't even seem to be in anyone's vocabulary in southern California. Outside of downtown Los Angeles, everywhere else seems to blend in/all run into each other, and a lot of communities/little cities all look alike aside from their respective downtowns/commercial centers. That's probably why every municipality has its own street sign designs, to differentiate themselves from one another.
When I think of "suburbanite," I think of someone who lives in a total bedroom community who has to go "into the city" for any kind of amenities. A lot of the US might be like that, but SoCal isn't really like that.
People in the Greater LA area don't really say they "live in the suburbs." They'll just say what city/community they live in. "I live in Newport." I somehow don't think that people in Newport Beach think of themselves as suburbanites. "I live in Hermosa." Same thing with Hermosa Beach residents. Also, the "suburbs" of Los Angeles are all very different socioeconomically; there are poor suburbs, wealthy suburbs, "rough" gang-ridden suburbs, etc. If you say you grew up in El Monte, people familiar with El Monte might have the idea (and might be judging you in various ways) that 'oh, he's from a rough area.' They won't think 'oh, he's from the suburbs.' BTW El Monte has been changing the last few decades; I don't doubt it still has gangs but it's not as bad as it used to be.
San Fernando Valley folk tend to just think of the SFV as, well, "the Valley": "I live in the Valley." They don't say "I live in suburban LA," and I don't think they think of themselves as suburbanites. Some Valley people might specifically say what neighborhood in the Valley they're from, and others might not, depending on what kind of cachet the neighborhood has. People from Encino will say they're from Encino, but people from Reseda might say they're from "the Valley." Or they might say they're from Reseda. And I'm not knocking Reseda, either, I'm just using a "Karate Kid" example.
Santa Monica and Beverly Hills residents tend to say they live in Santa Monica and Beverly Hills, with all the baggage/cachet that implies. I know they don't think of themselves as suburbanites.
An anecdote, but many years ago I used to work with a guy around my age who grew up in Beverly Hills, but when I first started working with him and asked him if he was from LA, he said. "Yes." And then when I asked him what part, he said "Oh, Olympic Boulevard area, kind of near the Westside." Hehe and Olympic is a very long street, so I didn't push it. When someone is vague about where they live or where they're from, I figure there's a reason. After I got to know him better, we started talking about high schools, and he told me not to tell anyone, but he went to Beverly Hills High. I asked him "What's wrong with Beverly Hills High?" And he said that when another coworker (who was an asshole) found out he was from Beverly Hills, he started kidding him about it, to the point of almost bullying: "Oh look it's the rich kid." "Here comes the rich kid." That kind of thing. So I guess some people either play it up, or act on the DL, that they're from Beverly Hills.