Skellig Gra
Member
I feel this is slightly pedantic
Maybe

I feel this is slightly pedantic
Where in the city were you at?IDK... My wife and I thought the city was incredibly hostile. Maybe it was because we went during the french holidays so there were a LOT of us in the city and the locals were tired of seeing French people everywhere. But I've had some of the most humiliating attitudes towards me in my life.
I've been to Montreal three or four times and had a great time every time. I could definitely see myself living there. It's probably the best city I've ever been to.I'd rather not visit Montreal any time soon.
Seriously.lol
The whole world is a dump then pretty much if you weigh in posts here.
Tijuana, what a horrible city.
Venice is overrated, yes.
But this thread is strange lol. People are naming legit tourist destinations other than dumpy cities, which there are plentiful. Venice still kills many places.
Where in the city were you at?
It's the border city for CA, so it's obviously the quickest for southern Californians to get to if they feel like visiting Mexico.Why do Americans visit Tijuana? It's... not good to put it lightly.
A Starbucks and some random store looking for cheap sunglasses. I mean...We went pretty much everywhere in Manhattan. But our hotel was close to Times Square even though we only spent like one hour there.
For example, we grabbed a coffee at Starbucks when we left our hotel in the morning and even though we said "hello" with a smile, the person didn't even respond or even look at us. We really felt like walking wallets to them.
Another example was when we stopped at a random store to buy cheap sunglasses. The cashier was really nice at the beginning and then all I could understand was that she was trying to sell us an extra article at a discount, but we didn't understand it clearly. My wife said "excuse me I didn't understand" with a thick french accent and at that very moment, the cashier stopped looking at us, she litterally turned her head away, didn't respond when we said goodbye. We were treated like actual shit.
I've never experienced such blatant rudeness in a store in France.
Not one vote for London![]()
A Starbucks and some random store looking for cheap sunglasses. I mean...
It'd probably tied with Nashua and Franklin, both in NH.
Franklin is like heroin central and Nashua has some of the worst designed streets imagineable. Plus, some parts look legit bombed out.
It's scary.
We went pretty much everywhere in Manhattan. But our hotel was close to Times Square even though we only spent like one hour there.
For example, we grabbed a coffee at Starbucks when we left our hotel in the morning and even though we said "hello" with a smile, the person didn't even respond or even look at us. We really felt like walking wallets to them.
Another example was when we stopped at a random store to buy cheap sunglasses. The cashier was really nice at the beginning and then all I could understand was that she was trying to sell us an extra article at a discount, but we didn't understand it clearly. My wife said "excuse me I didn't understand" with a thick french accent and at that very moment, the cashier stopped looking at us, she litterally turned her head away, didn't respond when we said goodbye. We were treated like actual shit.
I've never experienced such blatant rudeness in a store in France.
Also I feel like American people make no effort to try to understand less than perfect english. I know that in Paris, most stores make an effort to communicate even if the stranger's english is garbage.
You go to any random Starbucks anywhere in the country here and you probably have a high chance of interacting with rude people. It's a US problem, not specific to New York. People in low end retail here are treated and paid like absolute shit, and their attitudes reflect that.Those are just examples. And shouldn't I be treated with respect anywhere ?
If I have to go to expensive stores to get as much as a "hello" then fuck that city.
Like I said, I never experienced something like that in France.
I'll take pickpocketing over gun crime any day of the week, thanks.
You know there are 300 million of us. I've been treated rudely by plenty of people in France. I don't judge the entire country based on that.
Wrong. Somebody shat on it early in the thread. It was apparently the worst part of their trip to various cities.
Nice city, the people not so much.
You go to any random Starbucks anywhere in the country here and you probably have a high chance of interacting with rude people. It's a US problem, not specific to New York. People in low end retail here are treated and paid like absolute shit, and their attitudes reflect that.
NYC if full of COUNTLESS restaurants, cafes, hip shops (not all expensive), bars, etc. Not to mention the museums, broadway shows, music, comedy shows, and constant special events. Judging the city based on your interaction with a couple of shitty stores seems very closed minded.
Speaking of Tijuana, all the border cities in Mexico suck. Spend a little more time and money and visit Mexico City or the Yucatan peninsula, which are safer and culturally enriching.
Not trying to be edgy but,
Venice was such a let down. It Was the worst city I've visited as a tourist.
Are you talking UK here? Because as someone from Exeter it is far from the worst place in the UK. Try visiting somewhere like Doncaster and see how it holds up.
Plymouth i definitely agree with though, fuck Plymouth.
When I visited San Francisco a couple of times I had a number of people that were rude to me, but overall I really enjoyed the city and surrounding area. People being dicks didn't make me decide that the city is shit. Just the people I interacted with were dicks. I'm just a visitor in their city in the end, I don't take it personally.I spent a whole year in my entire life in the USA, visited many cities ... So I have some experience. Again it's MY experience and YMMV.
I'm not saying the whole country is rude though. Just saying they could be a little more tolerant when it comes to non english speaking persons.
And my examples about rude people were during my time in NYC.
This thread is about "the worst city you've visited".
Well mine is NYC because people were rude to us. Simple as that.
I hear you. I'm not trying to diminish your personal experience. Just don't like you generalizing hundreds of millions of people.I spent a whole year in my entire life in the USA, visited many cities ... So I have some experience. Again it's MY experience and YMMV.
I'm not saying the whole country is rude though. Just saying they could be a little more tolerant when it comes to non english speaking persons.
And my examples about rude people were during my time in NYC.
This thread is about "the worst city you've visited".
Well mine is NYC because people were rude to us. Simple as that.
Too bad I didn't meet more people like you though. Guess it's bad luck.
We went pretty much everywhere in Manhattan. But our hotel was close to Times Square even though we only spent like one hour there.
For example, we grabbed a coffee at Starbucks when we left our hotel in the morning and even though we said "hello" with a smile, the person didn't even respond or even look at us. We really felt like walking wallets to them.
Another example was when we stopped at a random store to buy cheap sunglasses. The cashier was really nice at the beginning and then all I could understand was that she was trying to sell us an extra article at a discount, but we didn't understand it clearly. My wife said "excuse me I didn't understand" with a thick french accent and at that very moment, the cashier stopped looking at us, she litterally turned her head away, didn't respond when we said goodbye. We were treated like actual shit.
I've never experienced such blatant rudeness in a store in France.
Also I feel like American people make no effort to try to understand less than perfect english. I know that in Paris, most stores make an effort to communicate even if the stranger's english is garbage.
My experience too, but it's a massive city, so it's reasonable that you'll run into unfriendly people as well.Weird seeing people call New Yorkers rude. Usually when I'm on the subway and streets I see people all the time helping tourists. Like even if you live there and just ask for directions, I haven't found someone that wouldn't help.
Weird seeing people call New Yorkers rude. Usually when I'm on the subway and streets I see people all the time helping tourists. Like even if you live there and just ask for directions, I haven't found someone that wouldn't help.
When I visited San Francisco a couple of times I had a number of people that were rude to me, but overall I really enjoyed the city and surrounding area. People being dicks didn't make me decide that the city is shit. Just the people I interacted with were dicks. I'm just a visitor in their city in the end, I don't take it personally.
Whoa, did not expect to see that one. I kind of liked it, although to be fair, I was mostly in the old town area, and a section near it that had just few enough Stalin-era-esque buildings to not destroy the character of it.Sibiu in Romania was pretty piss poor apart from the old town area.
ITT: People trying to be edgy. Even Ottawa, as boring as it is, is no where close to the "worst city".
And I'm definitely sorry you drew the short straw on your time here. Sucks for sure.Again it's MY experience from my time there in May 2016. Maybe I was just unlucky or I picked a wrong period to go. But it doesn't mean anyone who goes to NYC will have the same perception.
ITT: People trying to be edgy. Even Ottawa, as boring as it is, is no where close to the "worst city".