Wiscy continually tries to prove you right LOLUh, don't you realize that alcohol is a proven treatment for seasonal depression. Note I said treatment and not cure.![]()
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Wiscy continually tries to prove you right LOLUh, don't you realize that alcohol is a proven treatment for seasonal depression. Note I said treatment and not cure.![]()
This would be my rough map for places that feel distinctly Midwestern. An actual map wouldn't have quite as smooth of lines and would have a few places cut out. If nothing else Iowa is definitely the only wholly Midwestern state. Now if you wanted to argue about if the southern half of Minnesota is the most Midwestern place or if Kansas City is the most Midwestern big city or if large parts of Illinois or Indiana are the most Midwestern places, those are arguments that can be reasonably had.A little stubbyMinneapolis, Kansas City, Indianapolis, Omaha, Des Moines, and Sioux Falls are the most Midwest feeling cities.
Chicago, Milwaukee, Green Bay, Duluth, Detroit, and Cleveland are all Great Lakes cities which make them feel different than the Midwest in a variety of ways. St. Louis, Louisville, and Cincinnati are all a combination of Midwest and Southern.
You go much farther north from Minneapolis and it doesn't feel like the Midwest anymore. You start to go west from Sioux Falls, Omaha, or Kansas City and it doesn't take that long to feel like you are out of the Midwest. And if you go south or east from Indianapolis you get outside the Midwest.
View attachment 171225This would be my rough map for places that feel distinctly Midwestern. An actual map wouldn't have quite as smooth of lines and would have a few places cut out. If nothing else Iowa is definitely the only wholly Midwestern state. Now if you wanted to argue about if the southern half of Minnesota is the most Midwestern place or if Kansas City is the most Midwestern big city or if large parts of Illinois or Indiana are the most Midwestern places, those are arguments that can be reasonably had.
I’d agree with your first list, but I would drop Minneapolis off of the Midwest feel.Minneapolis, Kansas City, Indianapolis, Omaha, Des Moines, and Sioux Falls are the most Midwest feeling cities.
Chicago, Milwaukee, Green Bay, Duluth, Detroit, and Cleveland are all Great Lakes cities which make them feel different than the Midwest in a variety of ways. St. Louis, Louisville, and Cincinnati are all a combination of Midwest and Southern.
You go much farther north from Minneapolis and it doesn't feel like the Midwest anymore. You start to go west from Sioux Falls, Omaha, or Kansas City and it doesn't take that long to feel like you are out of the Midwest. And if you go south or east from Indianapolis you get outside the Midwest.
View attachment 171225This would be my rough map for places that feel distinctly Midwestern. An actual map wouldn't have quite as smooth of lines and would have a few places cut out. If nothing else Iowa is definitely the only wholly Midwestern state. Now if you wanted to argue about if the southern half of Minnesota is the most Midwestern place or if Kansas City is the most Midwestern big city or if large parts of Illinois or Indiana are the most Midwestern places, those are arguments that can be reasonably had.
My vote is for Indiana. But Iowa is certainly 1B
It can’t be Minnesota, too becuase liberal and too lakey.
It can’t be Wisconsin, because too drunk.
It can’t be Illinois, because big city Chicago.
It can’t be Kansas or Nebraska, because too cringey.
It can’t be the Dakotas, because the dakotas.
It can’t be Missouri or Kentucky, because SEC
Michigan is too stoned and Ohio is full of ********.
Truth. I got caught in a torrential downpour just east of Lexington Ky and by the time I got to Evansville I said enough is enough.Southern Indiana is like Deliverance.
This 100%. Agree with all points about the periphery regions being similar but with distinct differences.Minneapolis, Kansas City, Indianapolis, Omaha, Des Moines, and Sioux Falls are the most Midwest feeling cities.
Chicago, Milwaukee, Green Bay, Duluth, Detroit, and Cleveland are all Great Lakes cities which make them feel different than the Midwest in a variety of ways. St. Louis, Louisville, and Cincinnati are all a combination of Midwest and Southern.
You go much farther north from Minneapolis and it doesn't feel like the Midwest anymore. You start to go west from Sioux Falls, Omaha, or Kansas City and it doesn't take that long to feel like you are out of the Midwest. And if you go south or east from Indianapolis you get outside the Midwest.
View attachment 171225This would be my rough map for places that feel distinctly Midwestern. An actual map wouldn't have quite as smooth of lines and would have a few places cut out. If nothing else Iowa is definitely the only wholly Midwestern state. Now if you wanted to argue about if the southern half of Minnesota is the most Midwestern place or if Kansas City is the most Midwestern big city or if large parts of Illinois or Indiana are the most Midwestern places, those are arguments that can be reasonably had.
Really? I feel like MSP, KC, DSM and Omaha are quintessential Midwest cities. Great Lakes cities along with StL have a bit of rust belt feel to them.I’d agree with your first list, but I would drop Minneapolis off of the Midwest feel.
How can anyone argue with your map not showing the heart of the "Midwest" in the Midwest States?Minneapolis, Kansas City, Indianapolis, Omaha, Des Moines, and Sioux Falls are the most Midwest feeling cities.
Chicago, Milwaukee, Green Bay, Duluth, Detroit, and Cleveland are all Great Lakes cities which make them feel different than the Midwest in a variety of ways. St. Louis, Louisville, and Cincinnati are all a combination of Midwest and Southern.
You go much farther north from Minneapolis and it doesn't feel like the Midwest anymore. You start to go west from Sioux Falls, Omaha, or Kansas City and it doesn't take that long to feel like you are out of the Midwest. And if you go south or east from Indianapolis you get outside the Midwest.
View attachment 171225This would be my rough map for places that feel distinctly Midwestern. An actual map wouldn't have quite as smooth of lines and would have a few places cut out. If nothing else Iowa is definitely the only wholly Midwestern state. Now if you wanted to argue about if the southern half of Minnesota is the most Midwestern place or if Kansas City is the most Midwestern big city or if large parts of Illinois or Indiana are the most Midwestern places, those are arguments that can be reasonably had.
Somehow we’ve landed on “big city I don’t like” = not Midwest.Really? I feel like MSP, KC, DSM and Omaha are quintessential Midwest cities. Great Lakes cities along with StL have a bit of rust belt feel to them.
Not sure what other region/feel MSP could have. Way more like the MW feel than Great Lakes/Rust Belt.
Somehow we’ve landed on “big city I don’t like” = not Midwest.
Twin cities are absolutely big city vibe, but still Midwest in character. Most people there either grew up in Minnesota or Iowa/surrounding state.
Just as New York is a Northeastern city, Atlanta is a Southern city, Phoenix is a Southwestern City, Seattle is a Pacific Northwestern City…and so on.
The Minnesota accent could have its own thread. Interesting topic. It's weird that some areas of the state have it and some do not. When I was in my early 20s I dated a girl from Warroad, way the hell up in the northern part of the state, and she had the accent big time. It freaked me out when she would talk dirty during... well, you know.To be Midwestern, you have to have the Midwestern "accent". So take Minnesota off the list.
I will never forget when our farm help went to college at SIU and came back with a goddamn southern accent. We lived closed enough to Wisconsin to spit on it.Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Kansas are all Dixieland adjacent in the south end.
Iowa in the south end is something indescribable.
I feel MSP is a Chicago wannabe. The other cities mentioned I would agree are what you think of when Midwest is mentioned.Really? I feel like MSP, KC, DSM and Omaha are quintessential Midwest cities. Great Lakes cities along with StL have a bit of rust belt feel to them.
Not sure what other region/feel MSP could have. Way more like the MW feel than Great Lakes/Rust Belt.
If you're a multi-generational Illinoisan wanting to know where you land on the north/south cultural divide, it's worth figuring out who your ancestors voted for.
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1860 United States presidential election in Illinois - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
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Not only that, the Great Lakes and Rust Belt cities have a distinct look and vibe, and it’s not MSP at all. MSP feels a hell of a lot more like Denver or a western city than Chicago or any of the Rust Belt industrial cities.Somehow we’ve landed on “big city I don’t like” = not Midwest.
Twin cities are absolutely big city vibe, but still Midwest in character. Most people there either grew up in Minnesota or Iowa/surrounding state.
Just as New York is a Northeastern city, Atlanta is a Southern city, Phoenix is a Southwestern City, Seattle is a Pacific Northwestern City…and so on.