Any place The Travelers live in SC and GA. The neighborhoods are huge mansions seemingly abandoned with a trailer home behind where they actually live. It's weird.
https://patch.com/florida/landolakes/bp--what-you-need-to-know-about-travelers
Any place The Travelers live in SC and GA. The neighborhoods are huge mansions seemingly abandoned with a trailer home behind where they actually live. It's weird.
https://patch.com/florida/landolakes/bp--what-you-need-to-know-about-travelers
The weirdest place in 'Murica is your Mom's crotchal region. Hot, humid, craggily, funky in the extreme.
Still though, a place I like to spend time...
Wall Drug has got to be up there.
slime drip wrote:
asdfg34 wrote:Supply and demand - you pay a premium for living among brilliant, attractive, ambitious people and have easy access to world-class culture and unlimited career opportunities.
But I suppose one could be happy living in a 100k vinyl siding house in Oklahoma eating cheese sandwiches and spending time with low-IQ whites.
so I pay how much and I get to live next to cringy douchebags like you?
The overwhelming smell of urine in NYC makes a cheese sandwich with Jerhro sound nice.
Eureka, CA.
nerdallert wrote:
+1 to some of the towns in remote Utah. SLC is really normal and cool city, but those tiny towns out in the middle of nowhere give off a very weird vibe.
I agree, SLC is awesome, but even there, it seems so strange that there are barely any liquor stores? Maybe it's because where I'm from there is a liquor store on every street corner open until at least midnight, but I remember one weekend my flight arrived in SLC in the evening and in that huge city I was only able to find one liquor store that was about to close at 10 PM. On a FRIDAY NIGHT!
Jolo, WV
Eastern Tennessee mountains.
Your butt
Jerome, AZ
A brutal drive up a mountain to a former Ghost town built into the side of the mountain, that remade itself into...weirdness.
+1 for Centralia, weird place, with an interesting past
Forks, WA
Any city in Montana
I'll vote for Portland. I'm really suprised I didn't see anyone else toss this out there previously.
I've been all over the US, and Portland both labels itself weird, and it does a pretty solid job of delivering. I still can't understand the kids who seem to drop out of HS, get a dog, and live in a city park. They aren't like on some great road trip, they're just basically hanging out in a park.
My 5 year old daughter met her first cross dresser, mayyyybe 50 ft from leaving our hotel for the first time. Have you ever tried describing oddities to a 5 year old!
Para
Sunnydale. It's not like other towns. Lots of mysterious deaths and supernatural happenings that kept getting covered up, plus a weird girl with a pointy stake who wanders around at night, making sure you stay inside.
Pretty much Anytown, Midwest of population
Holyland USA, abandoned religious theme park in Waterbury . Conn.
I' m somewhat religious but even when it was opened it creeped me out .
Snake.handlers wrote:
Jolo, WV
Isn't the Church of Jesus Christ with Signs Following in Jolo?
Canada Girl wrote:
It seems so strange that there are barely any liquor stores?
The State operates all liquor stores. They have a number of other detailed and bizarre restrictions in restaurants. For example, a limited number of wine glasses are allowed on a table per person.
Living in the State is a whole other level of strange.
I’m a D2 female runner. Our coach explicitly told us not to visit LetsRun forums.
Great interview with Steve Cram - says Jakob has no chance of WRs this year
Guys between age of 45 and 55 do you think about death or does it seem far away
2024 College Track & Field Open Coaching Positions Discussion
RENATO can you talk about the preparation of Emile Cairess 2:06
adizero Road to Records with Yomif Kejelcha, Agnes Ngetich, Hobbs Kessler & many more is Saturday