• World's Top cities list out: New York comes in 1st, London 2nd, and Paris 3rd
    97 replies, posted
[QUOTE=Animosus;46966766]Qantas does, but Emirates mostly, if not always, flies into Dubai then out to whatever city, whereas Qantas would probably take a different route. Wouldn't want to fly Qantas anyway, never really liked them.[/QUOTE] Shame they fucked up my emirates flight. The service in flight was good. When I was gonna fly off, the reservations team fucked up my flight with someone else, and they had to delay me. Then flying back, the plane to singapore flew off, and they were really messy. Fixed us a last minute flight back, but we had to run all the way to our plane.
[QUOTE=headshotter;46956335]Paris definitly is dirty[/QUOTE] Only some place of Paris are dirty, if you live in the shithole part of Paris, that's your fault. So yeah, if you want to visit paris, don't try to go everywhere, that's a bad idea. And yeah, peoples in Paris are rude.
Three expensive, shitty cities
[QUOTE=Chrille;46965623]I'd visit Berlin over Paris any day. Haven't been to New York. London is pretty nice, I was only there for a week, but after getting familiar with the Tube I had a great time exploring the city. There's also a certain charm to British pub culture I think.[/QUOTE] New York's a somewhat boring city after the initial shock of times square - don't get me wrong, there's a lot of stuff to do there, but the city itself is boring to just walk around in. Might have something to do with the grid layout, I don't know. Totally agree with you on Berlin, London and Paris there, though.
Big cities suck. Small cities, interstate regional hubs, and historic towns/villages are way cooler and more fun to visit. In big cities everything is super expensive and people are rude and everything is dirty and there's usually a lot of crime and it's all artificial beauty. Concrete, asphalt, steel, glass. Give me a historic town/village on a lake or in a valley or in the mountains with natural beauty and gorgeous older brick and mortar or rough hewn stone buildings any day. Also diner food is better.
[QUOTE=Lord Xenoyia;46946549]I went to Paris once. It was dirty and everyone was rude. People overrate that rusty telephone pylon. How is that #3?![/QUOTE] In Japan Paris is really popular, so when Japanese people visit the city and actually see it's no where NEAR what their expectations were, they actually get physically sick. This phenomenon is known as Paris Syndrome It's not exclusive to Japanese people or Paris, though
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