August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (JFields27 @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 01:52 PM) hmm my cousin goes to mizzou .. .hes lives in st. louis, big cubs fan But he gets made fun of all the time for that. I have a friend who is from SE Missouri, big Cardinals country, and he was a die-hard Cubs fan and heard it all the time.
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (YASNY @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 02:48 PM) Ok, someone remind me ... it's been a few years. Who's number was Hudson3-2700? I believe that was Magikist Carpets. . . "Call Buchelle at: [insert Deep Voice here] Hudson3-2700" Why the hell is that still stuck in my head after all these years? Edited August 5, 200817 yr by FlaSoxxJim
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (JFields27 @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 01:41 PM) wait you dont think the 100's are part of chicago? I know they literally are part of the city, but I start thinking suburbs when I get out that far. I just grew up so far into the city that that doesn't seem like it's in the city to me.
August 5, 200817 yr so Pop is a midwestern thing, Soda an eastern, Coke a Southern, Western is all over the place. Anyways what do you think Other is, i cant even think what people would call pop/soda
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (FlaSoxxJim @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 02:13 PM) I believe that was Magikist Carpets. . . "Call Buchelle at: [insert Deep Voice here] Hudson3-2700" Why the hell is that still stuck in my head after all these years? It's been stuck in my head for years as well. And yes, the very deep voice also.
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (StrangeSox @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 02:19 PM) Pop vs. Soda map http://popvssoda.com:2998/ That map doesn't have pop stretching down to my part of Illinois, and I don't know any locals that call it soda. Edit: Now that I visit the webpage, it just shows both soda and pop overlapping my area, which is still inaccurate but not as bad. Edited August 5, 200817 yr by Jake
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (Jake @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 02:40 PM) That map doesn't have pop stretching down to my part of Illinois, and I don't know any locals that call it soda. It's based on user-inputs to the website. Vote!
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (Jake @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 12:40 PM) That map doesn't have pop stretching down to my part of Illinois, and I don't know any locals that call it soda. Edit: Now that I visit the webpage, it just shows both soda and pop overlapping my area, which is still inaccurate but not as bad. Here is one done a few years ago, much larger sample, by county and percentage.
August 5, 200817 yr I must be the only one that doesn't have a picture of Harold Washington anywhere in my house.
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (JFields27 @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 03:24 PM) so Pop is a midwestern thing, Soda an eastern, Coke a Southern, Western is all over the place. Anyways what do you think Other is, i cant even think what people would call pop/soda I've heard tonic? But, that's pretty rare.
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (lostfan @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 01:44 PM) Yeah the loop is actually a very small area, very specifically defined by the area the L trains go around. If you're outside that, you're not in the loop... not even the area east of Wabash to the lakefront which is still in the heart of downtown. Not true at all. The "West Loop" stretches all the way to Ashland. The "South Loop" stretches deep almost to the Stevenson. The El trains only go to Wells on the west side which means the Sears tower wouldnt be in the Loop according to your calculations.
August 5, 200817 yr QUOTE (RockRaines @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 06:02 PM) Not true at all. The "West Loop" stretches all the way to Ashland. The "South Loop" stretches deep almost to the Stevenson. The El trains only go to Wells on the west side which means the Sears tower wouldnt be in the Loop according to your calculations. The West Loop and South Loop are the West Loop and the South Loop, those are different areas. The most specific, literal definition is the area the L tracks go around. And no, the Sears Tower is technically not in the Loop either. If you define the "loop" as the general downtown area, then yeah, that's a much wider area.
August 6, 200817 yr QUOTE (LosMediasBlancas @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 07:14 PM) Sorry guys, but the burbs are not Chicago, IMO. Just part of the collective sprawl known as "Chicagoland"
August 6, 200817 yr QUOTE (maggsmaggs @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 12:49 PM) The pop one is good. Everybody that goes to Mizzou (not from Chicago) always says soda and I am just like: what? I refer to it as soda. And from Chicago area. Just for the record.
August 6, 200817 yr The word "Joe" is always used and I don't mean the name. Means yo most of the time or dude.
August 6, 200817 yr Author QUOTE (lostfan @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 04:26 PM) The West Loop and South Loop are the West Loop and the South Loop, those are different areas. The most specific, literal definition is the area the L tracks go around. And no, the Sears Tower is technically not in the Loop either. If you define the "loop" as the general downtown area, then yeah, that's a much wider area. That's exactly right. All of those other areas have piggy-backed themselves onto the "loop" name so that they could raise the rents.
August 6, 200817 yr QUOTE (lostfan @ Aug 5, 2008 -> 05:26 PM) The West Loop and South Loop are the West Loop and the South Loop, those are different areas. The most specific, literal definition is the area the L tracks go around. And no, the Sears Tower is technically not in the Loop either. If you define the "loop" as the general downtown area, then yeah, that's a much wider area. The "Loop" has been defined as the central business district since 1920, which is everything inside of the river boundries, so yes, it is in the loop. Pre-1920 it would have not been. The "West Loop" is the business district just past the river to the highway, and beyond that to Ashland, which is a residential area, is called the west loop gate. Edited August 6, 200817 yr by RockRaines
August 6, 200817 yr QUOTE (RockRaines @ Aug 6, 2008 -> 10:23 AM) The "Loop" has been defined as the central business district since 1920, which is everything inside of the river boundries, so yes, it is in the loop. Pre-1920 it would have not been. The "West Loop" is the business district just past the river to the highway, and beyond that to Ashland, which is a residential area, is called the west loop gate. http://www.chicagohome.com/NHDetails.cfm?NH_ID=27 This lists the boundaries as 45E (Wabash), 300S (Jackson I think, without looking at a map), 200 W (Wells) and 200N (Lake). (I didn't notice until after I typed this that the site has the street names right next to it, lol). Technically the Sears Tower, Michigan Avenue, and Grant Park are not a part of the Loop proper. It's all semantics really and it depends on who you ask and how they define it. If you define it as the literal area where it got its name from, then it's the definition I gave which is a tiny area. If you define it colloquially as the heart of downtown, to include Grant Park, then it's everything inside the river and the lake which would be more or less the whole skyline.
August 6, 200817 yr QUOTE (lostfan @ Aug 6, 2008 -> 11:49 AM) http://www.chicagohome.com/NHDetails.cfm?NH_ID=27 This lists the boundaries as 45E (Wabash), 300S (Jackson I think, without looking at a map), 200 W (Wells) and 200N (Lake). (I didn't notice until after I typed this that the site has the street names right next to it, lol). Technically the Sears Tower, Michigan Avenue, and Grant Park are not a part of the Loop proper. It's all semantics really and it depends on who you ask and how they define it. If you define it as the literal area where it got its name from, then it's the definition I gave which is a tiny area. If you define it colloquially as the heart of downtown, to include Grant Park, then it's everything inside the river and the lake which would be more or less the whole skyline. The University of Chicago made the definition of the loop to be the boundaries of the chicago river to the north and west in 1920. In official city parlance, delineated by the University of Chicago in the 1920s, the Loop is community area of Chicago number 32, bounded by the Chicago River to the north and west, Roosevelt Road to the south, and Lake Michigan to the east
August 6, 200817 yr QUOTE (RockRaines @ Aug 6, 2008 -> 01:53 PM) The University of Chicago made the definition of the loop to be the boundaries of the chicago river to the north and west in 1920. QUOTE (lostfan @ Aug 6, 2008 -> 01:49 PM) It's all semantics really and it depends on who you ask and how they define it.
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