Dallas
New York City
New York City is about 7Ă— the size of Dallas by population.
At a glance
Weather, month by month
Cost of living
What locals say
Living in Dallas feels big, spread out, and heavily car-dependent, with a polished downtown core surrounded by suburbs, shopping corridors, and constant highway traffic. The city has a strong corporate, upscale side—good restaurants, luxury hotels, museums, and a major airport—but everyday life can be frustrating if you are stuck commuting across town or dealing with long drives to get almost anywhere. Politics is unusually visible in public life right now, with frequent protests, voting-line complaints, and a lot of civic energy spilling into the streets and online. At the same time, people still notice small pleasures: beautiful malls, busy coffee shops, patio bars, and moments where the city feels lively and connected rather than just sprawling.
- Traffic and airport runs6
- Polling-place and civic friction5
- Car culture and suburban sprawl4
- Politics in public spaces4
- Service and dealership annoyances2
- Activism and civic energy6
- Upscale amenities4
- Airport and regional connectivity3
- Food, drinks, and patio culture3
- Beautiful built environments2
“Seen at The Truck Yard in Dallas 🍻”
“This mall is relatively dead but I still visit to walk it because the building is absolutely beautiful.”
New York City feels intensely public, political, and always in motion, with everyday life spilling onto sidewalks, subways, and parks. People seem used to friction—crowds, transit delays, scams, protests, construction, weather chaos—but they also normalize moments of mutual aid, from CPR by strangers to neighbors showing up for rallies, pickets, and community work. The city’s personality in these posts is unusually civic-minded and expressive: residents argue about elections, labor, and immigration while also making art on the subway, in museums, and on the street. Even with the noise and stress, there’s a strong sense that the city rewards being outside, paying attention, and joining in.
- Transit and infrastructure chaos6
- Scams and petty urban hustles3
- Political corruption / bad governance5
- ICE / policing / public safety tensions4
- Crowding and urban strain4
- Civic energy and political engagement6
- Mutual aid and everyday heroism5
- Public art and visual culture5
- Resilience and grit4
- Neighborhood and street-level energy4
“Share it wide and loud.”
“Yeah ranked voting just feels like such a better system. Maybe I'm too optimistic, but there actually are a good number of candidates that I would be fine voting for and I love not having to make the business decision of choosing a candidate I don't like as much because it would otherwise be wasted. A bit unfortunate for me that the two leading candidates are probably my bottom two, but at least I can still vote for who I want.”
Food & nightlife
The food scene reads as broad and polished, with plenty of high-end dining, but Reddit posts in this sample lean more toward specific spots than restaurant debate. Coffee shops, mall food, and casual beer-and-patio places show up alongside the upscale reputation, suggesting you can eat well at both the expensive and low-key ends. The city’s food culture seems tied to socializing and convenience as much as to destination dining, with many people meeting up at places that double as hangouts.
Nightlife in Dallas looks centered on car-accessible entertainment districts, breweries, and patio bars rather than a dense walkable club core. The Truck Yard is the kind of place people mention as a scene, and downtown/Elm Street seems to come alive around protests and late gatherings as much as traditional nightlife. The vibe is more sprawling and mixed-age than edgy, with a lot of after-work drinking, live music, and group meetups.
The food scene comes across as cheap, fast, globally mixed, and deeply tied to neighborhood identity. Halal food is singled out as broadly appealing, and the city’s everyday eating seems to include corner stores, dollar-store-type spots, coffee chains, street vendors, and late-night grab-and-go meals rather than only destination restaurants. There’s also a strong undercurrent of worker politics around food, especially the Starbucks strike boycott, which makes even coffee feel local and political. Food in NYC is not portrayed as polished luxury so much as fuel for a city that eats on the move.
Nightlife here feels less like a single scene and more like an extension of the city’s public life: protests in Times Square, holiday subway gimmicks, walking around after dark, and crowds that keep spilling into the night. The posts suggest a city where being out late can mean bars and clubs, but also rallies, transit rides, street noise, and impromptu spectacle. There’s a playful, chaotic energy to it—costumes on the subway, pumpkins on the M line, people circulating through dense public spaces. The vibe is social and performative, but also restless and political.
Weather vs. what locals say
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The weather sentiment is mixed in a very Texas way: people expect extremes, and when cold snaps arrive the city is visibly underprepared. The jokes about one snow plow and dripping faucets suggest that winter weather is treated as a brief disruption rather than a normal condition. Heat is not directly discussed in these posts, but the overall tone implies Dallas weather is something people adapt around rather than admire, with occasional weather events creating civic chaos.
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The weather seems less like a background condition than an event people react to collectively. A 24-hour blizzard is the kind of thing that becomes a timelapse, a snow corps operation, and a shared reference point, while hot weather appears in the form of overheated birds and general summer strain. Statistically, New York has all the usual Northeast weather, but locals talk about it through disruption, spectacle, and adaptation rather than averages. The city’s weather identity is basically: you plan around it, joke about it, and keep moving anyway.
In short
- New York City is about 7Ă— the size of Dallas by population.
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