I Took the LONGEST Greyhound Bus Route in America. 4 DAYS!

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  • Опубліковано 26 лют 2022
  • I tried to cross America on a Greyhound bus, on their longest route. It didn't end well...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 8 тис.

  • @freeportkid
    @freeportkid 2 роки тому +2544

    “It can’t be that bad” … anyone who’s ever been on a greyhound started praying for you at that point

    • @Mycatsmeow2
      @Mycatsmeow2 2 роки тому +35

      Truth! Lol

    • @mickcurran4201
      @mickcurran4201 2 роки тому +11

      🤣

    • @supportmalphite8769
      @supportmalphite8769 2 роки тому +93

      People who ride greyhound are a lesser class of human being.

    • @SyriusStarMultimedia
      @SyriusStarMultimedia 2 роки тому +5

      Amen.

    • @APres20
      @APres20 2 роки тому +57

      i went from Johnson City, TN, to Oklahoma City, OK, on a greyhound for a trucking job. Never again. I can't imagine the cross country route.

  • @Dr.Pepper001
    @Dr.Pepper001 2 роки тому +1836

    In 1967 I took a Greyhound bus from Jacksonville, Florida to San Diego. It took 4 days. I was a young Marine who was on my way to Camp Pendleton for training prior to heading for Vietnam. I enjoyed the trip. The drivers stopped several times along the route for breakfast, lunch, and supper. I'm 75 now but remember the details of the trip quite well.

    • @josh3749
      @josh3749 2 роки тому +82

      Legend 🙏

    • @DopeWafflez
      @DopeWafflez 2 роки тому +35

      thanks for sharing!

    • @eriktruchinskas3747
      @eriktruchinskas3747 2 роки тому +36

      Hoorah devil dog, thank you for your service. You hear about the deaths from the AAV that sunk near pendleton last year?

    • @cslx6678
      @cslx6678 2 роки тому +22

      Thank you sir

    • @jcost0099
      @jcost0099 2 роки тому +32

      Welcome Home Marine!

  • @dalcon555
    @dalcon555 Рік тому +344

    The laugh of the first greyhound ticket checker when he found out Noel was going from LA to NY SAID EVERYTHING

    • @whatever8282828
      @whatever8282828 7 місяців тому +17

      A lot of people need to do trips like this, although if you do, it would be better on Amtrak! I met interesting people that way. (some folks are not allowed on airplanes for various reasons)

    • @Dr.ZoidbergPhD
      @Dr.ZoidbergPhD 6 місяців тому +10

      ​@whatever8282828 Amtrak is more expensive than an airplane doing the same distance and I doubt most ppl would do that trip just bc

    • @adriande1
      @adriande1 5 місяців тому +2

      @@Dr.ZoidbergPhDAmtrak also offers horrible service.

    • @Twobarpsi
      @Twobarpsi 5 місяців тому +1

      Fax

  • @erics3317
    @erics3317 Рік тому +306

    I like how at least 2 Greyhound employees were like "Really?!" when they found out you were going all the way to NYC from LA.

    • @dwightjs1
      @dwightjs1 Рік тому +10

      For $100 more you can fly.

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB 8 місяців тому

      Lies again? Ezlink Card USD SGD

    • @SeizureGman
      @SeizureGman 6 місяців тому +3

      @@dwightjs1 When I watched this video I found if you booked a week or two in advance flying always cheaper if you didn't mind transfers even direct was only like 30 to 40 bucks more. I'm from the UK so maybe i'm missing special offers or something

  • @breakfastsausage
    @breakfastsausage 2 роки тому +5774

    Also a round of applause for the bravery shown by choosing Taco Bell when you know you'll be stuck on a bus for 4 days.

    • @Wuts_Gud
      @Wuts_Gud 2 роки тому +131

      Lmao my thoughts exactly

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 2 роки тому +66

      Why? Probably the safest thing. Not fresh. Since all of it is meats and sauces freeze dry and rehydrated.

    • @1MinuteFlipDoc
      @1MinuteFlipDoc 2 роки тому +173

      having to lose all the contents of your GI system in the bathroom of that bus, after eating taco bell. fun for EVERYONE! hahah

    • @jaytrock3217
      @jaytrock3217 2 роки тому +23

      @@1MinuteFlipDoc LOL taco bell of 20 years ago. Now it is all rehydrated. Maybe the sour cream.

    • @eyepodwalkman6247
      @eyepodwalkman6247 2 роки тому +76

      Taco Bell isn't as digestively hazardous as it's reputed to be. Just be conservative with your choices.

  • @QlifeXL
    @QlifeXL 2 роки тому +1387

    Riding a Greyhound for the bus for an hour will change your whole outlook on life. You will also meet people that you only heard about in folklore.

    • @odiecalodie
      @odiecalodie 2 роки тому +91

      And these are people you only see on a Greyhound Bus.

    • @alohathaxted
      @alohathaxted 2 роки тому +50

      And billygoats gruffs and other lesser pagan demons.

    • @QueenKayKay47
      @QueenKayKay47 2 роки тому +7

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @siripfreely
      @siripfreely 2 роки тому

      Here in Canada, we once had a mentally ill passenger decapitate another passenger.

    • @youtubeexpert9089
      @youtubeexpert9089 2 роки тому +17

      It's just uncomfortable af

  • @MarionStevensJr
    @MarionStevensJr 2 роки тому +497

    I did quite a few shorter Greyhound trips during college, and I viewed them as, while not great, at least tolerable. But then I did a a 17-hour overnight trip. I foolishly thought going overnight would be easier, since I could sleep most of the time. Nothing could be further from the truth. And I got to spend several hours in the Memphis bus station during the middle of the night. Even though the staff said they'd transfer my bag to the next bus, i grabbed it and never let it out of my sight. I couldn't wait to get on the next bus. Needless to say, I felt horrible by the time I reached my destination.
    On the flipside, some years later, I had to make quite a few trips to help take care of my parents, who were both terminally ill. So, naturally, I was buying tickets at the station pretty regularly. It was run by an older lady and an older gentleman. Not sure if they were married, but I suspect they were. Once those folks found out why I was traveling so much, they started applying every discount they could, whether I was eligible or not. They never asked or told me they were going to do it; they just did. I'm immensely grateful to those folks.

  • @sclm046
    @sclm046 Рік тому +150

    My dad was a Greyhound driver for over 40 years, retiring in 1969. San Antonio was "home" terminal. His route was from San Antonio, Texas, to Laredo on the Mexican Border and return. Paid by the mile, a round-trip was 312 miles. I know he would not be pleased with the way busses are operated these days. Enjoyed the video!

    • @lilcam-qk9mp
      @lilcam-qk9mp Рік тому +5

      I bet that was a very scenic drive. The desert southwest is beautiful

    • @briantampa1164
      @briantampa1164 Рік тому

      ​@Dale Gribble very good point

    • @alexlabs4858
      @alexlabs4858 Рік тому +3

      I would love to travel back to that time and experience a greyhound bus ride. In today’s time, I can tell you with confidence I will never step foot on a greyhound.

    • @madlad4206
      @madlad4206 7 місяців тому

      @@alexlabs4858 it's all the black people on it that ruin it

  • @Ccdddttt
    @Ccdddttt 2 роки тому +1151

    I rode greyhound round trip from Atlanta to San Diego twice. Both trips were less than 4 weeks apart, I no longer fear hell.

    • @gurvinka
      @gurvinka 2 роки тому +31

      😂

    • @emoney865
      @emoney865 2 роки тому +11

      Lmaooo

    • @vintage3262
      @vintage3262 Рік тому +25

      You better hell isn't a joke

    • @AbrahamG.99
      @AbrahamG.99 Рік тому +32

      @@vintage3262 it is

    • @vintage3262
      @vintage3262 Рік тому +20

      @@AbrahamG.99 Then you need to repent in Jesus name because Jesus is coming and we do not want to be on the end of the sword. Why go to hell over pride?

  • @ken_in_atx9619
    @ken_in_atx9619 2 роки тому +870

    Someone that says a 5 hour Spirit flight is worse than a 4 day Greyhound trip has never ridden on a Greyhound bus.

    • @gugalaxy7772
      @gugalaxy7772 2 роки тому +16

      Would you say it's worth it going on a spirit airlines trip that cost 10-20$ more than a Greyhound Bus? Genuine question.

    • @MrNoah11992
      @MrNoah11992 2 роки тому +40

      @@gugalaxy7772 of course

    • @arlenem.6469
      @arlenem.6469 2 роки тому +8

      I've taken a greyhound from Southern California to Northern California and it was ok. There are rude people, but they're probably on the plane, too.

    • @blackkkabllakkcaa
      @blackkkabllakkcaa 2 роки тому +31

      Did 24hr greyhound from Tampa to DC. The people on the busses are kinda sketch, but for me the no leg room is what sucks. Take spirit and get it over with

    • @RaghunandanReddyC
      @RaghunandanReddyC 2 роки тому +6

      They are equally worse. Buses in India recline way more than Greyhound busses. Seats too are cramped compared to back home. I think they can do much better.

  • @HAL-bo5lr
    @HAL-bo5lr Рік тому +156

    Your positivity and laid-back reactions towards any situation, no matter how unbearable, is one of the reasons why you and your channel are amazing!

    • @noelphilips
      @noelphilips  Рік тому +20

      I appreciate that

    • @davorlekenik9563
      @davorlekenik9563 7 місяців тому

      ​@@noelphilips...have you been in Croatia ??

    • @PeterBren
      @PeterBren 2 місяці тому

      Yes, you are laid back, but that was because you have plenty of money to take an uber to a good hotel any time you wanted, and a flight. No medals for that then.
      Most on Greyhound can hardly afford the ticket. Slumming they call it in England don't they? Still your torment was entertaining.☺️

    • @jimbob-robob
      @jimbob-robob 2 місяці тому

      ​@@noelphilips music way too loud and intrusive...

  • @dcl505
    @dcl505 Рік тому +64

    If anyone's wondering what it feels like, just imagine eating lemon for 4 days straight while living in the slums of Skid Row, tension never leaves you until you get off at your final stop. Noel handled it with classic English politeness and unique ability to rationalize the chaos of hell

  • @jeffherdz
    @jeffherdz 2 роки тому +1531

    Being a Greyhound driver (out of Chicago) I can tell you that I never put up with any kind of garbage on the bus. I have called Police and State Troopers on multiple occasions. And have had many people removed from the bus for issues. Smoking in the bathroom....Yes. Why? Have you ever seen a bus catch on fire ...I'm guessing not. Let's just say that not everyone would make it off a bus should a fire break out. Still better than falling 30,000 ft and slamming into the ground. Or becoming dinner to hungry sharks. Drugs/alcohol, fighting, on and on and on.
    But I have to admit that I have met some wonderful people on the bus as well. If you brought a guitar on the bus good or bad player, I would ask you to play. If you were in the back of the bus, I would get on the intercom and suggest.... Freebird !!
    I've met trucker, fathers, husbands, mothers, wives, daughters, Marines, Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen. Nuns, Priest and people just trying to make it day by day.
    And the elderly. being thrown on Greyhound and shipped across the nation, expecting the drivers take care of them for 3 -4 days by family members, as you pull away...being glad as to not have to worry about them on the 4,000 mile journey.
    I can remember one gentleman that was so confused about where he was, he started crying.
    Sorry to say ... Drives are drivers...not social workers.
    Oh F.Y.I. Next time on Greyhound. Fun fact....You can get off the bus at any location and stay in a hotel, and get back on the bus the next day. It's not a Prison bus. Just advise the drive that you wanna get off and they can adjust your tickets.
    And if you wanna sleep. Stay close to the front of the bus. Might even have a chat with the drivers, if they feel up to it.

    • @crystalgrose
      @crystalgrose 2 роки тому +124

      Mr. Herdzina, just want to say “Thanks” to you for being a Greyhound Bus Driver. You and the many other drivers are very much appreciated even if you don’t hear it much. I love Greyhound. Been taking trips since I was a kid. Love traveling ground level ♥️

    • @jeffherdz
      @jeffherdz 2 роки тому +57

      @@crystalgrose Well, if you ever rode on my bus. Hope you enjoyed the ride.

    • @Michael_Wood
      @Michael_Wood 2 роки тому +48

      Thanks for sharing your story, Jeff. I might have been one of those Marines back in 1994 from San Diego to Chicago. Whatever the case, it was a cool experience where you get to meet all types of people and personalities.

    • @Someloke8895
      @Someloke8895 2 роки тому +35

      I've done the Greyhound route from Seattle > Birmingham, then a few years later Birmingham > Boston. Only saw 2 people being removed off the buses, 1 for trying to buy weed at a gas station stop, the other because she was very confused, abusive and very much in need of professional help (Police took care of her).
      Both times were an experience, mostly good, although I'm mystified by the Trout Museum at St Regis' truck stop near the Idaho/Montana border.

    • @jeffherdz
      @jeffherdz 2 роки тому +20

      @@Michael_Wood Thank you for your service,.

  • @VideoNOLA
    @VideoNOLA 2 роки тому +805

    Every prospective Greyhound rider ever: "I hope they have a bathroom on board!"
    Every person who's ridden Greyhound: "I wish they didn't have a bathroom on board!"

    • @AndrewGrey22
      @AndrewGrey22 2 роки тому

      Yeah sitting in the back row poop deck especially. You know, where the seats sit straight up and heroin junkies pass out for three days laying back there?

    • @raytheperson
      @raytheperson 2 роки тому +5

      Facts

    • @DonOblivious
      @DonOblivious 2 роки тому +42

      It's really hard to rank my Greyhound experiences in order from "worst to most uneventful" but "trapped in the back near the bathroom and a women that hadn't bathed in months" is pretty high up on the awful list. You absolutely want to be at the front of the bus! It's noisier because of all the smokers getting off the bus every stop, but earplugs can help block that. You can't easily block the bathroom smell.

    • @petemiller9404
      @petemiller9404 2 роки тому +14

      I learned to not sit by the bathroom after my first bus ride, 60s.

    • @KiambuX
      @KiambuX 2 роки тому +36

      That seat by the toilet is the seventh level of hell.

  • @MykelBBY1
    @MykelBBY1 Рік тому +55

    I took a Greyhound bus from Salt Lake City, Utah to Paris, Kentucky in the Fall of 1970. I met some nice and very interesting people (I really mean that). I sat next to a young lady with a newborn baby named Dawn and I held and played with her off and on through five states. She would be 52 years old now and I have sometimes wondered how her life turned out. Overall, it was an enjoyable 2-1/2 day trip with some exceptions: they lost my luggage, and I was almost mugged in the basement restroom of the Cincinnati bus terminal. I am 70 years old now and have never taken another Greyhound trip. I am kind of sad about that.

  • @jukappa
    @jukappa Рік тому +97

    I remember thinking as a kid Greyhounds were cool and luxurious. When you’re so used to riding a school bus and then you get to ride one of these guys on a big end of the year field trip with all your friends. It was all just good memories for me.

    • @phyllismiller1845
      @phyllismiller1845 Рік тому +3

      The Good Lord stepped in and got you off of that bus.🙏🏻👍🏻😂🤗

  • @martyyoung598
    @martyyoung598 2 роки тому +933

    In the summer of 1977 Greyhound had some sort of a “go anywhere pass” for a fixed price and you could keep riding the buss and go anywhere, literally. I was due to go in the Navy in the fall, so I spent about 6 weeks that summer “living” on the bus seeing the USA. I went from Florida to California, then to the Rockies, to Chicago, up to New England, Back to Cleveland, over to Missouri then home to Florida. I stopped over and then continued when I felt like it. 19 years old then and gained a lifetime of stories I still tell today. Boy did I see and experience some real “sh…stuff”!!

    • @ewilliamson488
      @ewilliamson488 2 роки тому +17

      In 1977 I was in Orlando's bootcamp. Go Navy.

    • @tolletalk
      @tolletalk 2 роки тому +36

      I also went on a month long journey on Greyhound all across Canada and the U.S. in 1977 with a Greyhound pass for $ 200.00. It was one of my best trips I ever took. Only had one single problem with a passenger in Phoenix, AZ. Other than that we slept on the bus and traveled from Toronto to Vancouver then down the Pacific hwy to San Francisco, L.A. then Las Vegas, Denver, Cincinnati, Savannah, New York, Washington then back to Canada, Nova Scotia, Quebec and back to Toronto! It was amazing!

    • @2148aa
      @2148aa 2 роки тому +13

      @@tolletalk You will be sad to find out Greyhound pulled out of Canada last year. No bus service has filled the vacuum. Greyhound hauled alot of mail in Canada.

    • @t.r4849
      @t.r4849 2 роки тому +2

      Fake news

    • @ellismeah5127
      @ellismeah5127 2 роки тому

      Great way to see the country

  • @sunnyscott4876
    @sunnyscott4876 2 роки тому +461

    In the early 60s, my grandmother was afraid to fly so I took a Greyhound bus with her from Los Angeles to Syracuse New York. I was probably 9 or 10 at the time. I am now 73 years old and I still to this day, cannot see a bus without remembering that long journey. When we eventually got to Syracuse my grandmother's ankles looked like sausages and the smell of diesel is forever etched in my brain.

    • @jimsteinway695
      @jimsteinway695 2 роки тому +8

      I’ve taken Trailways from SoCal to Texas, and from Texas to Alexandria Virginia that was a long ride for a teenager.
      And when I was little I used to routinely take a bus-from Dallas to San Antonio as a 8 year old. Think about that today!

    • @forgetfulpriestiv14
      @forgetfulpriestiv14 2 роки тому +13

      Wow, what an amazing story, and the buses of the 1960s weren't as comfortable as they are now and even now they aren't comfortable on long journeys. The longest I have done on a Greyhound bus is 24 hours

    • @sunnyscott4876
      @sunnyscott4876 2 роки тому +8

      @@forgetfulpriestiv14 I'm so glad now that I can get across the country in 4 hours on American Airlines.......✈💛🌎✈

    • @jeffrey.a.hanson
      @jeffrey.a.hanson 2 роки тому +6

      Damn. I used to complain of minor league baseball trips from greater NYC up to Syracuse 😆.

    • @sunnyscott4876
      @sunnyscott4876 2 роки тому

      @@jeffrey.a.hanson OK!

  • @SOak145
    @SOak145 5 місяців тому +19

    16:50 This is a certified 'Amarillo Bus Station Return Of The Jedi on a background TV' Moment 🎬🔥💯

  • @MrSamoMD
    @MrSamoMD 9 місяців тому +58

    There should be a National Prize for the first person going coast to coast on Greyhound and arrived on scheduled time, healthy and with their complete luggage.

  • @danielkuhl9209
    @danielkuhl9209 2 роки тому +1799

    If you want to see the USA at ground level, take Amtrak in a sleeping car from LA, Oakland or Seattle to New York. Much more civilized, privacy, better passengers and just a much better overall experience. As always, great video Noel!

    • @carlramirez6339
      @carlramirez6339 2 роки тому +19

      He kind of did:
      ua-cam.com/video/Mn_Oj8w_DQE/v-deo.html
      ua-cam.com/video/LpF1AUMlC5s/v-deo.html

    • @cardiac19
      @cardiac19 2 роки тому +35

      I think he did the California Zepher not too long ago.

    • @darmou
      @darmou 2 роки тому +55

      Yeah I way prefer trains a least you can stretch your legs and move around.

    • @johnsisk6912
      @johnsisk6912 2 роки тому +51

      YOU could not be more correct. Meal wifi private bathroom not bad

    • @banchnotok
      @banchnotok 2 роки тому +28

      for a grand

  • @luckyx16
    @luckyx16 2 роки тому +357

    I feel so badly for you.
    Riding on a Greyhound these days is the equivalent of sitting in the waiting room of a Psych ward for a day, wearing a sign that says talk to me.

  • @gnnascarfan2410
    @gnnascarfan2410 Рік тому +57

    As dodgy Greyhound can be, I give credit to them for not risking stranding you guys in the snow or an ice storm and calling everything off at Amarillo.

    • @fprosk
      @fprosk 6 місяців тому +7

      and they were even booking people in hotel rooms it sounded like!

    • @KevinJDildonik
      @KevinJDildonik 3 місяці тому

      Buses run in places like Canada and Sweden through the winter. "But they're prepared for that". Yes. Yes they are.

  • @noneyabusiness1718
    @noneyabusiness1718 Рік тому +94

    You had it pretty easy, back in 02 I took a greyhound from Fresno, California to Winnipeg, Manitoba. From Fresno to the Canadian border EVERY seat was packed and I'm pretty sure there were some chickens in the overhead compartment. The man in the seat behind me was doing my crossword puzzle over my shoulder then when we changed busses in Oregon I got a window seat only to have a homeless man with night terrors sit next to me. After sleeping stinky elbowed me in the face for the fifth time, I managed to escape by briefly straddling him at a stop and managed to find another empty seat. Got all the way to the border, converted my money at the duty free store just before the border only to be told I couldn't enter Canada because I "appeared to be an immigrant without a visa" - this was 5 months after 9/11 and I think I may have been the first person they've ever denied entrance to. I was removed from the bus, had to drag my luggage across several lanes of traffic and sit on the American side waiting for a greyhound to take me back to Seattle. After 8 or so hours, border patrol convinced another bus line of French Canadian tourists to let me catch a ride back with them and I reached Seattle Station a couple hours after their ticket booth had closed. All my money was in Canadian currency so I couldn't get a room or even a locker for my luggage and I had to spend the night surrounded by the kind of homeless people that scream at invisible enemies and wear their underwear over their pants. Then I met a very polite Satanist that was stranded just like I was and he and I sat back to back with our legs over our luggage and we both managed to catch a few naps overnight. The next day I purchased my return ticket and headed back to the border and at our first stop they get everyone off the bus and put you on the Canadian greyhounds. That's like going from coach on spirit airlines to a private jet if you ask me. Lots of empty seats, the bus drivers introduced themselves and played movies for us, one even told me several jokes. I swore I'd never take another American greyhound again, but in Canada - that was a blast!

    • @yuzhouyan7217
      @yuzhouyan7217 Рік тому +9

      That sounded like an exhausting adventure but fortunately it ended well. Sadly Greyhound suspended all its Canadian routes in 2021 :( The only remaining ones are Vancouver-Seattle and Toronto/Montréal-New York City.

    • @azrael4771
      @azrael4771 Рік тому +3

      Amazing story 😂😂

    • @bridgetisjonesing5007
      @bridgetisjonesing5007 Рік тому +4

      It’s like night and day, happened to me when I went from NYC to Quebec, the Canadian side is SOOOOO much better and polite, clean, greyhound was like a meth lab on wheels. We as Americans have got to do better

    • @Northanteus
      @Northanteus 9 місяців тому

      Democrats making this country a ghetto craphole, one decade at a time. Look at tent city in Democrat California, or San Francisco. The Democrats love spreading their mental illness and ghetto mindset all across the US. Disgusting.

    • @KS-fv4xt
      @KS-fv4xt 8 місяців тому +1

      Most hilarious explanation I have read ! OMG I can’t stop laughing - just imagining the whole journey in my head 😂😂😂

  • @juggalomagicninjamcl5936
    @juggalomagicninjamcl5936 2 роки тому +196

    I love how you were naïve enough to think Greyhound would get you to NY with enough time to get on your flight! That's fantastic, how ambitious!

  • @janettesinclair6279
    @janettesinclair6279 2 роки тому +264

    "We hadn't had a fight on the bus for several hours!..." That sounds like my worst nightmare. Good on you Noel for enduring this. Kudos to the drivers of these buses!

  • @ala0284
    @ala0284 Рік тому +23

    I love how consecutive videos go from Gulf Air First Class to 4 days on Greyhound. Talk about true variety

  • @apertureemployee215
    @apertureemployee215 Рік тому +22

    Greyhound is one of those things I'm amazed still exists. Honestly, just take an Amtrak or a plane especially for long routes like this. I did some quick price checking, and not only is taking a plane from LAX to JFK 14 times faster than taking the bus; its also about 50$ cheaper. If you're truly terrified of flying you can take the Amtrak, which is a bit pricier and takes about as long as a Greyhound, but is probably much more comfortable and at least you know you won't get stabbed

    • @crazychris960
      @crazychris960 Рік тому +12

      I think it's basically for people who have managed to get blacklisted from the other forms of travel.

    • @videofan1010
      @videofan1010 11 місяців тому +5

      ​@@crazychris960and young or poor people who don't a choice

  • @mikoriad
    @mikoriad 2 роки тому +180

    Sir you are a crazy man. Not many Americans would do this on purpose. Not that it's dangerous, just very, very, unpleasant.

  • @OfficialLILV
    @OfficialLILV 2 роки тому +349

    I can’t stop laughing, the undercover cops, the smell, the guy complaining on the bus. Thank you. subscribed!

    • @Nurse-Up
      @Nurse-Up Рік тому +1

      Lol

    • @darthderp8066
      @darthderp8066 Рік тому +4

      Idk about undercover cops but seems like something they would do

    • @user-Jamie218
      @user-Jamie218 Рік тому +1

      love your channel

    • @pepeshadilay
      @pepeshadilay Рік тому +1

      Yes there are undercover cops !! But they are usually at the bus terminals ,they don't ride the busses.....when I was at a terminal in Nashville this narc looking old white guy kept asking me what kind of drugs I had on me ,and he wants to buy some ...he had no luggage and no ticket

    • @osurpless
      @osurpless Рік тому +1

      @@darthderp8066 Yep, a big part about the stereotypes of bus travelers is that they wouldn’t dare object to such a blatant violation of privacy.
      Post-Patriot Act or not…

  • @erikurizita6702
    @erikurizita6702 Рік тому +21

    Greyhound is the only form of transportation slower than walking. I took nearly a 24 hour bus trip in all considering the layover, for a 312 mile trip. 3 and a half by car, 18 hours by bike.

  • @Jeng4280
    @Jeng4280 Рік тому +27

    Oh you were in that bad snow storm that we had last year! So treaturous. But I love your attitude about the whole thing. You are taking it like a grownup should!

    • @mikej5959
      @mikej5959 11 місяців тому

      Do they close the gates in texas and kansas on the onramps to high ways? Ive always seen these and no idea what they are for?

    • @Jeng4280
      @Jeng4280 9 місяців тому

      @@mikej5959 I am honestly not sure but I think they do when the roads are treaturous like that. I live in Arkansas and it literally paralyzes the state when it snows. And in Texas, its very rare but they do ebd up closing some highways and such when there is ice. Usually we do have some snow trucks that come and fix things before it hits-like putting salt on the roads beforehand. Usually when that happens we don't have much snow at all. LOL!

  • @tehnatureboy
    @tehnatureboy 2 роки тому +84

    I took a greyhound from Nyc to Los Angeles in 1998. Was a hell of a trip, no seatbelts, reclining seats, someone also smoked weed on the toilet and the cops were called in the middle of nowhere to take him away. The bus was totally full most of the way. The worst bus station was by far Detroit. It was like a demilitarized zone. Denver was by far the cleanest and organized. Many memories from that trip.

    • @nmussa6902
      @nmussa6902 2 роки тому +6

      I passed through the Detroit station in 2005 and it was apocalyptic. Went through again a few weeks ago and saw massive improvement. Still very much raggedy and ghetto, but closer to average for Cleveland/Detroit/Indianapolis.

    • @DrunkenGuitarGuy
      @DrunkenGuitarGuy 2 роки тому +8

      ya i did the east coast a few times in the 90's, not a seat to be had, and i was one of the few white guys on any of the legs! had to do one leg with a 400lb woman next to me who basically crushed me against the window! memories for sure!

    • @SushiBandit28
      @SushiBandit28 2 роки тому

      Lol Detroit always taking L's

    • @JK360noscope
      @JK360noscope 2 роки тому

      Things have... Changed since then Denver bus station is where the homeless congregate + offer me McDonald's sugar cookies after telling me how the dude's who family died in a car wreck and how dudeman can't hold a job nor a house no more

    • @xero4479
      @xero4479 2 роки тому +1

      Can't have shit in Detroit

  • @TheSpanishInquisition87
    @TheSpanishInquisition87 2 роки тому +225

    Whoever said they'd rather take a Greyhound bus than Spirit airlines has clearly never rode on a Greyhound bus. I've done my time on the Big Grey Dog, and I have horror stories.

    • @jaysantos536
      @jaysantos536 2 роки тому +13

      4 days on Greyhound bus? What's next 4 days in PRISON. About the same experience for sure.

    • @fizzyplazmuh9024
      @fizzyplazmuh9024 2 роки тому +19

      I HAVE done prison and ridden the Texas prison buses several times during that situation. Greyhound IS almost exactly as painful and unpleasant as a prison bus. At least in prison you can finally stretch out and sleep on a nice metal sheet or comfy concrete. Greyhound is always two or three more days of agony. Greyhound is super stingy so all of the routes cover wild zigzags across several states to cover more stop with fewer busses. So to go just to the next state over they may force you through TWO ADDITIONAL states that you have nothing to do with.
      The restrooms are often never emptied or the ventilator broken and the stench all the way at the front of the bus was still strong enough to make people wretch. THEN the AC broke down and THEN the engine died. And 1/3 of the buses electrical outlets for charging phones are dead.
      I HATE Greyhound.

    • @JasMcKenzie
      @JasMcKenzie 2 роки тому +5

      And it seems the Greyhound don't really give a damn about their crappy reputation. I've traveled all over Mexico in wonderful buses.

    • @GM-bd8ng
      @GM-bd8ng 2 роки тому +8

      @@fizzyplazmuh9024 I made the mistake to sit at the back near the bathroom, that had no ventilation! Grey Hound sucks.

    • @turnpike9680
      @turnpike9680 2 роки тому +1

      Same. Rode with minimum security inmates (no joke) when I was 12.

  • @collinparsons3363
    @collinparsons3363 Рік тому +22

    I have to think that 4 days on a Greyhound bus would make one appreciate the fact that you can get across the country in 5 hours and 45 minutes on a plane.

  • @eddiepickens5639
    @eddiepickens5639 3 місяці тому +5

    Bless your soul for even doing this trip

  • @Gregaleg
    @Gregaleg 2 роки тому +350

    You're a brave soul for doing this journey. Greyhound in the US has a reputation of being frequented by all sorts of crazies.

    • @greek7737
      @greek7737 2 роки тому +18

      mainly because us prisons have a deal with greyhound to transport people that get out of prison to near where they live.

    • @peterrisbergs7156
      @peterrisbergs7156 2 роки тому +24

      Several major problems with this trip-. Sitting for hours will make you constipated, give you a sore back and possible blood clots in your legs. A good night's sleep is one of the most important keys to good health and a proper immune system. I would smell like a dirty locker room without a daily bath.

    • @FrostbitexP
      @FrostbitexP 2 роки тому +3

      @Roger Rabbit 🔧 Seethe and sneed, white.

    • @mikehunt1528
      @mikehunt1528 2 роки тому +20

      @@peterrisbergs7156 Only one major problem with this trip - He didn't stop off at Hooters.

    • @tnickknight
      @tnickknight 2 роки тому +4

      @Roger Rabbit 🔧 black people are the normal ones, it's the white people that are the crazy ones

  • @user-uy3eq5hg1s
    @user-uy3eq5hg1s 2 роки тому +146

    When I was a kid my mom was poor so we would take the Greyhound Bus often. I remember one time in a Sacramento station I was playing the original Mortal Kombat arcade game and two homeless guys started fighting with sticks right outside the station. That was pretty much the worst I saw. It's definitely a popular method of transport for folks with less cash but it's a great service really, glad we have Greyhound.

    • @dcotai2902
      @dcotai2902 2 роки тому

      ... I knock u.. Btchi.. You.

    • @bwcbiz
      @bwcbiz 2 роки тому +5

      Yeah there's a bit of a vicious circle there where Greyhound's lower travel cost attracts people who are poor, but also the subset of poor people who have mental health issues, which in turn damages the passenger experience, reinforcing the notion that the bus is for poor people. But things would be even worse if Greyhound didn't exist at all.

    • @flautalee3090
      @flautalee3090 2 роки тому +1

      @@bwcbiz I agree that things would be worse without Greyhound. It would be incredibly more difficult to visit family or look for a job in a new part of the country. It would be sort of like the 1800’s before the advent of the railroads and their expansion to small towns.
      I don’t think stage coaches are making a comeback ~ except perhaps as a van that would stop at many small towns over a long trip. Is this a viable transportation model?
      For at least the first 75 years or so of the 1900’s, lots of trains stopped at little towns. [I took a train home to Washington DC in 1973, leaving Richmond Indiana on at 2am. It was a retro “Red-Eye.” I woke up as the train wound through the beautiful Appalachians. The trip wasn’t perfectly safe, as a man I met during breakfast in the dining car ardently tried to persuade me to get off the train with him at his stop in PA (I declined, and made it home ~ LOL). I wonder if this route still exists?]
      Some small town routes still exist, such as one between Washington DC and Williamsburg VA. When a niece and nephew graduated from William & Mary, 10 years ago, I rode with family to the graduation and took a local train back ~~ I expect the route served many students and their families to and from this state school. Recently, my sister took a train from Washington DC to Richmond DC to visit friends. She said it was great ~ modest cost and a lot easier than battling traffic.
      Areas where small towns have bus and train service are fortunate. My daughter went to a college in Ohio that wasn’t accessible by public transportation. Years before there had been a train stop, but no more. Ride boards were the only option.
      Last thought: I think that having a sort of TSA screening might be smart for both trains and buses? Just because riders may have less money shouldn’t mean that they’re less safe than when flying.

    • @voltz53
      @voltz53 2 роки тому +1

      Those homeless dudes were engaging in a Mortal Kombat scenario of their own...LOL.

    • @denialma
      @denialma 2 роки тому

      Finish him

  • @leahpeah123ya
    @leahpeah123ya Рік тому +31

    So glad you were able to afford a flight out of there. Most people riding the GH wouldn’t be able to do that. You are lucky sir!

  • @nileswillis7992
    @nileswillis7992 Рік тому +10

    Wow..thanks. Glad that someone else mentioned Atlanta. That station felt like it was in the middle of a gang war. Of all the stations that i had been to, Atlanta conveyed the highest level of danger.

    • @adventureallie7683
      @adventureallie7683 Рік тому +2

      It is! Never step foot outside those doors day or night --please!!!!!👀

  • @kinghenry100
    @kinghenry100 2 роки тому +165

    One of the few places I have feared for my life were greyhound stations.

    • @mkp3824
      @mkp3824 2 роки тому +14

      My brother and I got stuck at one in Chicago, in 1983! Yes, it's scary! Cleveland was horrible, too.

    • @jhoughjr1
      @jhoughjr1 2 роки тому +12

      they are all like third world countries

    • @briannelson3830
      @briannelson3830 2 роки тому +9

      The one in LA is sketch AF at night

    • @Zerospawnn
      @Zerospawnn 2 роки тому +13

      I like how Every greyhound station Is ghetto af 😂

    • @DrunkenGuitarGuy
      @DrunkenGuitarGuy 2 роки тому

      been to many on the east coast in the 90's! buffalo and washington were the worst by my memory! buffalo had security on duty but they were too afraid to leave their office!

  • @jprichard
    @jprichard 2 роки тому +430

    As an American who has spent nearly his entire life in the Midwestern U.S. and has taken one, and only one, Greyhound bus trip, my advice to you before you started this frustrating journey would have been 1) Never, never ride Greyhound, not under any circumstance, because it's like a combination psych ward and latrine on wheels and 2) Don't attempt a cross-country road trip in late January or early February through the Great Plains states, the Midwest and the Northeast because, you know, blizzards.

    • @theonlyonestanding8079
      @theonlyonestanding8079 2 роки тому +11

      As an American from California I'm afraid to travel east with all those hurricanes and tornadoes and weird extreme right and left wing people 😎

    • @rerunplaya532
      @rerunplaya532 2 роки тому +27

      Unfortunately psych ward and latrine people are becoming more common EVERYWHERE in America!

    • @romeodroops
      @romeodroops Рік тому

      California is the capital of extreme political idiots haha

    • @denisefarmer366
      @denisefarmer366 Рік тому +17

      As soon as the video started I laughed heartily because I knew this poor misguided soul was in for a rude awakening. I've made my share of long distance bus treks mostly back in the day, but the experience hasn't changed one bit... apparently 🤣🤣🤣

    • @pwoeckener
      @pwoeckener Рік тому +25

      @@theonlyonestanding8079 lol, a Californian calling everyone outside of California "weird" and "extreme". Sorry, I can't stop laughing at this. They were talking about hell in the comments above, and frankly, you can just say "California", as it's synonymous with "hell."

  • @KiriakosVilchez
    @KiriakosVilchez Рік тому +49

    You haven't experienced the sheer dumbf*ckery of travel if you haven't taken a long distance Greyhound trip. The first one you take really breaks you in. I traveled from San Francisco to St. Louis. My return trip wasn't as bad just because I already knew what was coming and prepared for the plethora of bad scenarios that could transpire. Here are some tips for you folks brave enough to go on a similar adventure with Greyhound:
    1. Hold onto your things for dear life. Do not leave anything on the bus unattended because chances are there is at least one scumbag or elderly thief who will take your stuff. And you won't get them back. Trust me.
    2. The driver is not lying when he/she says they will leave you behind. They absolutely will and some of the interstate stops they go through have scheduled buses that may come along anywhere between 4-6 hours. We're talking a prairie recreation park in the middle of Wyoming or Kansas where there is nothing for miles. Don't screw around with the driver. Don't be a dumbass pothead or drunk or anything like that. They will condemn you to Greyhound Purgatory and only the next driver can give you salvation. If you're patient (or brave enough) to hang around at the Greyhound stop you're dumped at that is. Pray that driver feels bad and let's you on.
    3. Bring a lot of snacks. You will get a lot of opportunities to buy food at the many stops but take advantage of those many breaks to stretch your legs and take in the scenery. Breathe some fresh air outside of the Burger King. Don't tussle with your fellow passengers for a coffee because you have like 7 minutes, maybe 20 minutes tops at the scheduled stops.
    4. Plan your bathroom break. I know this may sound silly, but trust me when I say that the bus bathroom is hell. People are gross and most love to use it while the bus is in motion. Let's keep it at that.
    5. Forget about regular sleep. There is sleep and then there is Greyhound sleep. Try to get some sleep here and there, but don't expect to sleep like a baby. It's impossible. The seats only become comfortable when you're exhausted from trying to sleep. The ambient noise of the bus helps somewhat.
    6. Enjoy the scenery. And I really mean that. The big positive with Greyhound is that you will witness the natural and beautiful landscape around you. Wide open plains, deserts, mountains, etc. You'll see a big part of the country the vast majority of travelers don't because everybody loves being crammed on a plane nowadays. So if you're going to enjoy something on Greyhound, soak in those environs.
    7. Lastly, pay attention to all transfers and updates by the drivers. Your trip could change on the fly. Delays, accidents, route changes, and other service interruptions can pop up on the fly. Not to mention if there are any troublemakers on the bus, expect the police to join the party to handle business.
    All in all, I appreciate my experience with Greyhound because it gives you a unique perspective on what a cross country trip by bus entails. If you have any sort of special accommodation needed or kids or are elderly, I would not recommend it. It can be rough and uncomfortable. Amtrak is a great option to be comfortable and see all of the sights in a leisurely way. Greyhound for short distances (anything less than four or five hours) is tolerable and can be fun. But if you want to go across the U.S., really think about your decision before you commit to this type of adventure. It's really not for everyone.

    • @jemelchellal2375
      @jemelchellal2375 5 місяців тому

      This comment is so entertaining and funny 🤣

  • @benjamintocchi7909
    @benjamintocchi7909 Рік тому +13

    The last time I rode Greyhound the normally four hour "New York Express" from Boston run ended up being right hours on an un air-conditioned bus in 90 degree heat. The highlight of the trip was having the take a collection from all the passengers to pay the toll b/c the driver claimed she'd get in trouble if she used the EZ-Pass.

  • @slyraven99
    @slyraven99 2 роки тому +678

    As one of my Amtrak co-workers once said: “Greyhound and Amtrak Coach class cross country is for those that would never make it through a security checkpoint at an airport”
    Update: Kicked off a dude shooting up heroin. My point still stands lol.

  • @jamesgossens6853
    @jamesgossens6853 2 роки тому +81

    Way back in the 80s, I spent 28 hours on a Trailways bus from Ohio to Vermont. It was quite an education. A night on a bus is one of the longest things you can experience. Not as long as a night in a war, but close.

    • @elaineculbert8594
      @elaineculbert8594 2 роки тому +8

      @James Gossens: My husband and I took the Greyhound from Toronto, Canada to Miami Beach in 1961. We were told it was “Express” only stopping for food, gas, new drivers. To our surprise, it stopped anywhere (one time, picked up eggs at a whistle-stop and dropped them off a few miles later!) couldn’t believe it. This was before many of the Interstate Highways went through so we were often on country back-roads, etc. Every time we stopped at a cafeteria, it was a frantic dash … before even paying for food, the driver was getting ready to pull out. I just dreaded the thought of the ride back to Toronto but we survived; never again!

  • @LadyJay114
    @LadyJay114 Рік тому +6

    Kudos for taking this adventure on. But its fascinating how you faced two realities: (1)bad weather in the middle of the US that screwed up the planned trip and (2)the fact that you could afford to take alternative travel methods when most people who ride Greyhound just can't..

  • @melissaholman2605
    @melissaholman2605 Рік тому +5

    I'm so sorry your trip got cut short but I'm so glad you got out in time before the weather hit. I'm now looking forward to the next time you go cross country in a Greyhound!! Can't wait! Safe travels!

  • @anthonyramirez6264
    @anthonyramirez6264 2 роки тому +50

    I took a Greyhound for a 2 hour trip and vowed to never step on one again. You took one across the country kept a positive attitude. You my friend are a different breed. I salute you!

  • @oscar.p3214
    @oscar.p3214 2 роки тому +89

    You sir must be insane to subject yourself to that torment .
    I took a grey hound from mass to southern FL once and I was ready to eat bullets.
    I don’t know where Hell is but I’m positive you can only get there on a Greyhound bus.

    • @LeeDfined
      @LeeDfined 2 роки тому +3

      I'm an ex driver...it ain't that bad.

    • @deeznuts-sn1di
      @deeznuts-sn1di 2 роки тому +6

      lmao “I don’t know where hell is but i’m positive you can only get there on a greyhound bus.”

    • @lisalu910
      @lisalu910 2 роки тому

      at 08:48, I was looking at that sign and thinking "Now's your chance! Bail out! Bail out!"

    • @vintage3262
      @vintage3262 Рік тому

      Don't joke about hell hell is unimaginable

    • @noobeenaut
      @noobeenaut Рік тому +1

      @@vintage3262 lighten up, its not that serious

  • @Jenisonc
    @Jenisonc Рік тому +6

    This was like planes, trains, and automobiles. If it could have gone wrong.. Kudos to you for keeping your head up. I know how long those rides can be.

  • @melissaholman2605
    @melissaholman2605 Рік тому +6

    Your commentary had me cracking up 🤣 You're very brave to go that far on a bus!

  • @jackblevel8296
    @jackblevel8296 2 роки тому +152

    1991 as a young Australian traveller I caught Grey Hound around America for 4 weeks, I had some Delta flights between long routes but did plenty of over night trips day after day. Would never do it again, but I met the heart and Soul of America 🇺🇸 Wow is all I can say. It isn't the same folk flying 😀

    • @vincentsubmarinismo774
      @vincentsubmarinismo774 2 роки тому +3

      I wonder if our paths crossed!
      I was" riding the dog" for 4 months in 1991 July to November.
      Happy days 😁👍

    • @anonymike8280
      @anonymike8280 2 роки тому +4

      We've got soul. All of us. The best take on the idea came from an R&B (black pop idiom) singer in his 50s who had spent his adult life playing all kinds of clubs and venues. He called soul what the ordinary American has experienced and lived. He was in a position to know. It's not easy here for the undereducated man or woman.

    • @loresma77
      @loresma77 2 роки тому +6

      Rent a car!!! Greyhound buses show you highways and truckstops.

    • @MrManfly
      @MrManfly 2 роки тому +3

      Our friend here got the Taco Bell special with extra beans 🫘 for all the passengers who are going to join him along the way !! 💨 🌯 😂

    • @the_gilded_age_phoenix8717
      @the_gilded_age_phoenix8717 2 роки тому +1

      You meet the dregs of society on Greyhound. Folks that are too karaazy or dumb to realize they could probably book a plane ticket for the same price they paid Greyhound.

  • @tinyvr7036
    @tinyvr7036 2 роки тому +111

    People on the greyhound bus tend to take care of each other on long trips cross country. At least that's how it used to be. It's sad we don't do that more.
    The bus drivers are heroes sometimes too.

    • @ZekeLanzer
      @ZekeLanzer 2 роки тому +20

      I usually meet some cool people on the bus. One guy I met does security in Salem MA on Halloween, and he fed me cause I didn't have time to get off for food at the stops we made.
      I woke up to one woman screaming at some guy she saw trying to take stuff out of my backpack. I'm grateful to so many of these people, an I hope they're doing well to this day.

    • @jonathanphillips5514
      @jonathanphillips5514 2 роки тому +1

      @@ZekeLanzer The cool and also crazy!

    • @Treywhitley
      @Treywhitley 2 роки тому +2

      Same here we would all smoke a blunt during our in between stops.

    • @mauricioramirez9744
      @mauricioramirez9744 2 роки тому

      Yes. Good people still exist.

  • @Cloud9DST
    @Cloud9DST Рік тому +6

    You’re brave for attempting this Greyhound journey. I’ve taken both Greyhound and Megabus a few times in my younger years and whew. Im glad that those buses were available to me but am appreciative of other methods of transportation.

  • @SarahWRah
    @SarahWRah Рік тому +7

    Over the decades, I've ridden Greyhound many times. My longest trip was 3 weeks in 2012 using a pre-paid hop on/hop off bus pass traveling from Fresno CA via AZ, NM, TX, the Gulf States and then to Savannah GA...and back via FL on a slightly different route. Once you're on the bus, it's a pretty nice ride. But services at the bus terminals range from OK to terrible. You have to be proactive about keeping something with you to eat, because food service is very unpredictable -Greyhound does not care when or how you might want to eat. I've met some wonderful passengers (rich and poor), and rarely had an unpleasant passenger experience. Unless it's changed, at the times I was traveling there were NO LOCKERS, so you have to keep your luggage with you at all times. Busses have 110 plugs and WiFi, which is nice.

    • @shanew.williams
      @shanew.williams 5 місяців тому +1

      What did you do when it was "time to go potty" ? I've heard bus toilet horror stories.

    • @SarahWRah
      @SarahWRah 5 місяців тому

      Nearly all Greyhound busses have toilets on board. Never a problem.@@shanew.williams

  • @jogonmf
    @jogonmf 2 роки тому +110

    In the 90s as a youngster visiting from England, I took Greyhounds from Portland OR to Boston. There was a deal on of $67 anywhere in the country. Took 5days. It was a "trip". Fantastic adventure!

    • @ClTlZEN_X
      @ClTlZEN_X 2 роки тому +6

      I don't know how Greyhound makes any profit.

    • @Kenngo1969
      @Kenngo1969 2 роки тому

      I'm glad you were able to keep your perspective about it!

    • @loyalrammy
      @loyalrammy 2 роки тому

      @@ClTlZEN_X they didn’t back then. That $67 fare was insane.

    • @loyalrammy
      @loyalrammy 2 роки тому +1

      There was a good chance I was your driver. I used to drive schedule 5532 from Portland - Boise - Salt Lake City from 1990 to 1997.

    • @jogonmf
      @jogonmf 2 роки тому +1

      @@loyalrammy I remember we broke down outside salt lake city and there were lots of cigarette stops. It was a great experience :)

  • @emobassist
    @emobassist 2 роки тому +161

    I can honestly say nighttimes on a greyhound on the highway is one of the most peaceful things i ever experienced

    • @gabrielort3531
      @gabrielort3531 2 роки тому +2

      Not if I'm on it cause I can't sleep..😝!
      (Just kidding though, I would just sit there and not move a muscle....hehe!)

    • @irisscott9488
      @irisscott9488 2 роки тому +6

      Emo Bassist; Yeah, I have traveled from Miami to San Diego on a bus! Loved it! Tiresome but great adventure and very interesting people! Window seat needed! Afghan or light blanket, lots of nonperishable snacks, puzzle and game magazines and toiletries and lots of wiped! Gotta be prepared for anything! Good times! Have also bused from NOLA to New York/New Jersey! Another fantastic journey! Fun times! Houston to San Diego about 4 times! Lovely! Blissful times!🤗👍🙂💅💯😍🙏🙏🙏

    • @MrGruffteddybear
      @MrGruffteddybear 2 роки тому +5

      What bus were you on? Every time I've been on a Greyhound bus it's full of sketchy characters, and annoying kids (One squirted me with a juice box). Nightime was even worse. Sleeping was impossible.

    • @leeriches8841
      @leeriches8841 2 роки тому +1

      I've never done that as I've only ever been to America the once (and NEVER again if I can help it) but I do enjoy night-time coach journeys in my country. So relaxing.

    • @juliet7703
      @juliet7703 2 роки тому

      @@leeriches8841 what is your country?

  • @rerunplaya532
    @rerunplaya532 2 роки тому +3

    This was an incredible video. Better then all the videos I watch of people showing us their trips to various places around the world. I was about to do it myself until you said you only get 20 minutes to find a restaurant to grab food as I thought to myself what if there was a long line? Love your English accent and eloquent narration of America's problematic passengers. Not bad at all! Great Job. You deserve the UA-cam Golden award!!!

  • @cmiller415
    @cmiller415 Рік тому +5

    I can’t wait to watch you cross the country on a Greyhound Bus! I give you massive credit for not only having made it from LA to TX, but for wishing you could have continued on from there! Being stuck in TX for several days waiting out a snow storm and then getting on a bus and tip-toeing your way SLOWLY through several snow covered states to get to NY would have been nightmarish on a whole new level. Believe me when I say it wouldn’t have been an experience you would have wished on your worst enemy. Multiply the misery of your first 2 days by 4, and then add freezing temps, feet of snow, and 30MPH maximum travel speeds. I hate to say this but I am glad your trip ended the way it did because it could have been so so so worse.

  • @LostInSpice
    @LostInSpice 2 роки тому +327

    My Greyhound story: I moved from Knoxville, TN, to Houston, TX, the summer of 1987. I was a poor teenager with little to my name. I loaded up a steamer trunk with my worldly possessions, hopped on the bus and started the 28-hour journey. The leg from Knoxville to Dallas was uneventful, but I had to change buses in Dallas. I had about five minutes to see my aunt, who lived in the DFW area, before boarding the Houston Express. It was a brand new bus so was quite nice, but it was crowded. I ended up in the back seat with a guy who talked nonstop. We traded cigarettes (he was smoking Newports and I was smoking Marlboros so we mixed it up). We laughed all the way south as he and I traded bawdy jokes and talked about life in general. He said his name was Bill and told me how he was moving from NYC to Houston because he was in a rap band.
    We said our goodbyes when we got to Houston and I went on my merry way, catching a ride from my girlfriend's parents to Katy. A few years later I was watching MTV (or some other video channel/show) and who do I see but Bill in a video with the Geto Boys. That's when I put two and two together and realized I'd spent a hilarious bus ride with Bushwick Bill. He was one of the nicest, funniest seatmates I've ever had on public transportation and I was saddened when he died.

    • @295g295
      @295g295 2 роки тому +2

      These Geto boys?
      ua-cam.com/video/XbKThf3aS-Q/v-deo.html

    • @truthteller8459
      @truthteller8459 2 роки тому +12

      Thank God it wasn't me sitting next to a person who talked nonstop and certainly one who liked rap and what it represents.

    • @ernesthromada3994
      @ernesthromada3994 2 роки тому +21

      I bet you're a hit at parties, Truth Teller. Oh, you don't get invited to any. It must suck to have only one branch on your family tree.

    • @LostInSpice
      @LostInSpice 2 роки тому +24

      @@295g295 Yep. That's Bill on the top left of the album cover. While I don't necessarily like their music, and Bill wound up being an absolute train wreck in his life, that bus ride was a memory I will never forget. We had an absolute blast. Just me, a skinny kid from Houston who left and was moving back "home" and a little person from Brooklyn sitting in the back of a bus, smoking cigarettes, telling jokes and laughing our asses off for several hours. You can't even try to fake those kinds of experiences in life.

    • @qwaszxpolkmncvb
      @qwaszxpolkmncvb 2 роки тому +2

      I can't count how many times me or a relative has gotten stuck in Knoxville because the driver refused to stop in Athens.

  • @JayMaKinGwaVez
    @JayMaKinGwaVez 2 роки тому +272

    I love this video. I did Greyhound NYC to Dallas,TX and back so I know the range of emotions you go through. It is a wonderful way to see the country though. So many places and things i would never have gotten to see otherwise. Sad it didnt work out for you the way you wanted. You were so genuinely disappointed. BTW Taco Bell is the most dangerous thing to eat on a cross country ride lol. Cheers!!

    • @noelphilips
      @noelphilips  2 роки тому +45

      Haha yes the Taco Bell did raise a few eyebrows! 😂 It's such a great experience though. Great to see the country at ground level!

    • @robertebirch1
      @robertebirch1 2 роки тому +13

      You ain't kidding about Taco Bell, Jay!!!

    • @marknesselhaus4376
      @marknesselhaus4376 2 роки тому +6

      I tend to have a cast iron stomach so the Taco Bell food would have worked for me as well as a Macker ;-)

    • @tammypearson4500
      @tammypearson4500 2 роки тому +5

      Taco Bell es no bueno for me on a short ride, let alone one that length and with non family members!!

    • @darmou
      @darmou 2 роки тому +2

      Sounds like Taco hell lol

  • @henryquinonez3022
    @henryquinonez3022 2 роки тому +7

    This journey was more fun to watch than some tv shows!

  • @Oldman808
    @Oldman808 Рік тому +1

    Greyhound is much better nowadays. Nearly everyone is self-absorbed using the free WiFi. There is little conversation between strangers, and the driver doesn’t permit anyone playing their music aloud - headphones are required. It is what it is: an economical and safe way to get from point A to point B.

  • @kathleeenmcclintock4931
    @kathleeenmcclintock4931 2 роки тому +337

    Hey Noel! I'm a Greyhound driver out of Phoenix. Sorry you only made it halfway. Looked like you had a fairly decent trip. 90% of our passengers are truly awesome! But of course it only takes 1 crazy... Next time try it in the summer or late spring. But make sure you leave LA at night! Hope you come back and try it again!

    • @Azdude801
      @Azdude801 2 роки тому +6

      That's a BIG Negative he won't be trying that again. What he should try next is traveling across the country in a Spirit airlines.

    • @jeffherdz
      @jeffherdz 2 роки тому +10

      Hey Kathleeen.....ex-Greyhound drive out of Chicago here !!

    • @Kenngo1969
      @Kenngo1969 2 роки тому +14

      Kudos to you, Kathleen and Jeff! I don't know how you do [did] it! It takes a particular kind of person to be a long-haul driver, especially with passengers! One thing's for sure: If I had to take a long road trip, certainly, I would much prefer to "leave the driving to [Greyhound]"!
      Warm Regards and Best Wishes,
      -Ken K. Gourdin

    • @raymoland
      @raymoland 2 роки тому +3

      So if there are 50 passengers on the bus, 5 will not be awesome.... No thanks. I'll fly....

    • @joshuabrausch9882
      @joshuabrausch9882 2 роки тому

      YOUR DISPATCH FUCKS YOU GUYS OVER BIG TIME

  • @olgaharris1103
    @olgaharris1103 2 роки тому +88

    I’m a 70 yr old woman who used to adore riding and seeing greyhound buses. 🤗. Also, I wanted to drive a Greyhound. The uniforms used to be a crisp grey with a dark line down the pant leg with a matching hat. It was a professionally run organization and the drivers were looked on like airline pilots today. I loved arriving at the stations and hearing the swishing sounds of the brakes. I am Black, and segregation was the norm, and I couldn’t have driven Greyhound if of age or not. Your trip was a little cray-cray, but that was not how I remember my trips. Things change with time, but I have many good memories with me and my mom on Greyhound! 🤗

    • @mauricioramirez9744
      @mauricioramirez9744 2 роки тому +10

      You are from a more civilized age in America...before the dark times, before Godlessness. I saw a glimpse of this civility at it's tail end as a child in the 80's but the drug epidemic simply crushed and depressed our communities into the violence and lawlessness we currently have today.

    • @SAJayPhaz
      @SAJayPhaz 2 роки тому +24

      @@mauricioramirez9744 how did you come to that conclusion when she literally just said she was there at the height of segregation like I am truly baffled by your comment civilized ?y’all at the height of yawl ignorance was y’all being civilized the crazy thing she said was Cray Cray that’s cause she’s 70 years old my boy you need to take several seats before I come sit you down

    • @pro-wo5eb
      @pro-wo5eb 2 роки тому +3

      Awesome story!

    • @ZambiblasianOgre
      @ZambiblasianOgre 2 роки тому

      @@mauricioramirez9744 Damn, what an ignorant comment.

    • @Ihfmpw8
      @Ihfmpw8 2 роки тому +2

      Bless you

  • @richobrian2197
    @richobrian2197 Рік тому +2

    I was so excited watching this, and am so very disappointed that you didn’t make it all the way. This has actually sparked my interest to do something just like this. Hopefully you can try again and get it done from beginning to end.

  • @josephconner4756
    @josephconner4756 6 місяців тому +1

    I travel on greyhound buses over the past 40 to 45 years and never ever had any problems and never missed a bus bus drivers where very nice and put over 65,000 miles.

  • @dinodesantis2976
    @dinodesantis2976 2 роки тому +68

    you are a brave man getting on a Greyhound bus for any length of time.

    • @Nderak
      @Nderak 2 роки тому +6

      man waffle house more dangerous than a greyhound

    • @firewalker1372
      @firewalker1372 2 роки тому +3

      I’m impressed he got on there eating Taco Bell 🤣 😂.

    • @thameekstaninjahman8337
      @thameekstaninjahman8337 2 роки тому +1

      That shit would be like sitting in prison

  • @rad9541
    @rad9541 2 роки тому +106

    My experience with greyhound, their employees seemed like they took pride in their job, it was kind of scary at some of the greyhound stations where the crazies hang around, they do manage to get you were you are going and on time. At times it can be confusing so you have to be alert

    • @idlehands1864
      @idlehands1864 2 роки тому +6

      Absolutely agree the employees of greyhound I have had experience with have always been friendly professional and helpful, it isn't their fault the tsa doesn't have a no ride list. No offense to them I'm glad I don't have the bus anymore though, they are saints.

    • @Bonzi_Buddy
      @Bonzi_Buddy 2 роки тому +5

      When you arrive in St. Louis they warn passengers not to leave the depot. Sketchy locations, sketchy passengers... all part of the Greyhound experience.

  • @denisefarmer366
    @denisefarmer366 Рік тому +2

    Been there done that😉. Right away as the video began I chuckled and settled in for some good hearted humor, knowing exactly how it goes on these bus trips. The body fatigue, no sleep hardly, noise, the other clientele, lousy meals. And tedium. And more!! I enjoyed the video and wonder if he'll do it again..... it'll be popcorn time for me if he does.🤣

  • @deirdreryan7402
    @deirdreryan7402 2 місяці тому +1

    My husband rode greyhound from NJ to LA and he said the scariest station was Detroit. And he’s a guy that knows how to protect himself.

  • @jackcade68
    @jackcade68 2 роки тому +142

    I've done that twice when I was in the States. It really makes you appreciate how bloody big that country really is!

    • @pixiedustgirl13
      @pixiedustgirl13 2 роки тому +1

      It IS large!

    • @gerald4535
      @gerald4535 2 роки тому +13

      This is why I've never understood Americans who haven't seen a lot of our country leaving to "travel". You can get a rental car/van in your city, get snacks while filling up and see and experience a lot for relatively cheap.

    • @jackcade68
      @jackcade68 2 роки тому +2

      @@gerald4535 Ahh. A dead show. YOU speak of a grateful DEAD show!!

    • @otishughley5952
      @otishughley5952 2 роки тому +7

      I drove a semi truck Florida took bout 10hrs from almost from Miami to the top at the Georgia/ Florida state line . Also from Dallas to Indianapolis was 12hrs . Miami to Indianapolis 16 hrs . This country is huge . So it is amazing I did the flying thing to

    • @jackcade68
      @jackcade68 2 роки тому +3

      @@otishughley5952 if the Lorrie drivers wake up and realize that society itself, from it's foundations to the penthouses, are completely, COMPLETELY dependant on THEM, then things would change overnight!

  • @gerrib1633
    @gerrib1633 2 роки тому +26

    The way you treat people when things don’t go as planned is amazing and many people could learn from it. Often service people get the brunt of others frustrations when things happen beyond their control and it’s not nice at all.

  • @jerkytoo8184
    @jerkytoo8184 Рік тому +2

    Shortly after finishing school and working for a year (1999), I decided to go from LA to Seattle on Greyhound. Overall, it was a decent experience. The worst that I encountered on the bus itself was someone taking a puff of a cigarette right before boarding and exhaling inside the bus. The bus stations were more sketchy, because they're usually in rough areas of the town. While the trip was decent, I wouldn't do it again nor would I even think of doing a cross country trip like this. Great job at taking on the challenge, Noel.

  • @wildgoldean
    @wildgoldean 6 місяців тому +7

    This is why we need high speed rail all over the US, just like the Interstates.

    • @Ptsxlouuivestouetjourd
      @Ptsxlouuivestouetjourd 6 місяців тому

      Sounds like communism. Praise Jesus Christ! Trump 2024! My freedoms! 2a let's go Brandon!

  • @Hispandinavian
    @Hispandinavian 2 роки тому +77

    I've experienced the bottom rung of American life called the Greyhound. I know the feeling of having to get off the bus, in the dead of night, and couldn't wait to get back on. The drama from street hoodlums, homeless, and other dodgy characters is unsettling. On the up side I did enjoy really seeing the landscape.

    • @kennys9644
      @kennys9644 2 роки тому +18

      Me too man. Alot of people from abroad have no idea the level of sketchy shit that can be found in the US.

    • @charismorgan2706
      @charismorgan2706 2 роки тому +6

      Atlanta is the worst

    • @Hispandinavian
      @Hispandinavian 2 роки тому

      @@charismorgan2706 You don't have to tell me twice.

    • @franciscloutier5387
      @franciscloutier5387 2 роки тому +11

      Dont you love the dystopian paradise of diversity?

    • @mosessupposes2571
      @mosessupposes2571 2 роки тому +2

      @@franciscloutier5387 Sadly, it isn’t dystopian. It’s real.

  • @Reggie-The-Dog
    @Reggie-The-Dog 2 роки тому +82

    One of the most miserable two days of my life was a Greyhound bus ride from Akron, Ohio to Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The ticket took all of my money, so I had nothing, and I started the trip hungry as it was. I could have used a shower and the weather was miserable too, which didn't help my spirits. Fortunately there was a one hour delay at a Greyhound garage to have a bearing repaired on the bus, so after we got off the the guy who was sitting next to me bought me Burger King and he also bought us a six pack which we chugged real fast and got back on the bus. But for me the two most miserable parts of the ride were that the bus was either too warm or too cold, and never just right, and that the seats were so cramped and uncomfortable that I felt like I was in hell. There was simply no comfortable position on those seats, no matter how you tried. That was in 1992 and I will never, ever get back on a bus again. I'd rather walk.

    • @blove142
      @blove142 2 роки тому +6

      Yes, i would rather walk too, at least you are FREE. lol

    • @Reggie-The-Dog
      @Reggie-The-Dog 2 роки тому +6

      @One of eight billion I don't remember his name but I remember what he looked like, and in my mind I can still see the BK and the bus garage almost like it was yesterday. It was one of those moments, one of those ordinary moments that are forever imprinted on your brain. Usually for me those kind of memories occur with strangers, people you didn't know who are in and out of your life in a flash but who stay in your memory forever. Life is so strange.

    • @Reggie-The-Dog
      @Reggie-The-Dog 2 роки тому

      @One of eight billion btw I can tell that got it. You understood. I wonder if it is like that for everyone.

    • @Reggie-The-Dog
      @Reggie-The-Dog 2 роки тому

      @One of eight billion Truth

    • @beatrixbrennan1545
      @beatrixbrennan1545 2 роки тому +2

      Yup, those seats make your ass feel like wood. No comfortable position. Period. Horrible

  • @FachyMarin
    @FachyMarin 10 місяців тому +4

    I'm from Argentina and long distance bus trips are pretty common here. Here are the pros and cons compared to Greyhound and Megabus in the US.
    Cons: most standard services don’t include power outlets, usb ports nor wi-fi. Bathrooms are nearly unusable. Too many stops.
    Pros:
    Sketchy people are pretty rare. Most people are pretty chill and if someone starts to make a scene, everyone will make sure this person will get kicked out in no time.
    Luggages are serialized to avoid any kind of issue. People can't grab your stuff If they don't show a the ticket which numbers have to match the security strap they put on it.
    If you pay 30% more, you can ride an “executive class” bus that has individual fully reclinable seats, 360 curtains, full meals and they even gives you a champagne glass.

  • @emilkarpo
    @emilkarpo 2 роки тому +5

    Amarillo is more of a place than people think. If it was a city in the Soviet Union it would have been a "Closed City". Amarillo is home to the Pantex facility. Where the US assembles and repairs nuclear devices (Weapons). I believe Bechtel is the current operator so it is on very competent hands.

  • @bunkie2100
    @bunkie2100 2 роки тому +29

    In 1977, I rode a bus from Albuquerque to NYC. I was young, almost broke and needed to get home. That was enough long-distance bus travel to last me a lifetime.

  • @Raz244888
    @Raz244888 2 роки тому +43

    Took a Greyhound trip like this in the early 70's as a kid with my little sister and mom. Trying to get to grandparents home in Kentucky from Seattle at Christmas. I'll never forget about all the layovers, changing busses, and missing Christmas by a day. Four days of Agony .

    • @josephforest7605
      @josephforest7605 6 місяців тому +1

      I took The Dog , from Miami to Niagara Falls , a layover in New York and changed buses in Buffalo .Three days of mental torture .

  • @seanwagner6992
    @seanwagner6992 Рік тому +2

    When you go Greyhound, every journey is an adventure. When I was in the Navy, I did the opposite of what you did. I went from New York City to Los Angeles. This was in the 1980s. It wasn't glamorous. But I never felt unsafe. And in an odd way it was rather rewarding. Every stop was a bit of an adventure. A new town. Sometimes the station was in the middle of town. Sometimes a part of town people avoid. I learned how resourceful I was. In twenty minutes, sometimes an hour, you had to find a place to get something to eat and make it back to the bus all while being mindful of your surroundings. It never dawned on me till seeing your video that we kept the same bus all the way through. I hope you get to make the full journey someday.

  • @colleensen3274
    @colleensen3274 6 місяців тому +3

    This is the most interesting travel video ever-- and I"ve seen a lot. Thanks for sharing your ordeal!

  • @skiparkcityut
    @skiparkcityut 2 роки тому +56

    Greyhound 100% varies based on the passengers on your bus. You see the craziest people on greyhound. The actual bus is quite nice if you happen to have a quiet or empty bus. If it's full and weirdos your in for a crazy trip

    • @quilmesdave
      @quilmesdave 2 роки тому +2

      Hahahahhaha!!! Indeed. I had that experience.

    • @FirstnameLastname-wl9jx
      @FirstnameLastname-wl9jx Рік тому +1

      And that's exactly how prison is. One half of a dorm can have a completely different vibe than the other side, and it's always a handful of losers that tip the balance.

  • @wlangjr21
    @wlangjr21 2 роки тому +309

    This is why I keep coming back to this channel. You haven’t stopped producing unique content and gone the route every other travel youtuber goes. All business class all the time. Lame. Keep up the good work.

    • @noelphilips
      @noelphilips  2 роки тому +31

      Thank you William!

    • @Jimmyjns
      @Jimmyjns 2 роки тому +24

      I think the mixture between rough travel and more high end travel is great. The big thing Noel is very good at is not just film inside the airplane itself. It’s the stuff all around it that makes it feel like you are doing the trip yourself.

    • @mholtebeck
      @mholtebeck 2 роки тому +1

      I've always wanted to try the cheapest flight from each airport

    • @loyalm2468
      @loyalm2468 2 роки тому +5

      Indeed, he and bald and bankrupt are the only travel youtubers I watch.

    • @WeMuckAround
      @WeMuckAround 2 роки тому +1

      @@Jimmyjns Nailed it. I watch these videos to experience the trip myself as much as I can from my own sofa. Noel’s USP is feeling like you’re going along with him. That’s quite hard to replicate as it comes down to his personality which you just can’t buy!

  • @JulieMoranNE111
    @JulieMoranNE111 Рік тому +9

    Wow, you are the bravest traveler I've ever "met." Otherwise, cross-country on Greyhound is just bats*** crazy.

  • @whatever8282828
    @whatever8282828 7 місяців тому +2

    I had forgotten I already watched this. What a bummer! I'm so glad (and sorry) you finally did the trip and posted that new video today! I do not envy you either trip! You're a lot more excited about McDonald's on this side!

  • @abbeyjane1306
    @abbeyjane1306 2 роки тому +59

    I got out of the Marine Corps, MCAS El Toro, in 1976. Shortly afterwards I took a Greyhound bus from San Diego to Pittsburgh Pennsylvania and returned to San Diego a week later. Nothing in my 4 years in the Corps prepared me for that kind of torture. $75 each way...

    • @Kenngo1969
      @Kenngo1969 2 роки тому +1

      LOL! (I hope you don't mind if I laugh at your experience, Abbey Jane: I don't know about you, but as for me, if my three choices are (1) laugh, (2) cry, or (3) scream, I'll try to choose the first every time!) Thank you for your Service, Ma'am!

    • @sanfranciscobay
      @sanfranciscobay 2 роки тому +2

      And quality of life was better in 1976. Imagine that trip today.

    • @icedclips725
      @icedclips725 2 роки тому

      I rode from pittsburgh to sacramento, eventually I just started drinking and taking sleeping pills to get through it.

    • @viadharmawheel
      @viadharmawheel 2 роки тому

      Still nothing compared to Diesel Therapy.

  • @TheInsaneChef
    @TheInsaneChef 2 роки тому +163

    You're a brave man Noel for doing an entire cross country on greyhound

    • @zacharyhughes3696
      @zacharyhughes3696 2 роки тому +2

      Agreed!

    • @Lovesomechicken
      @Lovesomechicken 2 роки тому +18

      Brave man for eating Taco Bell before getting on a Greyhound

    • @glovenchkirielen4229
      @glovenchkirielen4229 2 роки тому

      It’s about normal as shit get over yourself 😂

    • @markdavids2511
      @markdavids2511 2 роки тому

      Never knock an experience, if it doesn’t kill you of course.

    • @james-he7xv
      @james-he7xv 2 роки тому +4

      he didn't, obviously you didn't watch the video

  • @ryancourts2726
    @ryancourts2726 Рік тому +2

    The way u spoke to those groundhouse receptionist was very polite. Good on you mate

  • @anthonydivon5571
    @anthonydivon5571 Рік тому +3

    I rode the dog back in the late 90's round trip from Philly to Miami never again. I also used to drive tractor trailer over the road I applaud you for attempting this feat.

  • @greyjay9202
    @greyjay9202 2 роки тому +63

    I've done the trip from Boston to San Francisco, twice, by Greyhound. 4 days, no sleep. Hint for you, Noel:
    Next time, take the train.

    • @primitivestudio1
      @primitivestudio1 2 роки тому

      Hmm not so sure about the train. Yes I recently taken the train from Chicago to San Jose with change in LA. I would take train over bus but I find that bus and train are often not much cheaper than flying

    • @anaheimskip
      @anaheimskip 2 роки тому +4

      Train would be better, though it’d defeat what he was trying to accomplish. But, I’d rather fly Spiirt than take a bus.

    • @BooBooGlue1
      @BooBooGlue1 2 роки тому

      During the anywhere $99 Greyhound deal. I went From Portsmouth, NH to San Diego--3 days 7 hours of bedlam, dregs and depression.

  • @tobalaba
    @tobalaba 2 роки тому +93

    *Never* ever take a Greyhound bus that stops at night in Atlanta, the place is surrounded by junkies that look like zombies and in the small terminal, there is practically nothing to it. Going out for food at night there was one of the worst travel experiences in my life, and I am from South America.

    • @adventureallie7683
      @adventureallie7683 Рік тому +11

      You left the Atlanta station …AT NIGHT TOO!? In all honesty I’m surprised and glad you’re still alive! Saw a man get shot in broad daylight a few years ago at that station right outside the front doors …never rode again --honestly-at most stations-even though the inside is bad sometimes-you probably shouldn’t ever go outside the station-even in broad daylight fyi

    • @OffTheWagons
      @OffTheWagons Рік тому +4

      Or St. Louis where they tell you to not leave the station

    • @AntQuick1102
      @AntQuick1102 Рік тому +1

      Can confirm. Overnight at the atlanta terminal is a trip indeed.

    • @jeff191
      @jeff191 Рік тому

      I saw a naked crackhead at 3 in the morning, it was interesting to say the least

    • @ron3557
      @ron3557 Рік тому +2

      @@adventureallie7683 average day in America

  • @Ihfmpw8
    @Ihfmpw8 2 роки тому +3

    I’ve really enjoyed this video….I’m 76 and never been out of UK Thankyou so much !

  • @jenn4985
    @jenn4985 7 місяців тому +2

    Just watched the entire vid, let me tell you that maybe things didn’t go as expected but at the end you gave us a fantastic, realistic 32 min video that we all enjoyed, so for that matters, mission accomplished. Im from NY and have used greyhound to go to Philly years ago, not the greatest experience… always those characters doing their thing

    • @noelphilips
      @noelphilips  7 місяців тому +2

      Thank you. I recently finished my 2nd attempt. This time I went from NYC to LA. The video will be coming in a couple weeks.

  • @mnapier8215
    @mnapier8215 2 роки тому +20

    As you said Noel, Greyhound affords you unique sights and experiences to an amazing country that no other mode of transport can. I did NYC to Boston 22 years ago and I still remember it as if it was yesterday - the highlight being the driver jumping out on a Bronx street corner (without any explanation) and running across the road to get his breakfast off a street vendor!
    Sure there are far more efficient, fast and comfortable modes of transport but Greyhound somehow feels like of a rite of passage and it’s guaranteed to always be eventful!

  • @mcherylyn
    @mcherylyn 2 роки тому +23

    Took a Greyhound trip back in 1983 from Cleveland to Atlanta...refused to set foot on one since. Greyhound was also operating as a package delivery. We stopped in every small town there was, waaayyy off the freeway, sometimes taking 20 mins to get to the station and 20 mins back to the freeway. What was a 12 hour drive in a car turned into 20 on the bus.

    • @xixi560
      @xixi560 2 роки тому +2

      Lmao actually made me laugh

  • @yiffytimes
    @yiffytimes Годину тому

    I once took a Greyhound that was suppose to take me from Chicago to Louisville. Instead I got dumped in Indianapolis, that's Greyhound for you. Next time take Amtrak

  • @forresthodge1024
    @forresthodge1024 2 роки тому +23

    This basically confirms the reason why I have never and would never (unless it was the only option), take Greyhound anywhere. Seems like a middle school cafeteria on wheels in terms of the clientele it attracts.

    • @LeeDfined
      @LeeDfined 2 роки тому +1

      As a former driver that is a somewhat fair description. There are cool people but also many who are questionable.