A Regional Breakdown of the United States - Part Two

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  • Опубліковано 27 гру 2022
  • Make sure to watch Part One, if you haven't seen it already! If you want me to make Regional Breakdowns on other states and countries, leave a comment and let me know which ones you'd like to see!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 377

  • @ThatIsInterestingTII
    @ThatIsInterestingTII  Рік тому +109

    Do you want to see more Regional Breakdowns on other states or countries? Let me know in the comments which ones you'd like to see, and how you would've broken up the regions of the US yourself!

    • @theodorelovelace8256
      @theodorelovelace8256 Рік тому +3

      Yesss that would be awsome

    • @Nonamechannel420
      @Nonamechannel420 Рік тому +4

      Do one about the mountain west it best region

    • @JRudy17
      @JRudy17 Рік тому +2

      The videos on the regions of the United States have been excellent. I'd love to watch more of them. Another way to slice and dice the nation is by media market.

    • @jacksonmabray6149
      @jacksonmabray6149 Рік тому +5

      Texas seems like the proper next state to breakdown (hill country, panhandle, east tx, gulf coast, central tx, the valley, etc.)

    • @Nonamechannel420
      @Nonamechannel420 Рік тому

      @@jacksonmabray6149 no it should be Arizona is it really diverse

  • @xixingpooh
    @xixingpooh Рік тому +72

    As a Floridian, you were very accurate. The diversity of Florida is wild! Northern and Southern Florida do have such distinctly different identities.

    • @lorenii
      @lorenii Рік тому +1

      I love coastal Florida's afternoon thundershowers. You can almost set your watch by them!

  • @sandrapark4438
    @sandrapark4438 Рік тому +241

    Very interesting series! One correction: Retirees who winter in Arizona are called snowbirds not sunbirds. I believe the ones that go to Florida are also called snowbirds.

    • @caseclosed9342
      @caseclosed9342 Рік тому +18

      Yeah, at least here in Florida sunbirds are retirees who are whose full time residence is in Florida (often they were already here when they retired) and the spend a few months in the summer in the cooler north. My aunt and uncle actually do that.

    • @darrellbrown9523
      @darrellbrown9523 Рік тому +9

      In Texas too, they are called snowbirds.

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому +11

      I’ve never heard them called “sunbirds.” Lived in Florida my whole life, and they’re called “snowbirds.” N the Carolina’s they call them “grass chasers.”😊

    • @cleartexas
      @cleartexas Рік тому +1

      Interesting, I met a few of those while I was visiting near there. The ones who winter here in Texas, down by Mexico, are called 'winter texans'

    • @mahatmarandy5977
      @mahatmarandy5977 Рік тому

      @@cleartexas well, everyone does everything different in Texas anyway, right? :)

  • @charleyjr.iriarte7428
    @charleyjr.iriarte7428 5 місяців тому +4

    I am a Micronesian, but I teared up when I heard you talking about the West Coast. I lived a third of my life here, and I said that I´m never abandoning this place and its people! I will die for Americans! Fallen in love with its people!

  • @DarkTim3z
    @DarkTim3z Рік тому +118

    Honored to have the forests of Central Az being mentioned in a list along side the Rockies and Yellowstone 😢

    • @jnieto490
      @jnieto490 Рік тому

      Wild had no idea Az had forest I always thought it was in the great basin so pretty much all desert

    • @Nshifty4
      @Nshifty4 Рік тому +17

      @@jnieto490flagstaff AZ is one of the snowiest places in the country

    • @sahuaroscorpion270
      @sahuaroscorpion270 Рік тому +8

      @@Nshifty4 Flagstaff AZ is one of U.S. snowiest cities. It averages similar yearly snow as Buffalo NY.

    • @caseclosed9342
      @caseclosed9342 Рік тому +1

      @@Nshifty4 makes since. I was there in the spring as it was cold af!

    • @dankenk
      @dankenk Рік тому

      It’s not exactly forests but fine

  • @wyattdeshane
    @wyattdeshane Рік тому +61

    I'm glad you separated the Mountain West and the West Coast locations of California. Having spent about half of my life in both locations I noticed a condescending attitude that the Coast has for the Mountains. This was always funny to me as many people from the coast use the mountains for recreation, location for their 2-3 home (or airbnb), and even the majority of water is piped down from the mountains.

    • @myfirelsjourney947
      @myfirelsjourney947 Рік тому +6

      Can you describe this? I have never heard of or noticed this.

    • @wyattdeshane
      @wyattdeshane Рік тому +10

      @My FIRE L&S Journey sure thing, the easy route would be to start with politics. The Mountain towns are historically more conservative in California, which with current political polarization adds to the disdain. Im not saying it's one sided either, it definately goes both ways with tourism seen as a threat.

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa Рік тому

      Well, that condescending attitude is real but that's partly because the inland California mountains while resembling the interior west in demographics, economics and politics are actually still very much part of the West Coast and though transitional are still NOT truly part of the interior west!!! That's true both historically, functionally and even culturally in terms of vernacular culture if one adjusts for demographics and economics.

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa Рік тому

      @@myfirelsjourney947 those mountains are still the west coast both culturally and historically as well as functionally today. But our national political economic class and cultural devisions are now so strong that they are warping peoples definition of region in the Western US where such regional cultural differences are more subtle then they are in the eastern US.
      Basically being more rural, conservative (but not compared to much of the rural true interior west) and less diverse then most coastal areas, with a largely white and working class population but not right on the coast equals interior west to many people even if by any others means the area is still distinctly part of a shared West Coast cultural and historical settlement region.

    • @AbcIHateYou3
      @AbcIHateYou3 Рік тому +6

      I noticed the opposite, in Washington at least. A lot of the farmers on the East side of the mountains don't talk kindly about the people living in and around Seattle. Though I imagine both talk shit about each other equally, just like every other kind of "group" in this country.

  • @tallguygreg
    @tallguygreg Рік тому +39

    I've fallen in love with the Virgin Islands in the past few years. The history of it is so fascinating. And I know some of the other US territories have incredible histories too.

    • @tallguygreg
      @tallguygreg Рік тому +6

      Wow! I wrote this before you got to the part about the Carribbean. Well done!

    • @LANSl0t
      @LANSl0t Рік тому +3

      be careful not to fall too in love or they might not be called the Virgin Islands anymore

  • @twilightcitystudios
    @twilightcitystudios Рік тому +11

    Sunbirds is the first time I have heard that word. I usually hear the word snowbirds being used.

  • @michaelzing1197
    @michaelzing1197 Рік тому +48

    Thought i was gonna have to wait months for part 2, what a pleasant surprise

  • @precisa_
    @precisa_ Рік тому +82

    This short video series was great, i'd really love to see something similar aplied to other major countries

    • @curiodyssey3867
      @curiodyssey3867 Рік тому +4

      I second this!! And I don't really find geography that interesting, but damn you do a great job at picking out the most interesting nuggets of info that makes me just want to learn more.
      It also makes me say....that is interesting 😬

    • @booksivy169
      @booksivy169 Рік тому

      Russia maybe? 👀

  • @violatenor26
    @violatenor26 Рік тому +16

    Great videos! I was born and grew up in Minnesota, lived in Boston for seven years, lived in Honolulu for thirteen years, lived California for two years, and married someone from Guam and traveled there many times. I love Guam! I absolutely love the diversity of the USA. It is impossible to characterize US citizens, as we are all so different. This is a great summary of the different areas, as some outside of the US don’t realize how diverse and gigantic it is. This a wonderful introduction into the size and difference in culture!

  • @AiVersify
    @AiVersify Рік тому +24

    The Great Plains is always one of the most fascinating regions in the country, it’s so strange being in a place that’s often very isolated and overlooked.

  • @ghost21501
    @ghost21501 Рік тому +28

    You're making me miss the West Coast. I grew up in Sacramento but live in rural Missouri now. I call Missouri home, but the west coast holds a huge part of my heart.

  • @abard124
    @abard124 Рік тому +27

    So happy to see the recognition that the Cascades are a huge cultural and geographical divider. Having lived on both sides, they have very little in common besides what state they're in. Also really cool to see representation for the US territories; I've seen a million geography videos but they hardly ever mention the territories, much less tell me anything interesting about them, so I learned a lot from that portion of the video!

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa Рік тому +3

      That's not really true though. Yes they are a devide politically and to some extent culturally but except for California and Southeast desert Oregon the rest of the inland northwest in Oregon and Washington share a similer settlement history and similer vernacular culture, especially food imtertainment, architecture etc with the coastal Pacific Northwest more then with other parts of the interior west. The fact that the region is so much less diverse however and so much more working class,nas well as more arid and with significantly less direct influence from the 60's counterculture (but there is still a lot in it's urban areas) means the area superficially reaemble other parts of the inland west in some respects, but it is still within the greater Pacific Northwest which is part of the west coast. Eastern Washington is just about as West Coast culturally as California's central valley, both being definitely within the cultural spere of the West Coast/Left Coast but also culturally transitional into the interior west, with both cultures strongly present and even in large part merged into one.

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa Рік тому +3

      The Sierra Nevada Mountains and Southern California's Inland Empire (and really Southern California as a whole South of Santa Barbara) are also similarly culturally transitional in nature. In many ways Socal is both southwestern but also otherwise more interior west meets the sea then truly West Coast in terms of CULTURE, with strong Left Coast influences in parts to be sure but not truly similar in culture or history to the remainder of the west coast.

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa Рік тому +1

      The cascades are a devider based on national politics and lifestyle and demographics on a large scale WITHIN a region. Both sides of the Cascades share a vernacular Pacific Northwest (and west Coast) culture!

    • @zach2473
      @zach2473 3 місяці тому

      ​@@jKLa talking out your ass. There's almost zero similarity when it comes to economy, food, political leanings, entertainment, religion, even language (you clearly aren't familiar with Eastern Washington because you're not aware of its diversity owed to its large Latino population). It's not transitional. You couldn't even get the diversity part right because you said it's "much less diverse" when Eastern Washington is one of the most heavily Hispanic areas in the country

  • @ilenestrong7471
    @ilenestrong7471 Рік тому +12

    It is nice to see that you separated eastern WA, OR and CA from the coastal areas.

  • @dontarguewithidiots7459
    @dontarguewithidiots7459 Рік тому +15

    I gotta tell you dude, you do great work. Your breakdown is nuanced, detailed, and non-judgemental (a real blessing these days). Bravo!!

  • @octoberboiy
    @octoberboiy Рік тому +10

    I love California so much. Everyone has so much negative things to say about the West Coast but it’s wonderful, beautiful and alive. It has a unique culture and beauty.

  • @anthonyminimum
    @anthonyminimum Рік тому +47

    0:44 The Great Planes
    5:29 The Mountain West
    11:12 The West Coast
    18:46 The Caribbean
    21:20 Hawaii
    24:12 Alaska
    27:35 American Territories

  • @jkcorp.2883
    @jkcorp.2883 Рік тому +4

    Another banger video, loved all the statistical maps.

  • @richd6362
    @richd6362 Рік тому +6

    Thank you. Excellent video.

  • @SimonQuennevilleSim
    @SimonQuennevilleSim Рік тому +1

    Thanks for making these videos. Very insightful

  • @Dispatcher-kv2im
    @Dispatcher-kv2im Рік тому +9

    I would like to see more of a breakdown of counties in each state if possible! Love your videos and the level of detail. Truly one of my favorite channels!⭐️🇺🇸🎉

  • @matthewgarcia1499
    @matthewgarcia1499 Рік тому +2

    Thank you so much sharing!
    I learned so much about the American Samoa and their how they are disproportionately impacted as well… Great compelling and informative content that is interesting!

  • @QuickHistoryBits
    @QuickHistoryBits Рік тому +4

    Awesome series dude. I love your videos and I hope to see more content soon!

  • @leelundgren600
    @leelundgren600 Рік тому +3

    Great content! Thanks.

  • @foundationsmedicalinformat2420

    Commenting to boost visibility on this vid. Excellent content!

  • @bethanycreativeside4326
    @bethanycreativeside4326 Рік тому

    I like how you're explaining everything and it seems like you either been to these places or ask people in those areas. You seem to be very spot on with the places that I have lived in or I know so I feel like I can trust you in the places I don't know. Thank you for sharing. Please keep it up.

  • @eil9255
    @eil9255 Рік тому

    Great job. I admire the research and knowledge that went into this. We have moved around a bit and like the geographic divisions that you have discerned. Looking forward to more videos.

  • @greedyzombie8131
    @greedyzombie8131 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely loved these videos they were both very informative and interesting, i love how in depth you went I feel like I learned something about ever region. Love your videos keep up the good work

  • @OrpheoTreshula
    @OrpheoTreshula Рік тому +3

    Competence is often rare. Especially in at this level, in this issue. Viewing was a pleasure.

  • @hannofranz7973
    @hannofranz7973 Рік тому +1

    Incredible summary. Well done!

  • @redacted7058
    @redacted7058 Рік тому +8

    Excellent video series! Perfect level of detail explaining each region's cultural characteristics. I'd be interested in seeing a regional breakdown of other countries, especially one for China. It's difficult to find comprehensive English-language readings on the cultural differences of China's regions, but you'd be great at tackling the challenge!

  • @dariusbrock2351
    @dariusbrock2351 Рік тому +1

    Great video and thanks for sharing!

  • @kylekris105
    @kylekris105 Рік тому +9

    Your videos are some of my favorite to listen to while doing things at work or driving, very informative yet quite relaxing and well produced

    • @owen8681
      @owen8681 Рік тому

      Agree. Way to go Carter.

  • @malikshabazz2065
    @malikshabazz2065 Рік тому +9

    Awesome stuff dude! keep up the great work :-)

  • @jonellis7222
    @jonellis7222 Місяць тому

    This two parter was excellent. Thanks Carter.

  • @UniquelyCritical
    @UniquelyCritical Рік тому +7

    This is a wonderful video which shows that you put a lot of time and effort into understanding the various parts of the US. Depending on the program, there are ways to classify areas with overlap to show that they are transition zones. This may cut down on the criticizing comments in the future. Cheers!

  • @natebarry5553
    @natebarry5553 Рік тому +3

    Great series

  • @JMM33RanMA
    @JMM33RanMA Рік тому +3

    Another great video!

  • @kristinaginorio1344
    @kristinaginorio1344 Рік тому +2

    Excellent job.

  • @tesseg
    @tesseg Рік тому +19

    Great video. Informative, objective and accurate. If you ever get to Canada, I'd love to get your take on my country. Larger geographically, it's regions are very distinct.

  • @Truckngirl
    @Truckngirl Рік тому +13

    Hi Carter! I was waiting for you to cover Hawaii. I have one correction for you. The entirety of Oahu is actually the City and County of Honolulu and a single government entity (police, fire, mayor, etc.). In spite of a portion being outside the core urban area, it has 70% of the state's population (1,016,508) to the state's total 1,442,000 as of 2021. Now add the over 6 million visitors to Oahu each year (typically around 500k per month, pre-pandemic, but we're almost back to 2019 numbers). This offers a different view from the basic population totals. Your series was fantastic! Narration without distracting music is exactly what I want from my educational viewing. Good job!

  • @hiramesensei3112
    @hiramesensei3112 Рік тому +2

    Something you glossed over that deserves mention is that a big reason there is so few small towns in many mountain west states is that large portions of the land (up to 80% in Nevada) is owned by the Federal government.

  • @tranarchism
    @tranarchism Рік тому +7

    I would love to see a similar video/series on the regions of canada and mexico!

  • @JuneMacCross
    @JuneMacCross Рік тому +2

    I am loving the regions so far. I would like to see drilling down to evaluate more specific focus. The mountain west has so much to name just one. Maybe the State parks in a region? Because these are what we use to plan vacations and I like getting ideas. But just keep making these, I love them so far.

  • @jaycolins2430
    @jaycolins2430 Рік тому +1

    Another great video 👌🏾

  • @MegaGo68
    @MegaGo68 Рік тому +1

    Bloody brilliant!

  • @RashedHaikal22
    @RashedHaikal22 Рік тому

    Thanks a lot for the nice informative content

  • @mohammadharis7244
    @mohammadharis7244 8 місяців тому

    A very well done video!

  • @williamowsley9771
    @williamowsley9771 Рік тому

    Great series.

  • @michaelsadams524
    @michaelsadams524 Рік тому +11

    I definitely would enjoy seeing a breakdown of each state. I must say that the title of your subscription is perfect because your page is definitely interesting!

    • @haigewalk7956
      @haigewalk7956 Рік тому

      This channel already has a detailed breakdown of the first 15 states already and I’m sure will do the rest!

    • @michaelsadams524
      @michaelsadams524 Рік тому

      Thank You!

  • @dryeraze_marker
    @dryeraze_marker Рік тому

    your summary of the mountain west (especially the geographical history of the lds church in utah) is the most informative, objective, generous, and accurate description of my home (sierra nevadas) i have ever heard. thank you carter for this awesome work you are doing to teach the truth, not your opinion

  • @markswayne6326
    @markswayne6326 Рік тому +3

    You really nailed your regional breakdown of the West Coast states. I am saying this as someone who has lived in all three West Coast states and on both sides of the regional divide you set.

  • @NimrodTargaryen
    @NimrodTargaryen Рік тому +1

    Amazing, thanks much🎉

  • @weller9699
    @weller9699 Рік тому +14

    South Dakota is definitely in multiple regions. I live here. The far eastern side shares many similarities with the “Midwest” states like Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. However, the western half of the state is much more similar to Wyoming and Montana, mountain time zone, higher elevation, semi-arid climate, and a different culture and economy than the “Midwest.”
    SD is 400 miles wide. The eastern and western ends of the state are very different from each other.

    • @10thletter40
      @10thletter40 Рік тому +1

      Yes, Kansas, Nebraska, and Texas share many similarities as well

    • @pansexualdickhaver6878
      @pansexualdickhaver6878 Рік тому

      @@10thletter40 how you get those 3 and forget Oklahoma?😂

    • @10thletter40
      @10thletter40 Рік тому

      @@pansexualdickhaver6878 Because the western side is just a bit smaller 😉

  • @ange_109
    @ange_109 Рік тому +7

    I'd love to see a video of this for the continent of Africa - it'd be interesting to see how you group it's many diverse countries

  • @JustFluffyQuiltingYarnCrafts

    Very interesting. Did not know about some of those non-contiguous areas. TFS ♥️

  • @NomadicNaturePhotographer
    @NomadicNaturePhotographer Рік тому

    A Great work!!

  • @michaelhatfield5808
    @michaelhatfield5808 Рік тому +2

    Great Plains checking in! Hardly anyone around and the climate is nice albeit schizophrenic at times. Hardly any moisture which create challenges but it's typically not humid. The lack of trees was weird at first too but now trees everywhere is strange. I absolutely love it.

  • @HarvestStore
    @HarvestStore Рік тому

    Great video.

  • @yuliyaahmetshina4216
    @yuliyaahmetshina4216 Рік тому +1

    Worlds best explainer you deserve 100 million subs !!!!

  • @Dunwelll
    @Dunwelll Рік тому

    I'd love to see more regional videos!

  • @caleb1413
    @caleb1413 Рік тому +2

    As an American who can attest to the accurateness of these videos, I'd love to hear your perspective on similarly diverse countries. I also live in Louisville, KY, which as you have discussed is very much on the border between regions, so would be eager to see videos on regional differences within states.

  • @Acein3055
    @Acein3055 Рік тому +5

    This is an excellent video and much better than the average YT video or TV videos like NOVA made by PBS. This is an excellent video because it has no obnoxious background kettle drums pounding and no obnoxious background corny music and it does not force the audience to view the narrator's face.

  • @johnnyvelez10
    @johnnyvelez10 Рік тому +9

    We definitely call them snow birds not sun birds

  • @jKLa
    @jKLa Рік тому +3

    Hawaii also had many Portuguese immigrants and Puerto Rican migrants as well in the early 20'th century to work in Agriculture, with their descendents still there to a large extent but the populations having heavily mixed with the the rest of Hawai's so for the most part no longer very distinct nor separate communities.

  • @michellaneous3364
    @michellaneous3364 Рік тому

    13:01 thanks, really appreciated knowing how expensive everything here is, like sometimes I can't imagine myself lvining anywhere else but here, but then when I think about whether id actually be able to survive here, im like id rather move out

  • @austinkealey140
    @austinkealey140 Рік тому +4

    Glad you put south Florida in its own area because it is definitely much different than north Florida based on what I seen when I visited there.

  • @svenrio8521
    @svenrio8521 Рік тому

    A great video

  • @user-if3px5fn1n
    @user-if3px5fn1n 9 місяців тому

    I should add that the presentation is top notch😊

  • @ashercole1838
    @ashercole1838 Рік тому

    I have always wanted a map of the u.s without state borders, and this really explains that. Thank you.

  • @_trendkill_1674
    @_trendkill_1674 Рік тому

    Awesome. I would love to see a video like this done on my home country, Australia.

  • @juanpineda5693
    @juanpineda5693 Рік тому +4

    Another amazing video by the GOAT 😩

  • @aemeromedia
    @aemeromedia Рік тому

    good insight!
    💪

  • @aidanburns6163
    @aidanburns6163 Рік тому +10

    Bold in my eyes to not break up the western US a bit more, I personally wouldn't have the Pacific Northwest anywhere near the same region as San Diego, but maybe that's just me.

    • @theawecat27
      @theawecat27 4 місяці тому +1

      definitely, i feel the northwest deserved it's own region that isn't lumped in with cali! at least he did well describing many of the differences

  • @michellaneous3364
    @michellaneous3364 Рік тому +2

    17:11 thats Apple Park, and the housing near there (Sunnyvale, Cupertino...) is super expensive, especially Sunnyvale, its perfectly situated right between Cupertino and Mountain View. silicon Valley is also home to a lot of big tech companies, and everyone wants to live near those apparently, or they work there. some include apple (the park is shown in image at time, yes its big, we took my cousin there when he visited cause apparently its a must see location if u come to Bay Area), adobe (I see that building too often), eBay (literally can bike there), intel (we had a field trip there), Nvidia (drive by to volunteer everyday over the summer), google (been to the googleplex with a friend), PayPal (my friends mom works there, they even have a stadium thats home to I think the earthquakes)
    one thing about this place is that you can be rich compared to like most people in different state but be broke poor compared to all your friends

  • @JuneMacCross
    @JuneMacCross Рік тому +2

    Thanks!

  • @yuliyaahmetshina4216
    @yuliyaahmetshina4216 Рік тому

    king of edits

  • @aceundead4750
    @aceundead4750 Рік тому +2

    Alaska is a small country in physical size, but a tiny state by population.

  • @markchavez2011
    @markchavez2011 Рік тому +10

    They’re called snowbirds, not sunbirds. Good video and informative!

  • @SolaceEasy
    @SolaceEasy Рік тому

    Yes, please, for additional area breakdowns of states and Nations. Perhaps one that was less focused on political boundaries and more on geologic boundaries.

  • @iquemedia
    @iquemedia Рік тому +1

    wow
    that is interesting - part two

  • @1TakoyakiStore
    @1TakoyakiStore Рік тому

    I'd love to see a video on the St. Elias mountains. People seem to be unaware that it's the highest mountain range outside of the Himalayas and the Andes. Even more if you consider the Wrangell mountains a part of it.

  • @Chris-ut6eq
    @Chris-ut6eq Рік тому +4

    Very interested in more details on USA regions(west in particular), plus Canada and perhaps Mexico. Not so interested outside north America.

  • @lorenii
    @lorenii Рік тому +3

    Great info! You need more Oklahoma tho!! We have the world's tallest hill, Cavanal Hill, which is 1 foot shy of being considered a mountain, and we have a desert, a salt plain, a prominent dinosaur fossil range, and two of the world's most inland international shipping ports, Tulsa Port of Catoosa and Port of Muskogee!!!

    • @jKLa
      @jKLa Рік тому

      Most of Oklahoma and most of Texas are really a Western South Region that should not be grouped with the rest of the great plains. That's only one thing he gets wrong here.

  • @user-if3px5fn1n
    @user-if3px5fn1n 9 місяців тому

    Very interesting and educational for a non US citizen. I found this to be jam-packed full of interesting information, but I am left wondering about how much of this is alive in the consciousness of people in America???
    I am looking forward to watching the other series. Thank you for creating this.

  • @Cyrus992
    @Cyrus992 Рік тому +1

    My aunt and I myself used to live at 12:19 which is Rancho Cucamonga

  • @ByzantineCuban
    @ByzantineCuban Рік тому +3

    I honestly think its pretty acurate that you included south Florida as part of US Caribbean tho I could see how it would overlap culturally getting to Tampa/Sarosota on the west and Vero Beach/Daytona on the east. Given it is pretty sourthern there yet parts have a strong or growing Caribbean(including thoes descended from Hispanic Islands) population. You did a well explained summary for region as complicated as us 😂

  • @chiarac3833
    @chiarac3833 Рік тому

    One of the most interesting and informative takes on the US. I hope that you continue down this fascinating path. Thank you for your efforts. Maybe if more of us learned about our world we would see how similar we really are. Thank you again!
    One question, people born in American Samoa are citizens of what nation, if not the US? Also, why aren't they US citizens? Thanks again!

  • @A.Mayflower127
    @A.Mayflower127 Рік тому +6

    I love your channel and video
    IMO, the following are the regions of the USA
    1. New England
    2. Mid Atlantic
    3. The South
    4. The Midwest
    5. The Great Plains
    6. The Rocky Mountain West
    7. The Pacific Northwest
    8. The Southwest
    9. California
    10. Texas
    11. American Caribbean
    12. American Oceania
    13. American Arctic

    • @yungrichnbroke5199
      @yungrichnbroke5199 Рік тому +2

      I’m actually, for the most part, very happy with how he divided the country. I was offended at first, but his explanations of each made it make perfect sense and seem very cohesive.

    • @Keesha_Hardy
      @Keesha_Hardy Рік тому

      Where does Hawaii fit in with the divisions? American Oceania?

  • @Jarekthegamingdragon
    @Jarekthegamingdragon Рік тому +10

    I really disagree with looping the entire west coast together. The PNW is EXTREMELY different to california and we're not connected at all. (This isn't throwing shade at California it's just different) Hell Portland is further north than Toronto. It's 630 miles away from the bay area. PNW and California should be two different regions. At least you separated west and east of the cascades though that much is correct.

    • @noskpain2792
      @noskpain2792 Рік тому +1

      He got Texas wrong as well. Someone from the border town has nothing in common with someone who live in Omaha. Texas should have been lumped partially Norteño culture and the rest is Southern Appalachian and Deep South East Texas.

    • @yungrichnbroke5199
      @yungrichnbroke5199 Рік тому

      I disagree. He captures the diversity that exists within each region. Doing it in largely north/south bands makes sense to me. Climate, elevation, migration patterns are most similar in this way.

    • @Jarekthegamingdragon
      @Jarekthegamingdragon Рік тому

      @@yungrichnbroke5199 It makes VERY little sense in this regard. The closest metro areas between the PNW and California is Portland to the Bay area. Those two cities are 630 miles apart with absolutely nothing but wilderness between them. Portland is further north than toronto, the bay area is further south than denver. Those two regions are not at all remotely connected.

    • @flappyflop1672
      @flappyflop1672 Рік тому +4

      It’s better to think of each region as a grouping of smaller regions. The Mountain West for example consists of at least 2 or 3 distinct regions, though Texas definitely should have counted as its own region in the video.

    • @tmghui888
      @tmghui888 10 місяців тому

      @@flappyflop1672Texas was once its own country after breaking away from Mexico, so they deserve to be separate.

  • @Scheminem711
    @Scheminem711 Рік тому +2

    Great to see the Wichita Mountains get a shoutout at 1:20! The area is truly a hidden gem.

    • @ChadWright-ip8vm
      @ChadWright-ip8vm 5 місяців тому

      Yes, I've taken in that exact view from the summit of Mt. Scott. It's beautiful in a wild and craggy kind of way. Wichita Mountains, Oklahoma.

  • @isaacbroadway
    @isaacbroadway Рік тому +3

    I'm not sure central Texas and South has anything in common with the Great plains. History, geography, demographics, culture, climate, are all way different.

  • @richardvillagomez2513
    @richardvillagomez2513 Рік тому

    28:07 you mentioned my home, saipan! proud to be chamorro :-)

  • @theEddieworld
    @theEddieworld Рік тому

    id love to see a regional breakdown of australia!

  • @michellaneous3364
    @michellaneous3364 Рік тому

    ive been to Hawaii a few times, kauai is so small u can drive around the whole place in a day, and that place is just full of chickens. hilo is I think the rainiest city in us, it can be rainy and sunny at the same time. and yes, there's snow on Hawaii, at the highest peak Mauna Loa, which they got observatories or something.
    wrangell st Elias NP is the largest national park they even have a sign there saying that, but even for its size to really get in to see anything you have to fly in (there's at least one other NP in alaska like that and they advertise their bears), like u can't drive in, so we only been to the visitor center while on our way to Valdez (went on a "tiny" road trip across bottom of Alaska to homer, got car sick too many times I don't even remember most of the trip), and Denali itself is super large. (u didn't specific an order but like the Missouri then Mississippi before Yukon), also interesting how Alaska had a gold rush but people only talk about the California one, and honestly if people go to alaska the trip is so predictable and identical where when we went we saw another tourist family coincidentally three times, they were strangers.we did visit a Russian Orthodox Church there, its so different from the churches we normally see
    also, Alaska is the most volcanic (by a long shot) and earthquake prone state, but there's like no people living near those volcanoes, and I think the largest earthquake recorded was in alaska

  • @garyrobbins9197
    @garyrobbins9197 Рік тому +4

    People who come Arizona during the winter are called "snowbirds" not "sunbirds." I had never heard of the word "sunbirds" until this clip. Still, I liked the clip.

  • @rsjmail
    @rsjmail Рік тому +1

    Great Geography lesson!
    Add sone demographics and you get tremendous insights into how the world actually works!

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 Рік тому +5

    Now we get to the western states, wheere all the interesting people live
    (I should know, I live in New England)

  • @Mabon-sz9nz
    @Mabon-sz9nz 10 місяців тому +1

    I would like to see an in-depth video on Florida: North middle and South as those 3 regions are very different.