the older i get, the more i love my city. born and raised and im still discovering what all there is to love about this city and every weekend spent is worth the money and time. no matter where i go, this place will always be my base.
@@izzywoods794 Hi, I keep hearing about Dallas having plenty of opportunities.. but that's it.. What opportunities do you see that Dallas has to over? I plan on moving there in next few months.. The rent tho whewwww.. Especially, vs size 🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️..
the most world shaping thing to have ever come from Dallas, which gets no mention by almost every commentary about Big D, is the integrated circuit (aka microchip). electrical engineer Jack Kilby was working in Dallas, at Texas Instruments, in 1958 when he came up with the idea. he got a Nobel Prize in 2000 for this accomplishment. it blows my mind that this event gets so little attention, especially on the internet of all places!
Percentage of Dallas drivers who believe tailgating gets them to their destination faster: 70% Percentage of Dallas drivers who know what a yield sign means: 15% Percentage of Dallas drivers who know what a red light means: 65%
How about the other percentage (in Dallas) that get right up to the stop light and decide that they don't want to turn left. They want to turn right and expect 4 or 5 lanes of traffic to come to a complete stop because they're too self-absorbed to plan ahead. Instead of completing their turn and finding a place to turn around, they somehow feel that everyone is supposed to just stop and "take care of them"? I see this irritating behavior way too often. I used to install satellite TV, and would often have to work downtown. I hated this because the closer you got to downtown Dallas, the more aggressively people drove. It usually felt like everyone with a set of wheels was trying to kill me.
We have a really crooked judge in Dallas he’s massively on the take and controls out mayorlike a puppet and will shut down the restaurants at any time so I will plan on dining in Dallas.
Greg Abbott,ruled to further ensure that no governmental entity can mandate masks, the following requirement shall continue to apply: No governmental entity, including a county, city, school district, and public health authority, and no governmental official may require any person to wear a face-covering or to mandate that other person wear a covering,” the executive order read.
@@shoutingatclouds6841 The government doesn't own very many restaurants. Most of the ones here require masks except when eating. Its amazing how quickly "minimal government" Republicans discovered the joys of adding supremacy clauses to every bill they pass now so local government is hobbled. But yeah, go ahead and don't wear masks and don't get vaccinated. Darwin wins in the end.
I just moved here from West Virginia. Wow is all i can say. The food is amazing. We moved too Kaufman ( plenty if my hubbys family ( mexican/ American) all about working hard and family. My hubbies whole family like most of my big family in West Virginia are Republicans. I am use too traffic though i was born and raised just 48 miles from Washington DC. I do miss the Blue Ridge Mountains though. But i can and will adapt. If you have ever been to Mexico City you will see a big city. I can't believe the housing prices around here now.
@@charliehicks5676 damn dude you beat me to it. I was gonna say California... But living in Jersey for 12 yrs. I can say blue cities and states are a disaster.. so happy I'm back home in Dallas
I lived in Dallas for two years and just left last month. It's a great city and you are spot on about the food! One thing you didn't mention was that Dallas has one of the largest and most well respected medical research institutions in the country, UT Southwestern Medical Center. Although, to be fair, I only know about it because I worked there lol.
@@fakebrake so true. ( I have family and friends in both medical communities and the weirdness of Austin.) But Houston has the absolute worse VA hospital! I battled them as they neglected my father to death. Only after his death did I find proof of their social workers adding in elder fraud. Reporting it did nothing.
Houston leads in medicine and medical industries, air transportation and some of the best medics in the world. I think Houston was ranked #1 in special practices in the US
@@SouthernSilverExchange you can't even type in proper English shut up. Top it off you done ever live in Dallas, you really hated you wouldn't be wafching this video, you're obsessed with it here but mad because you can't afford it.
Would love to see your take on the different neighborhoods of Dallas proper. I’ve lived in Oak Cliff (which used to be its own city) for a decade and have always told people “you’ll love Dallas as soon as you find your neighborhood.” I know you’ve seen a million cities, but of those that I’ve seen, Dallas is unique in how unique each one of its neighborhoods are.
My grandparents bought a house in south Oak Cliff in the 1950's and lived there until they died. It was a great neighborhood initially but crime rose over the years. It is getting much better now :)
@@suckit9593 they’re saying everyone is identified by their neighborhood. Each neighborhood kinda tells a lot about the person. So what some people do is ask you where you graduated from or what school does your kids go to. They then make an assessment about you off that tid bit of information.
Unique? They all look the same besides a select few and those are the rich ones. Mesquite, Garland, Plano, Pleasant Grove.. they all look the same. Same strip malls, gas stations, etc. Very few pockets of Dallas are original anymore.
I grew up just north of Dallas. I get choked up driving down I30 when I start to see the Sky line. I love Dallas. Theres a certain vibe (more so if you're a Texan) that it gives. I will ALWAYS call Dallas home. And I will ALWAYS feel the love for Dallas. Its quintessential Texas!!!
Lived here all my life. Doing a film about the youth in Dallas. As much as I love this city, many issues get swept under the rug for more luxary apartments, new business buildings, new bridges, new parks, while homelessness and crime among youth is growing heavily.
I think the rise in crime recently, is due to kids being out of school from the pandemic. It's not just a Dallas thing or a Texas thing. The same thing has happened all over the US. As far as homelessness, there are limits to what can realistically be done about that. Most of the homeless have serious alcohol/drug and psychological problems, and we long ago got rid of the infrastructure to compel treatment.
@@eventhisidistaken no, has nothing to do with the pandemic, crime out here been bad,, but getting worse for sure, getting robbed is #1, watch your back! Me and my 70 year old mother was robbed in our driveway. Also Laura Miller an old mayor of Dallas closed our homeless shelter they have no place to go. Most of the condemned buildings they used to go to have been refurbished and/or torn and replaced with high rises and gentrified for all the people moving here
I think the best time of year to visit Dallas is in October when the State Fair is going on. Other things to check out that weren't mentioned in the video: Klyde Warren Park, AT&T Discovery District, Deep Ellum, and the free trolley around downtown/uptown. Speaking of free... the Dallas Museum of Art admission cost is also free
You forgot to mention that some of the best tacos you can eat are at gas stations, but then again that's most of Texas. For me the BBQ restaurants are good but I prefer the hole in the wall, mom & pop joints. Slabs in Mesquite was great but I think they fell victim to the lockdown. Great people and bbq.
Dallas is close to having 8 million people in the area. It’s projected to become the 3rd biggest metro in the country, only behind NYC and LA. Dallas will only continue to become more of a powerhouse when it come to the global city ranks. I love this city
@@brittoncoil2518 Besides it being flat. What does the area need to be more exciting? Im just curious to know what other cities offer that makes Dallas boring.
I like how you actually mention MLS teams in the sports section, no other UA-cam channel that talk states or cities never mentions it when they talk about their sport teams.
Moved to Dallas in 1976. Raised two daughters here and have enjoyed the best restaurant scene in these United States. Over 1,200 Sushi joints in DFW, State Fair of Texas, Cowboys and I can keep going on. Great city.
I was born in OK and raised in Dallas. Elementary on through to College - Texas Woman's University Alumni. When I was older, and left Dallas to see the country, I was shocked to see the differences! Mostly, no decent Mexican Restaurants, 'strange' Baptist churches (not like the SBC AT ALL!), Minimal support of football from elementary through high school, etc., and on. No matter where my zip code locates me, I am a proud Texan and Dallasite. I played in the fields where 635 now resides. Ant's not forget SWA (Southwest Airlines)!, created on a bar napkin by Herb Kelleher and Rollin King. Based at the original Dallas airport, Love Field, and has become on of the US major carriers. People of Dallas are very proud of their Hometown Airline! I love Dallas, and I feel you will not find kinder folks in ANY large city anywhere in the USA! God Bless Texas!
Sounds legit like a Dallas weirdo to me 🤣 NOBODY takes football from elementary school THAT seriously because it's weird lol. Same with beauty pageants and drill teams. It's weird lol
@@JP-jd8wr Its all a community ie the parents of kids that do that. Mostly for football. I haven't heard of a pageants or drill show, you are on your own for that one.
North Texas- Rolling Hills & Plains East Texas- Deep south Central Texas- Hills West Texas- Deserts, Mountains, Valleys, Canyons Panhandle- Desert, plains and Canyons Southwest Texas- Marsh, swamp, Desert, Mountains, Hills, Valleys, Canyons, Plains South East Texas is just swamp basically
It’s interesting seeing my city through your eyes. My family moved here from N.C. in 1964, when I was ten years old. Dallas is an exceptionally dynamic city, offering lots of opportunity for advancement. I live in the Junius Heights Historic District, in Old East Dallas. This is a wonderful place to live.
As a resident of San Antonio, saying that San Antonio is more populated than Dallas is amusing. The only reason that statistic appears as such is because San Antonio has drawn an outrageously large city limit. Dallas has a more moderately sized city limit. Same thing occurs in Florida with Jacksonville. They appear to have a large population because of their enormous city limit. No, it’s not actually more populated than Miami. The latter just has a more reasonably drawn city limit.
I live in Arlington and have for decades by choice. Ft Worth is a much superior city to Dallas. The Dallas downtown is filled with commuters from 80 miles out and then empty at night. Ft Worth's downtown has plenty to do and is safe to walk wherever. Dallas reminds me of Atlanta and Ft Worth of the true west. By the way on the Cowboys, they are and have been THE most valuable sports franchise in the world in all sports according to Forbes. They are also located in Arlington next door to the Rangers and Six Flags. Overall, your video of Dallas proper is pretty accurate.
I'll give you that Ft. Worth has the better downtown and that it is the true gateway to the west. But overall metropolitan area goes to Dallas. Many Ft.Worth suburbs are still back water hick towns. Plus Ft. Worth seems to lack overall ambition in certain areas like landing a pro sports franchise. Ya'll could've gone after the Rangers a few ago by helping them build an awesome downtown ballpark. But I doubt that option even crossed any Ft. Worthians minds. Also the new Cowtown Arena is 2nd rate. That place could possibly draw an NCAA Tourney first round. But thats about it.
Bob, I lived in Arlington for almost 70 years before moving to another Metroplex city. Nice place, but not what it used to be. Briggs, I worked in downtown Dallas, so I have a lot of experience with the place. I am sure most of your analysis is correct, but Dallas is not very high on my list of choice places. There is one BBQ place that is light years ahead of all others. It's open two days a week and is is in Farmers Branch, just north of Dallas proper. The name? Cattleack BBQ.
Downtown Dallas has picked up the nightlife scene, not as good as Ft Worth. I drove through there on multiple occasions at night recently. There was a lot of damn people, more than there used to be.
There’s great food throughout many if the suburbs too! Plano (where I grew up) has a lot of amazing, authentic asian food due to the large population of asian that live there. I’m sure there are at least 100 asian restaurants in Plano lol
No, it fucking doesn't. There is not a single legitimate GOOD chinese restaurant in Plano. Just mainlanders looking to make a buck by selling general tsos to white ppl or opening shitty gross buffets.
@@allandulles7108 Seriously? There are numerous Chinese restaurants where the menu is literally in Chinese and almost everyone eating there is asian lol. At Legacy and Chase Oaks (across from Chase Oaks Church) there are a bunch of authentic places, and H-mart has a great food court as well. Idk what you’re talking about lmao
@@timothycontoveros4699 hmart is korean food, not chinese. I shop at the legacy place often. The food court is nasty and expensice shit. Never seen any of those dishes there in beijing ever. Just looked like a bunch of random shit tossed into noodles, or just random shit stir fried together. was less than impressed.
@@timothycontoveros4699 tell me which exact restaurant in the food court you think is good and I will go there. I last went montgs ago and thought it was all shit. Makes all chinese lose face serving that slop.
@@allandulles7108 Well, Idk if all of the restaurants on the food court itself are good, since I haven’t eaten there in a while, but right next to the food court is Little Sichuan which I think is pretty good and authentic. That being said, I’m certainly no expert on Chinese food. I would be shocked tho if these restaurants that primarily cater to asians had inauthentic americanized menus.. like why would that be the case? Also yeah H-mart is Korean food but my point is there is definitely authentic asian food in Plano.
Moved to Dallas area in 2013. Now live in small suburb in east, Forney. 14,000 when i moved 5 yrs ago & now 45,000 & predicted to be 100,000 in 2023! Of course traffic is horrible & city govt hasn’t kept up with needed changes to streets!!!!
The Dallas Cowboys have not actually played in Dallas since 1967. When they became an expansion team in 1959, they played at the cotton bowl. In 1957 Texas Stadium which is located in Irving open, and now they play at what we affectionately called Jerry world which is in Arlington. Texas Stadium opened in 1967.
Yup! The Irving Cowboys, then the Arlington Cowboys. Thanks only to Mark Cuban, Dallas is actually the home to only two professional sports teams -- the NBA Mavericks 🏀 and the NHL Stars 🏒.
Been in Dallas for 16 years now moved from suburban Chicago. Dallas is a great city (didn’t much care for Chicago) Overall nice people, good educational institutions, great restaurants, nice climate, lots of opportunity for most folks, and if u like sports plenty of that as well. Crime situation could be better but thats probably true of all big cities.
@@INDIGO.GODDESS_573 Dallas is a business friendly city Not sure what field you are in but there are a lot of companies and industries Dallas has oil/gas, tech, medical, real estate is booming, and many other industries are doing well and on the look out for good people especially now A lot of companies have left california and have moved to Texas (and specifically Dallas due to the favorable tax climate)
The extent of my Dallas experience was several layovers at DFW. I never set foot on the ground at Dallas, and never realized there was such a high Latino population there. No wonder the Mexican and Tex Mex food is so good! :)
I love Dallas I live about 30 minutes east of Dallas alot of good places to eat I like the lower Greenville Ave from Munger to Mockingbird. Also the Pecan lodge off of main in Deep Ellum in Dallas best BBQ.
Y'all can't be from Dallas if y'all didn't know we go by Triple D. The concept comes from the city of Dallas logo. The D has 2 more D's around it making it a total of 3 D's. And there you will see Triple D's.. I love my City too
One interesting statistic.... Dallas is part of the Dallas-Fort Worth television market, and it's currently the number FIVE television market behind New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia. However, the difference in television households between number 4 Philadelphia and number 5 DFW is so small that I expect next year's rankings to place DFW as number 4.
Fyi, Arlington is the SECOND home to the Cowboys. The first was in Irving, still nobody but you is making a correction on semantics. Guess who else doesn't play in their named city? Half of sports, go tell em'! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤗
Home run!! Thanks for the restaurant plugs-will have to check them out...in the burbs we don't get into Dallas much, but good Q we will travel for!! You may have said so, but Dallas area has THE best tex-mex any where.
I'm from New Orleans I use to live in Dallas for 17 years when I was there I lived all over the the Dallas Ft Worth area from Pleasant Grove Irving DeSoto Cedar Hill Grand Prairie Airlington Plano Uptown Dallas Ft Worth I currently live in Hot Springs Village Arkansas its beautiful here from the lakes to the trees the natural beauty is amazing.... I'm planning to moved to Vegas or Arizona in a year or two my time in Dallas was cool I always had a more fun in Houston and Austin its a little more vibrant (hip) and cultural those places Dallas was always kind of boring to me but I would rather stay in one of its many suburbs cities in the DFW metroplex then any other place in Texas
I'm quite impressed that you managed to live in 9 cities in your 17 years in DFW. I lived in Richardson, Far North Dallas, Arlington, Dallas proper, Garland and Irving before buying a house and settling in Coppell. Noticed that you still go by Mister Service DFW here.
San Antonio Dallas San Antonio Dallas 🤷🏽♀ lol I'm moving to TX in a couple months but I can't make up my mind, my BFF is in Dallas so it'll be my second home. This video was just in time! Can't wait!
There's also a trolley tour you can take showing the Depository, Oswald's house, and the Texas Theater. I went on it shortly after the 50th anniversary of the assassination; would highly recommend the Sixth Floor Museum in the Depository.
I find it macabre that the scene of a murder and the murderer's life are the major highlights. Never once has a Kennedy visited Dallas since. I suppose people are just naturally rubberneckers.
@@lenarrowseller2419 My very first real job was at a car lot at W.Davis & Elsbeth (Which had an interesting criminal history of it's own!) that was across the intersection for one of Oswalds former apartments. Plus my late grandfather (1902-90) managed an apt house at 224 W.10th (It's a lawyers office now) from about 1960 to 1986, and swore that Oswald stopped by & looked at a vacancy he had,but he ran him off....said there was just something about him he didn't like??
I like going to museums when I'm in different cities. Dallas Museum of Art is a good one once you get inside but the statues outside of it are mundane and not appealing to bringing you inside. I would like to go to their Zoo since I do visit zoos on an irregular basis. My favorites are the Bronx Zoo, Washington DC Zoo and the San Diego Zoo. They are all spectacular! In Texas, the Fort Worth botanical gardens rivals all, including the Dallas Botanical Gardens. I generally visit botanical gardens as a Zen moment when I'm frustrated with my travels!
I grew up in the Houston Museum of Fine Arts with the Zoo just blocks away. Now I do alot of work with museums in Dallas. I prefer the Kimbell in Ft Worth. The Botanical Gardens and Dallas Arboritum are both beautiful. If you are in Dallas at the DMA, walk across the street to the Crow Collection of Asian Art in the Trammell Crow building or the Nasher Museum.
@@cutlassrkt I live in Dallas proper but on of my favorite museum to go to is the Modern Museum in Fort Worth the art is incredible and the build is fantastic and the world class Kimball museum is right across the street great also. Thanks and Welcome and Enjoy!
I love living in dallas but my only problem is pay is so less. $12 an hour for nurse aide with 5 years experience. New York California they pay more than $20 -25 an hour sometimes more. I don’t know why Texas sucks with pay. I may have to move eventually can’t survive on $12 an hour for long.
I live near Grapevine, Texas and work in Grapevine, Texas and I can vouch for Tolberts!!! The food is AMAZING!!! 😋😋😋 They got showcased on the Travel Channel. 😃😃😃
First let me say that Dallas is closed! We are full! And people deciding to move here is making thw cost of our housing GO UP 🙄 please stay where you are. 😂 But , seriously as a resident of Dallas for mostly all my life I must say I'm very impressed you did your homework. Everything you mentioned is spot on! Nice & accurate presentation of the Triple D...⭐😁👍🏾Thanks Briggs!
I relocated from Shreveport Louisiana to Dallas Texas 11 years ago, I love the areas outside of the city area such as Cedar Hill in the Lakeridge community subdivision it is absolutely gorgeous and quiet , are very friendly please visit this area it is not far from Joe Pool lake which has a restaurant located on the lake called the Oasis" check it out .
I wish I could get one of these for Lexington Kentucky or best small towns in Kentucky. But considering I’m probably the only person to ever ask for this I’m not holding my breath it’ll happen
Correct. It's completely surrounded by Dallas on all sides, but it's an independently governed enclave city with its own services, including city council, mayor, and police force.
I have lived here all my life I grew up going to the Texas theater which is still there and President Kennedy been here never will forget that day and then Bonnie and Clyde I have visited both of their graves which Bonnie grave is no longer there I love my home but I'm also it's s disappointed .. used to be pretty quiet around here it ain't no more and I don't feel so safe anymore either. Too much traffic
Interesting list....I didn't get to see much of Dallas when I went 3 years ago, but it was an interesting experience. My main outings were at the Reunion Tower observation deck and the Dallas World Aquarium. I would've loved to visit their Zero Gravity theme park too if I had extra money and company with me. I went alone. Also Dallas' skyline at night looks awesome.
@@angelajohnson5728 Oh I didn't know that. I feel bad for the employees there who were forced out of work and those who looked forward to going to that theme park for a good time, but can't anymore.
I was born and raised in Dallas and one thing I do not like about it is the damn traffic. However you should try out this wonderful restaurant called Williams Chicken I love it.
When you come in October you have to go to Hard 8 BBQ and Cattleack BBQ! I work across the Street from Cattleack it is packed all the time! You can't just go on your 30 minute lunch break 😄 and it's only open Thursday and Friday 10:30- 2:00! As far as Brisket goes I think Hard 8 and Cattleack are hard to beat!😋
Born in Dallas and lived here for the remaining 52 years so far (well FW for the past 11) - never heard the “DDD” thing. Big D, yes. Triple D, not so much. 😆
For those from Dallas that never heard of "Triple D", may likely have never been around the hood. It stands for "dirty dirty Dallas". It was coined near the late 80's/ early 90's, but you'll usually only hear around The Cliff or Pleasant Grove (or other similar areas).
Got it from the city logo that used to be on the Squad Cars (up to 1991-92) and is still on pretty much every other city owned vehicle. And I first heard that nickname in 1976!!!
I live in Dallas, TX. There are many good opportunities here. There are lots of jobs. There is also no state tax. You can actually get a home for less than 150 grand depending where you want to live. ( some of the suburbs)
Just out of curiosity I headed to Zillow to check that out, and yes, there are almost 200 houses (and 300 condos and townhomes) for sale in the Metroplex under $150k. Most are closer to Dallas and FW than not.
@@ridahakimi4335 yea I live about 50 mins from Dallas (30mins from Fort Worth) average house is about $230,000. Not saying you can’t find something cheaper but a nice house…👍🏼
Yesss!! Smokey John's!! The best bbq. It's down the street from my job and I treat myself often. The owners are super nice with the guaranteed best customer service. You can't go wrong.
Thanks Briggs, the first time I ever went to Dallas was a bit over 44 years ago. Loonngg a** drive from Birmingham. That was before I20 was even started with mostly 2 lane highways. Even before I20 was started to Atlanta. My first experience with the LBJ expressway AND roll roads. Got totally PO'd because I had to pay a dime to get OFF the highway If I did ever move to a large major city it most certainly would be Dallas. Would have to teach them how to cook and eat pork though. Thanks
I went there in 1972. I was in the Navy and a friend had to drive his van home before he went overseas so I helped on the long drive. I went to Richardson a few times about 20 years ago when I was going to some schools on communications equipment. What a difference between 1972 and 20 years ago. I went to a school for 5 weeks once just south of FW back in the mid 80s. Hell, of the 9:technician schools I was sent to in the lower 48 8 of them were in Texas.
LBJ is even worse now double decker with tolls makes Austin's elevated I-35 look easy. But hey the turnpike you drove is now one of the non toll interstates.
After my last trip (Richardson) I found out about they way their system is built using the tolls to pay for them. It makes total sense. Travelled to Chicago 3 years ago and made plans to avoid the tolls, mainly because I couldn't get the info of costs.
I used to visit the DFW Metroplex a lot a couple years ago. One of my favorite places I've ever visited. They have everything! The food is amazing and the people are friendly a accommodating. The suburbs are great to live and raise a family. Great city all around. The only thing that I never liked were the cicadas. 😱 That loud noise is everywhere... nonstop. When it's their season. 😅 But that's a minor annoyance compared the everything else the city has to offer. Fort Worth included.
I'm from Dallas born and raised. You forgot to mention the night life here, you can't go wrong with that either. Aways new bars and clubs popping up everywhere here. From hip hop to pop music and of course country two stepping, can't leave that out it is Texas 😆
There's so much to do in Dallas. You're also within like 2.5 to 4 hours of other great cities like Htown, San Antonio, Shreveport, OKC, Austin, and the casinos lol
You missed one fascinating place to see in Dallas. The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza is a museum located on the sixth floor of the old Schoolbook Depository overlooking Dealey Plaza at the intersection of Elm and Houston Streets. The museum examines the life, times, death, and legacy of United States President John F. Kennedy and is located in the very room from which Lee Harvey Oswald shot and killed President Kennedy. Plan on staying a few hours.
The Museum that Ross Perot built is worth a stop. Ole Ross left his mark. There is a huge commercial airport along I-35W. And how could you ignore “CowTown”? Fort Worth may outgrow Dallas by the time all is said and done.
One of my late Aunts actually knew the Barrow family,(They owned a service station on what is now Singleton Blvd in West Dallas. The building still stands....for now?) she was friends with their daughter Marie. As a result,she actually had met both Buck & Clyde,and of course knowing Clyde had also met Bonnie. Told some very interesting background stories about them. Such as Clyde being an amazing high speed driver (He preferred Fords) and being quite a gifted pool player. Also that by today's standards,he'd be probably be called Bi-Polar...a 'Jekyll & Hyde' personality. Also that Bonnie was actually quite intellegent....and married to someone else the whole time they were out doing their thing!! (And as a side note,when speaking of the 1967 movie made about them was very quick to say 'They're (the actors playing them) are both too tall!!')
As a Native Californian still living in this now destroyed state, feel I must apologize to Texans for all the Crazies moving into your territory 😬🤯🤪~Some of us are SANE🙋♀️:)
@@alexisault4444 Absolutely AGREE, lol😱~I was in Rancho Cucamonga, Inland Empire, which was certainly a much more "Conservative Pocket"; plus, my Daughter & Family are now in Mission Viejo, Orange County, which is also mainly Conservative🤩:) Just do NOT head West into the Cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs Los Angeles area, which has sadly become like EVIL Socialism🤦♀️!!
the older i get, the more i love my city. born and raised and im still discovering what all there is to love about this city and every weekend spent is worth the money and time. no matter where i go, this place will always be my base.
Cherish Dallas. It’s phenomenal & I wanna move there
Same
I just moved here a year ago and am still exploring and boy is there a ton of opportunity here
@@izzywoods794 Hi, I keep hearing about Dallas having plenty of opportunities.. but that's it.. What opportunities do you see that Dallas has to over?
I plan on moving there in next few months.. The rent tho whewwww.. Especially, vs size 🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️..
@@izzywoods794What made you move there?
Where did you move from?
the most world shaping thing to have ever come from Dallas, which gets no mention by almost every commentary about Big D, is the integrated circuit (aka microchip). electrical engineer Jack Kilby was working in Dallas, at Texas Instruments, in 1958 when he came up with the idea. he got a Nobel Prize in 2000 for this accomplishment. it blows my mind that this event gets so little attention, especially on the internet of all places!
Excellent mention! I had a TI calculator in school and only decades later when I moved to Dallas I learned about this.
@@rogerbritus9378 engineers built the modern world and get basically no credit. pols take it all.
@@gringoviejo1935 As an engineer with patents to my name I sadly know that a little too well.
Thanks for this mention. It is a really big deal.
DR KIRBY had two acceptance speeches "Thank you." and "Thank you very much"
Percentage of Dallas drivers who believe tailgating gets them to their destination faster: 70%
Percentage of Dallas drivers who know what a yield sign means: 15%
Percentage of Dallas drivers who know what a red light means: 65%
I'm the other 30% that starts coasting when someone's tailgating me 😁🤣
Apparently you have never driven around salt lake city...utah drivers are bat shit crazy...sure Dallas has bad drivers,utah has bad drivers and snow
@@shadfletcher6815 Utah is Rocky Mountain Texas
Those percentages sound about right for Boston drivers too.
How about the other percentage (in Dallas) that get right up to the stop light and decide that they don't want to turn left. They want to turn right and expect 4 or 5 lanes of traffic to come to a complete stop because they're too self-absorbed to plan ahead. Instead of completing their turn and finding a place to turn around, they somehow feel that everyone is supposed to just stop and "take care of them"? I see this irritating behavior way too often. I used to install satellite TV, and would often have to work downtown. I hated this because the closer you got to downtown Dallas, the more aggressively people drove. It usually felt like everyone with a set of wheels was trying to kill me.
Very nice of you recommending restaurants. The owners will highly appreciate you're bringing them business.
We have a really crooked judge in Dallas he’s massively on the take and controls out mayorlike a puppet and will shut down the restaurants at any time so I will plan on dining in Dallas.
@@richardhammond816 Don't forget your mask!
Greg Abbott,ruled to further ensure that no governmental entity can mandate masks, the following requirement shall continue to apply: No governmental entity, including a county, city, school district, and public health authority, and no governmental official may require any person to wear a face-covering or to mandate that other person wear a covering,” the executive order read.
@@shoutingatclouds6841 The government doesn't own very many restaurants. Most of the ones here require masks except when eating.
Its amazing how quickly "minimal government" Republicans discovered the joys of adding supremacy clauses to every bill they pass now so local government is hobbled.
But yeah, go ahead and don't wear masks and don't get vaccinated. Darwin wins in the end.
@@redwolfexr I live in Dallas most everybody is dead here already the street smell like rotting corpses .
I've been here 8 years and I love it! It's a whole different world here.
And where did you come from? The liberal northeast?
@@charliehicks5676 No sir. Midwest.
I just moved here from West Virginia. Wow is all i can say. The food is amazing. We moved too Kaufman ( plenty if my hubbys family ( mexican/ American) all about working hard and family. My hubbies whole family like most of my big family in West Virginia are Republicans. I am use too traffic though i was born and raised just 48 miles from Washington DC. I do miss the Blue Ridge Mountains though. But i can and will adapt. If you have ever been to Mexico City you will see a big city. I can't believe the housing prices around here now.
@@charliehicks5676 damn dude you beat me to it. I was gonna say California... But living in Jersey for 12 yrs. I can say blue cities and states are a disaster.. so happy I'm back home in Dallas
@@marcello1821 hate to break it to you, but Dallas is a blue city. All the large cities in Texas are blue lol
I lived in Dallas for two years and just left last month. It's a great city and you are spot on about the food! One thing you didn't mention was that Dallas has one of the largest and most well respected medical research institutions in the country, UT Southwestern Medical Center. Although, to be fair, I only know about it because I worked there lol.
I lived there for the last 10 and just moved in June … Dallas is okay
Houston medical center says hold my beer.
@@fakebrake so true. ( I have family and friends in both medical communities and the weirdness of Austin.) But Houston has the absolute worse VA hospital! I battled them as they neglected my father to death. Only after his death did I find proof of their social workers adding in elder fraud. Reporting it did nothing.
Houston leads in medicine and medical industries, air transportation and some of the best medics in the world. I think Houston was ranked #1 in special practices in the US
@@fakebrake MD Anderson is great, but I think UT Southwestern is still more reputable for its research and its medical school.
I work for a company that’s based in Plano. Food is a highlight of trips to head office.
Been here my whole life and traveled and lived in many countries and cities, and Dallas is by far my favorite..I'm never bored here.
Uve lived and traveled in some shitty places if "Dull"as is your favorite
@@SouthernSilverExchange you can't even type in proper English shut up.
Top it off you done ever live in Dallas, you really hated you wouldn't be wafching this video, you're obsessed with it here but mad because you can't afford it.
@@SouthernSilverExchange Dallas is wack lol
Dallas was fine until the Hurricane Katrina "law-abiding citizens" began to flood the area..
@@214warzone Dallas was a cowtown lol
Would love to see your take on the different neighborhoods of Dallas proper. I’ve lived in Oak Cliff (which used to be its own city) for a decade and have always told people “you’ll love Dallas as soon as you find your neighborhood.” I know you’ve seen a million cities, but of those that I’ve seen, Dallas is unique in how unique each one of its neighborhoods are.
How can you explain
My grandparents bought a house in south Oak Cliff in the 1950's and lived there until they died. It was a great neighborhood initially but crime rose over the years. It is getting much better now :)
@@suckit9593 they’re saying everyone is identified by their neighborhood. Each neighborhood kinda tells a lot about the person. So what some people do is ask you where you graduated from or what school does your kids go to. They then make an assessment about you off that tid bit of information.
Unique? They all look the same besides a select few and those are the rich ones.
Mesquite, Garland, Plano, Pleasant Grove.. they all look the same. Same strip malls, gas stations, etc.
Very few pockets of Dallas are original anymore.
@@PBTexasBoy I would never judge a person by where they live but rather by their character.
I grew up just north of Dallas. I get choked up driving down I30 when I start to see the Sky line. I love Dallas. Theres a certain vibe (more so if you're a Texan) that it gives. I will ALWAYS call Dallas home. And I will ALWAYS feel the love for Dallas. Its quintessential Texas!!!
Lived here all my life. Doing a film about the youth in Dallas. As much as I love this city, many issues get swept under the rug for more luxary apartments, new business buildings, new bridges, new parks, while homelessness and crime among youth is growing heavily.
I think the rise in crime recently, is due to kids being out of school from the pandemic. It's not just a Dallas thing or a Texas thing. The same thing has happened all over the US. As far as homelessness, there are limits to what can realistically be done about that. Most of the homeless have serious alcohol/drug and psychological problems, and we long ago got rid of the infrastructure to compel treatment.
@@eventhisidistaken no, has nothing to do with the pandemic, crime out here been bad,, but getting worse for sure, getting robbed is #1, watch your back! Me and my 70 year old mother was robbed in our driveway. Also Laura Miller an old mayor of Dallas closed our homeless shelter they have no place to go. Most of the condemned buildings they used to go to have been refurbished and/or torn and replaced with high rises and gentrified for all the people moving here
Lived here since 1981. Crime peaked circa 1993. After declining quite a bit, it started rising again in terms of violence about five years.
five years ago.
@@eventhisidistaken false the year before corona homicides was up too 400’s within the first 3 months.
You talking about Dallas barbecue and never mentioned Pecan Lodge and Terry Black in Deep Ellum that sacrilegious 😱😆🙏
Preach!!! 🗣Pecan Lodge🤤
pecan lodge is amazing 🤧 honestly deep ellum just hits different
He didn't mention Mike a's either!
Yesssssir Terry Black 😋😋 one of the best
Pecan lodge is meh 🥴
I think the best time of year to visit Dallas is in October when the State Fair is going on. Other things to check out that weren't mentioned in the video: Klyde Warren Park, AT&T Discovery District, Deep Ellum, and the free trolley around downtown/uptown. Speaking of free... the Dallas Museum of Art admission cost is also free
You forgot to mention that some of the best tacos you can eat are at gas stations, but then again that's most of Texas. For me the BBQ restaurants are good but I prefer the hole in the wall, mom & pop joints. Slabs in Mesquite was great but I think they fell victim to the lockdown. Great people and bbq.
California has better tacos
Hell yea Fuel City and them joints over in the North Dallas area. El Tacaso, Paisanos. Real good spots.
Velvet Taco is one of the best for sure!
@@VinceroAlpha Thats my spot too. Definitely unique tacos.
@@SIr3N128 You got that right, haven’t found a taco I like yet. Fuel City is a joke. Can’t wait to go visit kids, and get my favorites.
Dallas is close to having 8 million people in the area. It’s projected to become the 3rd biggest metro in the country, only behind NYC and LA. Dallas will only continue to become more of a powerhouse when it come to the global city ranks. I love this city
Dallas is very boring
@@brittoncoil2518 What do you think could cause more excitement in Dallas to be less “boring”?
@@Goodtimenotalongtime nothing lol it’s a flat boring wasteland lol. Just cheap and tons of jobs that’s why people are moving there
@@brittoncoil2518 Besides it being flat. What does the area need to be more exciting? Im just curious to know what other cities offer that makes Dallas boring.
Unless something really bad happens the Metro will build until it reaches the Red River and spills over into Southern Oklahoma.
Terry's Black BBQ off main street in Deep Elum is a must eat as well! This time of year, take your dinner upstairs on the patio and enjoy!
I like how you actually mention MLS teams in the sports section, no other UA-cam channel that talk states or cities never mentions it when they talk about their sport teams.
Except DallasFC is actually up in Frisco. Like how the Cowboys aren't actually in Dallas anymore either.
@@k-peezy2723 that can be said for a lot of sports teams especially like the New York giants and jets are in a different state
Moved to Dallas in 1976. Raised two daughters here and have enjoyed the best restaurant scene in these United States. Over 1,200 Sushi joints in DFW, State Fair of Texas, Cowboys and I can keep going on. Great city.
I was born in OK and raised in Dallas. Elementary on through to College - Texas Woman's University Alumni. When I was older, and left Dallas to see the country, I was shocked to see the differences! Mostly, no decent Mexican Restaurants, 'strange' Baptist churches (not like the SBC AT ALL!), Minimal support of football from elementary through high school, etc., and on. No matter where my zip code locates me, I am a proud Texan and Dallasite. I played in the fields where 635 now resides. Ant's not forget SWA (Southwest Airlines)!, created on a bar napkin by Herb Kelleher and Rollin King. Based at the original Dallas airport, Love Field, and has become on of the US major carriers. People of Dallas are very proud of their Hometown Airline! I love Dallas, and I feel you will not find kinder folks in ANY large city anywhere in the USA! God Bless Texas!
Football is old. Soccer now.
Sounds legit like a Dallas weirdo to me 🤣 NOBODY takes football from elementary school THAT seriously because it's weird lol. Same with beauty pageants and drill teams. It's weird lol
@@JP-jd8wr Its all a community ie the parents of kids that do that. Mostly for football. I haven't heard of a pageants or drill show, you are on your own for that one.
Ever heard of Lee Harvey Oswald? Was he a kind Dallas resident?
I feel you
Left another major city and came to Dallas I love it.
I lived in Dallas a few times. Dallas is a beautiful city, and there’s some beautiful women out there too
Bruh you had to bring up the women lol
Hell yeah there is! ....
@@luiss6737 every information is needed
@@luiss6737 I for one have no problem with that.
North Texas- Rolling Hills & Plains
East Texas- Deep south
Central Texas- Hills
West Texas- Deserts, Mountains, Valleys, Canyons
Panhandle- Desert, plains and Canyons
Southwest Texas- Marsh, swamp, Desert, Mountains, Hills, Valleys, Canyons, Plains
South East Texas is just swamp basically
Well southeast is by Louisiana
South Texas: Mexico.
@@bastipro1333 Yes, and we love it.
Been in Dallas for 10 years now. It’s a great place to live!!
It’s interesting seeing my city through your eyes.
My family moved here from N.C. in 1964, when I was ten years old.
Dallas is an exceptionally dynamic city, offering lots of opportunity for advancement.
I live in the Junius Heights Historic District, in Old East Dallas.
This is a wonderful place to live.
As a resident of San Antonio, saying that San Antonio is more populated than Dallas is amusing. The only reason that statistic appears as such is because San Antonio has drawn an outrageously large city limit. Dallas has a more moderately sized city limit. Same thing occurs in Florida with Jacksonville. They appear to have a large population because of their enormous city limit. No, it’s not actually more populated than Miami. The latter just has a more reasonably drawn city limit.
I live in Arlington and have for decades by choice. Ft Worth is a much superior city to Dallas. The Dallas downtown is filled with commuters from 80 miles out and then empty at night. Ft Worth's downtown has plenty to do and is safe to walk wherever. Dallas reminds me of Atlanta and Ft Worth of the true west. By the way on the Cowboys, they are and have been THE most valuable sports franchise in the world in all sports according to Forbes. They are also located in Arlington next door to the Rangers and Six Flags. Overall, your video of Dallas proper is pretty accurate.
I've been thinking of moving to Texas and Ft. Worth has seemed a better fit than Dallas.
I'll give you that Ft. Worth has the better downtown and that it is the true gateway to the west. But overall metropolitan area goes to Dallas. Many Ft.Worth suburbs are still back water hick towns. Plus Ft. Worth seems to lack overall ambition in certain areas like landing a pro sports franchise. Ya'll could've gone after the Rangers a few ago by helping them build an awesome downtown ballpark. But I doubt that option even crossed any Ft. Worthians minds. Also the new Cowtown Arena is 2nd rate. That place could possibly draw an NCAA Tourney first round. But thats about it.
Bob, I lived in Arlington for almost 70 years before moving to another Metroplex city. Nice place, but not what it used to be.
Briggs, I worked in downtown Dallas, so I have a lot of experience with the place. I am sure most of your analysis is correct, but Dallas is not very high on my list of choice places. There is one BBQ place that is light years ahead of all others. It's open two days a week and is is in Farmers Branch, just north of Dallas proper. The name? Cattleack BBQ.
Downtown Dallas has picked up the nightlife scene, not as good as Ft Worth. I drove through there on multiple occasions at night recently. There was a lot of damn people, more than there used to be.
Have you been to downtown within the past 6 months?
There’s great food throughout many if the suburbs too! Plano (where I grew up) has a lot of amazing, authentic asian food due to the large population of asian that live there. I’m sure there are at least 100 asian restaurants in Plano lol
No, it fucking doesn't. There is not a single legitimate GOOD chinese restaurant in Plano. Just mainlanders looking to make a buck by selling general tsos to white ppl or opening shitty gross buffets.
@@allandulles7108 Seriously? There are numerous Chinese restaurants where the menu is literally in Chinese and almost everyone eating there is asian lol. At Legacy and Chase Oaks (across from Chase Oaks Church) there are a bunch of authentic places, and H-mart has a great food court as well. Idk what you’re talking about lmao
@@timothycontoveros4699 hmart is korean food, not chinese. I shop at the legacy place often. The food court is nasty and expensice shit. Never seen any of those dishes there in beijing ever. Just looked like a bunch of random shit tossed into noodles, or just random shit stir fried together. was less than impressed.
@@timothycontoveros4699 tell me which exact restaurant in the food court you think is good and I will go there. I last went montgs ago and thought it was all shit. Makes all chinese lose face serving that slop.
@@allandulles7108 Well, Idk if all of the restaurants on the food court itself are good, since I haven’t eaten there in a while, but right next to the food court is Little Sichuan which I think is pretty good and authentic. That being said, I’m certainly no expert on Chinese food. I would be shocked tho if these restaurants that primarily cater to asians had inauthentic americanized menus.. like why would that be the case?
Also yeah H-mart is Korean food but my point is there is definitely authentic asian food in Plano.
Moved to Dallas area in 2013. Now live in small suburb in east, Forney. 14,000 when i moved 5 yrs ago & now 45,000 & predicted to be 100,000 in 2023! Of course traffic is horrible & city govt hasn’t kept up with needed changes to streets!!!!
I have family in Dallas and visit it often. It’s a great city. The food is a big highlight. Good bars everywhere too
The Dallas Cowboys have not actually played in Dallas since 1967. When they became an expansion team in 1959, they played at the cotton bowl. In 1957 Texas Stadium which is located in Irving open, and now they play at what we affectionately called Jerry world which is in Arlington. Texas Stadium opened in 1967.
Yup! The Irving Cowboys, then the Arlington Cowboys. Thanks only to Mark Cuban, Dallas is actually the home to only two professional sports teams -- the NBA Mavericks 🏀 and the NHL Stars 🏒.
They are the Arlington/Frisco/Westlake Cowboys.
@@roygreen9890 Right!
Texas Stadium opened in 1971. Until then they played in the Cotton bowl stadium on the fairgrounds in Dallas.
Technically texas stadium was in the border between irving and north dallas
Been in Dallas for 16 years now moved from suburban Chicago.
Dallas is a great city (didn’t much care for Chicago)
Overall nice people, good educational institutions, great restaurants, nice climate, lots of opportunity for most folks, and if u like sports plenty of that as well. Crime situation could be better but thats probably true of all big cities.
I'm planning on moving there..
Please tell me.. What opportunities?
@@INDIGO.GODDESS_573
Dallas is a business friendly city
Not sure what field you are in but there are a lot of companies and industries
Dallas has oil/gas, tech, medical, real estate is booming, and many other industries are doing well and on the look out for good people especially now
A lot of companies have left california and have moved to Texas (and specifically Dallas due to the favorable tax climate)
The extent of my Dallas experience was several layovers at DFW. I never set foot on the ground at Dallas, and never realized there was such a high Latino population there. No wonder the Mexican and Tex Mex food is so good! :)
I love Dallas I live about 30 minutes east of Dallas alot of good places to eat I like the lower Greenville Ave from Munger to Mockingbird. Also the Pecan lodge off of main in Deep Ellum in Dallas best BBQ.
Line be to damn long, they don't answer phone.
Munger near 30 is full of homeless people though now. 🤪
I'm glad I moved to Houston Texas 6 years ago love it ❤❤❤
Y'all can't be from Dallas if y'all didn't know we go by Triple D. The concept comes from the city of Dallas logo. The D has 2 more D's around it making it a total of 3 D's. And there you will see Triple D's.. I love my City too
One interesting statistic.... Dallas is part of the Dallas-Fort Worth television market, and it's currently the number FIVE television market behind New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia. However, the difference in television households between number 4 Philadelphia and number 5 DFW is so small that I expect next year's rankings to place DFW as number 4.
Good video, however, the Dallas Cowboys are not in Dallas Texas. Their stadium is in Arlington Texas around the corner from the Rangers!
Fyi, Arlington is the SECOND home to the Cowboys. The first was in Irving, still nobody but you is making a correction on semantics. Guess who else doesn't play in their named city? Half of sports, go tell em'! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤗
Yeah but they got that new stadium in I think it's Plano
@@earlenem5745 that's the Star , their practice field.
@@SeanCarterCFH No, I will make a correction too. So there!
@@kathleenkirchoff9223 Which is in Frisco. LOL
Thanks Briggs! These are fun. Especially fun today because I live in Texas. 🥳
The tripple d🔥 born and raised thanks for doing this one Briggs!
Dirty Dirty Dallas?
🤟🏽🤟🏽
⭐
Dallas, Best city in Texas
Dallas is a shithole.
@@kensmechanicalaffair uh huh..you wished you lived here
@@neiandresamuels5428 Nope.
Home run!! Thanks for the restaurant plugs-will have to check them out...in the burbs we don't get into Dallas much, but good Q we will travel for!! You may have said so, but Dallas area has THE best tex-mex any where.
Sorry you didn't mention the Dallas Symphony and the Dallas Opera. Like everything else, they are just now starting to open back up for live events.
I'm from New Orleans I use to live in Dallas for 17 years when I was there I lived all over the the Dallas Ft Worth area from Pleasant Grove Irving DeSoto Cedar Hill Grand Prairie Airlington Plano Uptown Dallas Ft Worth I currently live in Hot Springs Village Arkansas its beautiful here from the lakes to the trees the natural beauty is amazing.... I'm planning to moved to Vegas or Arizona in a year or two my time in Dallas was cool I always had a more fun in Houston and Austin its a little more vibrant (hip) and cultural those places Dallas was always kind of boring to me but I would rather stay in one of its many suburbs cities in the DFW metroplex then any other place in Texas
I'm quite impressed that you managed to live in 9 cities in your 17 years in DFW. I lived in Richardson, Far North Dallas, Arlington, Dallas proper, Garland and Irving before buying a house and settling in Coppell. Noticed that you still go by Mister Service DFW here.
Patiently waiting for a “What is going on with Austin, Texas” video.
Keep up the great work Briggs!
tent city texas
I'm from Dallas and knew it was awesome, but this made it even awesomer!
Grew up there, and left over 20yrs ago. I don't miss the concrete jungle that it is. Never moving back either.
Just in time. I was looking for something to watch.
San Antonio Dallas San Antonio Dallas 🤷🏽♀ lol I'm moving to TX in a couple months but I can't make up my mind, my BFF is in Dallas so it'll be my second home. This video was just in time! Can't wait!
There's also a trolley tour you can take showing the Depository, Oswald's house, and the Texas Theater. I went on it shortly after the 50th anniversary of the assassination; would highly recommend the Sixth Floor Museum in the Depository.
Oh boy! A tour of Oswald's house and a tour of the place where Kennedy got shot from, how scenic.
@@lenarrowseller2419 🤣🤣🤣
I find it macabre that the scene of a murder and the murderer's life are the major highlights. Never once has a Kennedy visited Dallas since. I suppose people are just naturally rubberneckers.
@@lenarrowseller2419 My very first real job was at a car lot at W.Davis & Elsbeth (Which had an interesting criminal history of it's own!) that was across the intersection for one of Oswalds former apartments. Plus my late grandfather (1902-90) managed an apt house at 224 W.10th (It's a lawyers office now) from about 1960 to 1986, and swore that Oswald stopped by & looked at a vacancy he had,but he ran him off....said there was just something about him he didn't like??
I didn’t understand how great our food was (in Dallas) until I left. It is the main thing I miss.
I second that
NICE! Love Dallas. Waiting on your Houston, Atlanta and Charlotte videos!
Thank you for mentioning the Dallas World Aquarium. If you are going to Dallas for a trip and enjoy zoos you NEED to go to the Dallas world aquarium.
I like going to museums when I'm in different cities. Dallas Museum of Art is a good one once you get inside but the statues outside of it are mundane and not appealing to bringing you inside. I would like to go to their Zoo since I do visit zoos on an irregular basis. My favorites are the Bronx Zoo, Washington DC Zoo and the San Diego Zoo. They are all spectacular! In Texas, the Fort Worth botanical gardens rivals all, including the Dallas Botanical Gardens. I generally visit botanical gardens as a Zen moment when I'm frustrated with my travels!
Have you checked out the Fort Worth zoo? I would say it’s even better than the dallas zoo
I grew up in the Houston Museum of Fine Arts with the Zoo just blocks away. Now I do alot of work with museums in Dallas. I prefer the Kimbell in Ft Worth. The Botanical Gardens and Dallas Arboritum are both beautiful. If you are in Dallas at the DMA, walk across the street to the Crow Collection of Asian Art in the Trammell Crow building or the Nasher Museum.
@Mike Oliver Me too, loved it as a kid.
@@wavy2tee Fort worth zoo is number 2 in the nation according to USA Today.
@@cutlassrkt I live in Dallas proper but on of my favorite museum to go to is the Modern Museum in Fort Worth the art is incredible and the build is fantastic and the world class Kimball museum is right across the street great also. Thanks and Welcome and Enjoy!
I love living in dallas but my only problem is pay is so less. $12 an hour for nurse aide with 5 years experience. New York California they pay more than $20 -25 an hour sometimes more. I don’t know why Texas sucks with pay. I may have to move eventually can’t survive on $12 an hour for long.
I've been really enjoying these What's up with videos. I learn a lot from these.
I'm a truck driver and i'm in Dallas three times a week. I will definitely be giving The Slow Bone a try.
I live near Grapevine, Texas and work in Grapevine, Texas and I can vouch for Tolberts!!! The food is AMAZING!!! 😋😋😋
They got showcased on the Travel Channel. 😃😃😃
First let me say that Dallas is closed! We are full! And people deciding to move here is making thw cost of our housing GO UP 🙄 please stay where you are. 😂 But , seriously as a resident of Dallas for mostly all my life I must say I'm very impressed you did your homework. Everything you mentioned is spot on! Nice & accurate presentation of the Triple D...⭐😁👍🏾Thanks Briggs!
I relocated from Shreveport Louisiana to Dallas Texas 11 years ago, I love the areas outside of the city area such as Cedar Hill in the Lakeridge community subdivision it is absolutely gorgeous and quiet , are very friendly please visit this area it is not far from Joe Pool lake which has a restaurant located on the lake called the Oasis" check it out .
I wanna move to DTX at some point. I’m not a huge fan of big city life anymore, Dallas is the exception for me✨
I wish I could get one of these for Lexington Kentucky or best small towns in Kentucky. But considering I’m probably the only person to ever ask for this I’m not holding my breath it’ll happen
Good food , Good people. Nice and clean ! Will be going back in October, possibly relocating there or Vegas. I love both.
🤣🤣 Did you really have to show the picture of Big Tex on fire?? Too soon, too soon 🥺
Forreal 😞
Crazy I'm Dallas now from Minnesota &Atlanta
Um, Briggs, I hate to tell you this but as a native, Cockrell Hill is not apart of Dallas. It's its own city with its own library and utilities.
Correct. It's completely surrounded by Dallas on all sides, but it's an independently governed enclave city with its own services, including city council, mayor, and police force.
It is in Dallas County and conveniently close.
I was looking for this comment.
Wait is it really?
I have lived here all my life I grew up going to the Texas theater which is still there and President Kennedy been here never will forget that day and then Bonnie and Clyde I have visited both of their graves which Bonnie grave is no longer there I love my home but I'm also it's s disappointed .. used to be pretty quiet around here it ain't no more and I don't feel so safe anymore either. Too much traffic
Interesting list....I didn't get to see much of Dallas when I went 3 years ago, but it was an interesting experience. My main outings were at the Reunion Tower observation deck and the Dallas World Aquarium. I would've loved to visit their Zero Gravity theme park too if I had extra money and company with me. I went alone. Also Dallas' skyline at night looks awesome.
The Zero Gravity Theme Park is permanently closed. The land owner sold the land and Zero Gravity's lease was not renewed.
@@angelajohnson5728 Oh I didn't know that. I feel bad for the employees there who were forced out of work and those who looked forward to going to that theme park for a good time, but can't anymore.
I was born and raised in Dallas and one thing I do not like about it is the damn traffic. However you should try out this wonderful restaurant called Williams Chicken I love it.
Who Else Needed this Video,, Today in Their life🕺💃🤸🧜💆🙏
It Is What It Is 👌🏾🤬
The description of SRV - I’m subscribed 👍
When you come in October you have to go to Hard 8 BBQ and Cattleack BBQ! I work across the Street from Cattleack it is packed all the time! You can't just go on your 30 minute lunch break 😄 and it's only open Thursday and Friday 10:30- 2:00! As far as Brisket goes I think Hard 8 and Cattleack are hard to beat!😋
Try Lockharts in Oak Cliff.
@@michaelv6870 I rarely drive out to Oak Cliff but I hear about Lockharts a lot! I'll head over there one day
I was lucky enough to visit the old eagle Ford elementary school that Bonnie and Clyde attended before they "renovated" it. It's unrecognizable now
Born in Dallas and lived here for the remaining 52 years so far (well FW for the past 11) - never heard the “DDD” thing. Big D, yes. Triple D, not so much. 😆
Too be honest I thought "DDD" had to do with Debbie Does Dallas. I'm sure I am not the only one who thought that upon first hearing.
@@paulluna8099 LOL. Made me laugh. But, ya, Ive never heard triple D so not sure who this guy talked to. Clearly they were yanking his chain.
@@cindyhawkins6238 triple D is a thing. As a life long dallas resident it is a thing. People even have tattoos of it.
I have lived in Dallas since 1976 and never heard of triple d Eighther, but i'd like to meet her.
Triple D is more of a hood thing and mean “Dirty Dirty Dallas”
For those from Dallas that never heard of "Triple D", may likely have never been around the hood. It stands for "dirty dirty Dallas". It was coined near the late 80's/ early 90's, but you'll usually only hear around The Cliff or Pleasant Grove (or other similar areas).
Got it from the city logo that used to be on the Squad Cars (up to 1991-92) and is still on pretty much every other city owned vehicle. And I first heard that nickname in 1976!!!
Funny thing... I live next to Briggs st in Dallas lol
I enjoyed this and the great info and history on Dallas. Thanks for making this video.
I'm actually thinking of moving there, heard that there's nice people.
Cap
Come on down! We'd love to have ya!
@Stephen Caleb yeah, I wanted to avoid Houston and Austin in the first place.
We try to treat others as we want to be treated.
It’s a great place. Lived there for 11 years. I miss it
Love the Be Nice to Each Other text and how it appears in each video.
everything is great in DFW Food, museums parks, etc, except the traffic at all hours, bad driving habits, tailgating, and frecuent road rage
Moved to dfw 2 years ago, love living here and won’t leave. A beach house in a few years somewhere else is all I’d need
Carlos Gonzalez their 2 st home
Ann a dentist here that why
I don't no her so he want let me use her it for safety my cousin
I live in Dallas an it’s full of life night day got something for everyone ranch ,city
Born & raised in Big D, represent! ❤️💛💙
Looking forward to his "What is Up With NYC, New York?" video.
I was born in Dallas Texas. Grown-up in Dallas in the 70's.
I live in Dallas, TX. There are many good opportunities here. There are lots of jobs. There is also no state tax. You can actually get a home for less than 150 grand depending where you want to live. ( some of the suburbs)
150k wont be in the metro area. you gotta drive out 1.5 hours out for that price.
Yeap you need 200 and up to get a decent home ,its getting expensive out here too.
Just out of curiosity I headed to Zillow to check that out, and yes, there are almost 200 houses (and 300 condos and townhomes) for sale in the Metroplex under $150k. Most are closer to Dallas and FW than not.
@@ridahakimi4335 yea I live about 50 mins from Dallas (30mins from Fort Worth) average house is about $230,000. Not saying you can’t find something cheaper but a nice house…👍🏼
@Mike Oliver hope you don’t vote the same way expecting a different outcome 🙏🏼
Yesss!! Smokey John's!! The best bbq. It's down the street from my job and I treat myself often. The owners are super nice with the guaranteed best customer service. You can't go wrong.
Thanks Briggs, the first time I ever went to Dallas was a bit over 44 years ago. Loonngg a** drive from Birmingham.
That was before I20 was even started with mostly 2 lane highways. Even before I20 was started to Atlanta.
My first experience with the LBJ expressway AND roll roads. Got totally PO'd because I had to pay a dime to get OFF the highway
If I did ever move to a large major city it most certainly would be Dallas. Would have to teach them how to cook and eat pork though.
Thanks
I went there in 1972. I was in the Navy and a friend had to drive his van home before he went overseas so I helped on the long drive. I went to Richardson a few times about 20 years ago when I was going to some schools on communications equipment. What a difference between 1972 and 20 years ago. I went to a school for 5 weeks once just south of FW back in the mid 80s. Hell, of the 9:technician schools I was sent to in the lower 48 8 of them were in Texas.
LBJ is even worse now double decker with tolls makes Austin's elevated I-35 look easy. But hey the turnpike you drove is now one of the non toll interstates.
After my last trip (Richardson)
I found out about they way their system is built using the tolls to pay for them. It makes total sense.
Travelled to Chicago 3 years ago and made plans to avoid the tolls, mainly because I couldn't get the info of costs.
You came up US 80. whose track I-20 generally follows. .
I used to visit the DFW Metroplex a lot a couple years ago. One of my favorite places I've ever visited. They have everything! The food is amazing and the people are friendly a accommodating. The suburbs are great to live and raise a family. Great city all around. The only thing that I never liked were the cicadas. 😱 That loud noise is everywhere... nonstop. When it's their season. 😅 But that's a minor annoyance compared the everything else the city has to offer. Fort Worth included.
I always thought the triple D. came from Debbie does Dallas?
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Actually, I heard that years ago, back in the 80's. Maybe Briggs just couldn't put that in, maybe he wanted to keep it clean.
Bingo
I'm from Dallas born and raised. You forgot to mention the night life here, you can't go wrong with that either. Aways new bars and clubs popping up everywhere here. From hip hop to pop music and of course country two stepping, can't leave that out it is Texas 😆
There's so much to do in Dallas. You're also within like 2.5 to 4 hours of other great cities like Htown, San Antonio, Shreveport, OKC, Austin, and the casinos lol
Red river to city limits is an hour
@@Meowmeow-nk7no That's true too. Winstar is only like an hour and change away lol
Marching bands are what makes football games exciting especially Skyline High school 🔥
You missed one fascinating place to see in Dallas. The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza is a museum located on the sixth floor of the old Schoolbook Depository overlooking Dealey Plaza at the intersection of Elm and Houston Streets. The museum examines the life, times, death, and legacy of United States President John F. Kennedy and is located in the very room from which Lee Harvey Oswald shot and killed President Kennedy. Plan on staying a few hours.
The Museum that Ross Perot built is worth a stop. Ole Ross left his mark. There is a huge commercial airport along I-35W. And how could you ignore “CowTown”? Fort Worth may outgrow Dallas by the time all is said and done.
Appreciate you covering the City of Dallas!
Another spot to add to my lists thanks 🙏🏽
I'm from Dallas, God I love this place
I stay out of Dallas as much as possible but Texas is Heaven on earth. I say welcome to Texas now go home 😜
Couldn't agree with you more stay away from Dallas that is why I am in Austin ten times better!
One of my late Aunts actually knew the Barrow family,(They owned a service station on what is now Singleton Blvd in West Dallas. The building still stands....for now?) she was friends with their daughter Marie. As a result,she actually had met both Buck & Clyde,and of course knowing Clyde had also met Bonnie. Told some very interesting background stories about them. Such as Clyde being an amazing high speed driver (He preferred Fords) and being quite a gifted pool player. Also that by today's standards,he'd be probably be called Bi-Polar...a 'Jekyll & Hyde' personality. Also that Bonnie was actually quite intellegent....and married to someone else the whole time they were out doing their thing!! (And as a side note,when speaking of the 1967 movie made about them was very quick to say 'They're (the actors playing them) are both too tall!!')
As a Native Californian still living in this now destroyed state, feel I must apologize to Texans for all the Crazies moving into your territory
😬🤯🤪~Some of us are SANE🙋♀️:)
havent met nobody from California maybe u destroyed austin
@@Tony-nj9de True~Austin Libbers:(
Take them back
I know there are decent people in California but my goodness are some of y’all are cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs.
@@alexisault4444 Absolutely AGREE, lol😱~I was in Rancho Cucamonga, Inland Empire, which was certainly a much more "Conservative Pocket";
plus, my Daughter & Family are now in Mission Viejo, Orange County, which is also mainly Conservative🤩:) Just do NOT head West into the Cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs Los Angeles area, which has sadly become like EVIL Socialism🤦♀️!!
From Dallas. Great area to live in!