Posts Tagged ‘Ta-Nehisi’

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Fri May 29th 2009 at 8:50am UTC

More Nashville Effect

Friday, May 29th, 2009

Boy, Ta-Nehisi’s commenters surely do rock.

One:

I was just in Nashville and it felt like Hollywood or NYC, where people get off the bus to make their artistic fortune. Also, a friend of mine who LOVES karaoke was annoyed to find the quality of karaoke talent much higher in Nashville than in Boston …

Two:

[P]eople come to Nashville with dreams to play music, to write music, or to make it in the industry. Nashville also has a major school of music and a major symphony orchestra and a lot of non-country music. Plus it’s warmer, and chiller, and less expensive than NYC.

Three:

Having lived in Nashville for the last 10 years, I can tell you that the staff at Waffle House can do better than more than many top 40 artists. There is something to be said about having that many musicians in one place at one time… There are few things more annoying than to go some other town (e.g. NYC or Boston) and listen to a bad band. You forget where you’re from until you listen to a bad band. It doesn’t happen in Nashville. Like. Ever.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Tue May 26th 2009 at 1:23pm UTC

America’s Urban Dilemma

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Megan is skeptical that cities can outlast the crisis. Crime will get worse, she fears, tax revenues will shrink, and middle class families will once again head for the ‘burbs. Ta-Nehisi (and many of his commenters) say economics favors big cities, especially Gotham. Case in point: how expensive it (still) is to live in Manhattan. I side with Ta-Nehisi, especially on the question of New York City, for reasons I outlined here.

As an American living in Toronto, I’ve come to learn this is peculiarly American condition and conversation. Toronto is loaded with families: middle-class, working class, upper-class, immigrant, and Canadian-born; gay and straight; married and so on. Crime, violent crime at least, is relatively low; the public schools stellar by American standards. I live downtown in a largely residential neighborhood loaded with middle-class families, of roughly the same demographic that would live in, say, Bethesda or somewhere like it. Toronto provides a workable model of an “urban family land” – which stands in sharp relief to the barbell demography of American cities which divide into the young (singles and “strollerville” couples) on the one hand and empty-nesters on the other.

This missing middle is less a problem for America’s biggest and best cities. Places like New  York and San Francisco have shown they can function without a large contingent of families. But it poses a looming problem for American competitiveness. It means America’s leading metro centers remain, by definition, considerably more stretched out. In an era where density and talent clustering are key drivers of innovation and economic prosperity, this may ultimately prove a significant competitive disadvantage for the nation as a whole, even as its biggest cities continue to fare relatively well.