The Disneyfication of American Cities

Beautiful places don’t have to be limited to expensive theme parks or giant indoor buildings, they can just be places.
➜ Includes footage by:
/ @resorttv1
/ @actionkid
Intro music by Josh Augustin: open.spotify.com/artist/2dYrn...
➜ Follow Me:
TikTok: / flurfdesign
Instagram: / bricelan
➜ References & Further Reading:
America's Suburban Experiment
www.strongtowns.org/curbside-...
Is Disneyland the great American artwork?
www.bbc.com/culture/article/2...
EPCOT: Walt Disney's New Urbanist City
www.archdaily.com/987892/epco...
EPCOT: Walt Disney's failed city of tomorrow
www.morningbrew.com/daily/sto...
What Disney can teach us about urban planning
www.zdnet.com/article/qa-what...
Walt Disney’s radical vision for a new kind of city
theconversation.com/walt-disn...
Mall Maker
archive.org/details/mallmaker...
Malls Weren't Supposed to be Like This
• Malls Weren't Supposed...
Why the inventor of the shopping mall denounced his dream
www.theguardian.com/artanddes...
Southdale Center: America's first shopping mall
www.theguardian.com/cities/20...
Victor Gruen Wanted to Make Our Suburbs More Urban. Instead, He Invented the Mall
www.bloomberg.com/news/articl...
The rise and fall of the American mall
www.businessinsider.com/the-r...
What Is Traditional Development?
www.strongtowns.org/journal/2...
➜ Timestamps:
0:00 The suburban experiment
1:21 Disneyfication
2:20 Intro
2:30 Walt Disney's city of tomorrow
4:34 The invention of shopping malls
7:31 The death of American malls
9:26 Why traditional development is better
11:26 The Disneyfication of American Cities
12:49 Designing beautiful places
- flurf
#urbanplanning #suburbs #urbandesign

Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @SariatheFrostMage
    @SariatheFrostMage6 ай бұрын

    Imagine spending trillions of dollars of taxpayer money... to replace walking for those that can afford it. Then discovering that all of that money wasted leads to shorter, unhealthier, unhappy lives, fatter people, and more loneliness than ever. And still being absolutely determined to keep trying to remove walking from the average person's every daily life.

  • @NeonNion

    @NeonNion

    6 ай бұрын

    Definition of insanity

  • @kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934

    @kathyinwonderlandl.a.8934

    6 ай бұрын

    Many people are reaping huge rewards for this way we are living. All that matters is profit for few.

  • @felixthecat2786

    @felixthecat2786

    6 ай бұрын

    The automobile industry will do anything to maintain its grip on the population, as would the oil and gasoline industry, and all of these corporations that have monopolized big chain restaurants, shops.

  • @giovanigeorgis3848

    @giovanigeorgis3848

    6 ай бұрын

    Uhhh, the average human lifespan has gone up. Your comment doesn’t make much sense…

  • @laurie7689

    @laurie7689

    6 ай бұрын

    I broke my leg years ago and it continues to pain me and always will. I hate walking. It hurts - a lot.

  • @krist-yonnarain7786
    @krist-yonnarain77866 ай бұрын

    Ironically shopping malls in America are closing left and right because they have moved so far from their original purpose. Malls now try to limit socialization and ‘idiling’ to make shopping the focus of going to the mall.

  • @HigherQualityUploads

    @HigherQualityUploads

    6 ай бұрын

    But the ones in Europe and Asia (that you can walk/ride transit to) are still in business. I also think that explains the rise in delivery services. People hate driving so much that they will pay others to do it for them.

  • @krist-yonnarain7786

    @krist-yonnarain7786

    6 ай бұрын

    @@HigherQualityUploads Without a doubt and in towns/cities with no transit there’s lots of traffic and no alternatives so taking a quick trip can be a gamble.

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    5 ай бұрын

    The quality of retail goods, even luxury ones, has declined across-the-board. Walmart and Target lowered the bar for everybody else. And pleasant-sounding music has been replaced by outright ear rape in many of these places, and they refused to change it when asked. Even buying new clothes is an exercise in futility because they will be torn with in a few months anyway.

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    5 ай бұрын

    Many of them are one super sized Big Mac meal away from getting their own TLC show. Look at the videos of people going inside fast food restaurants in the 70s, 80s, and early 90s. They are nothing like today. These places were clean and full of skinny people who spoke English, and the food was not fried in seed oils. Look at them now. Also look at what Julia Child said about McDonald’s french fries.

  • @kylespevak6781

    @kylespevak6781

    5 ай бұрын

    They were doing that about 10 years ago when I was in highschool. Nothing new

  • @lotx5364
    @lotx53645 ай бұрын

    This actually seems like a black mirror episode- going to a theme park for something that used to be normal

  • @AndrewAnstrom

    @AndrewAnstrom

    4 ай бұрын

    Like going to a zoo not to see animals but a zoo for culture that we no longer have.

  • @kittykittybangbang9367

    @kittykittybangbang9367

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@AndrewAnstromkind of like human zoos

  • @Jacob630

    @Jacob630

    11 күн бұрын

    No

  • @Zak_How

    @Zak_How

    6 күн бұрын

    ​@@Jacob630Yes

  • @houston-coley
    @houston-coley6 ай бұрын

    Dude, I’m glad to see people finally talking about the intersection of theme park design and city planning. It’s been my weird niche obsession for years. The first time I went to Europe, I kept walking through cities like Prague and Vienna and saying “dude, this is just like Disney World!!” Turns out, the thing that appealed to me about Disney the whole time was a walkable place with good public transit designed at an inviting and aesthetically thoughtful human scale!

  • @idnwiw

    @idnwiw

    5 ай бұрын

    Person from Vienna: For me that Video answered why so many Americans seem so enchanted by Disney Land, which I could never understand.

  • @trvst5938

    @trvst5938

    5 ай бұрын

    When it comes to Disney, in Anaheim. They dodge millions in taxes each year. Imagine we used that revenue to create walkable areas for Orange County instead. 🫴

  • @Dragoncam13

    @Dragoncam13

    5 ай бұрын

    Those cities are centuries older than the vast majority of American cities

  • @Elcesai

    @Elcesai

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Dragoncam13 because cities are olders here doesnt mean you american should countinue to live like animals.

  • @tan89284

    @tan89284

    5 ай бұрын

    The US is 247 years old. Countries in the European continent have existed before the medieval times. Walt Disney travelled to Denmark, and visited Denmark’s old theme park called Tivoli. He modelled some of Disneyland in Anaheim after Tivoli. Seppos copy Europe. Denmark has another theme park called Bakken, and it opened in 1583. The USA didn’t exist in 1583.

  • @peblezQ
    @peblezQ6 ай бұрын

    As a kid, I wanted to live in Epcot lol. I thought the monorail was super cool and efficient. The fact that a theme park has better public transit than my own city is a tragedy.

  • @OscarUnrated

    @OscarUnrated

    5 ай бұрын

    It’s not that crazy, a theme park has way more visitors and money to spend per square mile than most cities

  • @NJBization

    @NJBization

    5 ай бұрын

    You are not wrong. Epcot was going to be a city that Walt Disney himself was going to built when he was alive. Sadly, that plan was put to a stop when Walt Disney died.

  • @ncard00

    @ncard00

    5 ай бұрын

    4K60fos video quality please

  • @somethingwithbungalows

    @somethingwithbungalows

    5 ай бұрын

    @@NJBizationawh shizsticks

  • @petebusch9069

    @petebusch9069

    14 күн бұрын

    I see you still haven't grown up. It failed because it was a stupid idea that did not take everything into consideration.

  • @lyndakorner2383
    @lyndakorner23836 ай бұрын

    "I’m not against the automobile... I just feel that you can design so that the automobile is there but still put people back as pedestrians again. I’d love to work on a project like that.” - Walt Disney

  • @noahpartic7586

    @noahpartic7586

    6 ай бұрын

    While I do have some disagreements on certain matters, I can agree on THIS quote. Before cars came along, streets were for EVERYONE. Cars come along, people become speed bumps then EVERYTHING changed lest cars be outlawed. I believe locals can be equalized for ALL...Cars, pedestrians, bikes, etc. If only greedy capitalists can just leave well enough alone. May The Force be with Us all.

  • @crimsonisms

    @crimsonisms

    6 ай бұрын

    @@noahpartic7586thats why bikers and pedestrians get right of way

  • @VeronicaM-pf8oo

    @VeronicaM-pf8oo

    6 ай бұрын

    Sure, pedestrians have the right-of-way on the sidewalk or at intersections. Cars have the right-of-way elsewhere on the roadway.@@crimsonisms

  • @noahpartic7586

    @noahpartic7586

    6 ай бұрын

    @@crimsonisms 🤨Where?

  • @lyndakorner2383

    @lyndakorner2383

    6 ай бұрын

    In California, pedestrians always have the right of way, except on freeways.

  • @gormenfreeman499
    @gormenfreeman4995 ай бұрын

    The suburbs is basically a giant bedroom that requires a vehicle to exit into the real world.

  • @Nozizaki
    @Nozizaki5 ай бұрын

    I actually think an even more damning data point against suburbia is that rents in more walkable places are always higher than in the suburbs, despite there being more a dense supply of housing in the downtown environment. People inherently want to live somewhere walkable, but doing so has become a scarce commodity

  • @josephmogavero1355

    @josephmogavero1355

    5 ай бұрын

    THIS. People have made snide comments while I look for a home to buy in an inner-ring suburb of my city. I don’t have the money to own anything in the city though.

  • @AntonioDavid-qu3zq

    @AntonioDavid-qu3zq

    5 ай бұрын

    They are higher due to their proximity to where "the good jobs" are but if people had the choice they'd rather have more space not have to share walls with strangers and refrain from making noise and walking loudly for the sake of others' right to quiet enjoyment. If you don't have one of those good jobs or aren't in industry of servicing those who do, you shouldn't be renting there - hopefully you've already bought or need to move where it's cheaper.

  • @suspiciousbird487

    @suspiciousbird487

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@AntonioDavid-qu3zqYou haven't lived in a small town where people go to Walmart for fun, have you?

  • @user-qm2kt8fx3j

    @user-qm2kt8fx3j

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@AntonioDavid-qu3zqthe ppl servicing the ppl with the good jobs cant afford to live in the city lmao

  • @zack1321

    @zack1321

    5 ай бұрын

    @@suspiciousbird487 I’ve lived in a small town where people go to Walmart for fun, but those kids were losers that didn’t have anything going on. Pretty much every suburban neighborhood has parks within walking distance with facilities for sports. If you’ve lived in the suburbs, you are easily within walking distance of a basketball court, football field, tennis court, volleyball court on sand, golf course etc. So if you are going to Walmart for fun it’s on you.

  • @oscarperez9783
    @oscarperez97836 ай бұрын

    Pretty sure that suburbia is a major contributor to depression as well

  • @sanuthweerasinghe7825

    @sanuthweerasinghe7825

    6 ай бұрын

    im pretty sure flurf did a video on how suburbia fuels the loneliness epidemic.

  • @tux_the_astronaut

    @tux_the_astronaut

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah because its killed community making people more isolated and lonely which is why we are seeing so much mental health problems and polarization

  • @johnperic6860

    @johnperic6860

    6 ай бұрын

    @@WiegrafFolles Dude, I know this might be shocking... but get this... you can socialize with people outside... WITHOUT SOCIAL MEDIA. 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱

  • @trvst5938

    @trvst5938

    5 ай бұрын

    And it’s subsidized by the tax payers.

  • @catboyedgeworth2469

    @catboyedgeworth2469

    5 ай бұрын

    @WeigrafFolles what are you talking about? they still had a local community. people didn't just live out in the middle of nowhere alone - those who did, who lived on the frontier, tended to have big families, and the vast majority of them worked to try to build community around them. towns sprung up everywhere, that was the point of being on the frontier. have you read anything from people on the frontier who didn't have community yet? they talk about loneliness a lot. i have norweigan ancestors who worked on the fronteir, and they still had a small farm community abd had real big families, and worked to build that into a full town. and they could still write letters to people. and yet they wrote about the lonely fronteir and their hopes and dreams of making a community for themselves. my grandfather on the other side of the family worked on railroads. people were not going to the fronteir to get away from people. everyone was trying to build communities. it was a very hard life without them. "hate, political polarization, and social strife" uh yeah, and where do you think that stuff comes from? you think it sprang up out of nowhere?

  • @Frank-oz8be
    @Frank-oz8be6 ай бұрын

    It's like city planners hated pedestrians

  • @kailahmann1823

    @kailahmann1823

    5 ай бұрын

    or they are just heavily influenced by "sell more cars".

  • @joestewart5406

    @joestewart5406

    5 ай бұрын

    The problem a lot of people don’t realize that people used to have very large parcels in most of inhabited places other than the big migration cities were the land was more desirable. the roads were made to go along those parcels when the population grew they were set stone. Most us cities were planed out 200 years ago and the population was nothing like it is now.

  • @moniquewrites9046

    @moniquewrites9046

    5 ай бұрын

    What if I told you, suburbanism was a response to certain ethnic communities becoming free. I think that will help you to understand.

  • @joestewart5406

    @joestewart5406

    5 ай бұрын

    @@moniquewrites9046 how is that if most suburbs are a majority white?

  • @pepperyk4

    @pepperyk4

    5 ай бұрын

    @@joestewart5406because all the white people left the cities bc people of color started moving into “their part of town”

  • @bearlogg7974
    @bearlogg79745 ай бұрын

    It’s insane to think America once was a country of trains, trolleys & beautiful cities

  • @The_king567

    @The_king567

    5 ай бұрын

    Those aren’t good things

  • @bearlogg7974

    @bearlogg7974

    5 ай бұрын

    @@The_king567 OoOoOoO ConVeNiAnCe 👻

  • @The_king567

    @The_king567

    5 ай бұрын

    @@bearlogg7974 yes

  • @symptomofsouls

    @symptomofsouls

    4 ай бұрын

    @@The_king567The guy from this video is a massive hypocrite. He criticizes suburbs for being "seas of asphalt" like cities aren't also seas of asphalt

  • @The_king567

    @The_king567

    4 ай бұрын

    @@symptomofsouls exactly

  • @knucklehoagies
    @knucklehoagies6 ай бұрын

    It's a shame cause in the US, the only opportunity for walkeable cities exists in big cities like NYC or Chicago. What about those who are not into big city life but still want to live in a quieter low key town with walkable/bikeable options?... That doesn't exist in the US. Outside of those two cities, you are essentially forced to buy a car if you want to get anywhere.

  • @theonlyalecazam2947

    @theonlyalecazam2947

    6 ай бұрын

    There are some walkable small towns usually on the east coast like Brattleboro, Vermont. But yea this is mostly true

  • @trawrtster6097

    @trawrtster6097

    6 ай бұрын

    There are some smaller communities that exist. There are several towns like this near Philly.

  • @14moti

    @14moti

    5 ай бұрын

    NYC is still a great option. It is more than just Manhattan. In Queens and Brooklyn you'll find a lot of what we call "middle housing" where you'll have quieter neighborhoods, with a lot of 3-6 floor apt buildings, or houses meant for 2-3 families. It's not necessarily a "low-key town" but it's a decent middle ground. And there are variations of middle housing too. Some areas are more city-like with fewer cars, while some are more suburban. And the best part is you still have decent access to the big city area if you need it.

  • @benjaminjo

    @benjaminjo

    5 ай бұрын

    Let's be honest. Chicago isn't exactly the kind of city ANYBODY wants to get caught walking in. And NY? Full of illegal immigrants now so...there's that.

  • @kylespevak6781

    @kylespevak6781

    5 ай бұрын

    Most cities are walkable across the US. Problem is that cities are the minority

  • @viccasaur
    @viccasaur6 ай бұрын

    Incredible video, people look at me crazy when I tell them that their love for Disneyland is because deep down they want to live in a walkable city. I also get called crazy when I tell people that battery powered vehicles is not the future, but rather implementing efficient public transit will be the future we need.

  • @giovanigeorgis3848

    @giovanigeorgis3848

    6 ай бұрын

    You are crazy. If you really think America and their citizens will freely ditch cars, and EVs, for PT without a fight or pushback, then you are simply crazy.

  • @laurie7689

    @laurie7689

    6 ай бұрын

    The only reason why I loved Disney World as a kid was because it was a family vacation. I got to go swimming in the pools. I got to ride on the rides. I got to eat a lot of delicious junk food. I liked the arcade games. I liked the pretty tropical flowers. I liked the water features. I liked the souvenir shops. I liked watching the fireworks and I liked the parade of floats that they had. As a kid, I never even noticed the buildings. I hated waiting in all the lines and I hated all the walking. I hate walking even more now that I'm older. The monorail scared me. I hated, and still hate, heights.

  • @smileyeagle1021

    @smileyeagle1021

    6 ай бұрын

    @@giovanigeorgis3848 you're right, it is going to be very difficult to undo multiple generations of propaganda. Does it never strike you as a bit odd that even to this day car commercials have to sell you on the idea this particular car will give you freedom, when people claim that the entire benefit of cars is the freedom that they provide? Why would corporations need to sell us on how their car is going to provide us something that is supposedly inherent to cars, other than perhaps maybe that isn't really an inherent quality of cars and they know it.

  • @smileyeagle1021

    @smileyeagle1021

    6 ай бұрын

    @@laurie7689 did you hate the walking or did you hate the standing, because those are two very different things, and at Disneyworld you are going to be doing a lot more of the latter because of how much time you spend in lines. As for walking in the rest of the country, I don't blame you, walking in most American cities sucks, it's designed to suck, American cities aren't designed for people to exist in without being surrounded by their car. Walking in a place where you are surrounded by asphalt that is soulless and lifeless is at best boring and tedious, and it probably feels like it takes you forever to get anywhere (because it does, since everything is spread so far apart to make room for all the car storage that is needed everywhere).

  • @giovanigeorgis3848

    @giovanigeorgis3848

    6 ай бұрын

    @@smileyeagle1021 No, it doesn’t strike me odd. Can your train off-road? Can your bus off-road? I don’t think so. Cars do give you freedom and saying that they don’t is super ignorant. And if car commercials are “pRoPaGAndA!1!1” then I guess every other commercial for every other item ever sold is too, including your precious bike 🤷‍♂️

  • @IAmJaydenKun
    @IAmJaydenKun5 ай бұрын

    People dont realize just how much control the auto industry has on our lives. Really sad when i visit places like Japan and see just how different their lifestyles are without the need of cars.

  • @zigzagintrusion

    @zigzagintrusion

    4 ай бұрын

    I want to live somewhere walkable so badly. I’ve always thought living somewhere walkable like Japan was a dream BECAUSE you don’t need a car. It’s crazy how much money, time, and effort they cost.

  • @symptomofsouls

    @symptomofsouls

    4 ай бұрын

    Yeah, I envy them living in literal broom closets and paying more rent per month than most americans do for house payments

  • @IAmJaydenKun

    @IAmJaydenKun

    4 ай бұрын

    @@symptomofsouls not going to convince you. If you are happy with your life, good for you.

  • @symptomofsouls

    @symptomofsouls

    4 ай бұрын

    @@IAmJaydenKun I just wish city people would stop going after the country way of life, I just want to live out there and be left alone and they keep voting for laws to make that harder. Higher taxes, more hunting regulations, requiring permits for everything.

  • @duckmercy11

    @duckmercy11

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@symptomofsouls Building high density cities is way more illegal than maintaining the country. Most municipalities straight up ban even medium size buildings and ignore the need for walkability.

  • @cretinousswine8234
    @cretinousswine82345 ай бұрын

    I visited the states from the UK, and I swear people thought I was homeless because I was the only person walking. And while I was there I mentioned to someone that I'll walk back to my hostel, (it was a 15 minute walk) They looked at me like I was crazy, like I had just said something they couldn't believe. They say "you're gonna WALk?" Im like yeah. It's 7 blocks or something. Why would walking 7 blocks be seen as such a crazy thing to do? Lol

  • @bluspringtrap9396

    @bluspringtrap9396

    5 ай бұрын

    Do people really think youre homeless just for walking? Ive never seen that before ever

  • @anenglishmanplusamerican7107

    @anenglishmanplusamerican7107

    5 ай бұрын

    Walking to high school and college was not only great exercise but also a pleasant experience. It’s unfortunate how reliant we’ve become on cars. As a person with a visual impairment, navigating the world on foot presents its challenges in today’s age. Due to the harsh realities of the world, I find myself depending more on transportation.

  • @TerrenceMarie

    @TerrenceMarie

    5 ай бұрын

    I once got asked if needed help by a stranger (they lived on the far side) who was driving by in my own neighborhood. They were very confused when I said I was fine.

  • @barrysims9906

    @barrysims9906

    5 ай бұрын

    It's dangerous to walk in America. Have you met there cops yet?

  • @noahtoomey7527

    @noahtoomey7527

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@barrysims9906this but ironically maybe OP was in a sketchy area and that's why they were shocked by them walking

  • @PastaSauce.
    @PastaSauce.5 ай бұрын

    One of the reasons I couldn’t live in America. It’s so car obsessed. I love being able to leave my house, walk and be able to get what whatever I need.

  • @gabija2401
    @gabija24015 ай бұрын

    i think another thing that is so important is the use of nature. I think trees and local flora are equally as crucial as having a walkable city to improve quality of life (at least sentimentally)

  • @ibreathefiction
    @ibreathefiction6 ай бұрын

    I also would like to point out that our suburban living experience really diminishes community for people who no longer have children. Because if you bring this conversation up with anybody who has children right now, they'll say that they feel like they have a community because their community is built up around their children. They make friends with their kids friends parents and other parents who are a part of your kids soccer league or whatever. They feel like they have a community so they don't see this as a problem. But for the vast majority of the population, it is a problem. It doesn't help children or teens or young adults or people who are older and have children out of the house with keeping up a community. It makes you wonder how many people who are in their late 40s and decide to have another kid are having that kid because they want a child, or because they crave the community that having a child brought them

  • @michah7214

    @michah7214

    6 ай бұрын

    Stop trying to fix a problem no one is complaining about. The older citizens I know want their neighborhoods to stay the same. They speak out strongly for that and then you call them " nimbys"

  • @swhoosh8305

    @swhoosh8305

    6 ай бұрын

    Stop addressing a point someone else makes using a bad tone. If you are gonna argue against someone, make sure that you respectfully address their mistake and keep in mind the diction you use. That way you don’t sound like a jerk on the internet.

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    5 ай бұрын

    Boomers trying to maintain their last grasp on oppressor class hegemony.

  • @michah7214

    @michah7214

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Attmay it's not boomers. It's anyone who likes living in a suburb and that's a lot of people or it wouldn't exist

  • @delftfietser

    @delftfietser

    5 ай бұрын

    Today's oppressed is tomorrow's hegemon. Can they be decolonized by the New Oppressed? Or does their former victimhood make them immune to accusations of fragility? Are they above the law?

  • @benjaminjo
    @benjaminjo5 ай бұрын

    I never understood my fascination for such "magical places" like Disney World or other 'very rare' spaces where you can be a functioning, happy human being - socializing in public spaces, where there's people who live freely in the area, commerce, shopping, food, etc. Everything you need for a healthy society in a walkable, bike-ride-away space. It's community. People make a HUGE deal going to Disney Parks (or most any theme park, to be honest), BECAUSE of that community we all crave and are willing to pay $100's of dollars to experience, even if for a day. This tells me, this is how we as human beings are meant to live amongst each other, not AWAY from each other, in gated communities and suburbia. It's depressing. Now I know why I loved the mall so much, and why I had an emotional reaction when it was recently torn down. I remembered, not the commercialization, but the moments and experiences I shared with family and friends. The mall was that artificial bridge for a semblance of community, and when that was taken away, there's literally nothing else to replace it. This also explains my great fascination and desire to travel the world AWAY from the states! I'd see cities like Vienna, Prague, Berlin, Cologne, and think, "My God! Are these cities real?!" The cities are made to be beautiful AND functional. In America, it's all about "cheap, cheap, cheap!", build fast and get them in and out the door. The aesthetics and beauty is an afterthought. In most other cities (much older cities) world wide, they know what works and stick to it.

  • @kylespevak6781

    @kylespevak6781

    5 ай бұрын

    Tldr; America is garbage

  • @karolinakuc4783

    @karolinakuc4783

    5 ай бұрын

    True. I have been to Italy a decade ago and I have seen black people living with white in peace. And really it illegal migration Italy is against coz nobody wants thugs in their area. So many people migrate it is hard to tell who is from Syria and if they don't have terriorist past.

  • @mozeskertesz6398

    @mozeskertesz6398

    5 ай бұрын

    I have only been in two of those cities (i lived in Europe), and those places are real.

  • @KillyJoe

    @KillyJoe

    5 ай бұрын

    There’s plenty of beautiful places in the states too tons of them….but I totally feel you on the mall I love the mall too it’s sad that some have closed and others aren’t the same at all….other than a grocery where are you gonna be around ppl a bar i guess but I hate bars and you’re supposed to meet a girl hah were all conditioned at this point to think whatever we could possibly say will end up being interpreted as being creepy so that’s great

  • @caitlinjones8716

    @caitlinjones8716

    5 ай бұрын

    I did study abroad in antigua Guatemala and it was wonderful being able to walk anywhere and at max it take an hour. Helps that the city is gorgeous and the temperature ideal. Also met lots of cool people!

  • @maryland7586
    @maryland75865 ай бұрын

    As an urban planning student, Disney using Ebenezer Howard and Jane Jacobs as references is groundbreaking. They're effectively the founders of New Urbanism (modern movement for transit-oriented development, reducing car reliance and encouraging pedestrian density) which we're only listening to nowadays

  • @J5L5M6

    @J5L5M6

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm merely in advertising (part of the problem, I know) but I fell in love with Jacobs' work and always do what I can to advocate for similar solutions in my local area.

  • @highlec
    @highlec5 ай бұрын

    Growing up American, it's almost impossible to see how things are until you truly take the walkability pill. Once the veil is lifted, it becomes torture to live your day to day life in. Once you leave, it's impossible to want to go back.

  • @MrToryhere
    @MrToryhere6 ай бұрын

    There’s this company called Westfield, that originated in Sydney Australia and has made massive malls that thrive because they are all built within commercial districts in the suburbs with transport hubs. All parking is underground so the malls are not surrounded and isolated by car parks. The malls themselves have art and lots of social areas for people to meet. But what makes them particularly successful is that they all have at least one supermarket as well as delis, greengrocers, butchers, bottle shops, etc. this means people come to do their food shopping and in the process go to other shops in the mall.

  • @AndreiTupolev

    @AndreiTupolev

    5 ай бұрын

    There's two in London, one in East London, one in West London, that seem to be doing reasonably well; even though they have 5,000 plus parking spaces they're also well served by public transport and they're not stuck way out next to a motorway

  • @staedlerok

    @staedlerok

    5 ай бұрын

    @@AndreiTupolev the one in west london is betterż less blacks and arabs

  • @darwincity

    @darwincity

    5 ай бұрын

    There is one is Sweden that was built with Westfield-style planning but was not launched by Westfield per se… and ended up being branded Westfield through purchase.

  • @RockinFootball_23

    @RockinFootball_23

    5 ай бұрын

    Oh didn’t know Westfield was the one behind this type of design. I thought majority of shopping centres (outside of the US) had supermarkets and other amenities. I close to a Westfield shopping centre in Australia and I pretty much only go for the groceries and the occasional errand. I rarely go actual shopping there (like for clothes). If it weren’t for these stores/services, I’m pretty sure the foot traffic would be lowered significantly.

  • @ACDZ123

    @ACDZ123

    5 ай бұрын

    I live near a big Westfield in Perth.I don't need to go into the city ever .cinemas,bowling, arcades, restaurants everything

  • @thsudy
    @thsudy5 ай бұрын

    I never realized it until I got older. But I hated going out in America, because you Need a car to do anything. Meanwhile in Japan and in Mexico me and my friends would just walk out and if we needed to, we’d use public transportation

  • @bloodgirl4
    @bloodgirl45 ай бұрын

    I grew up in a "small town" in the city of San Diego, where we had almost everything we needed within walking or a bike ride. After I moved to Oklahoma and wanted to walk places, people looked at me like I was crazy. People in cars don't even yield for pedestrians either.

  • @UnicornDreamsPastelSkies
    @UnicornDreamsPastelSkies5 ай бұрын

    The irony is that Disney parks are more walkable, people-oriented and lovely to look at than many American cities are. Those other places? More like a Hanna-Barbera cartoon, where if you pay attention to the scrolling backgrounds... it's the same buildings and trees over and over again. 😂 Done to save money, just like the typical suburb... but at what price glory?

  • @jukio02
    @jukio025 ай бұрын

    This is why people like going to theme parks like Disneyland. It's fun, walkable, and you're surrounded by people. We've brainwashed ourselves into thinking the suburban isolation lifestyle is what we want. No it's not, it's what the corporate/capitalist elites wants. It's to keep them separated from everyone else, keep everyone isolated and controlled. Unfortunately, this will never change, it's too late.

  • @danidejaneiro8378

    @danidejaneiro8378

    5 ай бұрын

    But nobody wants to go to Disneyland every day. Support for walkable cities ignores the simple fact that people _like_ having their own mini-castle with mini-park out back where they are the absolute monarch meaning I can smoke a cigarette or have a bbq or dry my clothes when and where I want . Growing up in the suburbs but now living in a city, I can tell you that I don’t necessarily prefer living in a stacked up ant colony where I have to battle crowds for space and access every time I step outside which is often because I need to make regular trips to the supermarket now that I carry my groceries home by hand. In the suburbs I can have my morning coffee on the porch and listen to the birds and not my next door neighbour coughing his lungs up while his toddler screams uncontrollably and I have to step over human faeces and used needles on my walk to work.

  • @starstorm1267

    @starstorm1267

    5 ай бұрын

    As someone with crippling social anxiety and lives in the suburbs, the thought of living in a dense and heavy populated area like the city is a nightmare. I’ve been to urban areas like New York City, and I’ve also been to Disneyland. I can tell you, if there weren’t so many people there, the experience would’ve been much more enjoyable for me.

  • @samuraieko5408

    @samuraieko5408

    5 ай бұрын

    It can change. It will simply require evrueone in power to be removed ans replaced with people who have the vision of building a proper civilization.... or we let this rotten bloated civilization collapse under it'a own weight, and then rebuild the way we truly wanted all along.

  • @user-gs8jv4oq6w

    @user-gs8jv4oq6w

    5 ай бұрын

    It's not too late things will change in time

  • @frawgeatfrawgworld

    @frawgeatfrawgworld

    5 ай бұрын

    problem lies within conflating disneyland to your most populous city, everyone knows new york is a mess thats not what this video is about. New york is not comparable to your average european city.@@starstorm1267

  • @anthonyruby2668
    @anthonyruby26685 ай бұрын

    It always felt like malls never got their prestige back after the 2008 crash

  • @claytonzator
    @claytonzator6 ай бұрын

    Something I always say about this topic is, even if these modern suburbs are your jam, do you think it should be illegal to build anything else in the whole country? Cus that's what our big government zoning laws and building codes are doing right now.

  • @johnperic6860

    @johnperic6860

    6 ай бұрын

    but my freedom or something

  • @asagoldsmith3328

    @asagoldsmith3328

    5 ай бұрын

    My freedom to be restricted to one mode of living and transportation! Traffic jams are AMERICAN!

  • @CantoniaCustoms

    @CantoniaCustoms

    5 ай бұрын

    @@johnperic6860 you must really want to live in China. And sadly for you, immigration into China has standards and dissidents are counterintuitive to stability.

  • @johnperic6860

    @johnperic6860

    5 ай бұрын

    @@CantoniaCustoms How does what I said correlate to wanting to live in China?

  • @zack1321

    @zack1321

    5 ай бұрын

    @@asagoldsmith3328 traffics jams don’t happen when you don’t try to cram a bunch of people into a small area. Suburbs not having public transportation isn’t a problem when they stay suburbs. If you don’t have a car go to the city. I would rather have my own vehicle that I can drive wherever I want whenever I want than share a vehicle with lots of people.

  • @johnperic6860
    @johnperic68606 ай бұрын

    You should check out Rosemary Beach in Florida. It's a newer community (built alongside Seaside and Alys Beach), with no more than 100 parking spots in the entire town (excluding street parking). The downtown area is a mixed-use medium density, built in traditional vernacular and colonial styles, and there are probably 10 times as many bikes as cars. It's a really wonderful community.

  • @longiusaescius2537

    @longiusaescius2537

    6 ай бұрын

    @johnperic6860 thanks I'll check it out

  • @mcsomeone2681

    @mcsomeone2681

    5 ай бұрын

    I'm surprised I haven't seen that in the news or something, that's pretty much unheard of here in America

  • @Trahzy

    @Trahzy

    5 ай бұрын

    Must cost a fortune though

  • @johnperic6860

    @johnperic6860

    5 ай бұрын

    @@Trahzy Yeah, there's extremely high demand to live there.

  • @bookisland6515

    @bookisland6515

    5 ай бұрын

    a friend took me on a trip there once. places like this and seaside were super popular among (rich) teens and tweens i knew in texas. this just further proves the children crave walkable cities! kids are riding bikes and walking around everywhere and get to experience independence outside of their parents having to drive them places. and they’re so easily able to make friends either from seeing the same kids often or from congregating on the street! while it was the most white place i have ever been the town itself was very nice.

  • @user-fg8ux8zo6w
    @user-fg8ux8zo6w6 ай бұрын

    I thought you would mention, Celebration, FL.Walkable neighboorhood made by Disney in Orlando... so not a city, and naturally just for the well-off since there's a high demand for walkable neighboorhoods

  • @flurfdesign

    @flurfdesign

    6 ай бұрын

    was thinking of making an entire video on that

  • @creshiell

    @creshiell

    6 ай бұрын

    Not to be confused with Celebration Pointe, FL omg I was so confused about what you were talking about because Celebration in Gainesville is like 1/3 outdoor mall, 1/3 unaffordable luxury apartments, and 1/3 stroads. It's a weird mixture of walkable and unwalkable, cause it's built out on the edge of the city no one goes to, and everyone has to drive to get there so it's has to accommodate everyone's cars. It's definitely not worth mentioning lmfao

  • @johnshoemakerpbc

    @johnshoemakerpbc

    6 ай бұрын

    Sadly Celebration has grown so big for its britches too now. Original celebration was awesome and didn’t even allow national chain stores in the downtown area. But now with all the other phases it’s so big and not fully walkable.

  • @longiusaescius2537

    @longiusaescius2537

    6 ай бұрын

    @johnshoemaker2260 make a metro or tram?

  • @franciscoacevedo3036

    @franciscoacevedo3036

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@flurfdesignNjb Jason from fake London would like a collab pleez, I presume 😂

  • @joedavenport5293
    @joedavenport52936 ай бұрын

    A lot of people in the US like the isolation of the suburbs. In fact, they build entire "man caves" so that they don't have to go out and interact with other people. And only invite a select few into their homes. This isolation is contributing to the polarization of society. There's no incentive to people to venture outside of their own bubble so a lot of people (especially suburbanites) don't have and understanding of the world outside of their subdivision, except what they see on the news which can be biased. It's also worth noting that race played a part in the development of the suburbs. Black families, including veterans, were excluded from the suburban experiment and were not allowed to buy homes in the suburbs.

  • @ignaciofuentes2642

    @ignaciofuentes2642

    5 ай бұрын

    You ever seen Gangs of New York? Ever heard of the Mafia? The Bloods? The Crips? So much for your theory about cities uniting us and making us all get along.

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    5 ай бұрын

    *Gangs of New York* is one of Martin Scorsese’s worst films.

  • @moczar1

    @moczar1

    5 ай бұрын

    You made his point.@@ignaciofuentes2642

  • @pepperyk4

    @pepperyk4

    5 ай бұрын

    @@ignaciofuentes2642 as if poverty doesn’t play a part here. If all of the middle and upper class people leave the city of live in the ‘nice part’ of the city, then the rest is left to people who can barely afford to live. Income and property tax doesn’t pay for schooling or infrastructure anymore which worsens the poverty. Over policing of low income areas creates artificially higher crime rates and then things like crack epidemic (which was engineered by the US government) hike up those crime rates and contribute to gang violence. All to serve modern day redlining and the school to prison pipeline.

  • @Redman8086

    @Redman8086

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes, you are correct that I do everything in my power not to have to interact with other people except for the ones I like. I'm not a people person (I find dealing with most people tiring) and would hate living in a big dense city. Nothing will change that about me; I've always been that way. Me isolating myself doesn't contribute to the "polarization of society". My goal is to get as far away from the big population centers, to avoid exactly the polarization you are talking about. I think having all these diverse people together in one place trying to get along is what causes polarization. Imagine cramming Jews and Muslims into one place, lol.

  • @breddss2364
    @breddss23646 ай бұрын

    Keep making these types videos, we love them, they’re really well done and informative :). I can see the inspiration from NotJustBikes too!

  • @jordan7dinodude

    @jordan7dinodude

    5 ай бұрын

    I love the little jokes in the place names, down in the bottom left corner 😂 The upsidedown Australia had me cackling

  • @joefer5360
    @joefer53606 ай бұрын

    Damn. Got a sub out of me. First time i've ever heard someone use the term a "sea of asphalt" to describe suburbia. The sea of asphalt rivers and streams that lead to the concrete islands that are those shopping centres. All to converge back to our ricktey boathomes that are docked to a harbor within that sea.

  • @northpolegs6201

    @northpolegs6201

    5 ай бұрын

    Better than having to walk on mud

  • @dragoneeley

    @dragoneeley

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@northpolegs6201I personally would rather walk on mud than daily risk my own demise to a potential collision with an insanely fast giant metal box.

  • @rebm7505
    @rebm75056 ай бұрын

    I never knew suburbs were like this, they sound really depressing and lonely. Thank you so much for this video! Very informative!!

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    5 ай бұрын

    That’s just a myth boomers pushed to justify the largest generational wealth grab in human history.

  • @Chavecito

    @Chavecito

    5 ай бұрын

    They are

  • @raisinette35

    @raisinette35

    5 ай бұрын

    They are also really ugly and are impossible to live in if you don't have a car to transport you to your every need.

  • @grloiselle53

    @grloiselle53

    5 ай бұрын

    Yea they are, as someone who just moved to one

  • @Redman8086

    @Redman8086

    5 ай бұрын

    Depends on what kind of person you are. To me living in a crowded city sounds awful and the ideal is living somewhere very remote. Suburbs are a good in-between though where you get some tranquility and independence, but you aren't so far away from hospitals, etc.

  • @ashleymorataya6391
    @ashleymorataya63915 ай бұрын

    I remember my first time visiting the US , asking my mom if there were actual people living somewhere, all you saw were cars , I even joked about it , thinking it felt like the movie “ Cars “ … pedestrians are a myth in the USA.

  • @MrBaskins2010
    @MrBaskins20106 ай бұрын

    you put so much truth to power with this video. love every second BUT the visual gag at 10:20 was the cherry on top for me. good stuff

  • @theperfectpeanutbutterjell7553

    @theperfectpeanutbutterjell7553

    6 ай бұрын

    Took a while for me to figure it out

  • @music4ever156

    @music4ever156

    6 ай бұрын

    I don’t get the visual gag, explain please?

  • @gambit_toys6554

    @gambit_toys6554

    6 ай бұрын

    Melbourne was upside down, cause it's the land down under @@music4ever156

  • @JanineDoProductions

    @JanineDoProductions

    6 ай бұрын

    Because Australia is upside down lol@@music4ever156

  • @jetfan925

    @jetfan925

    6 ай бұрын

    Australia is within the entire Southern Hemisphere.

  • @paolaanimator
    @paolaanimator6 ай бұрын

    I live in Massachusetts, while it is expensive, I love living here because it's walkable and accessing the train is cheap.

  • @trawrtster6097

    @trawrtster6097

    6 ай бұрын

    I feel like that’s only true in like, Cambridge/Somerville, but it’s not really true of other areas, even within eastern mass. So much of it feel like wasted potential tbh. There’s still a lot of land that could be upsized or built on, but they just end up making blocks upon block of McMansions or “luxury condos”. Not to mention, the T has problems. It takes about 30 minutes to go from Alewife to Park St to go like 7~8 miles on the Red Line without any delays. That’s really slow for a subway that doesn’t have to deal with city traffic

  • @paolaanimator

    @paolaanimator

    5 ай бұрын

    @@trawrtster6097 I agree with you. I live in the Revere area with my family so I access the train easily. And yes, I've had to deal with delays, but since it's so cheap I put up with it. I wish the T can cover more areas like Eastern Mass or other areas. I've been saving up for a car and hoping inflation and car prices will go down.

  • @symptomofsouls

    @symptomofsouls

    4 ай бұрын

    I live in MA. I am desparate to leave. it sucks here

  • @WhatsOnMyShelf
    @WhatsOnMyShelf6 ай бұрын

    I also like the concept of accessibility without a car in more green spaces since I don't own a car. Public transportation is not convenient in the US because there's no incentive for people to give up their cars. There's also a lot of industry $$ invested in keeping those industries rolling. It's not that there's a conspiratorial effort where all these companies come together to stop progress in the other direction (walkability). It's that it's hard to slam the brakes on a massive industry since so many people invest their effort in keeping it alive because it keeps them alive.

  • @DieAlteistwiederda
    @DieAlteistwiederda5 ай бұрын

    Here in Germany some shopping malls are build right next to apartment buildings and such so they actually get visited. They still suffer from people going online shopping more but not as much as others. In the end if you need something quick you just have to walk over like 10 minutes and get what you need. My city in general is extremely walkable in a lot of areas so much so that i know many people who never bothered with even getting a drivers license.

  • @J5L5M6
    @J5L5M65 ай бұрын

    Disneyland's main street is inspired/based on Old Town Fort Collins, Colorado. I was born there. More importantly, so was Harper Goff, the man who helped Walt Disney design "Main Street U.S.A."

  • @Matty002
    @Matty0026 ай бұрын

    how do you think 'lets build a traditional downtown' and proceed to build only stores? how do you forget the point of a city is to live close to everything you need?

  • @morelukeplayz6953
    @morelukeplayz69536 ай бұрын

    America too lonely

  • @jellotimec
    @jellotimec6 ай бұрын

    2:59 idk why but the way Walt said Epcot made me laugh

  • @lolololol7573
    @lolololol75735 ай бұрын

    Most important thing Americans can do is to acknowledge that it didn't work out. Adjust where needed, try again, and keep perfecting the formula until it does work. And learn from others. Unfortunately many Americans are stubborn and are preventing progression against those who have solutions available. Because they cannot admit it didn't work out. And that sucks.

  • @fritzfaust3644

    @fritzfaust3644

    5 ай бұрын

    I've never seen any direct solution proposed that's even slightly realistic without dumping trillions of dollars completely bulldozing public infrastructure. While there's also a sheer disregard for the people who already live in suburbs. Sometimes I feel like these re-zoning plans are openly antagonistic towards those who are already bought into the suburban system. It makes me less willing to support your cause if you try and berate and insult the suburban lifestyle and assume a lot of things about the people who live there.

  • @The_Lard

    @The_Lard

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fritzfaust3644 If mixed use zoning was allowed in America then restaurants and grocery stores could be built in suburbs. Why would you not want that convenience?

  • @fritzfaust3644

    @fritzfaust3644

    5 ай бұрын

    @The_Lard I don't mind mixed-use zoning so long as it is done with intentions to address or fix social issues that were otherwise unaddressed. I know some local areas that were trashed by people on the lower income bracket and I'm regularly advised to take caution when driving around them. I've been approached by beggars while walking into shops in areas you'd describe as "mixed-use zoning". I just think we have too many borderline unfixable issues in this country that doesn't facilitate community growth.

  • @lolololol7573

    @lolololol7573

    5 ай бұрын

    @@fritzfaust3644 The 'easier' solutions are often most protested against. (Read; easy still being difficult but most realistic to succeed.) A big problem with existing suburbs is all people are NIMBY's, for good reason. If you knew next to you they'd buy a school, you'd never have bought that house. Of course people don't want that, I completely agree and understand. It's much more difficult to transform a suburb when it's already built. The best solution to deal with this is to start now and include mixed zoning immediately with newly built suburbs. And have older suburbs transformed over the years as people change homes, need to be renovated or demolished etc. You cannot do that with suburbs that are finished and full. A big issue however is that it's assumed these people - who would like to live next to a school- do not exist. There are absolutely people who would LOVE to live next to a school, or next to a supermarket. But because of this assumption, a school is completely ignored as an option, forcing people to drive their kids due to dangerous traffic they now have to cross. I wouldn't want to live next to a school either, but I have friends and family who love it because they're parents. And once their kids are older they just move elsewhere, and somebody else will buy that house who has young kids. It's a combination of changing mindset within communities (one of the hardest things ever), and having patience but being consistent, dedicated and diligent. It can take years but if the people who try to make it work have trust in it and stay dedicated, it will succeed, but it's a lengthy process that could take an entire generation. It's super difficult as the first response is always negative, and it will stay negative until people get to experience it. And maybe then it will become their new normal, and they take it for granted. Most people will most likely never realize the positive they gained in life, how much their life changed, and be grateful about it. They usually notice when they are able to compare, and often cannot even explain what it is that's to frustrating about it. Good infrastructure is quite a thankless job to work on imho, yet so important.

  • @lolololol7573

    @lolololol7573

    5 ай бұрын

    Sorry for the wall of text lol. But, just wanted to add; I hear you. I don't think it's unfixable, it's just a HUGE task. I totally believe there are options, and no not the whole country has to be 'fixed'. But some good neighborhoods for those who need it, would help so much. It doesn't feel right to tell you 'naw you all are fucked' because I genuinely believe it's possible. It's just really really difficult. But I believe!

  • @CHEFPKR
    @CHEFPKR5 ай бұрын

    Having just visited Tokyo for a month... This video could not be more spot on.

  • @lyndakorner2383
    @lyndakorner23836 ай бұрын

    Disneyland is an enormous theatre that invites the audience to step onto the stage and to interact with the players. Main Street, U.S.A., depicts "everyone's hometown" (but mostly that of Walt Disney). He was born in Chicago in 1901, and he spent his formative years in Marceline and Kansas City, Missouri.

  • @marshalmarrs3269

    @marshalmarrs3269

    6 ай бұрын

    Walt Disney also never intended for his company to be exclusively for kids. And also Walt Disney is not a time traveler, He’s the OG MADLAD PROPHET!!!

  • @lyndakorner2383

    @lyndakorner2383

    6 ай бұрын

    "I do not make films for children... or, at least, not primarily for children." "You're dead if you aim for kids." "We design the films to appeal to ourselves." "The adults have the money; ... children don't have any money." - Walt Disney

  • @lyndakorner2383

    @lyndakorner2383

    6 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/a2ipxa6kd9KvYag.html

  • @marshalmarrs3269

    @marshalmarrs3269

    6 ай бұрын

    @@lyndakorner2383 Disney should have let the imagineers run the studios and possibly dive headfirst into the world of adult animation.

  • @GermanTribun
    @GermanTribun6 ай бұрын

    To be honest, over here in Germany, American suburbs are seen as insane. Sure, we do have things that are labeled as such, but the structure is vastly different and pains are taken that you can reach important stuff by foot or bicycle and that there is a connection to public transit. One thing that always is notable in American suburbs is either the total lack of sidewalks or them having crappy sidewalks that are next to unusable (either way too small and/or due to neglect since it seems the house owners are expected to maintain them instead of the municiapality). Unthinkable in our country where correctly sized sidewalks are required by law and have to be maintained by the municiapality.

  • @benfelps

    @benfelps

    6 ай бұрын

    @@WiegrafFollesthat sounds like you live in a developing country tbh (no judgement)

  • @legowagfles7287

    @legowagfles7287

    6 ай бұрын

    Germany? I’d say your Autobahn and sad state of DB with all its cancelled trains is just as bad as the US’s car infrastructure and commuter rail….

  • @SatisfecteIIent

    @SatisfecteIIent

    6 ай бұрын

    Despite all of the negative effects associated with Suburbia, Americans like cars and we like to drive. We have a very individualist culture here and enjoy the freedom of being able to commute without relying on public services like trains and buses. We also strongly value privacy and like not having to interact with the general public unless fully by choice.

  • @kailahmann1823

    @kailahmann1823

    5 ай бұрын

    @@legowagfles7287 bad transit in Germany: only a bus every two hours in your village or 50 people. Good transit in the US: The county seat has more than three trains per week.

  • @Attmay

    @Attmay

    5 ай бұрын

    People in other countries do not realize how big the United States is compared to any individual “country” in the illegal occupation of Western Asia racists call “3ur0p3.” They also do not seem to realize that our states do not function like individual nations and that the USA is not the EU.

  • @gambit_toys6554
    @gambit_toys65546 ай бұрын

    Another banger video! full watch. I moved from USA to Europe, Visited Canada and can confirm everything you said! Haha i noticed Melbourne was upside down! very funny!

  • @multifantv1245
    @multifantv12456 ай бұрын

    My family goes to Disney world every year and we know America’s Suburban experiment is awful when we love going to Epcot for the shops🤦🏼‍♂️

  • @trvst5938

    @trvst5938

    5 ай бұрын

    In CA Disney is over crowded because of this. It’s one of the only walkable pedestrian places in the entire developed state. Disney evades millions in taxes each year. We need walkable spaces and green space not allowing an already fraudulent monopoly to gain even more power and expand their footprint in the city of Anaheim. 💀

  • @ofacid3439

    @ofacid3439

    5 ай бұрын

    Abolish zoning laws!

  • @LikaLaruku

    @LikaLaruku

    5 ай бұрын

    Anyone remember when Disney created a disasterous suburban town in Florida called Celebration that inspired the Stepford Wives movie?

  • @justacutepieceofshit

    @justacutepieceofshit

    5 ай бұрын

    @@LikaLarukuI do! Is that still there? I remember the houses had like Mickey Mouse Easter eggs hidden around the properties lol

  • @newchangeunlisted_viewer5594
    @newchangeunlisted_viewer55945 ай бұрын

    WALKABLE CITIES. I am fortunate enough to have a car that my parents gave me. I feel sad watching adults in worse situations waiting to walk across 4 lanes of traffic where everyone is going 40 mph. Imagine being in that position Wondering if your gonna get hit at 40mph just to get 20 ft closer to your destination

  • @mr.pavone9719
    @mr.pavone97196 ай бұрын

    I grew up in a remote town in upstate NY and the mall was an important community hub when I was a kid and teen. It's where the movie theater was and all the big stores. It was also the place you could go during the winter and walk around without freezing. When they built a new mall across the road in the late 80s the old mall started dying. The new mall is on its way out now. It's too bad. Having grown up with them, I rather like malls.

  • @14moti

    @14moti

    5 ай бұрын

    Even in large cities, malls were still popular among teens. I grew up in NYC, where we have plenty of places for kids to hangout besides a mall. Usually it would be at a local park near the school. But the mall (Queens Center Mall) was still very popular-- it was like a central hub for high school kids. I'd go about 2-4 times a month to meetup with friends from other schools. I'm all for walkable neighborhoods like the video shows, but malls have a certain appeal to them and I think they should still exist. Malls feel a bit more premium than their outdoor equivalent.

  • @michah7214

    @michah7214

    5 ай бұрын

    I like malls.

  • @ItsDaJax

    @ItsDaJax

    5 ай бұрын

    Even as a kid I was a mallrat. They were just basically inaccessible until I was basically old enough to drive, being about twenty miles away for all of them,,from where I lived.

  • @tula1433

    @tula1433

    5 ай бұрын

    Now tiktok has replaced malls. Teens and kids don’t seek out in person activities like they once did. A sea of desperate strangers online will validate you and you will love it ! 🙄

  • @MikePerrino1
    @MikePerrino15 ай бұрын

    I work in tourism Chicago. I can not begin to explain how many people visit the city, then behave as if Chicago is nothing more than a theme park, and not a place where people live. A place they would never want to live, just visit and treat like Disney. It goes further. I also often feel like I am a mascot in a costume. I LIVE HERE, but people often take out their phones and just take pictures of me like I'm Mickey Mouse. (I ride various little electric vehicles that suburbanites have never heard of but urban residents are used to)

  • @MikePerrino1

    @MikePerrino1

    5 ай бұрын

    Like, there's a HUGE difference between tourists coming from actual cities and tourist coming from suburbs. I can fully tell the way they perceive the city and it's residents is different from eachother

  • @valorzinski7423

    @valorzinski7423

    5 ай бұрын

    With those murder and crime rates, most people probably just want to visit Chicago once and never return

  • @sfdko3291
    @sfdko32916 ай бұрын

    It's funny that Epcot legit just tried to be NYC lmao

  • @marks2807
    @marks28075 ай бұрын

    One thing that also killed the shopping mall in many cities is the internet. Amazon for example made it more convenient than walking around a mall, and maybe finding what you want.

  • @WhatsOnMyShelf
    @WhatsOnMyShelf6 ай бұрын

    I think part of the solution is restricting streets around "main street", usa to foot traffic only and by special permit only (such a delivery vans). They could also have special corridors like Disney envisioned for transit of larger goods to alleyways near shops to avoid congesting the streets with large, two ton, killing machines.

  • @tux_the_astronaut

    @tux_the_astronaut

    6 ай бұрын

    Also bring back trolly an short line railroads to get rid of big trucks snd busses

  • @WhatsOnMyShelf

    @WhatsOnMyShelf

    6 ай бұрын

    @@tux_the_astronaut Depending on where you live, there are short buses that do trips to local areas a town and surrounding towns. The town I live in has this, but it's still inconvenient and expensive. If there is plus side to getting rid of the stigma of a car-when-necessary society, I think an efficient and ubiquitous publicly supported transit system would remove a lot of tension from people's shoulders. This is a tax burden, but in a society which drives less, they also reduce the dollars that go into driving. For instance, if it's easy to buy and have big things delivered, people don't think they need a big car or truck.

  • @MidwestSirenProductions
    @MidwestSirenProductions5 ай бұрын

    I live on the main street in a small Midwestern town in America, and I love how close and cozy the town feels when compared to the modern suburban sprawls I grew up in. It also opens my eyes to how this town was not designed around the automobile, considering it was founded decades before they were even mainstream. Every weekend there are so many people walking about, so many small local businesses thriving, the culture and attitude of the town shows that there are still people that care. The only problem is that the streets are packed with cars, both moving and parked...and as cars (namely pickup trucks) get bigger and longer, cars can't drive down without yeilding to oncoming traffic.

  • @camariehowell8240
    @camariehowell82405 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this video. While traveling to Tokyo, I loved how the subway connected to a mall and you can find restaurants and stores while on your way to the subway. That changed my whole perspective on how city is able to have pedestrians but also, great transportation. It made me want to move there. I am American and I wish cities were more walkable and accessible like Japan or other European countries. I feel like people would be much more happier walking everywhere even just sitting outside eating ice cream while looking at a park. Traveling abroad and visiting other countries definitely changed my perspective on how to live accordingly.

  • @zack1321

    @zack1321

    5 ай бұрын

    I am also an American, I own a car at home and I live with friends in the suburbs, and I have been solo backpacking around Asia for 3 months so far. I ended up spending around 10 days in Tokyo, and 8 in Osaka and a week in Seoul. And I would have to disagree, while Tokyo public transport was the best I have experienced. It didn’t take long for the novelty to wear off. By the time I was out of Japan and Korea I was completely sick of being reliant on public transportation and always being surrounded by the masses. Since I reached Southeast Asia I have been renting motorbikes and I much prefer them. I greatly value the freedom it provides over trains and busses. Not to mention the fact that you can basically park anywhere you want with the bikes. This still doesn’t make the cities any better though, I hate being around that many people. It doesn’t matter how walkable or how good the public transportation is, a lot of people just want their own property and don’t want to be cramped with tons of people all around. As interesting as these cities are, I would never want to live in one.

  • @humpdeedump
    @humpdeedump5 ай бұрын

    Love how when you said it encourages people to get out and explore, you included a clip of someone touching grass.

  • @FBWalshyFTW
    @FBWalshyFTW6 ай бұрын

    Nicely done with 10:18

  • @sunso1991
    @sunso19915 ай бұрын

    Ask people in NYC, SF, Seattle, Portland, LA. How's their walkable paradise going?

  • @keemstarkreamstar7069

    @keemstarkreamstar7069

    5 ай бұрын

    Actually you can have a walkable paradise like those in Europe or East Asia if you have the demographics of Europe or East Asia. The demographics of all the cities you mentioned all have one element in common with a compromised judicial system that leads to a lot of issues. Hope this helps! It really sucks though because what he is saying is vaguely true but we’ll never get a walkable city that isn’t a nightmare in America because mentioning the realities at play is taboo.

  • @sunso1991

    @sunso1991

    5 ай бұрын

    @@keemstarkreamstar7069 exactly! I was born and raised in Taiwan, it is ultra urbanized and mix use is the norm. You will see almost every single row house even in alley ways having store fronts on first floor and the owner live above it. The urban core is clean and safe even at night. Because the population shares same cultural norm which focus on hard work and dont bring shame to your family. In the US, there is no cultural norm anymore, even the classic 1960s work/community/nationalism culture had been systemically destroyed by the left for multiculturalism socialism big government. America urban core is just a bunch of people from wildly difffeent background that shares no common vision nor common purpose. Have next to zero shame and courtesy. And defanged the police our last line of societal order. Walkable city is a pipedream in the US.

  • @keemstarkreamstar7069

    @keemstarkreamstar7069

    5 ай бұрын

    @@sunso1991 Indeed, although the reality of why this is goes a bit deeper than that and into the realm of genetics and the fact that certain populations are smarter or less smart than others due to differential genetic potentials for intelligence. Of course these are on a distribution with a standard distribution of about 15 IQ points. Its no coincidence that both Europe and East Asia have populations with average IQs (IQ being mostly genetic) of 100 and 105 respectively, and both groups have a low genetic tendency towards the impulsiveness which results in high homicide rates among other groups. Culture is partially downstream of genetics but can also shape genetics in the long term. It can also enhance or diminish the ability of people to reach their latent potential. Stricter culture can assist East Asian diaspora, but ultimately even adopted East Asians in the West outperform native Europeans of similar environment due to a higher average IQ. Lee Kuan Yew realized the importance of genetics and that humanity is inherently inegalitarian because genetics are real. Out of this knowledge he turned Singapore from a impoverished port in an important place to a hub of of innovation, and to keep it going the state prioritizes keeping the demographics the same and Han Chinese (average IQ of about 105) the dominant group at around 75% of the population.

  • @apapods

    @apapods

    5 ай бұрын

    LA is walkable? Lmao. Have you been there? SF, Seattle and portland are decent, but nowhere near actual walkable cities. NYC is probably the only one I can consider actual walkable and if only you remove the thousands of tourists. And those cities are still 10x better than other ones in america. Stop watching fox news, boomer

  • @kittykittybangbang9367

    @kittykittybangbang9367

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@sunso1991"cultural norm" 🚩🚩🚩

  • @MeguminIsWaifu
    @MeguminIsWaifu5 ай бұрын

    Great video, taught me a lot about the history of the modern American city. It was also really nice that I actually recognized some of the locations you filmed at such as Cloverdale Mall 😄

  • @martief1st
    @martief1st6 ай бұрын

    Yet another of the many reasons why I want to move back to Europe

  • @abhayglal
    @abhayglal4 ай бұрын

    Really well made and informative video! Just two things that I was thinking while watching: 1. I think it’s really important to acknowledge the role of racism in the development of suburbanism. Like most things in the US, the reason for people moving outwards and wanting create faux experiences of community was because they despised many of the members who actually made up their community. Obviously, you can tell your story without including this, but since it’s about the US in particular, I feel like it’s pretty important. 2. Some of the photos you used were of malls in the Middle East (which I know because I happened to live next to them for 10 years). Not really a criticism of the video, more a suggestion that I’d love to see you tackle the rise of American practices of infrastructure development in the Middle East. It’s a fascinating subject and I think would make a great essay!

  • @Phillydreaming
    @Phillydreaming5 ай бұрын

    i moved to a walkable city in 2022 and i was really shocked seeing this video because i have not seen a subdivision or suburb in over a year so i almost forgot about them in a way. obviously it doesnt feel like im in europe or anything but it definitely feels weird thinking about it because i grew up in florida which was very sprawled, we ran across a 4 lane highway to go to the corner store back then. here i dont even own a car.

  • @StatusFX3
    @StatusFX35 ай бұрын

    Just found your channel, I am stoked. You had me at "Walt Disney was a time traveler"

  • @tyronewilson7890
    @tyronewilson78905 ай бұрын

    I keep finding your videos doing research for an architectural history & theory essay and I love them!

  • @dima3899
    @dima38996 ай бұрын

    Toronto mall is smart. I saw this at Shinjuku station in Tokyo. It has a 4+ story mall on top of the station. Nightmare to navigate but pretty cool

  • @Ash_Wen-li

    @Ash_Wen-li

    5 ай бұрын

    Getting lost is part of the fun! As long as you're not on a time limit

  • @jannetteberends8730
    @jannetteberends87305 ай бұрын

    I live in Amersfoort, a city in Europe. We have 3 city gates from the Middle Ages in our town. Just yesterday I was thinking that they are very Disney like. Especially the Koppelpoort.* So yesterday I decided that Disney and the medieval people had the same source for their inspiration. * it’s on the English Wikipedia. When you search for it, you’ll see I’m right. Don’t care if it was built long ago. It’s Disney theme park.

  • @sunnyday7843

    @sunnyday7843

    5 ай бұрын

    My mother used to think Disney liked tivoli gardens as well- I wonder if he traveled to those places

  • @markthompson180
    @markthompson1805 ай бұрын

    From Martinsburg WV here - I agree with you 100% about focusing on increasing walkability in the downtown areas of our cities and towns. That's what I am trying to accomplish in my town.

  • @jasonchristenson1
    @jasonchristenson16 ай бұрын

    I've been thinking that Suburbs have been looking like a Pixar movie since the 90s. Thanks for articulating this.

  • @slumberycell4129
    @slumberycell41296 ай бұрын

    Keep up the great work, your channel is still small now but i can tell you will go far!

  • @dickiewongtk
    @dickiewongtk5 ай бұрын

    Moving from HK to Vancouver, the big box malls at the subur(?) shocked me. Why aren’t there restaurants in these malls except cookie cutter food courts with mostly fast food options?

  • @kidkieran77

    @kidkieran77

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes moving to China I felt the shock but in reverse (and a good way). It seems like in HK & China so many gems of restaurants are in the malls. But this is non existent in UK/US/Canadian malls.

  • @featherkingdom449
    @featherkingdom4496 ай бұрын

    If you guys think the US and Canada are bad take a look at New Zealand it's very tragic what the government did to a once beautiful walkable Māori island nation turning it into the most car centric country in the world per capita! The whole country is a car-infested, asphalt ridden suburban hellhole, it's a mini US with a little British twist 😞. The NZ government wanted to be like the US so bad that they destroyed all of their former human centric infrustructure just to replace it with asphalt, single family homes and strip malls...

  • @Kas-tle

    @Kas-tle

    6 ай бұрын

    Honestly when I visited New Zealand recently I didn't see it as quite as bad as the US, but I am from Los Angeles so my standards are pretty low. I was just thrilled that the public transit wasn't completely awful (but again compared to ours the bar is super low). The suburbs basically seemed like the ones we have but with a few more bike paths and better bus frequency. I agree with your sentiment though that given the history of the place it is more egregious there.

  • @fishingislife9554
    @fishingislife95545 ай бұрын

    I live next to Epcot in a suburb, going to disney is like escaping into a dream world where I can walk and not worry about getting killed by a car, I can enjoy food of different cultures, and look upon beautiful and uplifting architecture. It is When I return to my suburb that is the nightmare, loneliness, boredom, a feeling of being in a sort of prison.

  • @katobrucelee08
    @katobrucelee086 ай бұрын

    Where I lived they had these fake downtowns (less than a city block) and it was cool at fist but the fakness just kicked in quick. What cemented it for me was seeing a building get remodled and the brick facade really highlighted the lack of organticness for me.

  • @sandboxie97
    @sandboxie976 ай бұрын

    awesome video once again!

  • @class3times
    @class3times5 ай бұрын

    Yes, I did notice that you turned the "Melbourne, Australia" title card upside down. Great subtle sense of humor. I laughed out loud!

  • @ryeofoatmeal
    @ryeofoatmeal5 ай бұрын

    it's fascinating to see how malls are dying in America. meanwhile we are thriving in malaysia 😂 you can find a mall within 5km radius. meanwhile I love seeing suburbs in America. almost wanted to live there lol. growing up watching too much American film, they always show how quiet and also sometimes lively the neighbourhood is 😄 but that just a movie. I couldn't imagine what it feels like living there

  • @BenjaminGessel

    @BenjaminGessel

    5 ай бұрын

    Some suburbs are great, others… not so great…

  • @BoratWanksta

    @BoratWanksta

    5 ай бұрын

    I'll say NOT all malls are dying. Plenty of malls still are successful, but the problem is that TOO MANY malls were built in past decades at the peak of mall building. A good example would be like for example DeBartolo Company building Illinois Star Centre Mall in Marion, Illinois, and where only a few miles west University Mall in Carbondale already existed. To me it seems like it wasn't a good idea to build Illinois Star Centre, being it was so close to the existing University Mall in Carbondale. Forgot what Company was behind University Mall, sorry. For the record Illinois Star Centre closed in the late 2010s as a mall, after years of low occupancy. Although Target, Dillard's, and one or 2 other places(maybe a movie theater?) still operate with just outside access.

  • @sparkside217
    @sparkside2175 ай бұрын

    thank you for spreading the word about building better cities! Disney parks and the Vegas shops are tremendous examples that many US travelers can understand. For anyone interested, there's a book called "Paved Paradise" that talks about Gruen's ideas in a lot more detail, and explores the history of how parking has reshaped our cities and economy for the worse

  • @ishathakor
    @ishathakor5 ай бұрын

    i used to live in bangkok and it's a huge city for malls imo and they're great. i used to live in the downtown area in sukhumvit and i had a bunch of malls that were either within walking distance or took about 10-15 minutes to get to on the train. the best part of this for me personally was that i was a kid when i lived there and the malls and shops being so close by allowed me to have a lot of independence while still being very safe. i was able to go to the malls with my own or with some friends after school (i would phone my parents to let them know bc i had a stupid - only calls and texts - phone at the time) and be able to get back on my own either just walking home or taking the train or a motorcycle taxi (these are great btw. i don't think they're very safe though). it's really nice to grow up in a way where you can actually interact with the larger world and don't have to be chauffeured around everywhere by your parents

  • @D.NogueraMusic
    @D.NogueraMusic29 күн бұрын

    I appreciate you played the classic track from V -Sauce channel "Going Down" on the background from 10:09 onwards. Still one of the best tracks for a video essay👍

  • @daintydalmatian
    @daintydalmatian6 ай бұрын

    Based video based channel

  • @genericplantlife
    @genericplantlife5 ай бұрын

    I've never been to America but I grew up watching American media. As a kid, I always imagined sububia as the place where the characters in The Wonder Years lives. I thought that looked so nice and safe, where kids could ride their bikes around without fear of being rammed by cars or mugged by strangers. I never really thought about how it's all just houses and the occasional park and nothing else.

  • @symptomofsouls

    @symptomofsouls

    4 ай бұрын

    It's like that now because the suburbs are no longer safe, a lot of them also have crime problems, like the cities. You can still see things like this in rural america, but no one wants to move there

  • @Horus070
    @Horus0705 ай бұрын

    I live in a small city in the United States … we are luckily we have a historical downtown so it’s really hard to be destroyed ❤️

  • @camouflaging6090
    @camouflaging60905 ай бұрын

    I love how people hate their creations over time. For example, the man who made/coded the endless scroll rejects his decision. Neat video!

  • @AustinSersen
    @AustinSersen5 ай бұрын

    Yay, another Canadian urbanist on KZread came into my feed! Subscription added. :) I really, really hope that all of our voices together make a difference and help to speed up our transition back to the human scale and a proportional increase in public transit services while simultaneously decreasing auto dependency.

  • @smellincoffee
    @smellincoffee5 ай бұрын

    I've never heard of Walmart being an anchor in a mall before! Interesting.

  • @abissuminvocat
    @abissuminvocat5 ай бұрын

    In the Soviet Union, the concept of microdistricts was much more successful, since it focused specifically on pedestrians and public transport, as well as placing everything necessary for life within a 5-10 minute walk from a residential building. From school to hairdresser. Also, more dense development with large intra-block areas allocated for greenery, playgrounds and walking areas. The buildings themselves might not be so beautiful, but the residents easily interacted with each other, voluntarily or involuntarily. Even the notorious communal apartments are now being revived under the coliving brand.

  • @yoominji.
    @yoominji.4 ай бұрын

    lol I love the upside down “Melbourne, Australia” joke at 10:19

  • @izzyayala2003
    @izzyayala20035 ай бұрын

    i was surpirsed to see agincourt mall haha! great vid

  • @tonyclemens4213
    @tonyclemens42136 ай бұрын

    I recently visited a place called Blue Mountain in Ontario. I very much got an uncanny valley feeling walking around the resort area but Disneyfication works.

  • @RingsOfSolace
    @RingsOfSolace6 ай бұрын

    Wait wait wait, so Not Just Bikes got Walt Disney, too? Damn, that guy gets around.

  • @WatchTheThinker
    @WatchTheThinker5 ай бұрын

    This is a great video, extremely informative and well structured. I curate the content I consume, so I'm glad to add a subscription to that list. I am looking forward to whatever you put out next.

  • @pongop
    @pongop5 ай бұрын

    Great video and footage!

  • @humanothumqn659
    @humanothumqn6595 ай бұрын

    In san Francisco you can skateboard everywhere and people still get mad 😆

  • @johnbadman3340
    @johnbadman3340Ай бұрын

    It's so crazy that Americans won't build beautiful, scenic, walkable cities but will make fake, soulless replicas and treat them like fantasy places

  • @victoralley708
    @victoralley7085 ай бұрын

    City living is hell. The more rural, the better.

  • @letsroamaround2189
    @letsroamaround21895 ай бұрын

    This stuff makes me happy I live in europe, I can go everywhere with my bike/ on foot in my city + public transport is amazing

  • @keemstarkreamstar7069

    @keemstarkreamstar7069

    5 ай бұрын

    Ok racist CHUD maybe you should live somewhere more diverse instead of living in Europe.

  • @louislamonte334
    @louislamonte3345 ай бұрын

    Outstanding video!! Suburbia and its child shopping malls as you said are completely unsustainable. Both are really extremely ugly and unsightly. I've read articles that predict that they will be the new slums.

  • @Dj_Nizzo
    @Dj_Nizzo5 ай бұрын

    Solution: Add residential sections inside the malls. Business in the mall profit from the mall residents, and the mall becomes a walkable “community”, where people can live, work and shop, all without owning a car. Turn half the parking lot into outdoor parks/pools etc. America is saved. You’re welcome.

  • @MalwandeMbatha-gu9mx

    @MalwandeMbatha-gu9mx

    Ай бұрын

    That's actually smart 👌

  • @MalwandeMbatha-gu9mx

    @MalwandeMbatha-gu9mx

    Ай бұрын

    Walt Disney would not agree tho

  • @TheNinToaster

    @TheNinToaster

    16 күн бұрын

    minimum parking requirements enters the chat