padredan

padredan t1_j1umh8u wrote

Pittsburgh feels 20 years younger than it did in the eighties and nineties. Back then it was very much being a young person in an old people’s city. Now as someone getting closer to being one of those old people, it feels like it has completely flipped. The demographic keeps skewing younger and as a result the amenities and lifestyle offerings have moved more toward that market.

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padredan t1_j1sz9of wrote

It’s interesting because the hate used to come almost exclusively from the rolling coal loving nimrods who think electric cars are some liberal anti-merican conspiracy just shy of taking their guns. But now for some inexplicable reason, Musk has gone on an absolute bender to alienate the very people that are his core customers. And now those people are driving the Tesla hate. Clearly the Twitter project has turned out to be one of the most tone deaf endeavors Musk has undertaken.

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padredan t1_j1qgsoo wrote

Worth a revisit - just avoid the 12-2 slot and you are good! I used to have a shop close by back in the days when they used to stay open crazy late - like original Primanti hours before it become a yuppie t-shirt stand that made sandwiches too. The rare times I do make it over now though it is still great - still the same quirky off-kilterness and the food hasn’t changed a lick.

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padredan t1_j1p1wtx wrote

Yes - totally agree on Cambod-Ican! It’s not what I’d call traditional General Tso’s but I find it to be the most interesting, unique version and not overly sweet.

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padredan t1_ixsiyz7 wrote

Generally speaking a couple of our neighbors just put out garbage bags on the ground, cardboard boxes not broken down, etc and their cans are the ones that are upside down, across the alley, lids a couple houses down… It’s kind of entertaining at times. Not saying we are doing it right all the time or don’t scratch our heads at times, but there does seem to be a correlation to cans being where they belong and how crappy people make their jobs.

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