Posted on 08/18/2020 4:45:09 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
I love NYC. When I first moved to NYC, it was a dream come true. Every corner was like a theater production happening right in front of me. So much personality, so many stories.
Every subculture I loved was in NYC. I could play chess all day and night. I could go to comedy clubs. I could start any type of business. I could meet people. I had family, friends, opportunities. No matter what happened to me, NYC was a net I could fall back on and bounce back up.
Now its completely dead.
But NYC always always bounces back. No. Not this time.
But NYC is the center of the financial universe. Opportunities will flourish here again. Not this time.
NYC has experienced worse. No it hasnt.
A Facebook group formed a few weeks ago that was for people who were planning a move and wanted others to talk to and ask advice from. Within two or three days it had about 10,000 members.
Every day I see more and more posts, Ive been in NYC forever but I guess this time I have to say goodbye. Every single day I see those posts. Ive been screenshotting them for my scrapbook.
Three of the most important reasons to move to NYC:
Business opportunities Culture Food And, of course, friends. But if everything I say below is even 1/10 of what I think, then there wont be as many opportunities to make friends.
A) BUSINESS Midtown Manhattan, the center of business in NYC, is empty. Even though people can go back to work, famous office buildings like the Time-Life skyscraper are still 90% empty. Businesses have realized that they dont need their employees at the office.
In fact, theyve realized they are even more productive with everyone at home. The Time-Life Building can handle 8,000 workers. Now it maybe has 500 workers back.
(Midtown reopened, but still empty)
What do you mean? a friend of mine said to me when I told him Midtown should be called Ghost Town. Im in my office right now!
What are you doing there?
Packing up, he said and laughed, Im shutting it down. He works in the entertainment business.
Another friend of mine works at a major investment bank as a managing director. Before the pandemic, he was at the office every day, sometimes working from 6 a.m.10 p.m.
Now he lives in Phoenix, Arizona. As of June, he told me, I had never even been to Phoenix. And then he moved there. He does all his meetings on Zoom.
I was talking to a book editor who has been out of the city since early March. Weve been all working fine. Im not sure why we would need to go back to the office.
One friend of mine, Derek Halpern, was convinced hed stay. He put up a Facebook post the other day saying he might be changing his mind. Derek wrote:
In the last week:
I watched a homeless person lose his mind and start attacking random pedestrians. Including spitting on, throwing stuff at, and swatting. Ive seen several single parents with a child asking for money for food. And then, when someone gave them food, tossed the food right back at them. I watched a man yell racist slurs at every single race of people while charging, then stopping before going too far.
And worse.
Ive been living in New York City for about 10 years. It has definitely gotten worse and theres no end in sight.
My favorite park is Madison Square Park. About a month ago a 19-year-old girl was shot and killed across the street.
I dont think I have an answer but I do think its clear: its time to move out of NYC.
Im not the only one who feels this way, either. In my building alone, the rent has plummeted almost 30% more people are moving away than ever before.
So
Its not goodbye yet. But a lifelong New Yorker is thinking about it.
I picked his post out but I couldve picked from dozens of others.
People say, NYC has been through worse, or NYC has always come back.
No and no.
First, when has NYC been through worse?
Even in the 1970s, and through the 80s, when NYC was going bankrupt, even when it was the crime capital of the U.S. or close to it, it was still the capital of the business world (meaning, it was the primary place young people would go to build wealth and find opportunity). It was culturally on top of its game home to artists, theater, media, advertising, publishing. And it was probably the food capital of the U.S.
(NYC in the 70s)
NYC has never been locked down for five months. Not in any pandemic, war, financial crisis, never. In the middle of the polio epidemic, when little kids (including my mother) were becoming paralyzed or dying (my mother ended up with a bad leg), NYC didnt go through this.
This is not to say what should have been done or should not have been done. That part is over. Now we have to deal with what IS.
In early March, many people (not me), left NYC when they felt it would provide safety from the virus and they no longer needed to go to work and all the restaurants were closed. People figured, Ill get out for a month or two and then come back.
They are all still gone.
And then in June, during rioting and looting, a second wave of NYCers (this time including me) left. I have kids. Nothing was wrong with the protests but I was a little nervous when I saw videos of rioters after curfew trying to break into my building.
Many people left temporarily but there were also people leaving permanently. Friends of mine moved to Nashville, Miami, Austin, Denver, Salt Lake City, Dallas, etc.
Now a third wave of people is leaving. But they might be too late. Prices are down 3050% on both rentals and sales no matter what real estate people tell you. And rentals are soaring in the second- and third-tier cities.
Im temporarily, although maybe permanently, in South Florida now. I also got my place sight unseen.
Robyn was looking at listings around Miami and then she saw an area we had never been to before. We found three houses we liked.
She called the real estate agent. Place No. 1: Just rented that morning 50% higher than the asking price. Place No. 2: Also rented (by other New Yorkers. The agent said they came from New York for three hours, saw the place, got it, and went back to pack). Place No. 3: Available.
Well take it! The first time we physically saw it was when we flew down and moved in.
This is temporary, right? I confirmed with Robyn. But I dont know. Im starting to like the sun a little bit. I mean, when its behind the shades. And when I am in air conditioning.
But lets move on for a second:
Summary: Businesses are remote and they arent returning to the office. And its a death spiral the longer offices remain empty, the longer they will remain empty.
In 2005, a hedge fund manager was visiting my office and said, In Manhattan you practically trip over opportunities in the street.
Now the streets are empty.
B) CULTURE: I co-own a comedy club, Standup NY, on 78th and Broadway. Im very, very proud of the club and grateful to my fellow owners Dani Zoldan and Gabe Waldman and our manager Jon Boreamayo. Its a great club. Its been around since 1986 and before that it was a theater.
One time, Henry Winkler stopped by to come on my podcast. He was the one who told me it had been a theater.
He said, I grew up two doors down from here and used to perform here as a kid. Then I went out to LA to be the Fonz and now Im back here, full circle, to be on your podcast. This place has history. Things like that happen in NYC.
(When Henry Winkler stopped by Standup NY and I got to meet the Fonz!)
In the past year, Jim Gaffigan, Jerry Seinfeld, Tracy Morgan, and many others have been on the stage.
Its only one step to get onstage. Jim Gaffigan fell flat on his face while he was walking up the step. The next day, on Seth Meyers late night show, Jim said, I failed at the one thing youre supposed to do I couldnt stand up!
I love the club. Before the pandemic I would perform there throughout the week in addition to many other clubs around the city and, in the past few months, clubs in Chicago, Denver, San Jose, LA, Cincinnati, all over the Netherlands, and other places.
I miss it.
We had a show in May. An outdoor show. Everyone socially distanced. But we were shut down by the police. I guess we were superspreading humor during a very serious time.
The club is doing something fun: Its doing shows outside in the park. This is a great idea.
In a time like this, businesses need to give to the community, not complain and not take.
That said, we have no idea when we will open. Nobody has any idea. And the longer we remain closed, the less chance we will ever reopen profitably.
Broadway is closed until at least the spring. The Lincoln Center is closed. All the museums are closed.
Forget about the tens of thousands of jobs lost in these cultural centers. Forget even about the millions of dollars of tourist-generated revenues lost by the closing of these centers.
There are thousands of performers, producers, artists, and the entire ecosystem of art, theater, production, curation, that surrounds these cultural centers. People who have worked all of their lives for the right to be able to perform even once on Broadway, whose lives and careers have been put on hold.
I get it. There was a pandemic.
But the question now is: What happens next? And, given the uncertainty (since there is no known answer), and given the fact that people, cities, economies loathe uncertainty, we simply dont know the answer and thats a bad thing for New York City.
Right now, Broadway is closed at least until early 2021 and then there are supposed to be a series of rolling dates by which it will reopen.
THE JOURNEY TOWARDS PERSONAL FREEDOM STARTS WITH YOU It's time to make the most important decision of your life: Choose Yourself.
I will show you how...
But is that true? We simply dont know. And what does that mean? And will it have to be only 25% capacity? Broadway shows cant survive with that! And will performers, writers, producers, investors, lenders, stagehands, landlords, etc. wait a year?
Same for the museums, the Lincoln Center, and the thousands of other cultural reasons millions come to New York City every year.
The hot dog stands outside of the Lincoln Center? Finished.
C) FOOD My favorite restaurant is closed for good. OK, lets go to my second favorite. Closed for good. Third favorite, closed for good.
I thought the PPP was supposed to help. No? What about emergency relief? No. Stimulus checks? Unemployment? No and no. OK, my fourth favorite, or what about that place I always ordered delivery from? No and no.
Around late May, I took walks and saw that many places were boarded up. OK, I thought, because the protesting was leading to looting and the restaurants were protecting themselves. Theyll be OK.
Looking closer, Id see the signs. For lease. For rent. For whatever.
Before the pandemic, the average restaurant had only 16 days of cash on hand. Some had more (McDonalds), and some had less (the local mom-and-pop Greek diner).
Yelp estimates that 60% of restaurants around the United States have closed.
My guess is more than 60% will be closed in New York City but who knows.
Someone said to me, Well, people will want to come in now and start their own restaurants! There is less competition.
I dont think you understand how restaurants work.
Restaurants want other restaurants nearby. Thats why theres one street in Manhattan (46th St. between 8th and 9th) called Restaurant Row. Its all restaurants. Thats why theres another street called Little India and another one called Koreatown.
Restaurants happen in clusters and then people say, Lets go out to eat, and even if they dont know where they want to eat they go to the area where all the restaurants are.
If the restaurants are no longer clustered, fewer people go out to eat (they are on the fence about where so they elect to stay home). Restaurants breed more restaurants.
And again, what happens to all the employees who work at these restaurants? They are gone. They left New York City. Where did they go? I know a lot of people who went to Maine, Vermont, Tennessee, upstate, Indiana, etc. Back to live with their parents or live with friends or live cheaper. They are gone, and gone for good.
And what person wakes up today and says, I cant wait to set up a pizza place in the location where 100,000 other pizza places just closed down.? People are going to wait awhile and see. They want to make sure the virus is gone, or theres a vaccine, or theres a profitable business model.
Or even worse.
D) COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE If building owners and landlords lose their prime tenants (the store fronts on the bottom floor, the offices on the middle floors, the well-to-do on the top floors, etc.) then they go out of business.
And what happens when they go out of business?
Nothing actually. And thats the bad news.
People who would have rented or bought say, Hmmm, everyone is saying NYC is heading back to the 1970s, so even though prices might be 50% lower than they were a year ago, I think I will wait a bit more. Better safe than sorry!
And then with everyone waiting prices go down further. So people see prices go down and they say, Good thing I waited. But what happens if I wait even more?! And they wait and then prices go down more.
This is called a deflationary spiral. People wait. Prices go down. Nobody really wins. Because the landlords or owners go broke. Less money gets spent on the city. Nobody moves in so there is no motion in the markets. And people already owning in the area and can afford to hang on have to wait longer for a return of restaurants, services, etc. that they were used to.
Well, will prices go down low enough everyone buys?
Answer: Maybe. Maybe not. Some people can afford to hang on but not afford to sell. So they wait. Other people will go bankrupt and there will be litigation, which creates other problems for real estate in the area. And the big borrowers and lenders may need a bailout of some sort or face mass bankruptcy. Who knows what will happen?
E) COLLEGES There are almost 600,000 college students spread out through NYC. From Columbia to NYU to Baruch, Fordham, St. Johns, etc.
Will they require remote learning? Will kids be on campus? It turns out: a little bit of both. Some colleges are waiting a semester to decide, some are half and half, some are optional.
But we know this: There is uncertainty and there is hybrid. I dont know of any college fully coming back right away.
Thats OK, you might say, so in a semester or two it might be fine.
(Columbia University)
Not so fast. Lets say just 100,000 of those 600,000 dont return to school and decide not to rent an apartment in New York City. Thats a lot of apartments that will go empty.
Thats a lot of landlords who will not be able to pay their own bills. Many bought those student apartments as a way to make a living. So now it ripples back to the landlords, to the support staff, to the banks, to the professors, etc.
In other words, we dont know. But its going to be a lot worse before its better.
F) OK, OK, BUT NYC ALWAYS COMES BACK Yes it does. I lived three blocks from Ground Zero on 9/11. Downtown, where I lived, was destroyed, but it came roaring back within two years. Such sadness and hardship and then quickly that area became the most attractive area in New York.
And in 2008/2009, there was much suffering during the Great Recession, again much hardship, but things came roaring back.
But this time is different. Youre never supposed to say that but this time its true. If you believe this time is no different, that NYC is resilient, I hope youre right.
I dont benefit from saying any of this. I love NYC. I was born there. Ive lived there forever. I STILL live there. I love everything about NYC. I want 2019 back.
But this time is different.
One reason: Bandwidth.
In 2008, average bandwidth speeds were 3 megabits per second. Thats not enough for a Zoom meeting with reliable video quality. Now, its over 20 megabits per second. Thats more than enough for high-quality video.
Theres a before and after. BEFORE: No remote work. AFTER: Everyone can work remotely.
The difference: bandwidth got faster. And thats basically it. People have left New York City and have moved completely into virtual worlds. The Time-Life Building doesnt need to fill up again. Wall Street can now stretch across every street instead of just being one building in Manhattan.
We are officially AB: After Bandwidth. And for the entire history of NYC (the world) until now, we were BB: Before Bandwidth.
Remote learning, remote meetings, remote offices, remote performance, remote everything.
Thats what is different.
Everyone has spent the past five months adapting to a new lifestyle. Nobody wants to fly across the country for a two-hour meeting when you can do it just as well on Zoom. I can go see live comedy on Zoom. I can take classes from the best teachers in the world for almost free online as opposed to paying $70,000 a year for a limited number of teachers who may or may not be good.
Everyone has choices now. You can live in the music capital of Nashville, you can live in the next Silicon Valley of Austin. You can live in your hometown in the middle of wherever. And you can be just as productive, make the same salary, have higher quality of life with a cheaper cost to live.
G) AND WHAT WOULD MAKE YOU COME BACK? There wont be business opportunities for years. Businesses move on. People move on. It will be cheaper for businesses to function more remotely and bandwidth is only getting faster.
Wait for events and conferences and even meetings and maybe even office spaces to start happening in virtual realities once everyone is spread out from midtown Manhattan to all over the country.
The quality of restaurants will start to go up in all the second- and then third-tier cities as talent and skill flow to the places that can quickly make use of them.
Ditto for cultural events.
And then people will ask, Wait a second, I was paying over 16% in state and city taxes and these other states and cities have little to no taxes? And I dont have to deal with all the other headaches of NYC?
Because there are headaches in NYC. Lots of them. Its just we sweep them under the table because so much else has been good there.
NYC has a $9 billion deficit. $1 billion more than the mayor thought it was going to have. How does a city pay back its debts? The main way is aid from the state. But the state deficit just went bonkers. Then is taxes. But if 900,000 estimated jobs are lost in NYC and tens of thousands of businesses, then that means less taxes unless taxes are raised.
(Revenue sources for NYC are all going down but the deficit is going up)
Next is tolls from the tunnels and bridges. But fewer people are commuting to work. Well, how about the city-owned colleges? Fewer people are returning to college. Well how about property taxes? More people defaulting on their properties.
What reason will people have to go back to NYC?
I love my life in NYC. I have friends all over NY. People Ive known for decades. I could go out of my apartment and cross the street and there was my comedy club and I could go up onstage and perform. I could go a few minutes by Uber and meet with anyone or go play PingPong or go to a movie or go on a podcast and people traveling through could come on my podcast.
I could go out at night to my favorite restaurants and then see my favorite performers perform. I could go to the park and play chess, see friends. I could take advantage of all this wonderful city has to offer.
No more.
They will move to better, safer cities, and then they will vote for the same turds that ruined the city they left.
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Maybe it is time to start forming “Welcoming Committees” to go to these relocates’ homes and lay down the law.
“Now that you have escaped your Democrat He%% Hole, you must now vote to keep this state RED and not infect it with BLUE.”
Be adamant, be ardent, be stringent. Do not let these refuges turn your state blue.
Perform monthly “maintenance” (information upload) on these people until they put up a yard sign to confirm that they will now adopt the RED perspective of their new neighborhood.
‘I’ll never understand that mindset. Leaving that mess for a Rural Red part of the nation was very easy, especially given the mess these cities have become...’
Some people derive energy from being in close proximity to many other people. Our daughter was raised in suburban St Louis, MO. She went to Catholic HS in the city’s Central West End, University in the Chicago area at Dominican. Degree in Apparel Design & Merchandising. She works in fashion, took a promotion from Chicago to NYC in 2014. Lives in Brooklyn and worked in Midtown until 2019, now works in Brooklyn. She gets energy from her physical environment. When we have visited, I just feel completely drained. Far too many people, far too close together, too much room for anything to go wrong. Now it has. We’ll see what happens.
I grew up in Brooklyn, and left in the early 70s when I got married. I’ve been back to the old neighborhood once for a reunion of app fifty of my old pals. Not one of us remained in Brooklyn, or NYC. Good luck to your daughter. I bet she lives in either Williamsburg, Greenpoint or Fort Green (gentrification might have changed these names to something more trendy):)
“Museum Quality PORTL (video)”
Very cool!
“Everything the Left takes over... Dies”
Yes. Leftistism/progressiveism is like a deadly cancer.
Leave it be and it grows until it kills its host.
Treat it late and the treatment is painful and less likely to work.
Treat it early and the treatment is tolerable and more likely to work.
Avoid getting it and no treatment is necessary.
I’ve watched a few of their videos but I can’t figure out how they do it...yet.
If the Dems were smart (as a party), they would have moved to a position microscopically to the Left of the GOP and then complained about the GOP management and Orange Man bad.
My take is the way they do the background shadowing. Makes it look 3D. Plus, the frame outside aids in the illusion.
The company makes it sound likes it all cameras and algorithms, but I’ll bet it’s mostly what you suggested.
“If the Dems were smart...”
They wouldn’t be Dems.
Instead of selling the contents of their museums they repatriate them ... unless made by Christian white people in which case they get hidden away or even destroyed. Muslims buy up the land and build victory mosques or convert empty church buildings (same damnable difference).
Cancer spreads by metastasizing.
The cancerous tumors are metastasizing.
This would be the 3rd, maybe 4th, time I can remember NYC being dead forever. Don’t bet on it.
Hubby and I live about 130 miles NE of Grand Central Station (in CT near the MA line).
Since mid-March, our area has been *flooded* with cars with NY plates. We've seen several of these NY people slowing down in front of homes for sale, taking down realtor info from the signs in front of the houses.
We've never seen anything like this here before.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.