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- Jul 20, 2012
I went to t dot with a few friends for a bachelor party. A few observations from the weekend.
- Toronto/Canada are “isolated” as hell. Every time we asked a local about a hot spot, eatery, etc.. we had to field questions on why we were there and of course, why did US vote for Trump. (As if we all voted for that nut job) how bout you come and see for yourself?
- Toronto has the highest concentration of fine women I’ve ever witnessed with my own eyes (I’ve been to 20 countries and have dated within 5 of them)
- Due to Toronto’s women, we are blessed with the music by Drake, The Weeknd, etc which is largely fueled by drugs, judging women, crying about women, leaving Toronto, coming back to Toronto, peeling for strippers..
- There is a weird duality between the folks we encountered during the day and the folks we interacted with at night. Almost like a two-faced yin and yang. The people during the day were friendly, approachable. Everyone we encountered at night outted us as Americans immediately, and the conversation ended shortly thereafter. Also, most were higher than Mars. Even approaching other brown/Black people; West Indian, Caribbean, African, they wanted nothing to do with us.
- according to some conversations with Torontoins, the culture is largely fueled by image, judging others, segregated thinking. Everyone’s main concern is looking good.
- T dot f’s with Drake HEAVY. Every club was either Drake on repeat for three hours or other Toronto/Dancehall artists, not a single U.S. artist was heard. All this was to my surprise, but again, isolation and that chip
On the shoulder.
- The strip club was fantastic and easy on the dollar
- The crew and I went back through Drake’s and The Weeknd’s catelogue, our visit gave full context to the content of their music (which I still love)
- The fact that Drake as been outted with the Black Face picture is not surprising. There’s really no racial context for these folks to fall on up there. They don’t have the same daily lessons and reminders that we have in the U.S. it’s almost Utopia up there. As easy as that sounds, it’s not easy to get use to.
Yo, some of my Canadian folk on here explain all of this, are y’all really this WEIRD or am I just an outsider looking in?! I understand that our interaction is a very small sample of the culture at larger; however, a lot of these critiques I heard from people that live there.
- Toronto/Canada are “isolated” as hell. Every time we asked a local about a hot spot, eatery, etc.. we had to field questions on why we were there and of course, why did US vote for Trump. (As if we all voted for that nut job) how bout you come and see for yourself?
- Toronto has the highest concentration of fine women I’ve ever witnessed with my own eyes (I’ve been to 20 countries and have dated within 5 of them)
- Due to Toronto’s women, we are blessed with the music by Drake, The Weeknd, etc which is largely fueled by drugs, judging women, crying about women, leaving Toronto, coming back to Toronto, peeling for strippers..
- There is a weird duality between the folks we encountered during the day and the folks we interacted with at night. Almost like a two-faced yin and yang. The people during the day were friendly, approachable. Everyone we encountered at night outted us as Americans immediately, and the conversation ended shortly thereafter. Also, most were higher than Mars. Even approaching other brown/Black people; West Indian, Caribbean, African, they wanted nothing to do with us.
- according to some conversations with Torontoins, the culture is largely fueled by image, judging others, segregated thinking. Everyone’s main concern is looking good.
- T dot f’s with Drake HEAVY. Every club was either Drake on repeat for three hours or other Toronto/Dancehall artists, not a single U.S. artist was heard. All this was to my surprise, but again, isolation and that chip
On the shoulder.
- The strip club was fantastic and easy on the dollar
- The crew and I went back through Drake’s and The Weeknd’s catelogue, our visit gave full context to the content of their music (which I still love)
- The fact that Drake as been outted with the Black Face picture is not surprising. There’s really no racial context for these folks to fall on up there. They don’t have the same daily lessons and reminders that we have in the U.S. it’s almost Utopia up there. As easy as that sounds, it’s not easy to get use to.
Yo, some of my Canadian folk on here explain all of this, are y’all really this WEIRD or am I just an outsider looking in?! I understand that our interaction is a very small sample of the culture at larger; however, a lot of these critiques I heard from people that live there.
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