News photographer for a local tv station. Been in the game for 20 strong
Ok. I'm in the same industry in NYC.
News photographer for a local tv station. Been in the game for 20 strong
If you never got to experience the real Atlanta in the early to late 90s you fukking missed out. nikkas are moving here on a hope and prayer and a vision of a city that is long gone.
I’m self employed and run in them circles, it’s a lot of ways to get it if you work for yourself.
Can anyone speak to the tech space? I got a cousin who wants to break into the industry but honestly he doesn’t know where to begin. Can any brehs give some input?
I would respectfully disagree. I grew up in that Atlanta and Atlanta now is as real as the Atlanta in 1990 or 1980. Things change, perspective changes but people forget how things really were. People forget how bad the crime and homicide rate was during that time. Drugs really running through the city and destroying lives and communities. In the 90s we had widespread corruption under Mayor Campbell and City Hall. We still had major public housing throughout the city up until the early 2000s. There were alotta issues during that time in Atlanta that people gloss over b/c we romanticize the 90s. Truth is that Atlanta has always been a progressive city for black people and a city seen as a place of opportunity and growth. The fight now is to make sure that the promise and hope of Atlanta continues for the next generation and the generations after that
Do you think the transplants made things worst?I would respectfully disagree. I grew up in that Atlanta and Atlanta now is as real as the Atlanta in 1990 or 1980. Things change, perspective changes but people forget how things really were. People forget how bad the crime and homicide rate was during that time. Drugs really running through the city and destroying lives and communities. In the 90s we had widespread corruption under Mayor Campbell and City Hall. We still had major public housing throughout the city up until the early 2000s. There were alotta issues during that time in Atlanta that people gloss over b/c we romanticize the 90s. Truth is that Atlanta has always been a progressive city for black people and a city seen as a place of opportunity and growth. The fight now is to make sure that the promise and hope of Atlanta continues for the next generation and the generations after that
Do you think the transplants made things worst?
So I guess you're saying not necessarily.The fact that you can't buy a house in the heart of the hood for less than 300k made it worse.
So I guess you're saying not necessarily.
networking doesn't mean shyt if no one has shytSomewhat but not as much as networking
If the transplants are making it worst, it's probably the ones coming down with no plan, not the ones buying up properties that were too expensive where they moved from. These are the transplants who are bringing most of the money. The hate got so bad, that now I hear some blaming transplants for rising prices on other things in ATL, just because they moved here and bought a new home. That's a new one on me. If they didn't exactly say that, then they said something like the natives couldn't buy any new homes, because the transplants are driving up prices.That's a byproduct of "transplants" and gentrification. You couldn't sell no goddamn house in Mechanicsville for 300k in 1994.
Do you think the transplants made things worst?
4:25
"If you an unskilled person in the small town you came from, you will still be an unskilled person in Atlanta"
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Yep, Atlanta was amazing before 96, after 96, it was still good but only if you are young and not working yet. Once you are working age, Atlanta sucked. I liked DC more and Texas a lot moreatlanta changed after 96