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[deleted] OP t1_j6hxw0i wrote

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ch1ck3npotpi3 t1_j6hyd9b wrote

I've lived in and around Boston for 30 years, and I've never heard anyone other than tourists and visitors call it Beantown.

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[deleted] OP t1_j6hyt1b wrote

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ch1ck3npotpi3 t1_j6hz7le wrote

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[deleted] OP t1_j6i0f8q wrote

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AnyRound5042 t1_j6ilxf4 wrote

Yeah corporations and tourists don't get to dictate our names. They can continue to use beantown and we can continue to use that was a litmus test

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liberterrorism t1_j6i9s8g wrote

It’s a bunch of corny media headlines are not indicative of how frequently actual people use it. How many NYC residents do you think refer to it “the Big Apple”? None, because that shit is for tourists.

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magellanNH t1_j6ib1j9 wrote

That's really not how it used to be, but maybe it's because I'm old and the phrase has gone out of fashion. I'm telling you though, it was very commonly used back in the day.

If you listened to Boston talk radio, especially sports talk, you'd hear it repeatedly in everyday banter as a stand in for Boston. Of course, I haven't listened to the radio in like a decade so maybe it's totally different now.

Here's a transcript from a Cheers episode. I know it's just a TV show, but this feels really true to life to me, in terms of how the term was used by Bostonians in the 80s and 90s:

https://tvquot.es/cheers/quote/18guwka6y/

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Stronkowski t1_j6igq8k wrote

You should really rethink your argument about modern language if it involves quoting something from 40 years ago.

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liberterrorism t1_j6jmxrw wrote

You do know that Cheers is a fictional TV show created by Hollywood writers who aren’t from Boston? That’s like saying you know what the real NYC is like because you watched Friends.

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magellanNH t1_j6jpe7h wrote

My point was that the scene does a good job of capturing the essence of how we used the term back then. Even having Cliff be the character that said it, and the way he said it, somehow seems right on the money for the times.

I think of it as vaguely lower-class speak or blue collar. It was especially common to use it when talking about Boston sports and Boston sports fans.

Again. The key point is that the term has a long and deep history in the culture and the idea that the term was recently conjured up by the tourist industry is just plain wrong.

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Stronkowski t1_j6lrtx5 wrote

No one besides you is arguing about what people talked like in 1984.

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Budget-Celebration-1 t1_j6igs6p wrote

I’m not sure where these beantown haters come from. I will no longer use the dreaded word Boston. Till this day forward I’ll call it beantown!

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