Twin Cities' National and Global Image
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- Foshay Tower
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
That looks fun. Lots of Twin Cities identifiable in there even in those short clips, too.
Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
My family caught some of the filming of "Wilson" at 35th and Minnehaha. Woddy Harrelson was riding around on a bike between his shots in the area and my wife didn't recognize him. A film crew guy pointed him out to her. Guess he blended in well. Interestingly enough, that's right around the corner from the Prince house in "Purple Rain."
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- City Center
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Ha! A location scout wanted to take pictures of our house for possible use in the movie. When my wife read on the handout he gave us that the movie was about a lovable slob, she was not amused.
Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Bloomberg: Here are the Most Innovative States in America in 2016
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... ca-in-2016
An improvement over last year, which is good to see.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... ca-in-2016
An improvement over last year, which is good to see.
- FISHMANPET
- IDS Center
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Speaking of arbitrary rankings of things, Minnesota is #1 on this list:
https://www.thrillist.com/travel/nation ... for-winter
https://www.thrillist.com/travel/nation ... for-winter
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- Capella Tower
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Wow, how random, but cool!
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- IDS Center
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Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Minneapolis fiscal health as rated by The Fiscal Times placed the city at 19th out of 116 major US cities. The city's fiscal score was 84 out of 100.
http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2017/01/0 ... ies-Ranked
St. Paul at 52nd with a score of 71.
Other nearby Midwest cities are Madison at 37th, Des Moines at 40th, Milwaukee 76th, Aurora IL at 90th, Omaha at 100th, and Chicago dead last at 116th.
http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2017/01/0 ... ies-Ranked
St. Paul at 52nd with a score of 71.
Other nearby Midwest cities are Madison at 37th, Des Moines at 40th, Milwaukee 76th, Aurora IL at 90th, Omaha at 100th, and Chicago dead last at 116th.
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- IDS Center
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Twin Cities' National and Global Image
A different ranking here, SolarPowerRocks.com ranks each of the 50 states for solar power-friendly policy.
Minnesota came in at 11th for 2017 solar power-friendly policy. Down 4 spots from last year.
https://solarpowerrocks.com/2017-state- ... -rankings/
Minnesota came in at 11th for 2017 solar power-friendly policy. Down 4 spots from last year.
https://solarpowerrocks.com/2017-state- ... -rankings/
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- Foshay Tower
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
The only loosely comparable cities ahead of us are Boston, D.C., Boise, and Oklahoma City.Minneapolis fiscal health as rated by The Fiscal Times placed the city at 19th out of 116 major US cities. The city's fiscal score was 84 out of 100.
http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/2017/01/0 ... ies-Ranked
St. Paul at 52nd with a score of 71.
Other nearby Midwest cities are Madison at 37th, Des Moines at 40th, Milwaukee 76th, Aurora IL at 90th, Omaha at 100th, and Chicago dead last at 116th.
The top 6 are just eastern and southern LA "edge cities". Also in the top 18 are suburbs of San Diego, San Jose, Phoenix, Denver and DC. The remaining are smaller cities, like Fayateville, NC, which is a metro area of 320k residents.
Interesting list in general, and California cities are in excellent fiscal health. I assume because of high property values hence good property tax returns?
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- Stone Arch Bridge
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
MN in the news again for exporting violent extremists:
http://www.startribune.com/prosecutors- ... 410646815/
http://www.startribune.com/prosecutors- ... 410646815/
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- Wells Fargo Center
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Where was he radicalized?
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- IDS Center
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- IDS Center
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
This may or may not be him ... news story says his brother is a "Deontre Hughes", this Facebook page is for a Cullen Osburn (Khalil Hughes).
https://www.facebook.com/khalil.m.hughes
Hometown says Dallas, currently residing in Minneapolis.
https://www.facebook.com/khalil.m.hughes
Hometown says Dallas, currently residing in Minneapolis.
Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Prop 13 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Californi ... _13_(1978)) has made property tax revenues very unreliable indicators of anything in California, but it makes sense that places where there is more turnover/new development should have higher tax intake, not sure the correlation of those with the particular highly ranked cities.
The only loosely comparable cities ahead of us are Boston, D.C., Boise, and Oklahoma City.
The top 6 are just eastern and southern LA "edge cities". Also in the top 18 are suburbs of San Diego, San Jose, Phoenix, Denver and DC. The remaining are smaller cities, like Fayateville, NC, which is a metro area of 320k residents.
Interesting list in general, and California cities are in excellent fiscal health. I assume because of high property values hence good property tax returns?
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- IDS Center
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Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Care.com and Zillow looked at major United States cities and compared whether it was more affordable living in the urban center or in the suburbs.
https://www.care.com/c/stories/9696/cit ... an-parent/
Minneapolis and St. Paul aren't in the top 10, some cities are quite expensive according to the data and methodology — OMG New York. The Twin Cities are rated as almost $4,000 more expensive to live in than their suburbs. The methodology rates that child care in the suburbs could save a household about $3,000.
Any data geeks out there care to dig into the methodology and data and pick it apart?
https://www.care.com/c/stories/9696/cit ... an-parent/
Minneapolis and St. Paul aren't in the top 10, some cities are quite expensive according to the data and methodology — OMG New York. The Twin Cities are rated as almost $4,000 more expensive to live in than their suburbs. The methodology rates that child care in the suburbs could save a household about $3,000.
Any data geeks out there care to dig into the methodology and data and pick it apart?
Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
My first reaction is; these comparisons seem useless for picking 3 factors, and ignoring everything else. It would have been more useful if they had just looked at child care costs, or more useful yet to see a full analysis including all costs. The biggest/most obvious absence is transportation costs, but also food costs, entertainment, health care, etc. etc. etc. are relevant. Of course, most of us believe the more-difficult-to-calculate aspects of city living to more-than offset the costs, mainly increased quality-of-life.
EDIT: Also, is this accurate?
EDIT: Also, is this accurate?
Their decision to include residence square footage as a factor is also stupid, rather than just analyzing prices. A larger house could have less market value but gets bonus points just for being big?In Minneapolis, the annual cost of housing in an urban neighborhood ($14,710) is almost the same as that in a suburban area ($14,899).
Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Yeah, my go-to response when co-workers inform me that their mortgage in WBL is less than my downtown rent is to ask how much they spend on gas per month, reminding them that I fill up my car about once every eight weeks, and that's usually enough to sidetrack the conversation before even getting into the harder to quantify quality of life aspects.
Joey Senkyr
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[email protected]
Re: Twin Cities' National and Global Image
Yes, the details of one's situation matter a lot, and everyone's is different. I live in a suburb, but my SO works in the same suburb and I in an adjacent one, so for us, it's a better deal financially than if we lived in the core. Driving downtown from WBL five days a week, on the other hand, would get expensive quickly.
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