My first question is, what are you still doing here if you find it so unappealing? Secondly, do you ever venture out of midtown for nightlife (which I'm not fond of either)? There are lots of hotspots in Folsom, Roseville, Old Sac, and even West Sac is up and coming. I'll defer to your opinion on the artistic community thing as it's not at all an interest of mine. The music scene has seen a resurgence in recent years, but I suppose that depends upon what you're into. Lots of good blues, jazz and rock acts/venues can be found if you know the scene.
well, believe it or not, we don't all get to live where we want to live; we live where we're able to find work...
my wife and i are in our mid-20's, and the economic downturn hasn't been friendly to recent graduates with miles of student loan debt. she was able to get a job working for the state, and i work for the community college districts in the area. we just finally got our own place a little over a year ago. we're renting, but it's not cheap to live in a relatively safe neighborhood. we'll be leaving CA altogether once we've saved enough to make such a move, and once either she or i have a job secured on the other side of that move. it'll be a few years, but we're shooting for the pacific northwest, either portland or seattle, cities and climates more suited to our lifestyles. we're not fond of the hot summers in sacramento, and we're not fond of the fact that winter rain is so scarce these days...
and i love the train museum in old sac, but it's a once-a-year trip, at most. the rio city cafe is great. what other "hotspots" in this area are you referring to, exactly? it's a historic district, unfortunately laden with homeless, and hardly a beacon of life after dark. like many places in sacramento, it's quiet after 9:00pm. as for folsom and roseville, they're both a half hour away on the weekends, and forty-five minutes to an hour away in the evening traffic during the week. more to the point, my wife and i don't like driving everywhere. it's expensive to do so, and we're not exactly flush with cash, so we prefer to ride our bikes or take public transportation...
but sacramento is not a bike-friendly city, nor does it provide much in the way of convenient, clean, or safe public transportation. it's why portland is at the top of our list as an eventual destination. it's an extremely bike-friendly city with several great public transit systems. what
we value, as a young married couple, is a
city center that provides [non-government] jobs and cultural value. we want to feel comfortable taking public transportation to work and biking to our favorite spots. we don't necessarily want to have to venture out into the sprawl to engage with our hometown. hopefully the arena project will resuscitate sacramento's downtown culture, but we'll likely have left by the time it yields significant results...
anyway, as VF said, different strokes. i don't begrudge those sacramentans who truly enjoy living in the area. good for them. i'm just not among them, nor am i shy about voicing the problems i have with the city itself. and i think that nba players entering free agency--while certainly different than my wife and i in the make-up of their own value systems--don't see sacramento as a viable destination because of what it lacks, rather than what it has. i still believe that a losing franchise in a relatively undesirable small market is going to have considerable difficulty attracting those free agents. once a player
is here, they sometimes forge a bond with the city and its fans. its really nice when that happens. but those players are usually acquired via the draft or via trade. it's rare that free agents of note willingly arrive in sacramento with a wink and a smile, and there's a reason for that across the nearly 30 years that the kings have played here...