DCsOwn wrote:@rafael122: I used to feel exactly as you did about people outside of the actual city limits telling people that they were from DC (I grew up on 14th and Clifton back when the city was what the city once was), but I really don't care at all about it now. Now-a-days there is so much cross-pollinization between the three parts of the metro area (dc, southern maryland and northern va), that a lot of the cultural distinctions have faded. The City's affluence has risen tremendously and it's attracted tons of people from all over the metro area and country really, many former residents of the District have been displaced and moved to suburban neighborhoods around the city, people utilize and frequent sites all over the metro area and really, there's just a lot more interconnectivity in contemporary DC metro life than there was in the past.
Plus, I've lived in and traveled to a bunch of different cities (lived in San Fran, Chicago and Ann Arbor before moving back here, had extended stays in Paris and London), and people generally view regions of the country or a country more in terms of metro areas than cities anyway. How many people have you heard of that are from suburban Atlanta or the Dallas area that just consider themselves products of that area? Culturally, they really are pretty much just like the people from those cities (the people native to that area I'm speaking of, and obviously I'm generalizing a bit), and technically they are from Dallas or Atlanta. Just the Dallas and Atlanta metro area and not the city proper.
I have to confess, if I weren't from PG County, I wouldn't want to be near there.
DCsOwn, I spent a year in Monterey, CA. I liked Seaside and Carmel by the Sea, but things were pretty slow there for me at that point in my life. Oakland would have been a little more my speed than SF back then.
I also spent a year in Michigan. Spent a while in Flint and have family there. My mom lived for a while in Detroit and I have a lot of family there, too. That area has nothing on DC IMO. Visited Windsor, Ontario, and noticed it was about a billion times cleaner and very quiet and peaceful. I did like the people I met there. Not as aloof as NorCal types.
I lived in Columbus, GA for a while. That area is like Atlanta's illegitimate sibling. It's nice and peaceful and pretty boring but in a good way. If you heard about the little league fight that went on viral video a couple weeks back; that park is about a mile from the house I lived in. My kids played in that league. I prefer that to DC because life is SLOW there. Now that I'm old, slow is cool.
My favorite part of what Hawaiian's call the mainland, is Texas. I absolutely love Austin, TX. College town with lots of good music, entertainment, and the area around Lake Travis is where I would have wanted to live before moving here. Dallas is really spread out, just like San Antonio. What I like is for a big city the traffic isn't bad. I like Dallas.
The DMV is home, but I've been a lot of places, some that I like better. Where I am now is home to me, but I hate that the houses are so small and everybody is right up on top of each other. Otherwise, give me decent weather and a beach and I'm happy. I have seen enough folks like me, monte.

But to get back on topic, DC has a LOT to offer for a young, NBA player. Anyone interested in politics, history, the federal government, the military, especially the law, and many other careers would be happy to come to DC. Life outside the court would never be boring.
I liked the area when I was in my 20s. Tiny, I liked the mean streets back then.
