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kjun
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Posted

There are some very nice looking escorts appearing on here from Boston but I can't imagine going to Boston to see an escort. Actually, I can't see myself going to Boston ever again for anything. I did not find the people there to be the least bit friendly.

Guest countryboywny
Posted

I have been in Boston many, many times. It's one of my favorite places to go for history, great restaurants, shopping etc. I have always found the people to be quite friendly once I break the ice. I can see how one would think they are not, however, because they rarely will make the first effort at conversation. I'm puzzled by the escort scene there. Outside of Jon Ramsey, there are few, if any well reviewed consistent guys there. I was there last week and tried to contact an escort but got no response. I admit that it was quite late, but his profile on Rentmen showed he was on line?? So, I don't know what to think.

Posted

For a city its size, Boston seems to do quite well in the escort scene. There must be something (probably the large amount of

horny guys with disposable income - just a guess). I've always found the people there to be friendly, but then I'm from Philly and the two cities have a fair amount of common attitudes and styles, I think.

Posted
There are some very nice looking escorts appearing on here from Boston but I can't imagine going to Boston to see an escort. Actually, I can't see myself going to Boston ever again for anything. I did not find the people there to be the least bit friendly.

 

dude all you ever do is piss and moan when you come here. you throw out bomb like posts and then run.

 

you live in bangkok. you think there aren't a lot of folks who would rather sit in the inner circle of hell than live there? it's hot, it's humid and too crowded. no thanks

 

beantown is a good city. open your mind a little cause it sounds as if you do a lot of complaining without real knowledge.

Posted
For a city its size, Boston seems to do quite well in the escort scene. There must be something (probably the large amount of

horny guys with disposable income - just a guess). I've always found the people there to be friendly, but then I'm from Philly and the two cities have a fair amount of common attitudes and styles, I think.

 

It also might be the 300,000+ students at the undergraduate and graduate level, plus recent graduates trying to make enough money to remain in Boston.

Posted
dude all you ever do is piss and moan when you come here. you throw out bomb like posts and then run.

 

you live in bangkok. you think there aren't a lot of folks who would rather sit in the inner circle of hell than live there? it's hot, it's humid and too crowded. no thanks

 

beantown is a good city. open your mind a little cause it sounds as if you do a lot of complaining without real knowledge.

 

Love and kisses to you also Jim.

Posted
There are some very nice looking escorts appearing on here from Boston but I can't imagine going to Boston to see an escort. Actually, I can't see myself going to Boston ever again for anything. I did not find the people there to be the least bit friendly.

 

It's a city that has kept some historical buildings, unfortunately a lot of them were demolished and substituted by "shoe box style" 60's and 70's buildings. Bostonians still consider their city equal to NYC....

 

There's a lot of envy toward their aristocracy and the elites from MIT and Harvard. Blue-collar Americans hate immigrants and everybody who can take their jobs.

 

Interesting place to visit, I've heard from escorts it's a city with a fame for no-shows.

Posted
It's a city that has kept some historical buildings, unfortunately a lot of them were demolished and substituted by "shoe box style" 60's and 70's buildings. Bostonians still consider their city equal to NYC....

 

There's a lot of envy toward their aristocracy and the elites from MIT and Harvard. Blue-collar Americans hate immigrants and everybody who can take their jobs.

 

Interesting place to visit, I've heard from escorts it's a city with a fame for no-shows.

 

I cannot let this comment lie. As a proud Bostonian, our ”DuPont” has innuendo-ed his way into a smear of the HUB. I was not born here. As with many others, I came to Boston for school and, as with many others, I fell in love with the city and stayed.

 

“It's a city that has kept some historical buildings”… yes, well for starters… Faneuil Hall, designed and built by artist and architect John Smibert in 1740–1742; re-built and enlarged by Charles Bulfinch in 1805. The great meeting hall is still used for public meetings, political debates and concerts. The gilded grasshopper weather vane on top of the building was created by Deacon Shem Drowne in 1742. Gilded with a gold leaf, the copper weather vane weighs eighty pounds and is four feet long. The weather vane is believed to be modeled after the grasshopper weather vane on the London Royal Exchange, based upon the family crest of Thomas Gresham.

OK: now on to Old North Church, Paul Revere and all that, Old South Meeting House, The Old State House (1713), New State House (1798), Boston Common (1634), it is the oldest city park in the United States.

 

Up on Beacon hill, the site of the New State House, you have a community built on land once owned by John Hancock and John Singleton Copley. The houses vary in date from the 1780s to the 1860s but form a cohesive neighborhood that has always been a socially acceptable neighborhood. It includes as an integral part, the African Meeting House (1806). Not a surprise that the abolitionist movement was centered here.

 

Back Bay is the great extension west of the Public Garden begun in the 1850s as a Boston version of Paris (Champs Elysées). Bordering the Common, the Public Garden (1837) has one of the oldest and smallest suspension bridges in the U.S. It is also the site of “Make Way for Ducklings” and the monument to ether. Along with the Common, it forms the beginning of Frederick Law Olmsted’s “Emerald Necklace”, our extensive park system and green space (1100 acres) begun as a project in 1878 and continuing today.

 

Back Bay has the Copley Plaza Hotel (Henry Hardenbergh-1912); H. H. Richardson’s masterpiece, Trinity Church; McKim. Meade and White’s finest extant building, the Boston Public Library. Town houses by Richardson, McKim Meade and White and other fine examples in a well-preserved Victorian and Edwardian setting.

 

The South End, Bay Village and Southie (South Boston) are all neighborhoods worthy of visiting for their architecture.

 

“substituted by "shoe box style" 60's and 70's buildings” Now to the bad. The modernist-inspired legions got hold of Boston in the 1960s and 1970s. They tore down Scully Square (they said they could end prostitution and bad morals by tearing it down) and replaced it with the not too felicitous Government Center. The apex of this monument to modernism is the Boston City hall (voted the ugliest building in the world—well, if you are going to do ugly, you may as well aspire to greatness). The head of the Boston Redevelopment authority was Edward J. Logue. He was brought from New Haven, where he was busy tearing it down. After he had torn down Scully Square and the lovely West End, the air went out of his program. Can’t say that I love or even like the newer buildings, but there has been no wholesale slaughter of Boston since Logue went.

 

“Bostonians still consider their city equal to NYC....” Absolutely not, we are a boutique city (600,000) based on history, culture, technology, research, and education. Does that sound like NYC to you? We are a bit outsized in the success of our sports teams from such a petit burg. But the equal of New York? NEVER.

 

“There's a lot of envy toward their aristocracy and the elites from MIT and Harvard.” Envy?? From … you? The Brahmins are in retreat, many of them have diminished family fortunes. A few have regenerated their finances through hard work. Boston is also a center for money management and new fortunes have been made though prudent investment. MIT and Harvard among nearly 100 fine institutions of higher learning have helped fuel technology and business. Digital technology, bio-technology, and capital have come together here and most Bostonians know that it has greatly added to the regeneration and vitality of this history-minded old city.

 

“Blue-collar Americans hate immigrants and everybody who can take their jobs.” This one is really not worthy of a comment.

 

Our more than 300,000 students and recent graduates keep our city young and vital. Come and visit and take a look for yourself.

Posted

here here jankeedaddy!

 

My history with Beantown is the same as yours (came here as a teenager almost 45 years ago), and my affection for it is also similar ... in part because it is a great, historical cultured, smart city of manageable size that is NOT New York. (Which I also love, but in a very different way.)

 

Many thanks for the long post that said what I would have said, but didn't have the time to write myself.

Posted

I didn't want to waste space and / or electrons, but yankeedaddy has it pegged perfectly. What other town in the U.S. of A. can you walk the LONG dimension in a matter of hours?

I'm a misplaced Midwesterner, who had a choice between Carnegie Mellon and MIT for a school. I chose the later.

 

Remembrances of things past: There was one (1) restaurant in Faneuil, Durgin Park, which had to be experienced. If you've never had indian pudding, you have no idea what nirvana is.

 

I wax euphoric. Although I live 35 miles away, Boston is still in my heart. Where else could a 19 year old sing with a symphony as well renouned as the Boston Symphony Orchestra?

I had already performed in Carnegie Hall by the age of 25, and have memories of performances that will be with me until I croak - which will be in about 35 years (I hope).

Guest verymarried
Posted

wow gallahad you should be able to get free escort service by offering to barter your singing :) - Yeah, I love Boston also. Does anyone get lost there driving or was it just me when we set out for the New Hampshire Coast and could not figure out how to get out of town? I mean I've never gotten lost driving in NYC, LA or in Europe like Boston! Great city though,

Posted
wow gallahad you should be able to get free escort service by offering to barter your singing :) - Yeah, I love Boston also. Does anyone get lost there driving or was it just me when we set out for the New Hampshire Coast and could not figure out how to get out of town? I mean I've never gotten lost driving in NYC, LA or in Europe like Boston! Great city though,

 

I am afraid that this is getting off the subject of “escorts in Boston.” But here is some information for escorts who happen to be IN Boston and, I believe, that it will find agreement from escorts who live IN Boston.

 

Driving in Boston is an Olympic sport with Olympian standards. It is not for the faint of heart.

 

For visitors to Boston, straight, gay, escort, client. Pahk the cah. If you want a good experience DO NOT TRY TO DRIVE IN BOSTON. If, perchance it is your car, and not a rental, park it safely and pay for parking. Do not attempt to drive it until you are about to leave town. Ask for exquisite directions to your intended exurban destination. If, however you have a rental car, dump it. Boston is, among other things, a walking city and a public transportation city (which also has cabs.) If you are a normally fit individual, you can walk anywhere in Boston that you ought to want to be. The “T” takes a little getting used to (OK a lot of getting used to. It is the oldest subway system in the western hemisphere and sometimes looks its age. Trains and cars will come up from the depths to fresh air only to go down again.) (Escorts take note.)

 

 

Now to the rules of driving: At the traffic signal: Yellow means speed up; red means go ahead; green is ‘proceed with caution.’

Speeding up as the yellow lights turn ever so gracefully to red is what you expect.

 

Except for the Back Bay, the streets were laid out by cows. Only cattle long-gone to their beefy rewards know why some of the streets do what they do. Inserting one-way signs has upped the ante as two one-ways face off and traffic comes together.

 

OK, you still want to do this?

The final driving test is following a 60 something Chinese lady with thick glasses driving east on Commonwealth Avenue in a large Buick with her right brinker on indicating that she is going to turn right onto Berkeley Street (a one-way street of oncoming traffic.)

 

What actually happens: she turns left across two lanes of traffic to follow Berkeley Street its intended direction towards the Charles River. She is untouched, unscathed, the brinker still brinking to the right, and… not a single Boston driver noticed. That’s how we drive in Boston.

 

“I've never gotten lost driving in NYC, LA or in Europe like Boston!” You got that one right VM. However, even I do not drive in Cairo, Jaipur, or Centro Storico of Roma.

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