<p>NORTH DAKOTA
i’m not even sure if it exists</p>
<p>wyoming.</p>
<p>there are less people in the entire state of wyoming than there are in county I live in.</p>
<p>and I don’t live in a county containing any major cities, it’s all suburban to rural</p>
<p>Arizona. Too hot</p>
<p>^^^Good…One?</p>
<p>Wyoming that state is practically empty, and Utah.</p>
<p>I live in New York City, and let me tell you, Upstate New York is NOTHING like the city. Its mountains, farms, and small towns. With some minor cities. People always think the city is the whole state. But going upstate feels like your in another state.</p>
<p>Oklahoma, I already live here and I DESPISE it here.</p>
<p>But I dislike almost all the middle states, way to plainsy, Christiany, hickish, and Boring (terrible grammar I know). I strongly prefer coastal states.</p>
<p>I’d probably go with empty parts of Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, etc.</p>
<p>For most states you can’t really generalize and say you don’t want to live in the entire state because some are so diverse. I’ve heard some people say Kansas as where they don’t want to live because it’s a wasteland. Having been to Kansas all my life because of family, that for the most part is pretty true. But, you’ve got the Kansas City area, Wichita, Lawrence, and Topeka areas that are decently sized.</p>
<p>Same for Missouri. Living just about half an hour away from somewhere can have a huge difference in lifestyle. But, for the most part as well, it’s St. Louis metro area, Kansas City, and Columbia and then everything else.</p>
<p>I would dislike living in any state west of the Mississippi excluding Lousiana, Missouri, Minnesota, Texas, Colorado, California, Washington, and Oregon. </p>
<p>I think I would enjoy living in New York (UPSTATE), New England, Pennsylvania (where I live), Maryland, New Jersey, or Virginia.</p>
<p>I’m going to go against the grain here and say most states on the east coast (especially the PA, NJ, DE, NY close to the city area). I’ve lived here all my life and found people to be extremely shallow and happy to live in the little bubble that surrounds their hometown. I would definitely love to live in the west (meaning CO, UT, WY) or the southwest BECUASE they are less populated and have access to many outdoor activities such as hiking, rock climbing, and fishing. Also, people in these areas tend to be more down-to-earth and judge people based on more than materialistic means. Just my 2 cents.</p>
<p>I also secretly want to move to Texas. I’ve always wanted to be a rancher/cowboy type :)</p>
<p>Maryland. Worst state ever. I despise the drivers up in Maryland (I live in Virginia) because they are so crazy!
On the other hand, I would love to live in Pennsylvania- lovely state with nice people and drivers up there.</p>
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<p>I would disagree with this. Maybe this is just where I live though. Do you mind my asking what part of the state you live in?</p>
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<p>EVERYONE that I know from Oklahoma said they hated it there lol</p>
<p>@NulliSecundus - I live about an hour outside of Philadelphia and go to a private school on the Main Line (obviously that explains a lot… love the school but not necessarily the people). I agree that there are pockets that do not fit my previous description, especially in the more rural areas, but have found the Mid-Atlantic and North East to be somewhat of a materialistic bubble that exists less in more rural areas of the county.</p>
<p>About the whole shallow people in the Northeast thing - it’s definitely true.</p>
<p>I went to visit Georgia Tech last April and actually found myself asking: why are people so nice here? They actually care about a stranger? Not going to lie - if you get really irritated at a fast, on-the-go lifestyle and rude people, the Northeast may not be for you (with the exception of Maine).</p>
<p>Wyoming and Montana are beautiful, though [road trip]. There aren’t many people, but if you’re at all outdoorsy or like peace and solitude, they’re nice places. Glacier National Park is especially beautiful in early fall. People in the northeast aren’t shallow, per se… they’re just not nearly as friendly or hospitable as southerners/midwesterners.</p>
<p>Alaska. I’d like to live in New England (namely Boston) or NYC (namely Manhattan)</p>
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<p>Yeah, we can thank Jersey Shore for that.</p>
<p>I’m not too fond of the South.</p>
<p>When I grow up I don’t want to live in Nevada or Utah since I’ve already spent too much of my life there already.</p>