Apr23 |
Mayor Of Dirty City Bashes Other Dirty City
The mayor of New Orleans, Ray Nagin, recently spent some time in our fair city to learn about how we’ve gotten rid of blight. One might think it’s a little silly to go to Philadelphia to learn about anything but our plan to license the city’s tour guides, but apparently we’re done a good job on blight, too. What we, the city, apparently haven’t done well is keep it clean, or at least not as clean as New Orleans, which was scrubbed when Hurricane Katrina was nearly turned into the Lost City of Atlantis. (The city was built in an old riverbed or something.) Ray Nagin noticed this, and told a crowd in New Orleans about how dirty our city is.
Wait, so? Isn’t this city dirty? I mean, don’t we always bash it for being so effing dirty? The Center City District cleans up, but, ah, isn’t everywhere else just full of slobs? I know, I know, if you’re from out of town you’re not allowed to bash the city while we Philadelphians are. But, ah, getting upset because somebody called the city dirty? And, uh, isn’t every city dirty? But let’s let Councilwoman Jeannie Blackwell defend the city against Nagin’s joke:
She’s right. Our Art Museum is pretty clean. Only one or two of the paintings have graffiti on them. Oh, and 6 ABC made Ray Nagin apologize. Thanks, local media! Update, 8:57 a.m. Took me a little longer than I thought it would to find this. From Bob Alotta’s Mermaids, Monasteries, Cherokees and Custer: The Stories Behind Philadelphia Street Names:
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