50 Arlington because I think of VA not TX.
136 (Garden Grove, CA) was the first one that I wouldn’t have been able to pin on a map. I figured it was in the general Los Angeles area (and was correct.)
Never heard of Pembroke Pines (#148) either. I would have placed it around the Tampa/St Pete area, but it’s actually north of Miami.
The four Texas cities you missed are all within 40 miles of each other - they’re part of the Dallas-Fort Worth complex.
Aurora CO (#56) was the first one I had to stop and ponder. I said CO at a guess, and turned out to be right.
SS
I got to Aurora. A few more in the top 100. Some surprises. My home town of Philly is increasing after having lost nearly half a million in the last 60 years. But even if hadn’t shrunk it still would have fallen from third place to fifth. And who would have guessed that Columbus is larger than Cleveland (and Cleveland is still shrinking). No surprise that Detroit is shrinking.
I made it Aurora, Ill but it seems to me to part of Chicago. Garden Grove,Ca and I was out, no idea where it is.
The Reaver(Capt)
That was mine as well.
A lot of people do not know where San Jose is exactly in California. It gets overshadowed by its smaller, but more famous neighbors San Francisco and Oakland.
If the question is not which state, but the general location of the city within the state, I would lose at #20 Memphis. If I was shown a map of Tennessee with just two dots where Memphis and Nashville were, I would have to guess which was which.
I got hung up at Henderson, NV (#71), then Chandler, AZ (#80), and then Gilbert, AZ (#97). Perusing the list beyond that point, there are a few I’d miss, and they’re all out west. I do fine on eastern, midwestern and southern cities.
Exactly the same for me.
I got to El Monte, CA before I was clueless, although I correctly guessed CA
Garland, TX and Pembroke Pines, FL
I didn’t know Virginia Beach, but I was able to guess. After that, it was Aurora that tripped me up; I associate Aurora with Aurora, Illinois, and Wayne’s World.
Mesa I certainly knew—maybe because it shows up often enough in crossword puzzles.
I made it to #150 Peoria, AZ. Growing up in the Midwest, going to college in TX and living on the West coast for the last 20+ years was very helpful to me. Except when I got to Peoria, which I thought was the one in Illinois.
Well, no. It’s in order or size, why would a quiz accept the wrong one?
First one I got wrong was Henderson, at least as far as knowing the state. This would make a fun quiz on a geoguesser type site. You need to be within X miles and such.
Only because Columbus assimilated all of its suburbs, and Cleveland didn’t. If you count metropolitan areas, Cleveland’s bigger.
Me, I was stumped by Mesa. I knew it was somewhere in the Southwest, of course, but guessed New Mexico instead of Arizona. I also would have gotten Arlington wrong, as I would have assumed the one in Virginia.
And I know Aurora because I have a cousin who once lived there. It’s one of the most depressing places I’ve seen: Go to the top of the highest hill, and it’s all a sea of identical little white houses, as far as the eye can see.
EDIT: Oh, and everyone knows that the only Springfield that matters is the one in NT.
Same here.
Me too.
But for a lot of them I know the state but I’m not sure how accurate I would be putting a pin in a map.
If I heard Portland in a national broadcast, I would assume Oregon. In a local broadcast, I would assume Maine.
The biggest one that I need clarification on is Arlington. I know of the existence of Arlington, Texas, but without any other clue I would assume they were talking about the one in Virginia.
The biggest one that I don’t recall hearing about at all is Fremont, CA (96)
I might guess Arlington is in VA. Had to cheat to know Aurora.