What is the first city that comes to mind when I say "Greatest City in the World"?

New York. I’ve never been there, so I’ve no idea if it actually is wonderful or not, but it’s the honest answer to ‘what is the first city that comes to mind when I say “greatest city in the world.”’ There’s a difference between the answer to that and the answer you’d give if asked what your personal favourite city was.

Most definitely yes.

San Diego, California.

You can do anything! Everything is either there, or at your fingertips. You can surf, ski, hike, ride thru the desert dunes, eat/shop downtown, sail, get to Vegas in a few hours, eat the best fish tacos in the world, check out the Zoo, Sea World, The Wild Animal Park, Lego Land and even get to Disneyland in an hour. There are Fighter Jets flying over your head on the daily, yet you can escape to quiet moments on the water or on a mountain. Plus, its sunny and rarely below 72degrees in the winter so you rarely are stuck in side and unable to enjoy all of the above!

But i’m a born and raised San Diegan… so i may be biased…

Why?

I like history too, but if we’re going by history Cairo’s history surely trumps any other advantage London has.

There’s only so much history a person can enjoy. There’s something to be said for newness, too.

Pittsburgh, naturally. :smiley:

Tolerant of new residents - yes, absolutely. Becoming a “local” in a matter of weeks? No - but I’ve never seen that in New York, either. New Yorkers IME are neurotic about how long they’ve lived in the city - they wear the number of years as a badge of pride, and condescend to people who haven’t been there as long. There’s a kind of smugness that’s the flip side to all the civic boosterism.

Londoners may not see newbies as “locals” either, but they’re less hung up on the idea of having lived in London as the be all and end all, and more interested in where people are from and where they’re going - which leads, IMHO, to a more genuine openness and inclusivity.

An interesting and well-preserved history is just one more of the potential boxes to check off in thinking of what makes a city great. I don’t know about Cairo, but Rome, for example, exceeds in the history but flags in the modern. London has the history of a Rome (well, not as long as that, but you see my point) and the newness and relevance of a New York.