tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4439433637901486588.post3151279798243113710..comments2024-03-17T00:12:25.118-07:00Comments on Understanding Google Trends: American States: big citiesBungle Jerryhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11265636294975450516noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4439433637901486588.post-21234858620922727042016-09-13T21:55:24.048-07:002016-09-13T21:55:24.048-07:00Problem with your "regional hubs". You ...Problem with your "regional hubs". You included too few regional hubs. <br /><br />You can divide the US into these specific cultural regions, with their principal cities or metro areas: <br /><br />Alaska (Anchorage), Hawaii (Honolulu), Northern California (San Fran Bay), Jello Belt (Salt Lake City) Southern California (L.A.), Pac NW (Seattle), Rocky Mountains(Denver), Desert Southwest (Phoenix), Gulf Coast (Houston), Great Plains (DFW), Upper Midwest (Minneapolis/Saint Paul), Missouri Valley (No central cultural hub, but there's a split between Omaha, Kansas City and Saint Louis), Great Lakes (Chicago), Mid South (Nashville), Deep South(Atlanta), Florida(Miami), Mid Atlantic(Balt-Wash), Appalachians(Pittsburgh), New England (Boston) and the NYC area (NYC, Duh).<br /><br />If you go to any of those regions, the dialects, sports affiliations, voting patterns and cuisines follow those said cultural fractures. <br /><br />You won't get a good Key Lime Pie in Atlanta, nor would you get decent shrimp in Oklahoma City. Yet Houston is considered a hub city for OKC and Atlanta is considered a hub city for Florida. <br /><br />Don't cheer for the Yankees in New England. It's not safe. Yet NYC is considered a hub city in New England. <br /><br />Follow my suggestion for your next hub citie study. And just remember, some of these hubs have more than one city (Balt/Wash, MPLS/STP, SF Bay Area, DFW). You might get a plurality leader if you split the cities in multi-polar cities rather than the true major city in that region. I Hate Pedoshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07235509164627955150noreply@blogger.com