There are only so many times you can go to the Zoo or the Riverwalk or the aquarium or Navy Pier or Magnificent Mile or the Art Institute or Millennium Park or Grant Park or Wrigley or the Signature Room in the Hancock Tower or the observation platform at the Sears Tower or the beaches along the lakefront or the Museum of Science and Industry or anything/anywhere else like Lincoln Park, Lake View, Evanston until you get tired of seeing it again and again and again. I've been alive since 1991 and I've seen Chicago every decade I've been alive. The way I see it, I have already lived in Chicago and even since moving away from it, I've been back there several times to visit again. It isn't anything personal or against any of these cities. The world is a big place and you only have one life. I have the same feelings about a number of cities. Regardless, I don’t consider myself as someone who thinks GaWC is a particularly great indicator for how much of an “alpha global city” a place is and I think pretty much anyone would consider the placement of the Miami area over the Bay Area to be pretty odd and not just in the sense of number of public companies with high valuations, but on a whole host of metrics.I think that’s a fair comment. I don’t know what triple-spacing means to you in that context. I did equidistant spacing for every tier going down with a space between tier names and the cities within that tier. It’s why people use dots for effects to make a distance. I’m pretty sure that double and triple spacing in this forum software gets eliminated into at most a linebreak for text in one line and then a linebreak for a single empty line. It being with Houston and DC makes sense IMO Miami being above any of them does not. I think Miami just lucks out a bit with the criteria vs SF getting shafted. I love your double and triple spacing for added effect to make an A- look wayyyy lower than an A. I personally am way more impressed by this: Here is the translation: GAWC created a list of certain law firms and accounting firms, and Miami has more branch offices of those firms than SF. San Francisco is placed in a tier than Chicago and Los Angeles-and Miami for that matter.
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