It's all I've ever known. I have no basis for comparison but I can definitely speak with confidence on the merits of DFW. After 28 years, I'm allowed to be jaded by the metroplex. Texas isn't so bad. Actually, I have a lot of pride for the state. North Texas, however, is a pit. I can't say much about Portland because I hardly know it. I really enjoy life here so far, but only time will tell. The only other city (outside of Texas) that I know really well is San Diego. My wife is a 5th generation San Diegan, from an old Jewish family that used to own much of Mission Valley and started the nearby town of Julian. I've spent several months in various vacations there and I love the city, but would never want to live there. Otherwise, Texas is all I know.
To your points...
Food? Steak... yes. Absolutely, the best in the state. My dad was a traveling salesman who covered the entire nation over a 45 year career and he said that Dallas had to have the best steak houses in the country. What else? Every other cuisine is marginal at best, and much better elsewhere. BBQ? You want the Hill Country (3 hours south). Seafood? Go to the Gulf (6 hours southeast). Mexican? San Antonio has you beat (5 hours south). There's no good Italian to speak of and the fine dining is trumped handily by both Austin and Houston. Last I heard, Dallas has something like 6 James Beard winners and that's fucking pathetic for the 8th largest city in the US and 4th largest metropolitan area.
Bars? Night life? Perhaps in the 90s when you were here... not today. Deep Ellum is a ghetto, Lower Greenville is trashy, the McKinney Bar area is douchey. Oddly, Oak Cliff actually has some of the best bars these days and you can chalk that up to good ole gentrification. Still, even after such a small sampling in Portland, I can tell you with total certainty that they take alcohol 1200% more seriously up here than they do down there. And people actually go out and enjoy themselves. Most of the bars in Dallas are just depressing. I'm sure it's better elsewhere and my brother in NYC could make a stronger case than probably anyone, but listing the Dallas night life as a positive just shows you haven't really been here in years. We do have strip clubs, if that's what you mean.
Nature? Wait, you didn't mention this... and that's good. Texas has it, but not here. Big Bend is a national treasure, but it's twelve fucking hours away. The Gulf Coast is amazing, and six hours away. Palo Duro Canyon is awesome, and 6 hours away. I'm curious about the 'things to do' bit. We basically have some lakes, bowling alleys and bars. Whee.
Oh... Sports? Okay, you got me... it's actually a very good sports town. The fans are (often) terrible and both fair-weathered and bandwagon'ing, but the city does support them whole-heartedly. You'll never ever see a situation where the Rangers are threatening to leave to Vegas if the city doesn't build a new stadium or anything like that. Of course, everything - EVERYTHING - is secondary to the Cowboys.
When I started telling my family and friends about wanting to leave Texas, people often asked me why. I turned it around and asked them to explain what was so great about North Texas. They all replied the same - the economy and job market... and then randomly threw in various areas of the state
hours outside DFW as examples for Texas superiority. Yeah yeah, low cost of living. But you more than make up for it by having terrible commutes, high work weeks (#2 in the nation in average weekly hours worked, only behind NYC), ridiculously high tolls (Houston is #1 in the country, Dallas is close behind), high city taxes, high crime (Dallas lead the nation in violent crime through most of the 00s), abysmal public schooling and... the god damned weather.
Did you know that we had 27 days of 105°+ last year? It was the hottest summer in the history of Dallas. The average temperature from May to September was 89.8°. That beat the previous record by over a full degree and that was a record that stood for over 70 years. And we have humidity t'boot. It doesn't snow, it freezes. We have black ice and idiots on the road who think 4-wheel drive helps them stop better. And we have our natural disasters. According to the New York Times, nobody has it worse. Seriously,
Dallas is the #1 worst city in the country if you want to avoid a natural disaster. We have it all - floods, softball+ hail, tornadoes, hurricanes, wildfires, mudslides, droughts, high wind, lightning strikes... we even had a 4.4 earthquake last year. Go read the article. Guess where they said the #1 best area to live is. Oregon. They basically get a freak blizzard every 20 years and an occasional baby earth quake.
The morning after my wife and I decided that Portland was the right choice, I picked up my Dallas Morning News at the cafe in my building. The cover story was on the urban growth boundary in Dallas and it was basically describing 'how wrong' the city planners got it. The article described how you could stand in the middle of downtown, spin a bottle and travel one hour in whatever direction it landed; when you stopped, you would STILL be in the metroplex. And you would have passed through multiple ghettos, gentrified neighborhoods, sprawling shopping centers and countless car dealerships. In any direction, it would all look the same. The writers named one city in the states that got it right - Portland. It was a very condemning article and I'd love to show it, but DMN.com is subscriber only... I kept the hard copy and could scan it if you really wanted... Anyway, it was nice because we had decided the night before to make the move. Then here is the newspaper of Dallas explaining how badly planned the city is and how ONE city got it right and it's the place we're headed.
anyway...
You could just be trolling and that's fine, I haven't had any dialogue like this in a while up here and some might like to know why I'm leaving. North Texas is a cess pool. All the best areas of Texas are hours away and the one thing that Dallas has going for it is cancelled out by all the many negatives. I
can speak to all of this because I know the city intimately. It remains to be seen if I'll see Portland in such a light. What matters to me is that my wife told me today that she can't explain how blessed she feels to be living where we are. We hated North Texas and now we are happy. Mission accomplished.