Ok I'm watching this video and have to say I'm a retired Chicago police officer who worked in 007 Englewood where you drove through and thing is the narrative you putting out here is not a good one and I see why based on the look of these neighborhoods. To call them Dangerous sure I can see on certain levels but if you a younger person hanging out something can happen to you but you are an adult and shouldn't be hanging in communities which you have no business and think about this you calling these communities dangerous but you drove through and nothing happened reason being because you drove through not stopping to converse loiter or anything like this even out west in 015, 011 or 013 if you did stop to visit a friend of family member residents won't bother you and 99.9% outta 100% of the time you won't be victimized. Offenders look for signs of weakness or you being unaware of where you are and surroundings or you in these communities overnight doing some shizzle you shouldn't be so be fair and honest here esp. in Chicago you can get caught up anywhere if you not aware of your surroundings point being what about all the looting and other BS that happens and continue to happen downtown matter a fact it's more crimes committed in better looking communities than it is in some of these downtrodden, distressed communities this paints too broad a picture. The citizens who live here sure they have their issues no doubt but they are not as bad as they are being shown here and they do not just daily do things to each other this is why you see kids running outside adult out side and even you driving along these " dangerous communities". It's really unfair to do this it's good people in these communities who work every day and are not on this BS, actually showing these communities like this just makes it even more difficult for these residents to make changes because of perceptions not reality. Go ahead get your views but it's more to this than the title suggests these communities are not tourist attractions and you giving tours well for me is a bit different if you driving south or west coming from another part of the country why would you even dare to venture here ? Seeing videos of this seems meaningless to me this vid popped up in my feed so I took a look to see and this is why I commented and as we see no one from what i saw said a word to you or bothered you and if they did and something negative occurred reasoning would be why are you over there what purpose are you serving other than to continue to make money off of views for your channel self serving with titles like this to interest people in seeing others down on their luck having to live like this in some cases below poverty levels. The government could assist in changing some of this but chose to ignore it all these vacant areas in Englewood were not like this back in the 60's 70's once more blacks started moving in and services began to stop as well as jobs this all is not fair in my opinion.
I’m from the Austin area of Chicago, I’ve been robbed so many times. But certain neighborhoods are not bad. I’m just concerned about dangerous neighborhoods and for anyone safety while driving in those neighborhoods.
A lot cleaner, especially in the housing blocks vs some cities. Lots of trees and some with huge trunks. The street-layout with green fronts is so much better than and row-home city and its hoods that lack trees at all and green fronts. The alleys not too bad also especially in neighborhoods with garages and putting the ugly power-line poles thru the alleyways. Chicago is far less the worst looking hoods vs those full of trash you see in other cities. Still, just so sad to see so many solid well-built brick buildings that will be a loss. Perhaps a new city one day will rise there where lost housing is and will be.....
You are spot on with the trees, and that's the big reason why it doesn't look as bad as say Philadelphia. My understanding is that it wasn't always like this. Chicago was a lot uglier in the 90s and earlier, before they started really gentrifying the city.
@@rob6409 When you are talking hoods.... street-cleaning sweepers, having alleys where trash and city lidded plastic trash bins are, SET-BACK of housing for green-space and still soaring trees (despite many lost to tree disease and storms). These are not about GENTRIFICATION as if it was gentrified... it would no longer be a hood by crime. It is CHOICE of their cities over their evolution. Chicago stuck with its grid with set-backs and alleys and standard lots with FAR LESS TYPICAL ROWHOUSING. Most singles, 2-3 flats, but also with more apartment buildings sometimes most of certain neighborhoods and blocks. Philadelphia had its original planner William Penn want his city to be GREEN. Even larger lots that did not come. Yet he did plan the ORIGINAL STREET-GIRD with TOWN PARKS and alleys and ALL SHOULD HAVE A SMALL GARDEN. Then his ideals got lost in SUB-DIVIDING LOTS with most alleys out... No Town Parks among blocks and GREEN was not a core value but for massive Fairmount Park thru along the one river. That SUB-DIVIDING MEAN MORE ROWS, gone was most alleys, ROWS on far more alley-sized blocks and the motto basically that ALL of any WAGE could own a Philly Row Home. Therefore small and tight meant poorest could and far far less need for Apartment buildings. Trouble that tight of a street-gird was not car-friendly at all. LESS GREEN IN FRONTS MEANT FAR LESS TREES being too close to homes.
@davidw7 Maybe it's not exactly gentrification, but Chicago made it a big priority I think in the 90s to start renovating it's neighborhoods. They tore down lots of old buildings and planted I think half a million trees over that decade alone. This continued to the present day basically. My point is that before this started happening in the 90s, Chicago was a lot uglier. Heck I remember even in the 2000s it was worse looking than now.
@@rob6409 What is true is that in the 90s. The Chicago mayor directed $$$ to ERASE more BLIGHTED buildings and back to Prairie of grass and tree lots resulted. Still that is not gentrification without people with somee $$$ moving in and renovating and building new in empty lots that is hoped for more one day. So yes if you have more dilapidated buildings standing.. it will look worse and did. Also.... the policy added boarding up those homes first if abandoned. Not leaving them windowless hoping kids and homeless would not get in. CLEANING STREETS MORE... and more trash bins and again... its alleys behind 90s of Chi streets maintained higher AESTHETICS of the trash there, the ugly power-line polls run there, additional parking and those hoods were once vibrant neighborhoods of some $$$ and those alleys got lined with garages. So efforts more pro-active in maintaining cleaning by street-sweepers and Garbage haulers not just leaving bags of trash around after going thru an alley, a proactive... making sure people cut their front green-space from high grass and lots they took over is plenty to now cutting grass adding to cost to the city. Also again, Chicago's CHOICE of STREET-GRID was not suddenly in the 90s altered to add more green-space where homes would be set-back for it.... that came LOOONG AGO. Trees SOARING could be planted in the 90s and soar today... still tree-planting just came in a few spurts and tree-disease and storms kept it a battle that still shows in hoods vs other neighborhoods in tree-levels. Philly chose it tight row-home sub-divided blocks for more and more rows on alley-size streets and ending alleys far far more to a walkway and no yards...CHICAGO DID NOT. It kept its grid from its laying by the government actually that already had alleys behind blocks more than any other American city and did not leave it till last growth to suburbs where some drive-way home, driveway home.... was used too. There was no CHANGE IN STREET-GRID that added FRONT GREEN SPACE. It was already there back to the 1800s. IN Philly. William Penn's Greene Countrie Towne was not realized... at least his original street-grid of Center City today when he could not keep his city as a suburban looking city of estates. Did his street-grid with Town Parks and alleys and that ALL should have a small garden. That was thrown out fully when PHILLY ALLOWED his grid that was already tight to be even SUB-DIVIDED EVEN MORE as we see across the city. Philly also stuck with typical row-homes even post WW2... though it did moderate and the far north region of course is suburban. A city of 60+% true row-homes if identical-built like a assembly line by common materials fully connected AND THEN SOLD TO PEOPLE depending on their means. Was different than Chicago chose. Chicago had its Great reset by FIRE. Philly was brick early for housing and Chicago was not. It was mostly wood-homes even had wooden sidewalks on its swampy conditions and mud streets in poorer immigrant areas and the Irish Ghetto is where the fire started as all them homes were wood, not rows but close-knit and dry conditions made it burn and burn destroying all what is its core northward today. 1/3 the city then sparking its industrial areas. Some residential areas south were spared.... but many of those areas got homes replaced anyway and ALL had to be Brick after the late 1870s. That gave-way to some choosing to build just outside the city-limits then very early township/suburbs and still not use brick exteriors.... most them those areas within a decade or 2 were annexed anyway as the city became the fastest-growing in the world late 1800s. The wealthier were allowed row-homes as less fire-prone and higher-end. The rest got un-attached homes as more fire-proof and those fronts of green NEVER DROPPED. Main Streets do have buildings to the sidewalk... just not off them unless dating back to when the city raised streets to put in new real sewer lines... some areas do date back to then with less front green and a sunken look as homes of the poorer were not raised... in areas spared from the fire at least. So all a cities choices matter in how it was built. The 90s brought a more proactive removal of blight for Chicago, boarding up homes without windows and if condemned and doing more cleaning of trash and measures to make sure TRASH PICK-UP was not neglected outside of strikes and some Cooovid era issues of workers. GREEN FRONTS WAS ALREADY LONG IN PLACE and TREES.... planting more just added to it minus loses in disease and storms.
So sorry 😔 for your loss💔 I live Milwaukee and I also lost my brother to gun violence 😔😭so I get it not a son or daughter but STILL very heartbreaking ‼️☝🏽🙏🏽
Sorry for both you guys loss😢gun violence is a serious issue that is ignored too often i live in NYC n recently loss my best friend shot in the back five times the pain never goes away..
Right!!! People who are not from Chicago would never understand. It’s by blocks not entire neighborhoods. You can be in a neighborhood that is crazy on a few blocks and really nice on others
@@wandak1889 gentrification has done that in Nashville tn . It’s like that hear , you will have a few sketchy streets and then some nice ones or hell even on the same street. I know Chicago is a lot bigger but we are not as small as we use to be either .. our neighboring city a few hours south is Memphis and that town is a lot smaller and runs up against bigger city’s with statistics all the time .
It amazes me how these videos go into poverish areas, and not one gun shoot or crime seems to be cited. People, please give Chicago a break. This is a wonderful city, and people usually mind their own business. Rich or poor, where there's people there is crime. Chicago is NOT the worst place .❤
I would like to stay in a nice executive hotel overlooking this, is it a hood or a ghetto? and sleep high above to pistol flashes on the ceiling like fireflies what a relaxing evening delight!
Haven’t seen not any police seems like they scared to patrol the hood but we all know what neighborhood they really patrolling or should I say guarding wtf
You say they are Chicago Ill most dangerous hoods. Im from Chicago born and raised here you don’t say a word and here you are criticizing my CITY CHICAGO. how dare you. How long you been here in Chicago
Why you people get on here making videos about neighborhoods in different cities speaking negative for one you’re lying to these people watching these videos two we do not have crime like that we would know the crime the killings and whatever else we have not one dangerous hood as you say if it was nobody would be able to go there this is not a war zone get it together
If its that dangerous why aint nobody shooting as you driving thru? Cause yhose areas not that bad the news makes it seem more than what it is! People come to visit and they see its not that bad
@@jayt4465I'm a tell you I believe makes a neighborhood bad 😞 or violent Drugs‼️and all that comes with they kill and fight territory who can establish drug houses on their block and the cartel is involved as well and they're are known to be violent a lot of people dealing are. Connected to the cartels their suppliers and you have to be cold blooded to survive in that lifestyle ‼️
@@jayt4465I'm a tell you I believe makes a neighborhood bad 😞 or violent Drugs‼️and all that comes with they kill and fight territory who can establish drug houses on their block and the cartel is involved as well and they're are known to be violent a lot of people dealing are. Connected to the cartels their suppliers and you have to be cold blooded to survive in that lifestyle ‼️
As a cat from Arkansas, when I was in the Navy people from Northern cities used to crack jokes on me for being a country boy from the south but damn you northerners be living jacked up. Chicago is my favorite city tho...
I'm from Chicago. My experience, country folk from the south are usually chill if you talk to them respectfully. Northsiders prefer to spew their ignorant bullshit behind closed doors for validation
Ok I'm watching this video and have to say I'm a retired Chicago police officer who worked in 007 Englewood where you drove through and thing is the narrative you putting out here is not a good one and I see why based on the look of these neighborhoods. To call them Dangerous sure I can see on certain levels but if you a younger person hanging out something can happen to you but you are an adult and shouldn't be hanging in communities which you have no business and think about this you calling these communities dangerous but you drove through and nothing happened reason being because you drove through not stopping to converse loiter or anything like this even out west in 015, 011 or 013 if you did stop to visit a friend of family member residents won't bother you and 99.9% outta 100% of the time you won't be victimized. Offenders look for signs of weakness or you being unaware of where you are and surroundings or you in these communities overnight doing some shizzle you shouldn't be so be fair and honest here esp. in Chicago you can get caught up anywhere if you not aware of your surroundings point being what about all the looting and other BS that happens and continue to happen downtown matter a fact it's more crimes committed in better looking communities than it is in some of these downtrodden, distressed communities this paints too broad a picture. The citizens who live here sure they have their issues no doubt but they are not as bad as they are being shown here and they do not just daily do things to each other this is why you see kids running outside adult out side and even you driving along these " dangerous communities". It's really unfair to do this it's good people in these communities who work every day and are not on this BS, actually showing these communities like this just makes it even more difficult for these residents to make changes because of perceptions not reality. Go ahead get your views but it's more to this than the title suggests these communities are not tourist attractions and you giving tours well for me is a bit different if you driving south or west coming from another part of the country why would you even dare to venture here ? Seeing videos of this seems meaningless to me this vid popped up in my feed so I took a look to see and this is why I commented and as we see no one from what i saw said a word to you or bothered you and if they did and something negative occurred reasoning would be why are you over there what purpose are you serving other than to continue to make money off of views for your channel self serving with titles like this to interest people in seeing others down on their luck having to live like this in some cases below poverty levels. The government could assist in changing some of this but chose to ignore it all these vacant areas in Englewood were not like this back in the 60's 70's once more blacks started moving in and services began to stop as well as jobs this all is not fair in my opinion.
Were you a good fed or more like Sam Brinton?
What happened to the cop Scarface from division and campbell
When is your book coming out..Damn!
It’s dangerous over there.
@@YvetteRivera-g5iI went to Schurz with a King named scareface from Diversey & Campbell in 1990
Post the names of the streets you are driving on. Names of the neighborhood would be nice also.
Thanks.
Agreed 👍
The area he is driving around is the west side of chicago specifically. garfield park and north lawndale.
Scary video tour of Chicago hoods. Urban decay, wastelands, shady characters, gangs, drug deals !
I didn't hear you getting shot at so apparently you are not in the most dangerous places! You're alive, be thankful! GOD BLESS!!!!
Same thing I was thinking 😊
It's dangerous but the topic is truth the video is facts
Lol even in the most dangerous places, people aren’t shooting in the middle of the day every minute you weirdo
Интересные дома, солнечно, мало людей, как то и красиво и грустно.
I wouldn’t be driving in dangerous neighborhoods in Chicago like that.
It's not dangerous
Everybody isn't @fraid like yourself
@@Conscious_Effort40fr these are the main roads too like madison and pulaski etc
Well everyone else isn't you
I’m from the Austin area of Chicago, I’ve been robbed so many times. But certain neighborhoods are not bad. I’m just concerned about dangerous neighborhoods and for anyone safety while driving in those neighborhoods.
Humboldt Park and Little Village checking in. 80s and 90s were WILD
Bro all the Hispanic hoods Belmont cragin lil village humboldt boty etc all was crazy🤣
A lot cleaner, especially in the housing blocks vs some cities. Lots of trees and some with huge trunks. The street-layout with green fronts is so much better than and row-home city and its hoods that lack trees at all and green fronts. The alleys not too bad also especially in neighborhoods with garages and putting the ugly power-line poles thru the alleyways.
Chicago is far less the worst looking hoods vs those full of trash you see in other cities. Still, just so sad to see so many solid well-built brick buildings that will be a loss. Perhaps a new city one day will rise there where lost housing is and will be.....
It's better than it was they clean a lot of it it comes a long way from what it was like
You are spot on with the trees, and that's the big reason why it doesn't look as bad as say Philadelphia. My understanding is that it wasn't always like this. Chicago was a lot uglier in the 90s and earlier, before they started really gentrifying the city.
@@rob6409 When you are talking hoods.... street-cleaning sweepers, having alleys where trash and city lidded plastic trash bins are, SET-BACK of housing for green-space and still soaring trees (despite many lost to tree disease and storms). These are not about GENTRIFICATION as if it was gentrified... it would no longer be a hood by crime.
It is CHOICE of their cities over their evolution. Chicago stuck with its grid with set-backs and alleys and standard lots with FAR LESS TYPICAL ROWHOUSING. Most singles, 2-3 flats, but also with more apartment buildings sometimes most of certain neighborhoods and blocks.
Philadelphia had its original planner William Penn want his city to be GREEN. Even larger lots that did not come. Yet he did plan the ORIGINAL STREET-GIRD with TOWN PARKS and alleys and ALL SHOULD HAVE A SMALL GARDEN.
Then his ideals got lost in SUB-DIVIDING LOTS with most alleys out... No Town Parks among blocks and GREEN was not a core value but for massive Fairmount Park thru along the one river.
That SUB-DIVIDING MEAN MORE ROWS, gone was most alleys, ROWS on far more alley-sized blocks and the motto basically that ALL of any WAGE could own a Philly Row Home. Therefore small and tight meant poorest could and far far less need for Apartment buildings.
Trouble that tight of a street-gird was not car-friendly at all. LESS GREEN IN FRONTS MEANT FAR LESS TREES being too close to homes.
@davidw7
Maybe it's not exactly gentrification, but Chicago made it a big priority I think in the 90s to start renovating it's neighborhoods. They tore down lots of old buildings and planted I think half a million trees over that decade alone. This continued to the present day basically. My point is that before this started happening in the 90s, Chicago was a lot uglier. Heck I remember even in the 2000s it was worse looking than now.
@@rob6409 What is true is that in the 90s. The Chicago mayor directed $$$ to ERASE more BLIGHTED buildings and back to Prairie of grass and tree lots resulted. Still that is not gentrification without people with somee $$$ moving in and renovating and building new in empty lots that is hoped for more one day.
So yes if you have more dilapidated buildings standing.. it will look worse and did. Also.... the policy added boarding up those homes first if abandoned. Not leaving them windowless hoping kids and homeless would not get in. CLEANING STREETS MORE... and more trash bins and again... its alleys behind 90s of Chi streets maintained higher AESTHETICS of the trash there, the ugly power-line polls run there, additional parking and those hoods were once vibrant neighborhoods of some $$$ and those alleys got lined with garages.
So efforts more pro-active in maintaining cleaning by street-sweepers and Garbage haulers not just leaving bags of trash around after going thru an alley, a proactive... making sure people cut their front green-space from high grass and lots they took over is plenty to now cutting grass adding to cost to the city.
Also again, Chicago's CHOICE of STREET-GRID was not suddenly in the 90s altered to add more green-space where homes would be set-back for it.... that came LOOONG AGO. Trees SOARING could be planted in the 90s and soar today... still tree-planting just came in a few spurts and tree-disease and storms kept it a battle that still shows in hoods vs other neighborhoods in tree-levels.
Philly chose it tight row-home sub-divided blocks for more and more rows on alley-size streets and ending alleys far far more to a walkway and no yards...CHICAGO DID NOT. It kept its grid from its laying by the government actually that already had alleys behind blocks more than any other American city and did not leave it till last growth to suburbs where some drive-way home, driveway home.... was used too.
There was no CHANGE IN STREET-GRID that added FRONT GREEN SPACE. It was already there back to the 1800s. IN Philly. William Penn's Greene Countrie Towne was not realized... at least his original street-grid of Center City today when he could not keep his city as a suburban looking city of estates. Did his street-grid with Town Parks and alleys and that ALL should have a small garden. That was thrown out fully when PHILLY ALLOWED his grid that was already tight to be even SUB-DIVIDED EVEN MORE as we see across the city.
Philly also stuck with typical row-homes even post WW2... though it did moderate and the far north region of course is suburban. A city of 60+% true row-homes if identical-built like a assembly line by common materials fully connected AND THEN SOLD TO PEOPLE depending on their means. Was different than Chicago chose.
Chicago had its Great reset by FIRE. Philly was brick early for housing and Chicago was not. It was mostly wood-homes even had wooden sidewalks on its swampy conditions and mud streets in poorer immigrant areas and the Irish Ghetto is where the fire started as all them homes were wood, not rows but close-knit and dry conditions made it burn and burn destroying all what is its core northward today. 1/3 the city then sparking its industrial areas. Some residential areas south were spared.... but many of those areas got homes replaced anyway and ALL had to be Brick after the late 1870s.
That gave-way to some choosing to build just outside the city-limits then very early township/suburbs and still not use brick exteriors.... most them those areas within a decade or 2 were annexed anyway as the city became the fastest-growing in the world late 1800s.
The wealthier were allowed row-homes as less fire-prone and higher-end. The rest got un-attached homes as more fire-proof and those fronts of green NEVER DROPPED. Main Streets do have buildings to the sidewalk... just not off them unless dating back to when the city raised streets to put in new real sewer lines... some areas do date back to then with less front green and a sunken look as homes of the poorer were not raised... in areas spared from the fire at least.
So all a cities choices matter in how it was built. The 90s brought a more proactive removal of blight for Chicago, boarding up homes without windows and if condemned and doing more cleaning of trash and measures to make sure TRASH PICK-UP was not neglected outside of strikes and some Cooovid era issues of workers. GREEN FRONTS WAS ALREADY LONG IN PLACE and TREES.... planting more just added to it minus loses in disease and storms.
Great exploration around Chicago most dangerous hoods. Tnx4d virtual tour. Watching from DUBAI
Dubai is awesome 👍
You not seeing anything cause it's not that bad
Go to the Latin areas you would get gang signs all day long!!
Matter of fact go through at night since you want to show bad neighborhoods.😮😮
I kno every street he is driving down I grew up over there and lost my eldest son and his daughter to gun violence
So sorry 😔 for your loss💔 I live Milwaukee and I also lost my brother to gun violence 😔😭so I get it not a son or daughter but STILL very heartbreaking ‼️☝🏽🙏🏽
Sorry for both you guys loss😢gun violence is a serious issue that is ignored too often i live in NYC n recently loss my best friend shot in the back five times the pain never goes away..
What I don’t understand is
Why am I in the video
I was just shopping😂😂😂😂
Dude this looks normal to me….but then I lived and worked there.
Stay off them side streets as much as possible. You’ll be ok!😉🌬️🌇
Obama didn't change shtt....
They got really cheap houses over there but here is the catch, after you do groceries, you may never get back to your home alive 😂
Ohh yeah I’ve seen this movie before the only thing that changes is the name of the town but the actors are the same
Beautiful. Driving city to city.
Great exploration 👍
its you hoodtime channel ?
I believe so, I cant find hoodtimes anymore.
For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.
John 3 : 17
Do a video on dangerous trailer parks start from from your hood 🤔
Right!!! People who are not from Chicago would never understand. It’s by blocks not entire neighborhoods. You can be in a neighborhood that is crazy on a few blocks and really nice on others
@@wandak1889 gentrification has done that in Nashville tn . It’s like that hear , you will have a few sketchy streets and then some nice ones or hell even on the same street. I know Chicago is a lot bigger but we are not as small as we use to be either .. our neighboring city a few hours south is Memphis and that town is a lot smaller and runs up against bigger city’s with statistics all the time .
It amazes me how these videos go into poverish areas, and not one gun shoot or crime seems to be cited. People, please give Chicago a break. This is a wonderful city, and people usually mind their own business. Rich or poor, where there's people there is crime. Chicago is NOT the worst place .❤
U act like crime goes down every second of the day. U watch to many movies
I would like to stay in a nice executive hotel overlooking this, is it a hood or a ghetto? and sleep high above to pistol flashes on the ceiling like fireflies what a relaxing evening delight!
Is this the old Hoodtime channel?
That's what I'm wondering ?
I 4got to add my son was 36 and his daughter was 25 when they died
Haven’t seen not any police seems like they scared to patrol the hood but we all know what neighborhood they really patrolling or should I say guarding wtf
atleast you can hear the birds chirping
Where are the boarded-up houses
You say they are Chicago Ill most dangerous hoods. Im from Chicago born and raised here you don’t say a word and here you are criticizing my CITY CHICAGO. how dare you. How long you been here in Chicago
U know dang well west Garfield park, Englewood, and north Lawndale are dangerous areas
I live in Chicago and I don't go into dangerous hoods
Sure wouldn't be there at night time
Driving around the same block smh
They show a Black face does not mean the most dangerous any thing
Pulaski & Van Buren
I Use To Live On Gladys And Karlov In The 70"s
The entire county of Cook Co ( crooked County ) Illinois is like O'Block and Englewood
Dexter Lombardo 🧔🤠 👋
Cleanest hood ever
I think you don't know what hood really is
Why you people get on here making videos about neighborhoods in different cities speaking negative for one you’re lying to these people watching these videos two we do not have crime like that we would know the crime the killings and whatever else we have not one dangerous hood as you say if it was nobody would be able to go there this is not a war zone get it together
Usually cauc@sian teenage femboys
The crime statistics tell a different story.
@@YanniMcNable but we're logical adults that know statistics don't mean a d@mn and can be swayed and more
The whole west side
South is dangerous ?
@@jorgeoliva232 both sides dangerous
Its not what he show you people
Show!
Why don’t you get out of the car and interact with the locals I could drive around all day in bad hoods
Ppl should mind they business and go about your day and you’ll be good
What are those guys flashing at the beginning of the video ? Looks like tickets?
$20 weed.
@@AnthonyHuerta-truthsayer Nice.
If its that dangerous why aint nobody shooting as you driving thru? Cause yhose areas not that bad the news makes it seem more than what it is! People come to visit and they see its not that bad
There were 109 people shot over the 4th of July weekend. Do you consider that good?
You just showed your stupidity!
@@jayt4465I'm a tell you I believe makes a neighborhood bad 😞 or violent Drugs‼️and all that comes with they kill and fight territory who can establish drug houses on their block and the cartel is involved as well and they're are known to be violent a lot of people dealing are. Connected to the cartels their suppliers and you have to be cold blooded to survive in that lifestyle ‼️
@@jayt4465I'm a tell you I believe makes a neighborhood bad 😞 or violent Drugs‼️and all that comes with they kill and fight territory who can establish drug houses on their block and the cartel is involved as well and they're are known to be violent a lot of people dealing are. Connected to the cartels their suppliers and you have to be cold blooded to survive in that lifestyle ‼️
The "best" country in the world....!
Do it at night..
I don't want to live in a dangerous place like this! No way.
Im not seeing any danger area in this whole video,
Is this hoodtime?
Humm, bugg.childs play.😊
Madison to start the video
Not dangerous.
As a cat from Arkansas, when I was in the Navy people from Northern cities used to crack jokes on me for being a country boy from the south but damn you northerners be living jacked up. Chicago is my favorite city tho...
I'm from Chicago. My experience, country folk from the south are usually chill if you talk to them respectfully. Northsiders prefer to spew their ignorant bullshit behind closed doors for validation