City October 11, 2011 1:06 PM

Buffalo in One Word: Surprising

Buffalo in One Word: Surprising
Written by Jason Clement:

How would you describe Buffalo in one word?

I spent the better part of my summer either asking Buffalonians that question, or editing their responses into clips like the one you see below. The project is called Buffalo Unscripted, and through it I met over 500 Queen City residents who - believe me - had a lot more than one word to say about their city.
 
In total, we filmed for nine days at 25 meet-ups in 14 neighborhoods. Hardcore, right? However, despite all that behind-the-camera time, I just this morning settled on my one word for Buffalo. I warn you: It's not that exciting, but hear me out. 
Buffalo is surprising.
 
Yes, a lot of things about your city surprised me. Like when I asked Mark Lewandowski if I could borrow the Central Terminal for a preservation pep rally and he responded in a split second - and in what sounded like one word - with, "Surekiddontworryaboutit." Or when Rick Smith brought me to the top of a grain elevator and then threw me in the back of a Kawasaki for an, um, fast-paced tour. Or when we realized after a wrong turn and a complicated immigration process exactly how close Canada is to you.
 
Perhaps most surprising, though, was the effect the city had on me - both in the sundrenched days of the heat wave we filmed during (um, also surprising), and when I was home in DC looking at pictures and questioning whether the trip actually ever happened.

Sweet-film-Buffalo-NY.jpg
 
I will always remember the feeling I got - no, the feeling that tackled me to the ground - one morning at Sweetness 7, our chosen venue for caffeine abuse. Owner and general rock star Prish Moran was in my frame, sipping coffee and laying it down like only Prish can. It was during a response that started with, "It's all about the kids man," that my eyes veered away from the camera and over to the big table - the honeycomb of the always-buzzing beehive that Prish has created. In that moment, MGMT's "Time to Pretend" mixed seamlessly with the clanking of cups to create a soundtrack for a question I wasn't expecting to ask myself that morning: What am I doing with my life?
 

Buffalo In One Word: Authentic from PreservationNation on Vimeo.

That's the thing about Buffalo - there are (at least) two ways of looking at it. The half-empties will see the rust and the scratches and think it's game over. My week and some change in the Queen City led me to a different perspective, though. I see Buffalo as a place where, if you're willing to un-tuck your shirt and get really dirty, you can get it done. And by "it," I mean that idea that has always been in the back of your head - a restored home, a better block, your own artwork, a new business. 
 
Looking at Prish's big table, where you can watch ideas bounce and bump around like pinball, I wondered if I belonged in Buffalo. If I needed the challenges the city faces to push me into being a different, better, less predictable version of myself. If moving to a place where there's room - lots of room - to be bold would be the end of my conversations that begin with, "You know, I always wish I had..."
 
And I'll have you know the existential crisis didn't end when my house-blend-fueled buzz wore off. Just ask my dental hygienist. Seriously.
 
Two weeks after being home, I was due for a routine cleaning. As I eased into my dentist's teal leather chair, the kind woman who was about to manhandle my mouth attempted to break the basically unbreakable ice that comes along with that situation. "So Mr. Clement, what have you been up to this summer?" she half asked as she readied her medieval torture devices. Fast forward fifteen minutes (literally), and not a single tooth had been scratched or scraped. Instead, she was listening to me go on and on about a city that, up until that point, had only been the butt of jokes to her. I knew I was rambling, partly to delay the inevitable, but partly because it's like I had been waiting for someone to ask me...waiting for my moment to be a Buffalo booster.
 
When the appointment was over (no cavities...booyah!), she asked if there was a website where she could see Buffalo Unscripted's final cut. I jotted our URL down on the back of my business card, and after mechanically telling me to floss regularly, she said she was really excited to see it.
 
I think she was surprised, too.
 
Jason Clement works for the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Washington, DC. He invites you all to a party he's throwing on Friday, October 21, during the National Preservation Conference - the screening of Buffalo Unscripted. Learn more about the event and let us know you're coming on Facebook.

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It's kind of funny how an outsider's point of view makes you realize how great this city is, and can be. Thank you for your insight and reminding us of what we have going here. I think that the "challenges" we face are what keeps me here plugging away at my little piece of the puzzle. It's so much more rewarding than just having it handed to you.

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Buffalo's on the way back. It's obvious to all but the most pessimistic, who unfortunately still include an unhealthy share of the local populace.

We're a little behind and a little slower to get rolling, but I think in a generation we'll be way out in front.

There's nothing like living somewhere else and realizing just how good it really is here.

replied to brownteeth
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I agree which is why I do not worry as much when the younger population want to move elsewhere. It can be a real eye opener for some to how good we have it here and that the same problems still exist elsewhere. At least that's how it worked for me. I can only hope that those experiences will draw people back who now appreciate what we have and will fight for it.

replied to Jesse
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Sadly I have this sneaking suspicion that not all who want to see the premiere of unscripted will actually be able to see it as the seating at the theater is limited to the first 300 or so who show up. Would be great if they held a Buffalo Sabres style "party in the plaza" screening the premiere outside or perhaps opened up a second creen at the theater for overflow crowds denied by seating capacity. I think all who come are there to experience! Maybe i'm crazy but what if 500, 600 show up for this? The Buffalo area seems very much into this conference and will likely come with an outpouring of Buffalove for this.

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or at least I hope they have another showing of it!

replied to flyguy
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dear jason:

we welcome you with open arms. we have lots of cheap houses for you and all of your friends. just say the word and we will even help you unpack your truck.

i am serious. it sounds like buffalo is calling to you.

Score: 5 ( 9 votes ) Vote up Vote down Report this comment

Thanks for your thoughts and comments about Buffalo. I'm an ex-pat who has lived in the Boston area for the last 35 years and frankly, I'd much rather be living in Buffalo than in Brookline, MA. And, I plan to do so starting in the Fall of 2012. I and many others often look at Buffalo in terms of the "glass half empty, glass half filled" philosophy. I'm with the "glass half filled" camp. Buffalo took a lot of body blows in the last half of the 20th century. None was as damaging as the departure of the steel industry in the 1980's. It was awfully hard for a lot of people in WNY to swallow and certainly tipped the scales heavily in favor of the "glass half empty" camp. If someone had told me when I was a kid that not only would Bethlehem Steel (the biggest steel manufacturer in Buffalo) leave Buffalo but would eventually declare bankruptcy, I would have thought that they were deranged. The end of the steel industry in Buffalo also put a lot of Buffalonians on the defense for a generation.

What you tapped into this summer was how strong the "glass half filled" camp has emerged in Buffalo and among many ex-pats since the start of this new century. You tapped into the energy that exists now in Buffalo that is accomplishing much more on its own than our chronically pathetic political class could ever accomplish.

I've found over the years that the national stereotypical perception of Buffalo is incredibly whacked. When I respond to the snow jokes or the perception that all that Buffalo is is a collection of igloos surrounding a football stadium, I tell non-Buffalonians about all of Buffalo's architectural gems, the 5 FLW houses, Louis Sullivan's Guaranty Building, Richardson's Towers and Dorschmeier House, Daniel Burnham's Ellicott Square Building, the Saarinen's Kleinhans Music Hall and our Olmsted designed park system. Their reaction to this information is similar to the one I'd get if I told them that life has been discovered on Mars. Thanks to you and your coworkers and all of the National Trust's staff and efforts for helping to show the rest of the country what Buffalo has to offer.

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Yes, Jason- we will help you get your footing here in Buffalo. The same was done for me three years ago. We are, after all, the City of Good Neighbors! Heed the call you hear in your heart, and you won't be sorry!

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I have never heard anyone say it like this before, but, Jason, you nailed it, and it couldn't be any more true in any city in America.

"I see Buffalo as a place where, if you're willing to un-tuck your shirt and get really dirty, you can get it done. And by "it," I mean that idea that has always been in the back of your head - a restored home, a better block, your own artwork, a new business"

Thank you for the perspective!

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Excellent piece!

I've been a lifelong Buffalo resident. My girlfriend (now my wife) temporarily moved to Boston last year and I had the same soul-searching conversations. What am I doing with my life? I stayed in Buffalo while she was in Boston, but essentially lived in both cities equally.

We love Boston, I mean absolutely LOVE Boston (me more than her), but now that we're here permanently, it's like we're discovering a whole new city that we didn't think existed. Buffalo has the same character we love about spots in Boston or Toronto, but much more down-to-earth people. I'm not over Boston yet, but I'm falling in love with Buffalo all over again.

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Jason, you had us at hello.

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Thanks for the feedback and just another idea that leads to more ideas via BR. I like the concept of something like Buff Unscripted streaming upon the face of a grain elevator. I know the idea of lighting and movies etc has come up in the past and to me it would seem would be most suited directly upon the elevator across from the Inner Harbor nearest the lighthouse. Seems streaming things like Buffalo Unscripted, A Million Reasons, Forgotten Buffalo vids about Polonia, etc., Buffalo: A Sense of Place, Buffalo: This Place Matters, Things that arent there anymore WNED, local sports highlight collections, etc....locally sensitive stuff, would be a great addition to the inner harbor. Theres a ton of content out there already. Heck, throw in the Goo Goo Dolls live in Buffalo concert and Off Limits show shot in WNY and you have hours of great footage, information, and its all local, all real to the area and probably cool for tourists as well. On Halloween bring out special playbacks of Ghost Hunters as Central Terminal or Most Haunted places in WNY, etc. These are all feathers in Buffalo and WNY's hat! Show them off and stream them on a large scale!

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Brilliant. Going seven years strong since the buzz first hit me.

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I can say that in the year plus since I moved here from NYC where I grew up I've been very much surprised by Buffalo, and much of that surprise has been positive and encouraging for the future of the city. Cant wait to be a part of it.

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Jason it was a pleasure to meet you and your crew at both the Central Terminal and at the Richardson tour. I'm so happy that you see Buffalo in a positive light and am encouraged that you have been passionately talking up our city to other outsiders. Can't wait for the premiere. My husband and I will be there!

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"both in the sundrenched days of the heat wave we filmed during (um, also surprising)"

I had to quote from Jason's article. Even this post has some negativity that to me goes beyond the uninformed. Why is it surprising to Jason that Buffalo would have a heat wave? Why is surprising to Jason that Buffalo would be "Sun Drenched?" The answer to that I believe lies within. Our own populace (that includes radio personalities, TV meteorologists, Buffalo News writers) perpetuate the image of Buffalo as a very negative place to be. Somebody (the skilled writer, Mike Puma) needs to do a story about this phenomenon. I recently have heard on a radio ad, "we are not too far away from that four-letter word: SNOW." You see how negative that statement is? How dare the media think that everyone in this city hates the snow. It's beautiful and I love the art of skiing. No snow, no skiing or skiing resorts or other winter festivities we love to enjoy. So why is SNOW a four-letter word? The more important question, why do the media have to portray snow as a negative event? Winter happens all over the world. It looks beautiful on post cards and holiday greeting cards and papers but when it's associated with Buffalo it somehow becomes an ugly four-letter word. That comes from within. Each day, on the back of the Local/Regional section of the Buffalo News below the weather map is a section called the "SUNSHINE DERBY." It compares Buffalo with Orlando, Syracuse, Rochester and Phoenix. And, you guessed it: Buffalo Beats all the other cities in the amount of sunny days each year except Phoenix. Buffalo is far ahead of Orlando and beats Orlando just about every year in the amount of Sun. But you don't hear about sun-drenched Buffalo too often and when Jason experienced it...he was "surprised." At least he took his surprise to his dental hygienist in Washington, albeit in a self-serving manner. So I say to Buffalonians and Buffalo wannabe's: Talk your city up not down. It’s just as easy to put a positive spin on a statement as it is a negative spin…in fact I am willing to bet it’s a lot easier.

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yeah...buffalo IS hearty.

you guys have real heart!

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Doc,
You are correct! Much of Buffalo’s negative image is perpetuated by the newspaper, TV and radio media. They are essentially Buffalo’s public enemy #1.

Snow coverage is a cheap news commodity. It takes an investment of substantial dollars (for reporters, etc.) to uncover significant news.

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