They've incorporated their culture and their values in the city and they've enriched the city
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Both like, from uh, you know a work ethic. You know the restaurants and the music and it's really a diverse city
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I mean you walk through the Vany Oven yu-you know you go through Korean neighborhoods,
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Old Jewish neighborhoods, Arab big neighborhoods, uh, Pakistani-Indian neighborhoods.
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It's incredible. The intensity... I think yeah, development has pushed us away from other people.
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You know, a lot of times people are rude because they want like immediate access or immediate information.
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You know some things in life can't be immediate, sometimes you gotta wait and let things happen
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People are like increasingly rude. Like I'll say someone will get in a cab, we'll say "I'll get em there in 5 minutes."
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And they'll say, "It should only take 3." Now who gives a shit if it takes 5 minutes or 3 minutes, who cares?
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At the end of your life nobody's gonna put shit I got in a cab in fi-seven minutes instead of three.
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It doesn't matter technology has made us slaves of the time.
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Naw, a lot of people that are really have technical jobs they're slaves to time.
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Time's the essences of life it seems like. And they're basically like losing it
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They're losing the essence of their life because, you know, their life is like just going away and,
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Their not enjoying it because their so engrossed in efficiency and productivity and shit like that.
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It's almost sad. They all come here from somewhere else like seeking their fame and fortune or,
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Their tap jobs and they're and caree-you know, in their in their industries.
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They get very engrossed in it and they into these you know these cell phones and computers
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And I think the real important things in life are you know, people and your family.
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I think you don't realize that, a lot of people don't realize that until they're older.
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I think there's going to be a backlash against technology.
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Street Guru (Part 1)
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Nitin Sawhney |