Of all the Boroughs, the one I’ve barely touched in my career as a scout is the Bronx. Sure, I’ve scouted the Zoo, and the Botanical Gardens, and Riverdale, and all the other places people typically mean when they say “Oh, I’ve been to the Bronx.” But not the real Bronx.

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Photo by Flickr user *Bitch Cakes* – click for more!

Then, last March, I signed onto a movie that was planning to film exclusively in the Bronx, in neighborhoods with pretty rough reputations. I gotta be honest: I was uneasy about it. Walking around with a pile of bright neon flyers and an enormous camera around my neck, I knew I was going to stick out like a sore thumb. I’ve had some bad encounters scouting in places like East New York before, and I just didn’t know what to expect in the borough Hollywood likes to portray as the most dangerous place on Earth.

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I was originally going to title this post “Is the Bronx the friendliest borough?,” but you know what? After four months spent visiting just about every corner of the Bronx, I feel I can answer that question unequivocally: the Bronx is the friendliest borough in New York City.

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Let me be clear: I don’t mean that people in the other boroughs aren’t perfectly nice. Or cordial. Or polite. Or amenable. But I meet a LOT of people in my travels as a scout, and if there’s one trait that seems universal to the New York personality, it’s what I’d call an elevated level of suspicion.

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New Yorkers are infamously suspicious of one another – just try saying “How’s it going?” to a random person on the street and watch him or her brush past you like you don’t exist. And of course, it’s often for good reason, as anyone who’s accidentally answered the “How’s it going?” question (spare change? got a metrocard swipe? want a free stress test? give me money for whatever cause is on this clipboard?) knows full well.

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But something was different in the Bronx. From the first day I started scouting, I found that people would talk to me out of the blue without any hidden agenda. For example, as I’d pass someone crossing the street, they’d nod and say “What’s up?” to me…and that was it. Could people really just be asking “What’s up?” just to be friendly? It didn’t make sense! But before long, I actually found myself answering, and returning the query.

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Things got weirder and weirder. I’d be in a deli, and someone would ask about my camera, and before I knew it, I was having a ten minute conversation explaining about the differences between camera bodies and lenses. Or I’d be putting up flyers in a building lobby, and find myself chatting about the weather with an elderly tenant checking their mail. And I swear, the friendliest Dunkin’ Donuts employees in the country are in the Bronx, of all things. In a way, it reminded me of the first time I visited the midwest, and was completely disarmed by how random strangers just kept having friendly conversations with me.

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But it was more than just casual conversation. When I’d be taking pictures of some of the Bronx’s lesser known historic areas, residents would always come up out of nowhere and start telling me the full history. I’d knock on people’s doors out of the blue, and they’d warmly let me in, proudly showing off the home where many had lived for decades, having survived the Bronx at its worst. No one treated me like a suspicious outsider, as so happens just about anywhere else in the city; I was treated like I lived next door (In fact, the only creepy people I met in the Bronx were the property owners from Manhattan, who always seemed to make uncomfortable jokes about about us being the only white people for miles).

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This is not to say there isn’t a dark side to the Bronx, or that bad things don’t happen there, or that when you visit you shouldn’t be on your guard, just as you would be in any other neighborhood you’re unfamiliar with. But the past four months I spent wandering through the Bronx have to be among the most enjoyable of my career, not only because of the beauty I got to see, but because of the people I got to meet and the wonderful spirit I found that I didn’t know existed in this city.

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To the Bronx: Thank you for a great four months. I shall return soon.

Oh, and one more thing. One day, I was getting something at a corner deli in a pretty dilapidated neighborhood as a bunch of 10 year old girls were buying candy after school. Just as they were leaving, one of them looked right at me and said, with the utmost sincerity, “You have really beautiful eyes,” then ran out.

I had to blink. Where was I????

-SCOUT

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  1. Walter Sarmiento Avatar

    I have been saying it for years! I grew up in Brooklyn, and moved to the Bronx about five years ago. There is no comparison, The Bronx is a much friendlier place to live and work.

  2. Peggy Mooney Ferguson Avatar
    Peggy Mooney Ferguson

    Thank you for seeing the real spirit of the Bronx, the wonderful people who live there . I was born and raised a Bronx girl on Kingsbridge Road that’s 192nd Street. At 21 I moved to Florida to get married and raise a family. I always missed the community I grew up knowing in the Bronx. I am so glad to see from other comments that it is as true today as it was when I was growing up, from elementary school at Our Lady of Refuge on Briggs Ave , to a teenager in HS at St Simon Stock on 172nd St Valentine Ave one block from Grand Concourse. yes so glad you were able to experience for yourself our great Bronx heritage and the legacy we leave behind.

  3. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    Well, you do have lovely eyes. 😉

  4. Old Skool Avatar
    Old Skool

    One of Prez’s (Lester Young) best lines was, “nice eyes”. Looks like you hit a chord with this one.

  5. Primmy Avatar
    Primmy

    I spent the first 39 years of my life living in the beautiful Bronx. I continue to work there, in the South Bronx. Every now and then I walk through the projects where I grew up. It’s still a nice place!

  6. D Avatar
    D

    Aww I love this post! My husband is from the Bronx and he is friendly and wonderful and amazing.

  7. Kent Avatar
    Kent

    Riverdale is a lot more varied – in terms of housing, income, and ethnicity – than people seem to realize.

  8. Joseph Avatar
    Joseph

    I have lived in Riverdale, Morris Park, and Pelham Bay and I think they are the best kept secrets almost in NYC. Everyone focuses on living in Manhattan or parts of Brooklyn and they pay astronomical rents, but in the upper parts of the Bronx you can find cheaper alternatives that give you the best of both worlds, city and suburban feel. Riverdale and Pelham Bay I believe have two of the biggest parks. Pelham Bay has easy access to 95, City Island, Wescthester, while Riverdale has beautiful million dollar homes, and has Metro North service. Morris Park has amazing Italian restaurants, loads of hospitals and good schools. The downside to these parts are that they are located at least 40-60 minutes from Midtown (59th street) via subway.

  9. HeyO Avatar
    HeyO

    Nice article. I’m interested to know what the movie is.

    One gripe with the article though… the Zoo – Botanical Gardens – Riverdale (and I’d throw in City Island and Country Club) are ALL the REAL Bronx. That’s part of the problem – the “good” parts are separated from the – seen by media – not so good. When the Lower East Side was a slum – no one said “that’s the real Manhattan” as opposed to the Upper East Side.
    It’s sad how the mainstream media treats the Bronx and I’m glad you recognized what is myth and what is fact. It’s definitely true that the Bronx was a very dangerous and run down places (some places never fell apart though). I was driving up University Ave. the other day from Burnside to the Jerome Park Resevoir and saying to myself “these buildings and this street are just as nice looking as West End Ave. – just with less moneyed residents”.

    Aside from that – great work!! I’ve seen some places in your photos that I didn’t even know existed! You have talent!

  10. HeyO Avatar
    HeyO

    Joseph – if plans go through – Pelham Bay and Morris Park will be getting Metro North Service in 2019! Making them even more desirable.

  11. HeyO Avatar
    HeyO

    JS50- you are right about that corner… It’s certainly improved since the 80’s and 90’s. There is a community garden/ farmers market there now.

  12. Anna Avatar
    Anna

    I moved to the South Bronx two years ago when I moved from Chicago because I didn’t know any better. It was a wonderful twist of fate. My friends in Brooklyn think I’m crazy, but I don’t mind. I pay half the rent they do for three times the space and I love my neighborhood. We don’t have nearly as much stuff as a lot of Brooklyn or Queens, but we have what we need. Now a few great restaurants have moved into the hood, I’m perfectly content.

  13. Phillipe Avatar

    The Bronx IS the friendliest borough! You’re welcomed back ANY TIME.

  14. Miladys Avatar
    Miladys

    I was born, raised and still live in the Bronx and I fully agree with this article-it actually made me tear.This article nailed it Oh my goodness!Although we may not have the luxury stores like Manhattan and the trendy neighborhoods like Brooklyn, we have a rich and powerful history that has cultivated an inner city culture and movement that CAN’T be replicated.The Bronx has constantly struggled with poverty and a bad rep,but having less income does not make people criminals.Like my moms says, “we poor and ghetto,but that don’t mean we bad” LOL. People in the Bronx have less money due to residential segregation,gentrification and racism-but I won’t rant too much.So I guess we friendly cuz we know struggle.
    God Bless Da’ Bronx!!!

  15. Joel Rivera Avatar

    Thank you for pointing out that the Bronx is one of the best places to Live and Work.
    Being born in the Bronx and having worked here for such a long time, I can attest to the fact that the Bronx is one of the best places to live. We are home to Yankee Stadium, The Bronx Zoo, The New York Botanical Garden, Arthur Ave which has some of the best Italian Restaurants in NYC, City Island which has some of the best Seafood and with massive investments being made by Government and Big business, The Bronx is the place to be.
    Let’s spread the word, The Bronx is Building!

  16. Zoe Avatar
    Zoe

    I am transferring to Bronx NY, from Indianapolis Indiana in August. Would love any suggestions on places to live under $1000 in a safe neighborhood, pet friendly.

  17. Mike Avatar
    Mike

    Glad you like the burrough I was born raised and reside in. Now shhhhh

  18. Steven Jay Griffel Avatar
    Steven Jay Griffel

    For my most recent novel, Grossman’s Castle, I researched dozens of castles around the world to serve as a model. Ironically, the one that suited me best was Fonthill Castle–in the Bronx, where I was raised.

  19. William Avatar
    William

    Yes we are a very friendly and generally accepting people, but you must know as a concensus – we do not want our borough to become the next Williamsburg, or just another great location to make movies. For many of us Bronxites being in our beloved Bronx, for lack of a better word, is SPIRITUAL. We don’t want to loose that.