Difference between revisions of "Charlottesville, VA"
m |
|||
Line 49: | Line 49: | ||
==Charlottesville and the outside world== | ==Charlottesville and the outside world== | ||
Look up Charlottesville on a map of Virginia or the eastern seaboard at large and its isolation becomes clear. The next largest city nearby is Richmond, 75 miles to the southeast. | Look up Charlottesville on a map of Virginia or the eastern seaboard at large and its isolation becomes clear. The next largest city nearby is Richmond, 75 miles (121 km) to the southeast. Washington, DC is 96 miles (154 km) to the northeast. To the north, south, and west lie wide expanses of not very much at all, unless you count the strip of small towns along the I-81 corridor that runs up Virginia's western border. | ||
Chris's accounts of his life to date show no evidence that he's ever seen much of the world outside the Charlottesville area. When he was a teenager, his family temporarily relocated to Chesterfield | Chris's accounts of his life to date show no evidence that he's ever seen much of the world outside the Charlottesville area. When he was a teenager, his family temporarily relocated to Chesterfield County, a semi-rural region south of Richmond, but that hardly counts as a change of scenery compared to his home suburb of Ruckersville, as the two areas are practically indistinguishable. His trip to Ohio in search of [[Julie]], and a brief visit with his brother [[Cole Smithey]] in California, are the longest journeys he's ever taken away from his birthplace. | ||
==C-ville== | ==C-ville== |
Revision as of 19:08, 18 September 2010
Charlottesville, VA is, for most Americans, the home of Thomas Jefferson's home Monticello and the University of Virginia. For Christian Weston Chandler, C-ville (as he calls it) is home to Charlottesville Fashion Square, The GAMe PLACe, and various other stores he is banned from.
The town is so quaint that they drew a interactive map of the place so that it looks like a low budget 80's theme park. According to the map the entrance of the town is guarded by the world's biggest knight.
Ride the racist roller-coaster Y'all!
CWC ON LOCATION | |
---|---|
Photo: | |
Location: | Charlottesville, VA |
Coordinates: | 38°1′48″N 78°28′44″W |
Classification: | Independent city |
Date established: | 1762 |
Population: | 45,049 |
Zip/post code: | 22901-22908 |
Area code: | 434 |
Website: | http://www.charlottesville.org/ |
Also known as: | C-ville |
Produces: | Political discord, indie music and somewhere for people in Ruckersville to go |
Current relevance: | Chris stalks people at various retail locations. |
Map
Charlottesville and the outside world
Look up Charlottesville on a map of Virginia or the eastern seaboard at large and its isolation becomes clear. The next largest city nearby is Richmond, 75 miles (121 km) to the southeast. Washington, DC is 96 miles (154 km) to the northeast. To the north, south, and west lie wide expanses of not very much at all, unless you count the strip of small towns along the I-81 corridor that runs up Virginia's western border.
Chris's accounts of his life to date show no evidence that he's ever seen much of the world outside the Charlottesville area. When he was a teenager, his family temporarily relocated to Chesterfield County, a semi-rural region south of Richmond, but that hardly counts as a change of scenery compared to his home suburb of Ruckersville, as the two areas are practically indistinguishable. His trip to Ohio in search of Julie, and a brief visit with his brother Cole Smithey in California, are the longest journeys he's ever taken away from his birthplace.
C-ville
“ | And when you diss CWCville you disf—you diss every "C-ville" within these United States. | ” |
Chris, Do Not Dis C Ville |
C-ville is a common local abbreviation for Charlottesville, although it is used in print much more often than it is spoken aloud. Chris has used the word as a CWC-ism to refer to every town in the United States that begins with "C," but he specifically uses it to refer to both Charlottesville and his fictional town CWCville. In the Rollin' and Trollin' video, Chris walks around the Charlottesville Downtown Mall and the adjoining Pavilion, referring to everything he sees as a part of CWCville.
It is clear that he wished to use the term to link his defense of his fictional town to his supposed patriotism. Essentially, insulting Sonichu means you are insulting CWCville, which means you are insulting C-ville, which means you hate America.
People from Seville, Spain are rumored to be currently wondering what to do with Ricardo's dastardly comparison.