1864: City Nicknames
Explanation
This explanation may be incomplete or incorrect: stub If you can address this issue, please edit the page! Thanks. |
Cities often have official or unofficial nicknames. For instance, St. Louis, Missouri, is known as "Gateway to the West" among several other nicknames. The nicknames typically invoke some historical or geographic feature of the city, but can sometime be opaque to those not familiar with the city. The full, formal name of Bangkok includes a long list of superlatives translating as "The city of angels, the great city, the residence of the Emerald Buddha, the impregnable city (of Ayutthaya) of God Indra, the grand capital of the world endowed with nine precious gems, the happy city, abounding in an enormous Royal Palace that resembles the heavenly abode where reigns the reincarnated god, a city given by Indra and built by Vishnukarn."
Black Hat appears to believe they are near New York City, despite the skyline being clearly recognizable as St. Louis due to the Gateway Arch. However, the nickname he gives is neither a common New York nickname (such as "The Big Apple") nor a St. Louis nickname. Megan tries to correct him, but it becomes clear that Black Hat is making up nicknames. Many of his suggestions are puns for real nicknames of other places.
The title text contains made up demonyms in the same pattern. A demonym is a word for the people who live in a particular place. They are typically derived from the name of the place (e.g. "St. Louisan" for people from St. Louis), but some regions have an informal demonym that can be used colloquially by those familiar with the place to refer to its residents.
Nicknames and Demonyms
City nickname in comic | Reference | Explanation | |
---|---|---|---|
The Hot Tamale | Hot Tamales | ||
The Winged City | The Windy City | Chicago. Possibly also Incheon International Airport (ICA/RKSI), South Korea | |
The Gold Trombone | |||
Castleopolis | Cassopolis | Polis (from the Greek πόλις for city) is commonly used as a suffix for city names, like Minneapolis or Alexandroupolis; Metropolis can either be a type of city, or one of the real or fictional cities bearing the name. Appended to the base word "Castle", this would be the "Castle city". | |
The Kissing Kingdom | |||
Sandland | |||
The High Place | |||
Ol' Ironhook | Old Ironsides | A nickname for the USS Constitution (docked in Charlestown, MA). Possibly a conflation of Old Kinderhook (a nickname for US President Martin Van Buren) with Old Ironsides (a nickname for English Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell). | |
The Thousand Spires | The City of a Hundred Spires | Prague | |
The Graveyard of Kings | The Graveyard of Champions | Court 2 at Wimbledon, where former champions are often defeated (the playing environment is very different from Centre Court and Court One, which are larger and where games involving highly-ranked players are preferentially located). The comic was released one day after the 2017 Wimbledon Championships were finished. | |
Bloomtown | Boomtown | Generic term for a town undergoing rapid growth. Used in the 2002 TV series of the same name as a nickname for Los Angeles. Might also be referring to Bloom County, a comic by Berkeley Breathed | |
Lantern City USA | Tree City USA | A designation supporting municipalities that showcase urban forestry, in connection with Arbor Day. | |
The City of Many Daughters | |||
Big Mauve | |||
The Glass Cradle | |||
The Road Source | Rome | From the saying that All Roads Lead to Rome | |
London Prime | London | In mathematics, the prime symbol is used to indicate something that is derived from or related to something else. For example, x′ (read "x-prime") is usually used to denote the first derivative of the variable x. London Prime would therefore denote a city that is similar to or derived from the original city of London in the United Kingdom. Cf. various cities named New London in the United States and elsewhere. | |
Hamtown | Hamburg | A burg is another name for a city or town, sometimes more specifically a fortified town. | |
The Salad Bowl | A theory of cultural integration in the US, one that stands in contrast to the older 'Melting Pot' theory. Could also refer to the Dust Bowl | ||
God's Boudoir | |||
The Glittering Swamp | |||
The Steel Forest | The Concrete Jungle | The Concrete Jungle is a name often given to New York's Manhattan area | |
The Mobius Strip | The Strip is a shortened and commonly used name for the Las Vegas Strip, the main area of hotels and casinos in Las Vegas, Nevada. A Mobius strip is a one-sided piece of paper created by rotating the short edge of the strip 180 degrees and attaching it to the other short edge. The Vegas strip has more or less only one side as well. | ||
The Land of Trains and Fog | In the webcomic Homestuck a deadly game takes place on planets named in the format "The Land of X and Y" e.g. "The Land of Light and Rain". | ||
The Meeting Place | |||
The Dark Star | Dark Star is a 1974 science fiction comedy film. | ||
The Walled Garden | Walled garden (technology) | A walled garden is a virtual environment where the user can only view content that is published or permitted by the proprietor, e.g. AOL or Facebook. This could also be a reference to walled cities, e.g. from the Middle Ages, or the Kowloon Walled City in the modern era. | |
Skin City | Sin City | Generic term for a city well known for gambling, drugs, or other vices. Also Las Vegas. | |
The Horse Rotary | |||
Turkeytown | Turkeytown | A town in Lincoln County, Kentucky | |
The Naked Towers | |||
The Meta-City | Metacity | A term for a heterogenous, sprawling urban center with multiple dense centers, such as Tokyo or New York City. Metacity was also the window manager in the Linux GNOME 2 desktop. | |
The Urban Orb | The screenname of a Let's Player on Youtube and Twitch. | ||
The City of Angles | City of Angels | Los Angeles. Also, the titular City of Angles in the web novel City of Angles. | |
The Big Wheel | |||
Bird City USA | A program started by the Audubon Society. | ||
The City of Seven Crowns | City of Seven Hills | Rome | |
Hilltopia | The Hilltop | May be reference to The Hilltop in AMC's The Walking Dead | |
Bug City | A nickname for the bug-infested Chicago in the roleplaying game Shadowrun. Also, a sourcebook for the game. | ||
The Bottomless Cup | |||
Lorde's Fen | Lord's Fen | Lorde is a musical artist from Herne Bay, New Zealand - an area near Waitemata Harbour. A Fen is a type of wetland, which could loosely connect to Herne Bay. | |
The Last Town | The third book in the Wayward Pines series. | ||
The Empty Set | The concert hall in the video game Transistor. | ||
Ghost Harbor | The name for a brewing company in North Carolina. |
Demonym in comic | Reference | Explanation |
---|---|---|
Northlanders | Highlanders | Maybe a reference to the people of the Scottish Highlands, with a similar demonym. The "High" in "Highlands" is a reference to the mountainous landscape, not the geographical position. |
Fair Folk | The elves in The Lord of the Rings are referred to as the 'fair folk'. The fair folk is also more generally used as a name for fairies in folklore. | |
Honey Barons | ||
Lake Dwellers | ||
Treasurers | ||
Swamp Watchers | ||
Dream Farmers | ||
Wellfolk | ||
Rockeaters | Rockbiter | In the Never Ending Story, Pyornkrachzark, more commonly known as "Rock Biter" is a large creature made completely of stone, named due to their diet of rocks. |
Forgotten Royals | ||
Remote Clients | Remote computer client | In computing, a remote client is a program used to access a computer or service over the internet. |
Barrow-Clerks | Barrow-wights | Creatures in "The Lord of the Rings" that resemble wraiths. The Hobbits come across them in the Barrow-downs. |
The People of Land and Sky | Sea Peoples |
Transcript
This transcript is incomplete. Please help editing it! Thanks. |
- [Black Hat, Megan, and Ponytail are standing on a hill overlooking a city. The Gateway Arch is visible, as well as a number of skyscrapers in the skyline.]
- Black Hat: Ah, New York. The Hot Tamale.
- Megan: This is St. Louis. Also, that's not–
- Black Hat: The Winged City. The Gold Trombone. Castleopolis.
- Megan: It's none of those.
- [Close-up of Black Hat]
- Black Hat: The Kissing Kingdom. Sandland. The High Place. Ol' Ironhook.
- Megan (off-panel): Still wrong.
- Black Hat: The Thousand Spires. The Graveyard of Kings. Bloomtown. Lantern City USA.
- Megan (off-panel): Please stop.
- [Black Hat, Megan, and Ponytail are walking]
- Black Hat: The City of Many Daughters. Big Mauve. The Glass Cradle. The Road Source. London Prime. Hamtown. The Salad Bowl. God's Boudoir. The Glittering Swamp. The Steel Forest. The Mobius Strip. The Land of Trains and Fog. The Meeting Place. The Dark Star. The Walled Garden. Skin City. The Horse Rotary. Turkeytown. The Naked Towers. The Meta-City. The Urban Orb. The City of Angles. The Big Wheel. Bird City USA. The City of Seven Crowns. Hilltopia. Bug City. The Bottomless Cup. [Text size getting smaller] Lorde's Fen. The Last Town. The Empty Set. Ghost Harbor.
- Megan: How long does this last?
- Ponytail: No city has ever let him stay long enough to find out.
Discussion
I think "Castleopolis" is much more likely to be a reference to The Phantom Tollbooth (which I'm sure xkcd has referenced at least once before) than a *very* small town in Michigan. As I suggested in the table, The Phantom Tollbooth has castles and cities named Digitopolis and Dictionopolis, so this seems like the more likely reference to me. All open to interpretation of course! Erronius (talk) 23:52, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
For some reason I'm reminded of this comic. OldCorps (talk) 11:41, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
"Urban Orb" may refer to Boston, aka "The Hub". 108.162.219.220 (talk) 12:17, 17 July 2017 (UTC) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
Los Vegas may be sin city, but I'm pretty sure that Las Vegas is quickly becoming Skin City Seebert (talk) 13:01, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
My only guess as to "The Walled Garden": In the video game series Mass Effect, the name of the homeworld of the Quarian species, Rannoch, translates to "walled garden". Not something I really associated with xkcd, admittedly. PvOberstein (talk) 13:19, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
A guess at "Hamtown" instead of Hamburg would be "Hogtown", a common nickname for Toronto, Canada -- Harebenj (talk) 13:27, 17 July 2017 (UTC) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
The Mobius Strip is also a district in the fictional Perplex City. I'm sure I've seen it used in some cyberpunk-ish novel as well, but can't identify it off the top of my head. - 141.101.98.76 13:46, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
Well Folk might be a variation on Wee Folk. Thaledison (talk) 13:48, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
- I thought a similar thing, but about the Fair Folk. 17:03, 18 July 2017 (UTC)An Inside Joke (talk)An Inside Joke
"Horse Rotary" could be referring to a traffic roundabout, which are called "rotaries" in some countries. Kbseah (talk) 14:02, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
Some of these make me wonder if it might be easier to interpret if you connect adjacent ones. Seems to be easy to make the names of some real people/places/things by taking words from a pair of adjacent nicknames. For Example: The Urban Orb - City of Angles - The Big Wheel - Bird City USA - City of Seven Crowns - Hilltopia Could become: (...) - The Urban Angle - City of Wheels - Big Bird - Crown City - City of Seven Hills - (...) All of which seem to be Things That Exist™. Maybe I'm overthinking it :S - 141.101.98.76 14:39, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
No, I don't think you are overthinking this. If you just try and make random word associations you get interesting combinations. If New Orleans can be called the "Big Easy" and Chicago can be called "Chi (Shy) Town" then why not the "Big Shy" to the "Shy Easy", like Black Hat is just spouting out random words associated with city monikers (demonyms) you get a pretty humorous connection Rtanenbaum (talk) 17:14, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
Game of Thrones is based on the book series A Song of Ice and Fire, not Land of Ice and Fire. Correction made in description. OldCorps (talk) 17:01, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
From my perspective from USA there is nothing more inherently funny than the names given to people in British cities. That someone from Liverpool is called a Liverpudlian makes me laugh every time I hear it. But then again the town I grew up is was referred to with the pejorative "Dreary Erie, the Mistake on the Lake" Rtanenbaum (talk) 17:14, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
- Be proud though, not many cities can claim to have set a river on fire. OldCorps (talk) 17:39, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
- Agreed! Cleveland Rocks! Burn on, Cuyahoga, burn on. And a song to commemorate it [1] 108.162.219.88 18:08, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
Random reader here... It may be familiarity bias since I'm from St. Louis, but this is the third (or fourth) comic to my memory that highlights St. Louis when it seems like any random city could have sufficed (I'm thinking of 1321: Cold, 1368: One Of The, and maybe 1243: Snare) and I don't recall any other city getting name-dropped so often (at least outside of major metropolises). Have I just not paid attention as much when other cities are mentioned, or is the repeated use of St. Louis something worth including as trivia on these three/four articles? 162.158.62.63 17:36, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
- Boston (New England) beat St. Louis in Super Bowl XXXVI and Randall just wants to keep rubbing it in maybe? OldCorps (talk) 17:42, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
The Auditors ... wanted to simplify the universe by destroying it. Not so. They merely wanted to destroy humans and humanity, which are unnecessarily complicated from their point of view. To quote George Carlin: The planet is fine. The people are fucked.--172.68.154.70 18:52, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
Space Moose - Rumpleshithead. NSFW, I guess, if you work somewhere stupid. :-D 162.158.63.34 (talk) 19:33, 17 July 2017 (UTC) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
"The Kissing Kingdoms" Could be a reference to "The Kissing Kings," a common nickname for the two kings that are in the middle together in standard Bicycle new deck order. Dragonfiremalus (talk) 19:51, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
"The Land of Trains and Fog" is obviously Britain (or some portion thereof), famous for fogs/rain, and where much of early railroading was developed. There is a quotation about this someplace, (I think Rowland Emett referenced it in one of his cartoons). I just haven't been able to dig up the source. 108.162.245.70 22:51, 17 July 2017 (UTC)
The names in this kind of remind of towns names in Dwarf Fortress. Just randomly combined words. 108.162.246.23 (talk) 03:17, 18 July 2017 (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
"The City of Seven Crowns" also makes me think of the Seven Kingdoms (ASOIAF/GOT). Admittedly that may be because I watched the season 7 premiere last night. 108.162.245.166 (talk) 04:03, 18 July 2017 (UTC) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
Another reference for "The High City" as Denver could be the fact that Colorado has legalized marijuana, making it a place people go to get "high". 108.162.238.95 09:23, 18 July 2017 (UTC)
Hilltopia is also probably a reference to Zootopia, which also has been referenced before by xkcd regarding wikipedia discussion pages. 141.101.104.11 (talk) 13:37, 18 July 2017 (UTC) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
Anyone else think this comic was made specifically to troll this site? --108.162.210.154 15:33, 18 July 2017 (UTC)
Could "Bloomtown" also be a reference to the fact that many cities (especially in the Midwest) have "Bloom(something)" names. There are multiple towns called Bloomfield, Bloomington, etc... 108.162.237.232 16:48, 18 July 2017 (UTC)
Thousand spires could also be a reference to Kredik Shaw from Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn series. The name of the palace is literally supposed to translate as "Hill of a thousand spires". 173.245.50.150 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
Not sure how to edit, but Salinas, CA is nicknamed The Salad Bowl 162.158.255.82 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
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I've added Canberra to Meeting Place. It is really apposite to Canberra - but did Randall mean it that way? Some of these fancy labels are really generic! They could have come from almost anything. 172.68.254.102 (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
I'm wondering if it might aid readability to have multiple rows in the table for some entries, where there's multiple interpretations. 141.101.98.76 10:31, 20 July 2017 (UTC)
My first impression on reading the list of demonyms was that they all referred to some degree to the «Fair Folk». I believe some of the explanations given are a bit stretched, aren't they? Can't they all refer to basically the same thing?--188.114.111.17 13:45, 20 July 2017 (UTC)
Isn't "Graveyard of Kings" a reference to "The Graveyard of Empires", i.e. Afghanistan? --14:23, 24 July 2017 (UTC) -- Brandizzi (talk) (please sign your comments with ~~~~)
Walled Garden is more likely a reference to the Garden of Eden than to Babylon. The Farsi phrase for a walled garden is the origin for the word "paradise", I'm not sure that's worth saying. David Bofinger (talk) 01:28, 1 August 2018 (UTC)
I really don't think the fact that "The Land of Trains and Fog" is somewhat similar to "A song of ice and fire" qualifies as a reference to a TV show that is based on that book series but has a different name (GoT). Bischoff (talk) 11:08, 8 May 2019 (UTC)
Toronto is also known as the meeting place https://www.etymonline.com/word/Toronto Procrastinus (talk) 20:04, 28 November 2019 (UTC)
Why do you think that's Megan and not Danish? Nitpicking (talk) 02:51, 29 December 2022 (UTC)
- In general, because more like the typical Megan than Danish? As subtle as you might think that is. Well, it convinces me. 172.70.85.175 16:49, 29 December 2022 (UTC)