About: Boomtown   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

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rdfs:label
  • Boomtown
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  • Boomtown is a crime drama that aired on NBC for one 18 episode season and a second 6 episode season. Lasted from September, 2002 to December, 2003. It follows a crime from the point of view of the 7 main cast members and anyone else whose POV is important to the episode. This series provides gripping drama, three dimensional leads, some pretty good mystery plots, and all it asks in return is that you pay attention. Which is probably why it only persisted in its original form for the first season.
  • Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down (2, 3, 4) it's coming down, yeah Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down So here let's talk about the boomtown facts you've got stick up kids coming right at my back (right at my back) two blocks of reasonable rent and it's only getting smaller the rest of boomtown is only getting taller you've got ten miles of traffic and three hundred miles of roadway a million lights and they're lit over night and day all these lights going off like roman candles it's getting too much for me to handle Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomt
  • Call it the revenge of the boondocks. For several years now, the nation's entrepreneurial hotbeds have been migrating from the major urban centers to smaller cities on the periphery. But a funny thing happened on the way to Inc.'s 2006 Hot Cities list. Demographic trends have accelerated to the point that what once constituted the periphery is no longer, well, peripheral. Sure, longtime list-topping cities such as Phoenix, Daytona Beach, and Orlando again are posting strong job growth and continue to be great places to do business. But the nation's newest entrepreneurial hotbeds can be found even further afield--in cities like Bellingham, Washington; Port St. Lucie, Florida; and McAllen, Texas--places that have never registered as business centers. The rise of these small communities is th
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  • 154.0
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  • none
first released
Level Range
  • 11(xsd:integer)
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Enemies
Plaques
  • Disciple III, IV, V, Just Said No to Superadine IV, Scholar IV
Zone Name
  • Boomtown
Zone Map
  • Map_Boomtown.jpg
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Task Force Contact
  • none
Connecting Zones
Type of Zone
  • Hero Hazard Zone
VidiotMaps File
  • boomtown
Event
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abstract
  • __toc__
  • Boomtown is a crime drama that aired on NBC for one 18 episode season and a second 6 episode season. Lasted from September, 2002 to December, 2003. It follows a crime from the point of view of the 7 main cast members and anyone else whose POV is important to the episode. This series provides gripping drama, three dimensional leads, some pretty good mystery plots, and all it asks in return is that you pay attention. Which is probably why it only persisted in its original form for the first season. After the critically acclaimed first season, the show was hit with massive Executive Meddling. Andrea, one of the original seven, was written out of the show despite David McNoriss' arc being closely tied to her. Massive character derailment was given to each surviving member of the cast. But the final nail is that in this season it lost the Rashomon Style format that the show was famous for.
  • Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down (2, 3, 4) it's coming down, yeah Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down So here let's talk about the boomtown facts you've got stick up kids coming right at my back (right at my back) two blocks of reasonable rent and it's only getting smaller the rest of boomtown is only getting taller you've got ten miles of traffic and three hundred miles of roadway a million lights and they're lit over night and day all these lights going off like roman candles it's getting too much for me to handle Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down So here let's talk about the boomtown facts you've got stick up kids coming right at my back (right at my back) two blocks of reasonable rent and it's only getting smaller the rest of boomtown is only getting taller you've got ten miles of traffic and three hundred miles of roadway a million lights and they're lit over night and day all these lights going off like roman candles it's getting too much for me to handle Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down Boomtown's only based on image torn down and built up from one man's vision all the workers are up and gone feels like I'm sitting on a ticking time bomb, right Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down, yeah boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down Boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down boomtown's coming down it's coming down boomtown's coming down, down, down, down
  • Call it the revenge of the boondocks. For several years now, the nation's entrepreneurial hotbeds have been migrating from the major urban centers to smaller cities on the periphery. But a funny thing happened on the way to Inc.'s 2006 Hot Cities list. Demographic trends have accelerated to the point that what once constituted the periphery is no longer, well, peripheral. Sure, longtime list-topping cities such as Phoenix, Daytona Beach, and Orlando again are posting strong job growth and continue to be great places to do business. But the nation's newest entrepreneurial hotbeds can be found even further afield--in cities like Bellingham, Washington; Port St. Lucie, Florida; and McAllen, Texas--places that have never registered as business centers. The rise of these small communities is the most important trend emerging from this year's survey of the nation's hottest places to do business. As always, our list (which was compiled by Michael A. Shires, professor of public policy at Pepperdine University) puts the focus on job growth, which we believe is the best measure of a region's economic vitality--especially as it applies to entrepreneurs. The Small Business Administration estimates that small companies generate as many as three-quarters of the nation's new jobs; as a result, a region showing strong job creation is likely to be a hotbed of entrepreneurial activity. What's more, strong job growth suggests that a region's economy is expanding. That means new demand and new opportunities. To compile the rankings, Inc. measured current-year employment growth, as well as average annual job growth over the past three years and compared job growth in the first and second halves of the period comprising the past 10 years. The big difference this year is the number of communities surveyed. In years past, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which generates the job-growth data, surveyed 274 metropolitan statistical areas, or MSAs. This year, BLS surveyed 393--which has allowed us to paint a far more accurate picture of where the action really is. Red-hot Florida is the center of that action, contributing 19 cities to the list's top 100. Indeed, every one of the state's metro areas is experiencing significant population and job growth. The three star megaregions of the desert Southwest--Las Vegas (No. 9), Reno (No. 25), and Phoenix (No. 36)--boast many of the same advantages and are experiencing similar levels of growth. Now much of that growth is spilling over into even smaller areas, such as St. George, Utah (No. 2), Idaho Falls, Idaho (No. 10), and Bend, Oregon (No. 14). Says St. Louis-based demographer Wendell Cox: "This is the sprawl beyond the sprawl." The nation's largest urban areas continue to lag. New York City comes in at No. 292, Boston at No. 343, and Philadelphia at No. 392. This is in stark contrast with surrounding areas, such as the suburbs of Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. The industrial belt also is lagging; it accounts for five of the bottom 10 MSAs, including last place Muncie, Indiana. Admittedly, it's a lot easier for small, emerging regions to post big growth rates than it is for big, mature ones. Still, it's hard to deny the advantages of the boomtowns described in the pages that follow. We've profiled the top 20 cities in three categories--small (an employment base of less than 150,000); medium (150,000 to 450,000), and large (more than 450,000). We've also included some U.S. Census figures ranking the nation's cities on measures like median income, health, and education.
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