I'll let you lot decide how accurate this article is as I'm over here and you're over there.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1548957,00.htmlFor decades the streets of Greenwich Village beat as the counterculture heart of American life. From Bob Dylan and Jack Kerouac to the anonymous thousands fresh off the bus from Middle America, it has provided a sanctuary for the alternative and outcast or those simply fleeing a suburban childhood.
No longer. America's bohemian pulse has faded. Assailed by sky-high rents, chain stores and hyper-expensive eateries, Greenwich Village is starting to look more Wall Street than Beat Street. Last week a headline in the Village Voice, New York's venerable alternative newspaper, said simply: 'The Village is Dying'.
Another Voice column was more brutal. It called the remnants of the Village's bohemian lifestyle 'threadbare' and concluded that poor poets, struggling artists and wannabe actors had been forced out by a simple new reality: 'One must be rich to live here.'
For many New Yorkers that comes as no surprise. The Village has been remorselessly gentrified since the 1980s. Neighbourhood coffee shops have become Starbucks, local diners have become chic restaurants booked up weeks in advance or have been turned into a McDonald's. Now the Voice's strident tone and a documentary called The Ballad of Greenwich Village have shown how the final nails have been driven into the coffin of a neighbourhood whose artistic contribution to American cultural life is unmatched.