> The trans reception is quite variable, depending on where in the
> city you are; there are areas which can be dicey.
Each time I go back there I'm amazed at the changes since I lived there, now 30-some years ago. Some areas which were iffy or even downright scary then (Williamsburg, Bowery/East Village, etc.) are now very gentrified and perfectly safe. Demographics of the neighborhoods have really changed too.
> (i.e. Times Square and the theater district) often seem to be the
> place where I am most likely to get a nasty comment -
Times Square has really cleaned up! Right now it kind of reminds me of River North in Chicago. Back when I lived there it was a cesspool!
Nasty! Ironically, the bookstore where I got the publications which first got me in touch with the then-fledgling TG community was right in the slimiest part of said cesspool!
> I generally think it's tourists making them, not residents.
I might agree. Most New Yorkers are very live-and-let-live, although there will be a few equine derrieres in NYC, as there are in all areas.
> As you mentioned Stonewall, the West Village is about as friendly
> as it is going to get in NYC
That area (Christopher/Bleecker, Sheridan Square, which is really not a square)
was very dicey when I lived there. It had, at the time, a very derogatory nickname, and even the most gutsy kids (we could drink at 18 at the time and sure took advantage) stayed out of the area.
Ironically, even though I lived there I did not know of Stonewall until later. I don't remember any news reports or even any scuttlebutt of the incident. LOL, Likewise, I don't remember Woodstock either until it was over.
> As major cities go, NYC is my favorite, it just pays to exercise
> some caution.
I don't have the exact figures, but I daresay fewer crimes against persons occur in NYC than in Las Vegas.