Posted on 05/21/2013 12:27:51 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Are you f*&!ing serious?
As a native Buckeye whos lived in Washington for eight years, this was my first reaction to the data analysis released today by our Marchex Institute, which found that people in Ohio curse the most in the country. Washingtonians, by contrast, curse the least. (WTF?)
The data also placed Ohioans in the Top 5 Least Courteous category. Apparently, residents there have a harder time saying please and thank you, which were the keywords that Marchexs Call Mining technology scanned for when aggregating data on pleasantries.
Its fascinating stuff. And it coincides with National Etiquette Week, a seven-day gentle reminder, if you will, to be civil and courteous to one another.
The Institute, Marchexs data and research team, examined more than 600,000 phone calls from the past 12 months. The calls were placed by consumers to businesses across 30 industries, including cable and satellite companies, auto dealerships, pest control centers and more.
The Institute scanned for curse words from A to F to S. Analysts then linked the frequency of those words with all 50 states.
Following Washington in the Goody Two Shoes category states where people are least likely to curse were Massachusetts (2nd place), Arizona (3rd place), Texas (4th place), Virginia (5th place).
Ranking behind Ohio in the Sailors category states where people are most likely to curse were: Maryland (2nd place), New Jersey (3rd place), Louisiana (4th place), Illinois (5th place).
Ohioans curse more than twice the rate of Washingtonians, according to the data. Washingtonians curse about every 300 conversations. Ohioans, on the other hand, swore about every 150 conversations.
The data also found that:
66% of curses come from men The calls that contain the most cursing are more than 10 minutes long. So the longer someone is on the phone, the more likely that call is to devolve. Calls in the morning are twice as likely to produce cursing as calls in the afternoon or evening. The Institute also aggregated state-by-state data on who says please and thank you the most. The Top 5 Most Courteous states were: South Carolina (1st place), North Carolina (2nd place), Maryland (3rd place), Louisiana (4th place), and Georgia (5th place).
(Anyone else sense a Southern hospitality theme here?)
Washington didnt make the Top 5 for Most Courteous, but it did rank in the top third of the country for saying please and thank you.
The Top 5 Least Courteous states were: Wisconsin (1st place), Massachusetts (2nd place), Indiana (3rd place), Tennessee (4th place), and Ohio (5th place).
This, I suppose, bears repeating: Ohio was the only state to find itself in the Sailor and Least Courteous categories.
Ohios state slogan used to be The Heart of it All, said John Busby, Senior Vice President of the Marchex Institute. One could argue this data adds an extra layer of meaning to that phrase.
You could also argue Ohioans are simply transparent, passionate people. Maybe we do curse a little more and maybe we dont mind our Ps and Qs as much as we should. So what? At least you know how we feel.
So Washington, take your Least Likely to Curse title and allow me to remind you of two chilling words: Seattle Freeze.
Nuff said.
Sonia Krishnan, Director of Corporate Communications for Marchex
This former Buckeye pleads absofrigginlutely guilty.
Bulls***!
That’s funny because I had an English teacher in school who kept insisting that Ohioans rarely swore.
So this Ohio-born lad earned a week of detention by telling her “the f@$# I don’t!”
Big truck drivers hate the buckeye because their state police are friggin’ assholes about speed limits.
Ohioans probably swear so much because they are a key state in presidential elections and get bombarded with ads every four years. “Ah, &*$#! Another Obama Ad!”
Not buying this about Ohio rating #1. I hail from the NY/NJ area and they got Ohio beat by a mile IMO.
I don’t think of it as cursing but more as an accurate description. We refer to the president and most liberals around here as the rock suckers.... without the r.
Excuse me, Baynative. I am sorry to bother you. Please ping the Washington state list.
Thank you
llevrok
Bull $he-it. It’s us Meesh-e-ganders, specially us rugged type wimmen folk livin’ alone out in da sticks.
As a New Yorker I’d have thought we held the belt. Mona Lisa Gambini in “My Cousin Vinny” was no exaggeration-by a long shot!
First, I would ask the question -— “How do you do it... physically” :)
Bullsh*t.
Well, I am not a cusser, and I hate it when people do it. But I live in MD, and I can see how our governor and many of our legislators could drive one to profanity. So, it’s no wonder we’re #2.
I recently saw an old video of Ian Fleming. Despite his use of suggestive language he never used 4 letter words. The interviewer asked him why and Fleming mentioned that his Scottish family and ancestors did not use foul language and he just didn’t like it, especially in print.
He did admit he sometimes failed while playing golf.
I will say I personally never heard either of my parents use any kind of foul language.
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