Come for the football. Stay for the Beacon Drive-In.

Something tells me this is going to be a hard sell.

22 Comments

Filed under It's Just Bidness

22 responses to “Come for the football. Stay for the Beacon Drive-In.

  1. BMan

    Ah, the Beacon. On the shady side of Spartanburg (go Terriers) and makes the Varsity seem like a healthy choice.

    Like

  2. TennesseeDawg

    Like most people who aren’t from South Carolina….. we’ve never heard of it

    Like

    • Hogbody Spradlin

      It’s actually semi-famous in the upstate. Like the Varsity with worse food and no attitude, and the sweetest tea that ever made your teeth hurt.

      Like

      • Dante

        Again, like most people who aren’t from South Carolina, “the upstate”? Never heard of it.

        Like

        • Jay

          There are basically two parts to SC. Upstate and Low Country. Low Country consists of the coast, i.e. Charleston, Hilton Head, etc. Upstate is the flatter land. Columbia and Clemson are Upstate.

          Like

          • Hogbody Spradlin

            I usually refer to anything West of Columbia, including Greenville and Spartanburg, as upstate.

            Like

            • Hogbody Spradlin

              Columbia mIght be midlands. Then there’s the Pee Dee, home of South of the Border.

              Like

              • BMan

                I’m not from SC, but my firm has an office in the Upstate. Isn’t the Pee Dee that area between Greenville-Spartanburg and the NC border? And truly the crappy part of the state?

                Like

  3. KornDawg

    And they didn’t even mention South of the Border.

    Like

  4. Dog in Fla

    “Come for the football. Stay for the Beacon Drive-In.”
    And then to the Low Country for a hunting trip with the debs

    http://www.pigtailbrands.com/charleston-south-carolina/summerville-native-wins-yahoo-sundance-film-festival-shorts-competition-debutante-hunters/

    Like

  5. I post very little but I’m a Georgia alum originally from SC (I chose to go to UGa out-of-state to the chagrin of my Carolina and Clemson alum relatives).

    Lowcountry usually refers to the coast below Charleston, sometimes to the coast below Georgetown and only rarely to the entire SC coast. The coast north of Georgetown to the NC line is usually called the Grand Strand. Sometimes Horry (where Myrtle Beach is located) and Georgetown Counties are included in the Pee Dee, which is the area inland of the coast (bordered by the Pee Dee River, go figure) roughly to Sumter, where begins the Midlands. The Midlands run west past Columbia roughly to the Newberry area, where begins the Upstate.

    That’s your SC geography lesson for today.

    Like