
New York accents are hated by a majority of Americans — and a shocking number of New Yorkers, too: survey
New York's distinct accent — the one that brought us Joe Pesci's defensive 'Funny how?' in 'Goodfellas' and Fran Drescher's thick 'Oh, Mr. Sheffield' from the sitcom 'The Nanny' — is rubbing a lot of Americans the wrong way.
Nearly 60% of Americans say they find the accent annoying, according to a new survey by Podcastle, an AI voice platform.
And it's not just outsiders who feel that way.
Advertisement
6 Fuhgeddaboudit! Nearly 60% of Americans say the iconic New York accent — think Edith and Archie Bunker of 'All in the Family' fame, as played by Jean Stapleton (left) and Carroll O'Connor — is straight-up annoying, a new Podcastle survey says.
CBS /Landov
A surprising 45% of New Yorkers agree that their own accent is grating.
'How we speak and how others hear us can shape everything from trust to how we connect emotionally. This survey shows just how much accents matter, not just in daily conversations but in the kind of content people enjoy and even those they find attractive,' said Podcastle.
Advertisement
Only 10% of Americans say they trust someone with a New York accent.
In contrast, folks with a Southern drawl were deemed 256% more trustworthy and 232% more appealing than New Yorkers, the survey found.
6 How we speak, and how New Yorkers like 'The Nanny' star Fran Drescher (above right, with Roseanne Barr) speak, shapes trust and connection — even attraction, Podcastle said.
6 Even 45% of New Yorkers admit their accent is nails-on-a-chalkboard, per Podcastle.
Podcastle
Advertisement
6 Brooklyn-born Steve Buscemi (right, with director Tolga Karaçelik last month in NYC) might not be thrilled with this survey.
Getty Images
Michael Newman, a linguistics professor at Queens College, told Fox News that the classic NYC accent is fading — but it's not going away anytime soon.
'Some of the features that have been traditionally associated with New York City English are diminishing,' he said. 'What's being lost is the final 'R.' You get in the 'caw' and you go to the 'baw.' It's now 'car' and 'bar.''
Meanwhile, a Guide2Fluency study previously found New Yorkers' accents aren't just annoying to people — they're baffling to artificial intelligence systems, too.
Advertisement
According to the study, AI assistants like Siri and Alexa struggled to understand New Yorkers' 'caw' and 'baw,' with AI algorithms ranking the New York accent the second hardest to comprehend.
6 Just one in 10 Americans trust someone with a New York accent — think Pete Davidson (above left, with Jon Stewart). Meanwhile, Southerners came off as 256% more trustworthy and 232% more charming, the survey found.
Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post
6 Cardi B also offers as a thick-as-the-South-Bronx accent.
Getty Images
Still, some say the sound of New York is the sound of home.
'None of us as New Yorkers really want to sound like we are from somewhere else,' Newman admitted.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hamilton Spectator
40 minutes ago
- Hamilton Spectator
Rick Mercer's long finished ‘Talking to Americans,' but he's got new ways to address neighbourly tension
TORONTO - Rick Mercer picks up the bottle of sparkling water he just ordered, puts on his glasses and inspects the label. 'Where's that from? We're not having that in the shot if it's American. Jeez,' he says, glancing at the video camera with an impish smile. It's a product of Italy, but he moves it out of the shot anyway. 'Are we rolling?' We are. On this Tuesday afternoon in late spring, Mercer sits in a booth by the window at a Toronto restaurant. The sparkling water, his now-discarded reading glasses and some notes he doesn't reference are the only things in front of him as he promotes his new comedy tour, 'Stand-Up for Canada,' which gets underway in September. The show's message, he says, meets the moment: one in which U.S. President Donald Trump has imposed punishing tariffs on Canada and threatened this country's sovereignty. 'That has permeated almost every aspect of our lives, but it actually hasn't impacted my act at all. I'm doing the same act,' he says. 'I decided a long time ago that everything I do was going to be celebrating the country.' Mercer believes people are looking for that now more than ever, given the animosity that's developed between Canada and the United States: a relationship that is in some ways foundational to our national self-image. 'If you want to have that conversation about what it means to someone to be Canadian, you've really got to dig because the first thing that nine out of 10 Canadians will do is they'll start talking about how we're different than Americans, which is no way to define yourself,' he says. 'What's happening in the country now — people are standing in the middle of drugstores Googling what's a Canadian toothpaste, and they're reading labels in the ways that they've never read before, and their making choices about whether they'll eat a kiwi fruit — that's new. But I think it's always been there: Canadians, we're a proud country, there's no doubt about it.' Playing off of this cross-border kinship is part of how Mercer became a household name north of the 49th parallel. His wildly popular segment 'Talking to Americans' took off on CBC's 'This Hour Has 22 Minutes' and spawned an hour-long comedy special in April 2001. More than two million viewers tuned into the special to watch Mercer ask Americans leading questions about Canada based on ludicrous stereotypes. Would they consider a visit to our national igloo? What do they think of Canada's national dish, the beaver ball? 'It really was one joke over and over again, but it was a joke that Canadians really enjoyed,' he says. The execution of that joke relied on two things, Mercer says: Americans' ignorance about Canada and their goodwill towards Canadians. 'I was aware that by and large Americans knew nothing about Canada. But they did know we were the neighbours, and they wanted to be only generous and kind to the neighbours,' he says. 'That has clearly changed somewhat. People are very suspicious of Canada. I think Americans are more suspicious of everyone, both inside their country, their neighbours, and then outside their country as well.' That Americans are looking more closely at Canada is one of many reasons the bit wouldn't work today, Mercer says. The list also includes the general mistrust in mainstream media and the likelihood that once-unsuspecting Americans might recognize him from online clips. For his purposes, that's OK. It seems like it's time to look inward rather than measuring ourselves against others, he says: 'In order for Canada to be good, Denmark doesn't have to be bad.' The temptation to focus on the giant underneath us is ever-present, but Mercer is practised at resisting it. He left 'Talking to Americans' behind when he launched his flagship TV show, 'Rick Mercer Report,' in 2004. Over the course of 15 seasons, he travelled across the country, poking fun at politicians along the way. 'When I was doing 'Mercer Report,' one of the big learning curves that writers who worked on the show had to deal with was that in our universe that we created, America didn't exist. Like, it really didn't. We were just like, 'we don't talk about that.'' Americans got enough attention elsewhere, he says, so if the show talked about entertainment, it wouldn't be American entertainment. If it talked politics, it wouldn't be American politics. Whether his September tour will take the same tack remains to be seen. It's early yet, he says, but he doesn't foresee dunking on the United States overmuch. Tickets go on sale later this week, but he isn't due to hit the road until Sept. 11, performing 22 shows in 38 days alongside comedians Sophie Buddle, Mayce Galoni and Julie Kim. This is Mercer's third standup tour. He's leaned into live performance since leaving TV behind in 2018. Last year, he toured in conversation with musician Jann Arden. He also wrote two memoirs, 'Talking to Canadians,' about everything leading up to 'Rick Mercer Report,' and 'The Road Years' about the time he spent on the show. 'If you're in my business, if you're creating TV shows, if you're doing one-man shows — which I used to do in my early 20s — if you're writing books, if you're writing scripts, it really helps if you love your subject matter. And my subject matter has always been my country,' he says. 'And I'm not saying it's perfect, not by a long shot. It's just, that's someone else's lane. Right now it's all about celebrating.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 3, 2025.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Stephen A. Smith rips Knicks president Leon Rose for ‘weak-a** statement' after firing coach Tom Thibodeau
Stephen A. Smith didn't hold back after the New York Knicks fired Tom Thibodeau on Tuesday. The ESPN commentator ripped Knicks president Leon Rose for acting like a 'coward' and putting out a 'weak-ass statement' after parting with the coach that led them to their first Eastern Conference finals appearance since 2000. 'To be quite honest with you, I think we all as New Yorkers should find Leon Rose's statement offensive,' Smith said on ESPN. "Get the hell in front of a microphone and a camera and answer questions. Stop being a coward.' The Knicks announced on Tuesday that they had fired Thibodeau less than a week after the franchise fell to the Indiana Pacers in Game 6 of the conference finals. Thibodeau led the Knicks to the playoffs in four of his five seasons with the franchise, and is coming off back-to-back 50-win seasons. Advertisement Perhaps most importantly, Thibodeau brought the Knicks back to prominence in the NBA. The team hadn't been to the playoffs in seven years before he landed in Manhattan. Rose said in his statement that the decision to fire Thibodeau was what was 'best for our organization.' 'Our organization is singularly focused on winning a championship for our fans,' Rose said, in part. 'This pursuit led us to the difficult decision to inform Tom Thibodeau that we've decided to move in another direction.' While Smith's comments came in the immediate aftermath of the decision, his issue is that Rose very rarely speaks to reporters about the moves he's making with the franchise. 'This is the problem with the arrogance of the New York Knicks, OK? They deserve credit for what they have achieved,' Smith said. 'I applaud them for lifting us from basketball purgatory into relevance … but in the same breath when you make the potpourri of decisions that you have made, can you have the decency to stand before the media and answer the questions? … That statement is as weak as it gets.' Smith isn't alone in his criticism, either. Plenty of others in the Knicks world had similar thoughts. The Knicks will now start their search for a new head coach. While there are plenty of questions about the Knicks' moves now, and those aren't going away anytime soon, Smith doesn't expect anything to change. Advertisement Rose's statement, which is likely all he's going to get, wasn't good enough.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
'People Treat You Differently' When You're Rich, Says Mark Cuban. He Thinks Money 'Makes Ugly People Handsome And Pretty'
Mark Cuban doesn't sugarcoat what it's like to be wealthy. "It makes ugly people handsome and pretty," he joked during a recent appearance on the 'Your Mom's House' podcast. The billionaire entrepreneur and former 'Shark Tank' investor opened up about how money and fame change how others perceive and treat you. 'When you're on these lists and everything, people know who you are,' he explained. 'People treat you differently.' Cuban, who grew up working class in Pittsburgh, said he still values his privacy and avoids expanding his social circle. 'I'm not looking for new friends. My friends are my high school buddies, my college buddies, my rugby teammates.' Don't Miss:Invest where it hurts — and help millions heal:. 'There's a fame mist. Once you become famous, people like you a lot more. Same with money,' podcast co-host Christina Pazsitzky said, with Cuban agreeing: 'They go hand in hand.' He admits the attention can be uncomfortable. Even his kids sometimes ask him not to come to their basketball games because of the commotion. 'They know if I go, the other team will come up and take pictures,' he said. So sometimes he'll just come in the back door. Cuban says the biggest misconception about wealth is that it automatically makes life better. 'If you were happy when you were poor, you're going to be happy when you're rich. If you were miserable when you were poor, you're going to be miserable when you're rich.' One of his first big purchases? A plane. But he says the real luxury is time. 'The time that you save is money in the bank,' he told the podcast co-host, Tom Segura. 'The more time you have, the more money you'll make.' Trending: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: . Cuban shared a story from his teenage years during a newspaper strike in Pittsburgh. At 16, he and his friends drove to Cleveland, bought up newspapers, and then resold them in Pittsburgh for a profit. They stood on the corners in the morning selling papers for a dollar each when they used to be a quarter, with people even tipping them. That entrepreneurial spirit never faded. He says he's been that way since age 9 or 10. Today, he encourages his children to follow their own paths. 'You don't have to know what you're going to be when you grow up,' he told one of his kids. 'Just be curious. The more knowledge you have, the more capabilities and options you have.'Even with all his success, Cuban says he still reads daily and keeps learning, especially about AI and healthcare. He credits motivational speaker Zig Ziglar for helping him stay driven early in his career. He'd drive around listening to the same Zig Ziglar tape over and over to get motivated. Cuban then emphasized one of his core beliefs: failure is part of the game. 'If you're not failing, you're not trying.' Read Next: Here's what Americans think you need to be considered wealthy. If there was a new fund backed by Jeff Bezos offering a ?UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? APPLE (AAPL): Free Stock Analysis Report TESLA (TSLA): Free Stock Analysis Report This article 'People Treat You Differently' When You're Rich, Says Mark Cuban. He Thinks Money 'Makes Ugly People Handsome And Pretty' originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data