It's only because Ohio is terrible and we either want to escape, or have the power to destroy it.
:thumbsdown:
I think Ohio is interesting because it is a regional transition in every direction. It's like the "Silicon" of America. While it's not definitively Eastern, Midwestern, Southern, or Appalachian, it has characteristics of all of those. The eastern central part of the state (Youngstown, etc.) is classic "rust belt" former industrial with a shared steel history with Pittsburgh. However, it never managed to reinvent itself the way Pittsburgh has. Cleveland has some "rust belt" syndrome as well, but it's also a Great Lakes city. I would say both cities would classify themselves as being in America's Northeast.
If you go south a little to say Steubenville, you still have the shared steel history. However, I would argue that that part of the state, in high beautiful wooded hills, has more of an affinity for West Virginia and an Appalachia feel. (O.k. It's hillfolk country. But the people still tend be very down to earth and friendly. Despite Jerry Springer stereotypes, I've always though this area was very beautiful and pleasent.)
In the western half of the state, the land is flatter and agriculture is playing more of a role. Columbus, Cincinnati, and definitely Dayton are more mid-western. I've never really stopped in Toledo, so I don't know anything about it. Columbus has an agricultural history but also has banking and is the State capitol. When I went to college, I felt my friends from Columbus... how do I put this...dressed a little nicer than us from northeast Ohio. In Columbus you would probably wear Khaki pants and a polo shirt to the same restaurant that a Cleveland-er or Akron resident could pull off in blue jeans and a clean t-shirt. Cincinnati has a twist in that it boarders on Kentucky and has been seen historically as an interface between the "north" and the "south." It's famous for being a major "underground railroad" destination of escaped slaves in the 1800s. Also, it's famous for it's riverboat history/pork product transportation, which are kind of "southern things", even though it isn't in the true south.
Dayton is the birthplace of the Wright brothers and the home of the National Museum of the United States Air Force (see my forum pic). This is an awesome place for aerospace enthusiasts. It has to be the #2 aerospace museum in the United States and probably the world just behind the Smithsonian. In some ways it rivals the Smithsonian. (BTW, they are in the process of building a new space hanger around an unused Titan IV booster, and a handful of recently declassified spy sats.) Oh, yeah, and admission is free. Sometimes, I feel bad because I think it's under-appreciated because of it's location. Dayton isn't as sexy as New York, Washington D.C., or even Seattle. But the museum itself is world class.
Food for thought: Both John Boehner (pretty right house majority leader) and Dennis Kucinich (as far left as any American politician can be) are representatives from Ohio.