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1[[quoteright:331:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Atlanta_11.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:331:♫''[[Music/LittleFeat Well you can drop me off on Peachtree]],''\
3''I got to feel that Georgia sun,''\
4''And the women there in Atlanta''\
5''They make you awfully glad you come!''♫]]
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7->''"Do you remember how Atlanta was way more relevant back before the 1996 Olympics? I do. ''That'' ended pretty quickly."''
8-->-- '''[[WebVideo/SuperBunnyhop George Weidman]]''' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vnh0l_Ecpx4 on]] ''VideoGame/SystemShock''[='s=] [[http://shodan.wikia.com/wiki/New_Atlanta "New Atlanta"]]
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10Atlanta is both the largest-populated city and the state capital of UsefulNotes/{{Georgia|USA}}, and the largest metropolitan area in the DeepSouth[[note]]If you don't consider UsefulNotes/{{Texas}} Southern that is. If you do, UsefulNotes/{{Houston}} is the largest Southern city, and [[UsefulNotes/DFWMetroplex Dallas–Fort Worth]] is its largest metropolitan area. In the eyes of Uncle Sam, both Texas and Georgia are in the Southeast, so Houston is the largest "Southern" city and DFW its largest metro. In the eyes of everyone else--including Northerners who know the first thing about cultural geography--Uncle Sam knows where to stuff it. For this reason, you will often hear the phrase "east of the Mississippi River" when describing Georgia's comparisons to other states.[[/note]], best known for being the current center of the HipHop world. The Coca-Cola Company (Pepsi is North Carolina blasphemy)[[note]]Coca-Cola's influence is in fact so large that "Coke" has become the [[BrandNameTakeover generic term]] for soft drinks in much of the South; ironically, however, Pepsi actually ''outsold'' Coca-Cola during the 1996 Olympics mentioned in the page quote. Bear in mind this is not something to bring up to an Atlanta local in polite company.[[/note]], Delta Air Lines, Chick-fil-A, and the CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) have headquarters here. [[UsefulNotes/TedTurner Turner Broadcasting]] (which owns CNN, Creator/CartoonNetwork, Creator/{{TBS}} and Creator/{{TNT}}) is also based there (having grown out of an independent TV station on channel 17). Atlanta can roughly be divided to areas within and outside Interstate 285, a beltway highway that is known for insane traffic and referred to by locals as "The Perimeter". Atlanta also has the busiest airport in the world and if you have flown in or through the US more than a couple of times, you ''will'' have had a layover there at least once.
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13Atlanta has [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peachtree_Street at least seventeen streets]] named with variations on Peachtree[[note]]Many European plants not normally thought of as aggressive [[AlienKudzu went berserk]] when introduced to the Americas. Much of the Deep South was overrun by peach trees; UsefulNotes/{{Argentina}} was smothered by feral spinach. (For a twentieth-century repeat of this story, see... ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kudzu_in_the_United_States that]]''.) As for the frequency of streets name "Peachtree" in Atlanta, there is an oft-repeated story that at one point there was an ordinance forbidding Blacks from owning property on "Peachtree Street"--i.e. the one downtown--and that Whites renamed several unrelated streets "Peachtree" to take advantage of this; it's not clear if this is actually true, but it would surprise nobody if it were.[[/note]]. The city hosted the 1996 Summer UsefulNotes/OlympicGames, in which ''East African'' marathon runners collapsed with heatstroke.[[note]] Actually not that surprising once you realize that most elite East African runners grew up in high-altitude regions with temperatures considerably cooler than Atlanta summers. For example, the highest temperature ''ever'' recorded in the Kenyan city of Eldoret, home to ''many'' of that country's greatest runners (lowest elevation 7100 ft/2100 m), is 87.1 °F/30.5 °C—which is slightly cooler than Atlanta's ''average'' summer high. Typical highs in Eldoret are closer to 75°F/24 °C, a touch warmer than Atlanta's typical summer ''lows'', and typical lows in Eldoret drop below 50 °F/10 °C.[[/note]] The city infamously listed Olive Garden as the best Italian restaurant in the city in the guidebooks for said Olympics. Right by Centennial Park is the Georgia Aquarium, the world's largest indoor one. Due to its location in the South, Atlanta rarely receives snow and is famous for (from an outsider's perspective) overreacting to even hints of incoming snow; two inches[[note]]~5 cm[[/note]] of snow in January 2014 led to the whole city shutting down for nearly a week, epic traffic jams resulting in many people stuck in traffic for ''24 hours'', and several deaths.[[note]]The actual circumstances behind what came to be known as the "Snowpocalypse" was actually a unique set of incidents that likely would have overwhelmed any Southern city unused to snow: The snowfall began early in the week, during the busiest part of the day, and came down abnormally heavy in a very short amount of time, essentially overwhelming the public services of a city that typically only deals with light flurries and the occasional overnight heavy snowfall. This not only caused heavy traffic jams on literally every major highway running into, out of, or around Atlanta, but also meant that the plow and salt trucks were more or less stuck right there with the traffic, and public infrastructure ground to a halt. The snow then stopped for two or three days, with temperatures rising ''just'' enough to cause the snow to begin melting, and [[HopeSpot traffic began to clear a little bit]]...and then the temperatures plunged and it snowed ''again'', causing the snow to mix with the melted ice and refreeze. This created, essentially, a sheet of ice over ''everything,'' including the roadways and vehicles stuck on the roadways. With the roads impassible to all but only the sturdiest offroad vehicles (it should be noted that, with the exception of public service vehicles, tire chains are ''illegal'' in Georgia), infrastructure nonexistent, and public services vastly overwhelmed, it ''was'' an apocalyptic, worst-case scenario for the city.[[/note]]
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15Hometown of civil rights leader UsefulNotes/MartinLutherKingJr, and was nicknamed "the city too busy to hate." It also prides itself on being the epitome of the "New South," with modern architecture and industry. Atlanta can be used as a "But Not Too Southern" setting, a good choice for artists who want a story in the South without using the tropes of the DeepSouth ''or'' SweetHomeAlabama.
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17It was originally founded in 1837 as the end-point of a railroad line to [[UsefulNotes/{{Tennessee}} Chattanooga]], for passengers and freight to be transferred from that rail line to a train to Savannah. This intended function was reflected in the city's original name: Terminus, a name with which an early-to-mid 1990s street-traffic-control software system (home-grown by Georgia Tech's computer-science department) was christened as an [[FunWithAcronyms abbreviation]] for '''T'''raffic '''E'''vent '''R'''esponse & '''M'''anagement for '''I'''ntelligent '''N'''avigation '''U'''sing '''S'''ignals, which at the time was considered state-of-the-art, that adjusted traffic-light timing on-the-fly to adapt to fluctuations in traffic congestion on Atlanta's streets, developed explicitly as part of preparations for hosting the 1994 UsefulNotes/SuperBowl and the 1996 Summer UsefulNotes/OlympicGames. It worked better than expected.[[note]]Transportation department officials could feed in a tentative pre-scheduled set of signal-timings based on events that would probably cause congestion such as a sports-game predicted to have high attendance. If that game got cancelled, the Terminus software system would detect the lack of congestion, and correct the traffic-light timings to what they would have been set to in the absence of the predicted traffic-jam.[[/note]]
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19The city's official crest portrays a phoenix, [[ContinuityNod in reference]] to being the '''only''' city in the United States to have been completely destroyed by war, and referencing the manner in which it was destroyed: burned during [[UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar General Sherman's "March to the Sea"]] (safety advice: be '''very''' careful about broaching this subject with the locals, lest you incur their wrath; politics notwithstanding, the destruction of Atlanta is still a sore subject even today). The phoenix also neatly symbolizes the city's return to prominence after the war.
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21The reason that Sherman's wrath descended on Atlanta is that, during the war, the city was the South's most strategic railway junction. Three rail lines (basically tracing the same lines as today's Interstate highways running through the city, see below) made it possible to move troops and supplies to pretty much anywhere in the Confederacy east of the Mississippi that was reachable by railway. In one particularly striking instance of Atlanta's importance, General James Longstreet's entire corps was routed through Atlanta in September 1863 as an emergency reinforcement to the Confederate Army of Tennessee, playing a key role in the South's victory at Chickamauga (at the northern end of Georgia, a few miles from Chattanooga, Tennessee). Recognizing the strategic importance of Atlanta to the Confederate war effort, Sherman made it the primary target of his spring-summer 1864 campaign. The Confederates were just as aware of how important Atlanta was, and fought fiercely all the way down from the Tennessee border to the city itself, finally being forced to evacuate Atlanta after a string of bloody battles around the city and a siege lasting two months. The Battle of Atlanta (actually fought near Decatur to the east of the city), on July 22, 1864, one of the biggest engagements of the campaign, is commemorated in the Atlanta Cyclorama, which was at one time the world's largest painting.
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23Rappers call it the ATL, after the airport code for the busiest airport in the world. Said airport, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hartsfield%E2%80%93Jackson_Atlanta_International_Airport Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International]], is city owned, and the city is not allowed to make any profit off its operation.[[note]] The airport briefly lost its "world's busiest airport" title in 2020 to Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport in Guangzhou, China due to the UsefulNotes/Covid19Pandemic, but quickly regained it the following year as shutdowns and travel restrictions eased[[/note]] In addition to being the busiest airport, it is the home base and largest hub of Delta Air Lines, whose presence at Hartsfield-Jackson constitutes the largest single airline operation of any airport in the world.[[note]]That doesn't even include Delta Connection flights operated by regional partners, the bulk of which is handled by Expressjet Airlines.[[/note]] ATL also is a major focus city for Southwest, inherited from their recent merger with [=AirTran=] who maintained their principal hub there. It seems like a joke when discussion about the city inevitably leads to the airport, but the scope of the operation there is really unlike anything else. This is especially due to the disproportionate amount of connecting traffic it handles (i.e. passengers just passing through who aren't actually originating or arriving there). Other cities with similar megahubs such as UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}}[=-=]O'Hare and [[UsefulNotes/DFWMetroplex Dallas-Fort Worth]] have much larger amounts of local passengers. An old joke in the South says that when you die, it doesn't matter whether your soul is destined for Heaven or Hell, no matter where you're assigned for the afterlife, the connecting flight will [[ForegoneConclusion inevitably]] have a two-hour layover in Atlanta. This joke is also considered common knowledge among airline pilots and flight-attendants in the 'States, and anyone who has worked in a travel-agency, or members of travel-agents' families are also likely to be somewhat familiar with the joke. Seriously, if you tell this joke to any flight-attendant working in the United States, they're almost guaranteed to laugh, or at least chuckle and give a little nod. Atlanta has always been a key transportation hub; as explained above, it was one of the most strategic locations in the South during the UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar because of the railway lines that met there. Today, three Interstate Highways, numbers I-20 (running west-east), I-75 (northwest-southeast) and I-85 (northeast-southwest), meet each other at Atlanta, connecting the heartland of the Southeast with the Midwest and the East Coast and Northeast, and making the city one of the most important hubs in the Interstate network (which also helps explain why traffic on the Perimeter is so awful).
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26When Delta faced economic troubles starting with the 2002 recession and ending with its 2008 exit from bankruptcy, the state government looked for ways to diversify the economy. [[note]] Ironically enough, Atlanta was wasn't hit as hard by the economic collapse in 2007/2008 as it was from the earlier[[/note]] They decided on trying to boost film production and signed the first incentives program in 2002 as an experiment before substantially beefing it up due to its success in 2008. Georgia passed UsefulNotes/{{California}} as the top state for film and television in 2016 and in 2018 was second in feature film productions behind UsefulNotes/{{Canada}}. The state, in particular, is a favorite filming location of the world's current most popular film franchise, the Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse. Most of the films since the 2014 production of ''Film/AntMan1'' have been filmed at Pinewood Studios in the Atlanta area. Also filmed around Atlanta is the Creator/{{Netflix}} smash hit ''Series/StrangerThings'', which was actually rewritten to be set in Indiana rather than [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkState Montauk, New York]] because [[RealLifeWritesThePlot suburban Atlanta looks more like the Midwest than Long Island]], but the setting had to be Northern for a variety of reasons (ranging from casting to the desire to avoid [[SouthernGothic the South's]] [[HollywoodVoodoo built-in]] [[HillbillyHorrors horror tropes]]).
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28Many old-fashioned Southerners detest Atlanta. The city is an upstart by Southern metropolis standards, founded in 1837 and incorporated ten years later. Its perceived cultural blandness, liberal politics [[note]]It's the unofficial [[{{Gayborhood}} "Gay Mecca"]] of the South and one of the largest black-majority cities in the US, with a large and healthy black middle- and upper-class.[[/note]], incessant self-promotion, and seemingly undeserved prosperity grate on Southern sensibilities. This actually has a fitting analogy: Georgia is the so-called "Empire State of the South"... and Atlanta bears the same relation to the rest of Georgia that UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity bears to the rest of [[UsefulNotes/NewYorkState the Empire State]]. In fact, one common joke is that Georgia is two states: Metro Atlanta and everywhere else.
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30Atlanta is home to several major professional sports teams; however, the poor performances of its pro sports teams, with only three championships among its major teams in over a half-century, as well as the transient nature of the metro area's residents has given the city a reputation as a bad sports town:
31* The Braves are a UsefulNotes/MajorLeagueBaseball team that started in UsefulNotes/{{Boston}}, moved to UsefulNotes/{{Milwaukee}}, and finally ended up in Atlanta in 1966. They've won four World Series, two in their former home cities (1914 and 1957 in Boston and Milwaukee respectively) and two in Atlanta (1995 and 2021). Its players have included Hank Aaron who was the Home Run Champion to top Babe Ruth, and it was formerly owned by UsefulNotes/TedTurner, and as such had most of their games broadcast on cable station Creator/{{TBS}} from 1973 to 2007. They did very well and were popular enough in the 1990s to be nicknamed "America's Team"[[note]]pushed heavily by TBS, but anyone outside the Metro Atlanta area who called them that was doing so ironically[[/note]], but entered a slump in the 2000s. Even during their long streak of Division pennants, they were the poster-child for EveryYearTheyFizzleOut, netting one World Series win in 14 playoff appearances. In 2010, longtime manager[[labelnote:*]](for those of you not familiar with baseball terminology, a professional team's head coach is titled "manager")[[/labelnote]] Bobby Cox, known for being AFatherToHisMen (and being one of the most ejected managers in MLB) retired. In 2017, the Braves opened a new ballpark in suburban Cobb County, Truist Park.
32* The Falcons are an [[UsefulNotes/NationalFootballLeague NFL]] team, historically mediocre with occasional strong seasons, and appearances in UsefulNotes/{{Super Bowl}}s XXXIII and LI. It was the team quarterback Michael Vick played for when he was exposed for running dog fights. From 2008 to 2012, the Falcons were one of the NFL's more solid teams despite [[EveryYearTheyFizzleOut a lack of postseason success]]. Super Bowl LI will be a game that lives in infamy for the Falcons after the [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter Patriots]] [[MiracleRally erased a 25-point deficit in the fourth quarter]] to put the Super Bowl into overtime for the first time in its history, with the Patriots [[DownToTheLastPlay scoring the winning touchdown on their first (and the only) overtime possession]].
33* The Hawks are an [[UsefulNotes/NationalBasketballAssociation NBA]] team that have a logo that looks suspiciously like VideoGame/PacMan. Another middle-of-the-pack team, also owned by Ted Turner for a few years. Their most notable player in recent history was Dominique Wilkins, nine-time All-Star, two-time Slam Dunk champion, and often cast as one of UsefulNotes/MichaelJordan's [[WorthyOpponent Worthy Opponents]].
34* The Dream are a WNBA team founded in 2008; in their first season, they made a heroic effort to be the worst team in the history of ever, finishing 4-30. They got better. The Dream shared a home with the Hawks for most of their existence; however, the WNBA team moved to a smaller arena in suburban College Park, sharing the venue with the Hawks' G League affiliate, the College Park Skyhawks.
35* Atlanta had two different [[UsefulNotes/NationalHockeyLeague NHL]] teams, both of which ultimately left for Canada. Most hockey fans outside of Atlanta, especially traditionalists, generally accept the narrative that both the Flames and Thrashers failed due to a lack of fan support; however, many Atlanta hockey fans argue it was other factors, namely economic issues in the case of the Flames and the abysmal ownership of the Thrashers, that caused them to lose their teams. The Flames[[note]]an allusion to Sherman's burning of Atlanta[[/note]], founded in 1972, enjoyed modest success on the ice but had a bad reputation of EveryYearTheyFizzleOut come the Stanley Cup playoffs. However, the war between the NHL and the World Hockey Association as well as the collapse of Atlanta's real estate market in the 1970s caused then-owner Tom Cousins to bleed money on the Flames, selling the team to Nelson Skalbania, who moved them to Calgary in 1980. The Thrashers[[note]]named after the state bird; the nickname had also been considered for both the Flames and the NFL's Falcons[[/note]], a 1999 expansion team, struggled both on and off the ice, ''especially'' after the infamous season-cancelling lockout of 2004-05. The Thrashers were grossly neglected in favor of the Hawks by their ownership, ironically named Atlanta Spirit, a group notorious for its internal discord, with its partners suing one another. With no suitors willing to deal with Atlanta Spirit, the Thrashers were sold to True North Sports and Entertainment in 2011, relocated to Winnipeg and [[ReplacementGoldfish renamed]] the [[InNameOnly Jets]]. While there are still (mostly older) fans of the Flames in Atlanta despite their move to Alberta over four decades ago, the Jets receive ''[[https://apnews.com/279a76ae61534533b0d135c9123de184/Column:-Atlanta-hockey-fans-cheering-Anybody-But-The-Jets absolutely no love]]'' from many Atlanta hockey fans.[[note]]True North initially planned to acquire the Phoenix Coyotes, who went bankrupt in 2009 and at the time, was under league control, to bring the ''original'' Jets franchise back to Winnipeg; however, the NHL was adamant that the Coyotes remain in Arizona. Atlanta Spirit acquired the Hawks, Thrashers, and the operating rights to Philips (now State Farm) Arena from Time Warner in 2004, and wanted to sell off the Thrashers as soon as legally possible, only obtaining the uncontested legal ownership of the Thrashers in late 2010/early 2011 after settling a lawsuit with an ex-partner. Atlanta Spirit allegedly refused any offers from outside parties to keep the Thrashers in Atlanta, since they, at the time, wanted to maintain control of the arena's operations and the Hawks, although Atlanta Spirit would start trying to find new suitors for the Hawks not long after offloading the Thrashers to True North, eventually selling the Hawks and arena operations to a group led by Tony Ressler in 2015. While many Atlanta hockey fans blame Atlanta Spirit for the Thrashers' demise, some also criticize the NHL front office of seemingly violating the league's by-laws, making no good faith efforts to keep the Thrashers in Atlanta as they have done for practically every other struggling franchise threatening to relocate. While many Atlanta hockey fans were not necessarily against the Coyotes staying in Arizona or even the return of an NHL team to Winnipeg (at least before True North came knocking on the Thrashers' door), most believe that the wrong team moved to Winnipeg in 2011, as the Coyotes had remained under the near-perennial threat of relocation, coming to a head in 2022, after the team was evicted from their arena in Glendale, and was subsequently sold and moved to Utah in 2024.[[/note]] Most hockey traditionalists, fueled in part by their general animosity towards NHL teams in the Sun Belt, want to permanently write off Atlanta as a lost cause, since the city lost both of its NHL teams to Canada. Despite this, some Atlanta hockey fans remain optimistic that the NHL will eventually give the Peach State a third try, should the right opportunity arise, and deputy NHL commissioner Bill Daly has remarked that the league is open to returning to Atlanta, believing that the challenges of the area's two prior teams could now be overcome. As of March 2024, there are ''two'' competing proposals to bring an NHL franchise back to the Atlanta metro area, both of which are planned to be based near Alpharetta, 30 miles northeast of downtown Atlanta. One proposal is the Gathering at South Forysth, led by businessman Vernon Krause, and the other proposal is a redevelopment of the North Point Mall site, led by former NHL player Anson Carter, who moved to the Atlanta metro area after retiring. The Atlanta (nee Gwinnett) Gladiators of the minor league ECHL has been based in Duluth since 2003, making them the longest continuously operating pro hockey team in not only metro Atlanta, but the entire state; Carter also has owned a minority stake in the Gladiators since 2022.
36* Atlanta United FC is probably the exception to the rule. They began play in UsefulNotes/MajorLeagueSoccer in 2017. The team is owned by Falcons owner Arthur Blank and shares the new Falcons' stadium. They won the MLS Cup playoffs in their sophomore season, broke attendance records several times over, and are now the most valuable soccer team in the United States. In September 2023, the United States Soccer Federation announced its intentions of moving its headquarters from Chicago to Atlanta, ahead of the 2026 UsefulNotes/FIFAWorldCup.
37* Henry County to the south of the city is the home of Atlanta Motor Speedway, a legacy NASCAR track.
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39While Atlanta may have bad luck with its professional sports teams, the city is often considered the de facto capital of UsefulNotes/CollegeFootball. The College Football Hall of Fame is located in Atlanta, across the street from Centennial Olympic Park. Atlanta is home to the SEC Championship Game, having been played there since 1994[[note]]the first two editions were played in Birmingham, Alabama's Legion Field[[/note]], and the Chick-Fil-A Peach Bowl, one of the "New Years Six" bowl games and every three years host to one of the two College Football Playoff semifinal games; during the Bowl Championship Series era, the Peach Bowl was one of the highest attended and highest paying non-BCS bowl games. Atlanta also hosts the annual Celebration Bowl, the de facto national championship among historically black colleges and universities in Division I football. The Metro Atlanta area is home to two FBS schools; the highly prestigious Georgia Institute of Technology (aka Georgia Tech) in midtown play in the [[UsefulNotes/PowerFiveConferences Atlantic Coast Conference]], while Georgia State University in downtown play in the [[UsefulNotes/GroupOfFiveConferences Sun Belt]]. Additionally, there is Kennesaw State University in nearby Marietta, who will make the FCS-FBS transition in 2024 when they join [[UsefulNotes/GroupOfFiveConferences Conference USA]]. However, the most popular college football program among Atlantans doesn't call the city home--that honor goes to the University of Georgia, located 70 miles northeast in Athens and play in the [[UsefulNotes/PowerFiveConferences Southeastern Conference]].
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41Those with more geeky inclinations can easily find a place in Atlanta. Downtown is overtaken every Labor Day weekend by the massive celebration of all things geek known as Dragon Con. [=MomoCon=][[note]]With "momo" being the Japanese word for peach, and Georgia is known as the Peach State[[/note]] is a newer and smaller but fast-growing multi-genre con which takes place around the Memorial Day weekend. [=MomoCon=] was originally held at Georgia Tech's Student Center, hosted by the Institute's anime club and offered free attendance, with merchandise sales raising funds for future events; however, increasing attendance as well as its associated rising costs forced the con to start charging a membership fee and move to larger spaces, eventually moving to the Georgia World Congress Center in 2015. While both Dragon Con and [=MomoCon=] are mostly similar in terms of featured guests and events, the former skews older and focuses more on sci-fi and fantasy while the latter is more anime-focused and skews towards a younger audience.[[note]]There are several other annual cons held in the Atlanta Metro area, including [[FilkSong GAFilk]] in January, and [=FrolicCon=] on Easter weekend, which is, somewhat bizarrely, a combination SF&F/[[UsefulNotes/{{BDSM}} BDSM]] convention[[/note]]. And the weirdness central that is Creator/AdultSwim (and the anime/action animation central that is Creator/{{Toonami}}) originates from an old Turner Broadcasting facility on Williams Street [[note]]this is why Adult Swim programming is produced by Williams Street Studios; the Interstate divides it from the Techwood campus that most of the other Turner nets are based at; the "Turner mansion" (as seen in the 1990s on Turner-released home videos and movies) is the central part of that complex[[/note]].
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43----
44
45'''Atlanta in fiction:'''
46* ''Film/{{ATL}}''
47* ''Series/{{Atlanta}}'', entirely shot there
48* ''Literature/AtlantaNights''
49* ''Film/BabyDriver''
50* ''Film/TheChangeUp'' starring Creator/RyanReynolds.
51* The 2005 ''Film/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'' has Violet Beauregarde from Atlanta. Given Violet’s character being updated to be a cocky sports prodigy rather than merely a gum enthusiast, it’s possible they chose Atlanta in reference to the 1996 Olympics. Ironically, Creator/AnnaSophiaRobb is originally from UsefulNotes/{{Denver}}, which serves as the hometown of Mike Teavee. Meanwhile, the children’s play adaptation ''Roald Dahl's Willy Wonka'' has Violet come from Snellville, a suburb in Gwinnett County.
52* ''WesternAnimation/ClassOf3000''
53* ''Series/{{Constantine}}'': Constantine's hideout in the TV series is set in an old millhouse in the rural outskirts of Metro Atlanta.
54* Most the main characters in ''Film/{{Deliverance}}'' are Atlanta yuppies, and a major theme is their culture shock at camping out in the rural Georgia wilderness, especially after they are attacked by rednecks.
55* ''Series/DesigningWomen''
56* ''Webcomic/TheDevilsPanties''
57* ''Theatre/DrivingMissDaisy''
58* ''Series/TheDukesOfHazzard'' occasionally uses it as a setting, and the first five episodes were filmed in the area.
59* ''Series/Dynasty2017'': The reboot of the '80s show moves the setting from Denver to Atlanta.
60* ''Anime/FarewellToNostradamus'': About a group of thieves trying to steal a book containing lost prophecies written by Nostradamus from the fictional Earth Building located in Atlanta.
61* ''Fled''
62* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'', "[[Recap/FuturamaS2E12TheDeepSouth The Deep South]]": Atlanta was relocated to the middle of the ocean and sank, becoming a stand-in for {{Atlantis}}.
63* ''Film/TheGeneral'', is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Locomotive_Chase the Great Locomotive Chase]] of 1862 that started in what is now Kennesaw, just north of Atlanta.
64* ''Franchise/GIJoe'': Scarlett is a big ShoutOut to ''Literature/GoneWithTheWind'', as ([[Film/GIJoeTheRiseofCobra barring the movies]] [[AdaptationalNationality where she hails from Canada]]), she hails from Atlanta (and part of the finale of ''WesternAnimation/GIJoeRenegades'' takes place in it) and in addition to having "Scarlett" as a codename, her real last name is '''O'Hara'''.
65* ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'': The Diggers family lives in Atlanta, creator Fred Perry's hometown.
66* ''Literature/GoneWithTheWind'' - not only is the Burning of Atlanta included in the second act, but Margaret Mitchell was born and died in Atlanta, hit by a car on Peachtree Street. Not only that, but UsefulNotes/TedTurner, based in the area, eventually came to own the film (via his 1986 acquisition of the MGM library)
67* The Literature/KateDaniels novel series is set in Atlanta that's been overrun and partly destroyed by magic.
68* Though it doesn't pass through Atlanta proper, ''VideoGame/Left4Dead2'' begins in Savannah and the Survivors pass through the state on their way to UsefulNotes/NewOrleans.
69* ''Film/LifeAsWeKnowIt'' starring Creator/KatherineHeigl.
70* ''Literature/AManInFull'' by Tom Wolfe.
71* ''Series/{{Matlock}}''
72* ''VideoGame/MidnightClub 3: Dub Edition''. The second part of the game takes place in Atlanta. Several landmarks can be seen while driving around.
73* ''Series/{{Profiler}}''
74* The ''Series/QueerEye2018'' reboot takes place here.
75* ''Series/RaisingDion''. Also shot there.
76* ''Film/Sabotage2014''
77* ''Literature/SimonVsTheHomoSapiensAgenda and its film adaptation, Love, Simon.
78* ''Series/SingleLadies'', a [=VH1=] show produced by Music/QueenLatifah which can be considered ''Series/SexAndTheCity'' [[AC:[[RecycledInSpace IN ATLANTA!]] And not white-washed!]]
79* ''Film/Triple9''
80* Most of Creator/TylerPerry's movies take place in Atlanta.
81* ''The Walking Dead'', both [[ComicBook/TheWalkingDead comic book]] and [[Series/TheWalkingDead TV show]], started out next to Atlanta, although they moved away fairly quickly.
82* The ''Literature/ZoeMartinique'' series of novels takes place in Atlanta.
83
84'''Shows based in Atlanta:'''
85* The internet comedy group [[http://dormtainment.com/ Dormtainment]] live in the Atlanta suburb of Dunwoody, in fact at least two of their videos require you to have some knowledge of the Atlanta area to get it (though you could probably figure it out): "Straight Outta Dunwoody" (a rap song about an upper-middle class suburb) and "Bday Bash" (annual concert held by a radio station in Atlanta).
86* The current version of ''Series/FamilyFeud'' moved here in 2011, to accommodate host Creator/SteveHarvey's other commitments (including being a radio host and having his own talk show); it previously taped in Hollywood and at Ride/UniversalStudios in Orlando, and will be moving back to Hollywood in the near-future.
87* ''Series/GoodEats'' is primarily filmed in Alpharetta and Marietta, Georgia.
88* ''The Radio/NealBoortz Show''
89* ''The RealHousewives Of Atlanta'', on Bravo.
90* ''Love and Hip-Hop: Atlanta'' on [=VH1=]
91
92'''Shows and films shot in Atlanta, but [[CaliforniaDoubling set elsewhere]]:'''
93* ''Series/BlackLightning'' (set in the fictional Freeland)
94* ''Series/DeviousMaids'' (set in Beverly Hills)
95* ''Film/TheDivergentSeriesInsurgent'' and ''Allegiant'' (set in a post-apocalyptic UsefulNotes/{{Chicago}})[[note]]however, portions of the former were actually filmed in Chicago[[/note]]
96* ''Series/DropDeadDiva'' (set in UsefulNotes/LosAngeles)
97* ''Series/HaltAndCatchFire'' (set in the UsefulNotes/DFWMetroplex)
98* ''Film/TheHungerGamesCatchingFire'' and ''Film/TheHungerGamesMockingjay'' (set in the Capitol of Panem which is implied to be what’s now Salt Lake City, UT)
99* Franchise/MarvelCinematicUniverse:
100** Several movies were at least partially filmed in Atlanta: ''Film/AntMan1'', ''Film/CaptainAmericaCivilWar'', ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol2'', ''Film/SpiderManHomecoming'' and ''Film/{{Black Panther|2018}}'', among others.
101** Some MCU shows were also partially filmed in Atlanta, including ''Series/TheFalconAndTheWinterSoldier'' and ''Series/{{Loki|2021}}''.
102* ''Series/NecessaryRoughness'' (set in Long Island)
103* ''Film/RoboCop3'' (As with everything else in the ''FRanchise/RoboCop'' franchise, it's set in Detroit)
104* ''Series/StrangerThings'' (set in Indiana)
105* ''Film/SweetHomeAlabama'' (set in Alabama)
106* ''Film/WeAreMarshall'' (set in Huntington, West Virginia)[[note]]Then-Georgia governor and former U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue had a cameo as an opposing football coach[[/note]]
107
108'''Creators originally from or based in Atlanta:'''
109* Creator/TheWeatherChannel
110* The [[UsefulNotes/TedTurner Turner]] networks:
111** {{Creator/TBS}}, {{Creator/TNT}} and Creator/TurnerClassicMovies
112** CNN & {{Creator/HLN}}
113** Creator/CartoonNetwork & Creator/AdultSwim (and by extension Creator/{{Toonami}})
114** Wrestling/{{WCW}}
115* Creator/JeffFoxworthy
116* Creator/DavidCross
117* Creator/MicaelaDee
118* Creator/ChloeGraceMoretz
119* Creator/TylerPerry
120* Matt and Mike Chapman (Creator/TheBrothersChaps), creators of ''WebAnimation/HomestarRunner''
121* Creator/DonaldGlover
122* Creator/TiffanyGrant
123* ''Series/RuPaulsDragRace'' often features {{drag queen}}s from Atlanta and the surrounding area, owing to its ginormous LGBT+ community and legendary drag scene. Ru[==]Paul himself started his drag career in Atlanta after moving there from San Diego as a teenager. He still has a soft spot for the city and will sometimes reminisce about it with contestants from there, especially the older ones like season 13's Tamisha Iman. Other Atlanta queens that have competed on the show include Season 7 winner Violet Chachki, Nicole Paige Brooks, Phoenix, Mariah Balenciaga, Trinity K. Bonet, Nina Bonina Brown, Aiden Zhane, La[==]La Ri, and Angeria Paris Van[==]Michaels.
124
125'''Musical acts based in or originally from Atlanta:'''
126* Atlanta has a huge rap and hip-hop scene, perhaps best known for spearheading the "Dirty South" movement, one of rap's most popular. A vast amount, possibly a majority nowadays, of rappers come from Atlanta, which produces a wide variety of acts such as Music/{{Outkast}} (composed of Big Boi and Andre 3000), Music/SouljaBoy, Music/LilJon, Music/{{Ludacris}}, [=D4L=], Gucci Mane, Music/TwoChainz, Music/{{TI}}, Music/{{Future}}, Jeezy (formerly Young Jeezy, before he got old and the stage name stopped being accurate), Music/WakaFlockaFlame, Rasheeda, [[Music/RunTheJewels Killer Mike]], Crime Mob, Ying Yang Twins, Jazze Pha, Music/ChildishGambino (Donald Glover's hip hop moniker), Dem Franchize Boys, Young Dro, Rich Homie Quan, Lil' Scrappy, Gorilla Zoe, Youngbloodz, Travis Porter, Music/{{Migos}}, Field Mob, Music/BoBRapper, Drumma Boy, Roscoe Dash, Yung Wun, I-20, Cyhi The Prynce, OJ Da Juiceman, Slick Pulla, Boyz n da Hood, Silentó, Pastor Troy, Music/PlayboiCarti, Yung Wun, Young Thug, Gunna, Unk, Trinidad James, Bone Crusher, Polow da Don, Yung Joc and J.I.D.
127* Many R&B artists also come from Atlanta: Music/{{Usher}}, Music/IndiaArie, Music/{{TLC}}, Music/CeeLoGreen, Keri Hilson, Monica, Music/{{Ciara}}, Music/ChloeXHalle and Music/ToniBraxton, to name a few.
128* Atlanta-based producer Bill Lowery launched the careers of Music/RayStevens, Music/JerryReed, and others.
129* Music/{{Sevendust}}
130* Music/TheBlackCrowes
131* Music/CatPower
132* Canadian Music/JustinBieber moved to Atlanta to forward his music career.
133* The Music/IndigoGirls grew up in Decatur and started performing locally when they were students at Emory University.
134* Music/{{Mastodon}}
135* Music/{{Sugarland}}
136* Music/{{Issues}}
137* Music/{{Le Castle Vania}}
138
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