Having grown up in Dyker Heights, a neighborhood in Brooklyn where people's houses are lit during the holiday season with elaborate Christmas lights and decorations, Andrew Meola finds the displays and crowds they draw now to be "incredibly obnoxious."
"Now it's become so commercialized that tourists are taking buses from Manhattan and sitting in traffic, both vehicle and human, for hours just to get a glimpse," the 19-year resident said.
He said the people that live in the neighborhood have to virtually lock themselves in their homes every weekend in December because the streets are all closed.
"I'd tell tourists to avoid that," he said. "It would take them half a day just to do it all. Not worth it."
Delgado, on the other hand, recommends visiting Dyker Heights.
"It's best to go towards the end of the Holiday season, when there's less people," she said. "But even if you go when it's crowded, it's beautiful, the decorations are insane, and overall a must-see. Feels like a literal Christmas wonderland."