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New York drivers named most aggressive, angry in U.S.

By Patricia Reaney Patricia Reaney Tue Jun 16, 12:47 am ET

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) New York has overtaken Miami to be voted the U.S.

city with the angriest and most aggressive drivers, according to a survey on

road rage released on Tuesday.

Miami topped the annual poll for the last four years but voters in 25 major

metropolitan areas gave New Yorkers the prize for angriest, most aggressive

drivers who tailgate, speed, honk their horns, overreact and lose their

tempers.

The response of New Yorkers to bad drivers also helped push the city into the

top slot for road rage.

"New Yorkers were most likely to wave their fists or arms. They were most

likely to lay on the horn and they were most likely to make some sort of

obscene gesture," said Michael Bush, of the marketing and consulting company

Affinion Group, which commissioned the survey.

Dallas/Fort Worth came in second as the worst road rage city followed by

Detroit, Atlanta and Minneapolis/St. Paul. Miami ranked a distant seventh.

Baltimore, Sacramento and Pittsburgh rounded out the top five cities with the

most pleasant drivers.

Portland and Cleveland were voted to have the most courteous, considerate

drivers.

"The real surprise to me is that there is no geographic way to break down road

rage," Bush told Reuters. "It is very much on a city-by-city basis, as opposed

to geographic area."

Talking on a cell phone was the behavior that irked motorists the most, with 84

percent of people citing it as the behavior most likely to incite road rage.

Driving too fast, tailgating, and eating and texting behind the wheel also

caused stress and incited road rage.

Nearly 50 percent of the 2,518 people who took part in the AutoVantage Road

Rage Survey also said other drivers frequently cut across the road without

notice.

More than 25 percent of people in the telephone poll reported seeing drivers

putting on make-up, shaving and reading while behind the wheel. A quarter said

slamming on the brakes and running red lights sent their tempers flaring.

Detroit and San Francisco had the most text-happy drivers, while Miami won the

distinction as the city where people were most likely to shave, read or put on

make-up while driving.

Most people, 43 percent, reacted to bad driving by honking the horn. But 36

percent resorted to cursing, 13 percent waved their fists or arms and 10

percent made an obscene gesture.

Seven percent were so angry they called the police and one percent admitted

they had slammed into the car in front of them.

"In Washington, D.C., four percent of drivers admitted to slamming into another

driver," said Bush. "They stand out in that one particular category."