Monday, December 24, 2007

Austin is... pt2

There are many new buildings being built in Austin, condos are being built in the Warehouse District. In front lies Austin's New City Hall, built in 2004 and designed by Antoine Predock, in association with Cotera, Kolar, Negrete, and Reed, it combines elements of the southwest and well thought out modern design. It is infinately better than its homonym, the ugly, hideous, and poorly designed Boston City Hall /Government Center.

This office building, near a river known as "Town Lake", is new, stylish, and handsome. For the most part, Philadelphia's most recent construction is none of those things.
My dish at Austin's Mongolian Grill



The Frost Bank building is a handsome new skycraper with a top that, to me, resembles a leaves of a plant of petals of a flower

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Video of the Post: Fujiya & Miyagi - Ankle Injuries

Fujiya & Miyagi's song Ankle Injuries has been on my playlist for a little while and I just checked out the video for the song, it's pretty incredible:




Saturday, December 22, 2007

Austin is...

I got into Austin on Thursday afternoon and my brother picked me up from the airport. We drove around for a while, getting a brief tour of the city and went to in to his office where we stayed. For dinner we went to EZ's Brick Oven Grill.

REVIEW 1
Thing: EZ's Brick Oven Grill
Where: 3918 N. Lamar, Austin, TX
When: Thursday Evening, December 20th, 2007
What: EZ's World Famous Beanburger - Fresh Ground Chuck topped with cheddar cheese, black beans, Fritos!, and picante, +guacamole added. Banana Milkshake
EZ's is a small chain based in San Antonio, it is casual-style dinning, with no waitstaff but bussers were there to clear the tables after patrons leave. The burger was fairly good, I've never had a burger with beans and or Fritos in it, but the beef was a little thin and lukewarm but cooked (they might freeze them or keep patties under a hot light) and they didn't ask me how I preferred it done. The milkshake was very good but only about 14 fl.oz., but then again, milkshakes no matter what the size never seem to be big enough for me and a burger.


We then went back to my brother's apartment and watched IFC's Greg the Bunny Show series 1 on DVD.

REVIEW 2
Thing: Greg the Bunny Show: Series One DVD
Where: Brother's computer
When: Thursday night/early Friday morning
What: disc one episodes of Greg the Bunny Show series one
My brother and I were both fans of the Fox series Greg the Bunny, it was canned. IFC took the series over but made some changes in the formatting, cast, and whatnot with a smaller budget. The Fox series featured Sarah Silverman before she was a more of a household name and I was sorry to see it canceled. The IFC series is pretty funny, entertaining, but not VERY funny. I give series one a B.

The flying

...after moving out of my apartment of two-and-a-half years and living on my friend's futon for a week, I stood waiting out on the sidewalk on a cold December morning in Philadelphia. I waited for the airport shuttle I had called an hour earlier. The van, run by Lady Liberty Shuttle (their web site oddly circulates between a picture of Chicago and Cleavland), was running a little late. I was growingly concerned but didn't fret it, at $10 it was much cheaper than a taxi cab and a better option than waking my friend and coercing him to drive or walking a mile and a half to the train station to take something only marginally cheaper than the door-to-terminal service Lady Liberty offers.

Arriving at PHL I managed my 4 large and overstuffed bags sans Sky-Cap. I had so many because, as I mentioned, I moved out of my apartment—an apartment which was super-saturated with stuff. A family member had booked this flight for me and they had booked me with pennypinching zero-frills carrier, Southwest. While I don't really appreciate the complete lack of services offered, I do appreciate their baggage policy of allowing three checked items of up to 50lbs without an additional charge. My backpacking/trekking backpack, in which I intend to take most of my things to Europe, is the 6,000 cu.in. EMS Summit 6000. It had two large blankets strapped to it (one of which I had to move) along with a full-sized crook-handled umbrella and barely passed the 50-lbs weight limit.

PHL is undergoing some terminal expansion. The E-terminal ID-checkers from the TSA were a lively pair, the burly bald man with a handlebar moustache was very excited to find that someone in the line was from Dayton, Ohio, which he claims is a rarity. He stated listing Dayton suburbs that everyone always seems to come from. Then several other people in line claimed they were from Dayton—it was very surreal.

At the gate I learned three things, Southwest seriously overbooks their flights, you have to go to the gate counter to get an actual boarding pass, and that my flight from Philadelphia to Austin is really a flight to Orlando that continues on to Austin and then to San Diego and Oakland (I pity the fool who booked a flight to Oakland from Philadelphia only to find this their route).


I board the plane, a single class 737, and sleep for most of the flight in a window seat. On the flight from Orlando to Austin, I wake up to have some coffee in a Styrofoam cup and some Wheat Thins, Southwest's idea of "lunch" I suppose.

the first post ever.

first post.