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Maximize Your Home Sale: Expert Pricing Strategies for Selling in Irving Park, Chicago
Are you ready to sell your Irving Park home in Chicago? Discover the key to a successful sale: expert pricing strategies. Learn why accurate pricing matters and how it can impact your home sale in Irving Park. The Power of Pricing Accuracy: Ensure your home stands out in Irving Park’s competitive market with precisely priced listings. Avoid the pitfalls of overpricing or underpricing, which can…
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Lavender Care TX: Your Partner in Achieving Pristine Indoor Air Quality
In the vibrant heart of Texas, where each city boasts its unique character and charm, the importance of maintaining excellent indoor air quality is paramount. Lavender Care TX is dedicated to this mission, offering exceptional Air Duct Cleaning services that not only enhance the air quality in your home but also contribute to the overall health and wellbeing of your family.
The Silent Impact of Air Ducts on Everyday Life
Purifying the Air You Breathe
From the bustling streets of Dallas to the serene suburbs of Plano, the air circulating through our homes impacts our daily life more than we often realize. Over time, air ducts can accumulate a significant amount of dust, pollen, pet dander, and other allergens. Lavender Care TX's air duct cleaning service is designed to meticulously remove these contaminants, ensuring that the air you breathe is clean and healthy.
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In addition to improving air quality, clean air ducts are essential for the efficient operation of your HVAC system. Residents of dynamic cities like Frisco and Garland understand the importance of an effectively running system for both comfort and cost-efficiency. Regular air duct cleaning by Lavender Care TX not only enhances the performance of your HVAC system but can also lead to reduced energy costs and prolong the life of the system.
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World Book Day
Today, April 23rd, is known as world book day. I’ve always loved reading, but it wasn’t until I was eight and read Ransom Riggs (what then was a trilogy) Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children that I became a full-blown bibliophile. It was my gateway book. From there I read Harry Potter and my love for literature completely exploded. I started reading everything I could get my hands on, and aside from a few depressing book slumps, my compulsive reading tendencies have not dwindled. Books are my first love. Before fully falling for movies and music, I fell for them. Fantasy, dystopian, realistic fiction, mystery, poetry, and most everything else, I love. Below are my top five books I really recommend you read. They’re either my favorite stories or they changed me as a person. I recommend Harry Potter to everyone ever, but it will not be on the list because it is an undeniable fact of life that everyone should just read those books.
Top 5 Books/Series: (No particular order) 1. The Shadowhunter Chronicles by Cassandra Clare Start with The Mortal Instruments, then go to The Infernal Devices and assess future ventures into the Shadow world after that trilogy. They’re urban fantasy novels and the multiple series means you can start in different places and stop where you need to because there are multiple ends in sight. I’ve read very few people who do urban fantasy as well as Cassy Clare. The blending of our world with a fantastical one can be difficult, but she does it phenomenally. 2. Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle I would go in order of publication starting with A Study in Scarlet, but my favorite it probably Hounds of Baskerville. I own two volumes which are comprised of all the stories, but I also bought a pocket size Baskerville so I could take it with me anywhere. Holmes is just one of my favorite literary characters, and I really do think that everyone should give the Sherlock stories a chance at some point in their lives. 3. Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton I don’t know about the rest of you, but I was a dinosaur kid. Which makes it particularly shocking that I didn’t see the Jurassic Park movies until I was about ten. Though I could tell you that not all, in fact few, of the dinosaurs in there were actually from the Jurassic period. The way that Crichton writes is just so analytical, he’s so scientifically driven about this fantastical idea of bringing back a species that had been extinct for millions upon millions of years, that it astounded me. It was a complete revelation reading this book and its sequel, I could not put them down. 4. A Court of Thorns And Roses by Sarah J. Maas This is one of my favorite series ever. A full-blown fantasy trilogy, it’s basically a demented Beauty and the Beast retelling with faeries as the main characters. The way that Maas writes, she just describes the beauty of things so well and designs characters that will stay with you. She also brings about difficult topics like domestic abuse, politics, and male rape victims, but does it in a sensitive way. I bought the first two books, read them in three days, and then proceeded to go back to the bookstore to buy the third. 5. The Legend of Sleepy Hollow by Washington Irving I have a strange addiction with the story of the Headless Horseman. I was a very skittish child, but even I could recognize how cool of a story Ichabod Crane’s adventure was. I first read this when I was nine, and later bought a copy after watching the Johnny Depp movie adaptation. Creepy, mysterious, and with enough twists and turns to keep you up at night, it’s a super quick fun read on a rainy night guaranteed to, at the very least, leave you unsettled. Honorable Mention Little Women by Louisa May Alcott The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett It by Stephen King Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen Paper Towns by John Green
#world book day#books#Book lover#Bibliophile#The Legend of Sleepy Hollow#ACOTAR#Jurassic Park#Shadowhunter Chronicles#sherlock holmes#sir arthur conan doyle
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Lost Chicago Building 5 - The Pullman Building
Life Span: 1884-1958 Location: 79 E. Adams – Southwest corner of Michigan & Adams Architect: Solon S. Beman
Illustrations, unless otherwise noted, are from the Ryerson and Burnham Art and Architecture Archive, Art Institute of Chicago. Accessed at: http://www.artic.edu/research/archival-collections
May 6, 1883 – The Chicago Daily Tribune reports that the excavation for the nine-story headquarters of the Pullman Palace-Car Company on the southwest corner of Michigan Avenue and Adams Street has begun. As the Home Insurance Building on La Salle Street is nearing completion – arguably the first metal-framed commercial skyscraper in history – the Pullman building will be “perfectly fireproof from cellar to garret – fireproof tile and iron beams being used throughout.” [Chicago Daily Tribune, May 6, 1883] The structure will have a dual purpose.�� The Pullman headquarters will have an entrance on Adams Street while a number of apartments in the building will be entered through the Michigan Avenue entrance. Company offices will occupy the first four floors of the building, and speculation is that the fifth floor will be given to the offices of General Phillip Sheridan. The five upper floors will be devoted to apartments of from seven to ten rooms and a number of bachelors’ suites from two to four rooms. The ninth floor will have a restaurant overlooking the lake with “a large covered promenade … making it a delightful resort in warm weather.” The half-million-dollar building will have its boilers located in a separate structure, given “the prejudice against living in a building with large steam boilers in the basement.” The Tribune assessment of the building concludes, “One of the objects sought by Mr. Pullman … was the furnishing to those employés of the company who desired them living apartments of superior character more convenient to their business than those in which many of them now abide … Mr. Pullman has expressed a wish that such a structure might be erected for their benefit.” [1]
Solon Spencer Beman, Architect (1853-1914)
“Chicago Pullman building. Design Preliminary sketch;” inscribed “BLC: J.K.P. del.;BRC: S S Beman / Architect .”
https://drloihjournal.blogspot.com/2020/04/pullman-building-at-michigan-and-adams-tip-top-inn-and-black-cat-inn-restaurants-chicago.html
Sanborn Map (detail), c. 1890; location of Pullman Building shaded purple.
“Michigan Avenue South from Grant Park Promenade,” postcard. Pullman Building is in the center of the view.
George Pullman (1831-1897), whose company by 1879 was the largest manufacturer of railway sleeping cars, with his Pullman Palace Cars being used by many railroads all throughout the country, wanted to construct a new factory town to bring together all the company’s manufacturing operations. The new “company town” would also house all of his workers. In 1879 Pullman brought New York landscape architect Nathan F. Barrett to Chicago to develop the concept. Barrett had introduced Pullman to Solon Spenser Beman, a twenty-six year old architect, also from New York, who had apprenticed with Richard Upjohn before starting his own firm in 1877. Pullman placed Beman in charge of the entire architectural design and construction of the buildings for new town. [2]
Nathan F. Barrett and Solon Spenser Beman, Town of Pullman, 1879 (Zukowsky, Growth of a Metropolis) Reproduced in Larson, Gerald R., “ 7.8. George Pullman Brings S.S. Beman to Chicago,” The Architecture Professor. https://thearchitectureprofessor.com/2020/09/23/7-8-george-pullman-brings-s-s-beman-to-chicago/
George Mortimer Pullman (1831-1897). Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Pullman
The former Pullman headquarters building in downtown Chicago at the northeast corner of Michigan and Randolph had been destroyed in the Great Fire of 1871, and the sleeping-car magnate obtained a permit to build a new 9-story building at the southeast corner of Michigan Avenue and Adams Street. Beman would design the building. The new Art Institute of Chicago building (1893) would later be directly across Michigan Avenue.
The Pullman Building viewed from the Art Institute, c. 1890s.
Beman’s design for the Pullman Building was influenced by the Romanesque style of architect Henry Hobson Richardson, which was sweeping the country in the late 1880s. Constructed of red granite, brick, and terra cotta at the corner of Adams and Michigan, the Pullman Building was a “massive and imposing” structure of 10 stories with corner turrets and a light well. The Chicago Tribune described its design as modification of the Norman round arched gothic, “the main object being to give it an expression of dignified elegance in its simple massiveness.” In common with other buildings built after the Great Fire of 1871, the Pullman Building was advertised as absolutely fireproof.
Excavation for the building foundations began in May 1883. Similar to other buildings of the Chicago School of architecture, iron beams and joists were used throughout the building. Stairways were also of iron; the building had four passenger elevators and a freight elevator, and was lit by both gas and electric light.
Construction was delayed by a strike by the Bricklayers’ Union, who decided that the fifty or so tile-layers working on the tile floors and other interior work should demand $4.00 per day rather than the $3.50 they were receiving. Non-union workers were brought in, and construction continued.
The Pullman Building was designed for multiple use: the first floor for stores dealing in light merchandise, the second and third floors for Pullman offices, the fourth and fifth floors for Army Headquarters of the Division of the Missouri and for telephone company offices; Chicago Telephone Company and Central Union Telephone Company are noted in the floor plans. The sixth floor was for general office space. Solon S. Beman’s architectural offices were located on the fifth floor.
The seventh through ninth floors were reserved for residence suites of various sizes, with private bathroom and hot and cold water for each. These suites are intended for those who wished to avoid the trouble of housekeeping. No cooking was allowed, however, provisions were made, however, for a restaurant on the ninth floor, with the kitchen and servants quarters on the tenth floor.[3]
Michigan Avenue residential entrance
side views on Michigan Avenue
Separate entrances for the offices and residences of the building announced its dual purpose: offices could be entered from Adams Street and residential apartments from Michigan Avenue. A light well in the building’s north side was open above a glass roof at the third story, giving the building a U shape.
Pullman executives occupied the lower floors. Other well-known building tenants included utilities magnate Samuel Insull, Allen B. and Irving K. Pond, brothers in architectural practice (Irving K. Pond worked in S. S. Beman’s offices), S. C. Pirie, of the Carson, Pirie, Scott & Company department store in Chicago; H.E. Hooper, US publisher of the Encyclopedia Britannica; and Florenz Ziegfeld, later renowned for the Ziegfeld Follies.
Adams Street entrance
Pullman Building, detail of arcade, north side, by photographer J.W. Taylor. Courtesy of the Faculty of Architecture, University of Melbourne. The Pullman History Site https://pullman-museum.org/theCompany/pullmanBuilding.html
The building’s business entrance on its north (Adams Street) side was through an imposing masonry arch springing from squat columns with stylized Corinthian capitals. A divided staircase of stone rose one story to the second floor, offering entry at its base to the first story and, through the central of three arches at the second story, to the business office area. This striking entry occupied the central light court in the U of the building, and was surmounted by a glass canopy at the third story. Rather heavy-handed and muscular in its effect, this sheltered entrance was more “public” than the building’s residential entrance, flush with the wall on the Michigan Avenue side.
Above this entrance, in the center upper stories of the building, were a vertical arrangement of semicircular windows framed in rather bizarre, interlocking horseshoe or keyhole arches. The composition’s sense of vertical movement contrasted with the horizontal bands of window openings in the rest of the building.
Pullman Entrance; J.W. Taylor photograph, 1893. Chicagology. https://chicagology.com/goldenage/goldenage067/
Arch and covered entry stairs
The Pullman History Site https://pullman-museum.org/theCompany/pullmanBuilding.html
Pullman Building, interior detail of 2nd floor entrance and open wells looking toward Office of the President (see 2d floor floorplan) by photographer J.W. Taylor. Courtesy of the Faculty of Architecture, University of Melbourne. The Pullman History Site https://pullman-museum.org/theCompany/pullmanBuilding.html
Pullman Building, President’s Office, Secretary by fireplace,1956. Chuckman Chicago Nostalgia. https://chuckmanchicagonostalgia.wordpress.com/2011/11/page/2/
Selected floors plans, from The Pullman History Site at https://pullman-museum.org/theCompany/pullmanBuilding.html
First (entrance) Story
Second Story: vestibule from Adams stairs; President’s Office (see photos above)
Seventh & Eighth Stories; Apartments
Ninth Story: Apartments and Restaurant
The Tip Top Inn was on the ninth floor of the Pullman Building.
For the first few years the Pullman company ran its own restaurant, The Albion, on the 9th floor. It was considered advanced at the time to locate restaurants on top floors so that cooking odors would not drift throughout the building. In addition, diners at The Albion, and later the Tip Top Inn, had excellent views of Lake Michigan. [4]
The Pullman Company, after the death of George Pullman in 1897, remained in the Pullman Building until 1948, after which its offices were moved to Chicago’s Merchandise Mart. By that time, all the architectural features of the upper story-- the turrets, towers, and chimneys-- were gone.
In “A Proud Old Lady Admits Her Age,” a 1956 newspaper article noted that
The Pullman Building, Chicago’s oldest “skyscraper,” is facing the wrecker with the same cumbersome dignity which characterized its 72 year history. With its carpets, curtains, and other makeup gone it looks a little shabby, but is still in essentially the same form bestowed on it by architect S.S. Beman back in 1884. It has yielded little to the blandishment of technology and fashion.[5]
The Pullman Building itself was demolished during a razing craze during the tenure of Mayor Richard J. Daley, along with dozens more buildings in Chicago’s Loop and thousands in Chicago neighborhoods with hardly a peep of protest. The Pullman Building was replaced in 1958 with the Borg-Warner Building, an ugly anomaly among the Michigan Avenue cliffs in the Michigan Avenue Landmark District. [6]
In later years, the turrets and top portion of the building were removed.
Architectural fragment, Pullman Building, Art Institute of Chicago.
Pullman Building, Andreas’ History of Chicago. Image: https://chicagology.com/goldenage/goldenage067/
Many of the images used here are also available on the Illinois Digital Archives website at http://www.idaillinois.org/digital/search/searchterm/Pullman%20Building
NOTES:
[1] Connecting the Windy City. Accessed at: http://www.connectingthewindycity.com/search/label/Congress%20Street
[2] Larson, Gerald R., “George Pullman Brings S.S. Beman to Chicago,” The Chicago School of Architecture. Accessed at: https://thearchitectureprofessor.com/2020/09/23/7-8-george-pullman-brings-s-s-beman-to-chicago/
[3] Chicagology. https://chicagology.com/goldenage/goldenage067/
[4] “Famous in its Day: Tip Top Inn,” Restaurant-ing Through History. Accessed at: https://restaurant-ingthroughhistory.com/2014/03/30/famous-in-its-day-tip-top-inn/
See also Digital Research Library of Illinois History Journal at https://drloihjournal.blogspot.com/2020/04/pullman-building-at-michigan-and-adams-tip-top-inn-and-black-cat-inn-restaurants-chicago.html
[5] “A Proud Old Lady Admits Her Age,” Copy from two undated, unidentified newspaper articles about the 1884 Pullman Building in downtown Chicago. View the article at http://www.idaillinois.org/digital/collection/pshs/id/15324
[6] “The Pullman Building,” The Pullman History Site. Accessed at: https://pullman-museum.org/theCompany/pullmanBuilding.html
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May 4, 2020
This is Not a Performance
Irving H Bolano’s incredible repurposed newspaper fashion for the Met Gala Challenge on Twitter #HFMetGala2020
May the Fourth be With You as you reach the next chapter of this current sci-fi drama we seem to be living through. As the saying goes, reality can be stranger than fiction. But it just happens to be a many red-eyed virus rather than an evil, black-masked father that we’re fighting as we all walk around like Storm Troopers.
There are so many aspects of our lives, during Covid, which make it feel like we are actors in a make-believe story. First of all, we’ve all become movie stars, with our faces, homes, and even pets showcased on our own silver screens. As isolated as we are, our private lives now play out in the public sphere more than ever - no paparazzi required. For some, this invasion of privacy is unwelcomed. But for many people, it satisfies a secret longing to share themselves with a wider audience. After all, deep down, everyone wants to be seen and heard (I guess, me included, since I have this blog, after all). It’s why TikTok and YouTube and Facebook have become multi-billion dollar companies so quickly. And now, while this pandemic is a harsh daily reminder of the impermanence of all things, it makes sense that these digital missives are an attempt to seek immortality, in some strange way.
As someone whose work responds to human’s need to have a voice, I truly get why this is the case. And I love that this time has turned housewives into opera stars, and health care workers into hip hop dancers, and housepets into circus performers. But, at the same time, I have become very aware of the masks that we wear, even inside our homes, to portray a certain self to the world that may stray quite far from our authentic selves. The expression “dance like no one is watching” acknowledges the fact that we all tend to perform when we have an audience, and perhaps we’re only truly ourselves when we don’t. I understand that the way we “perform” ourselves online gives each of us a chance to reinvent the fictions we want our stories to have. So, while I surely take some guilty pleasure from intimate glimpses into strangers’ lives, I also do so with a certain skepticism about the veracity of what I’m seeing.
This became particularly true for me when I received a recent link from my friend and amazing singer/songwriter, Dominique Fricot. Capitalizing on this current trend of oversharing, he cleverly asked his fans to film their morning routines for the music video of his new song, Wake Up, by his duo, Flora Falls. Dom’s warm tenor voice blended with his partner’s breathy tones feel just like a lazy morning in bed. But I’ll leave it up to you to decide just how accurate these portrayals of people’s idyllic daytime rituals actually are.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=EbsqXou5FeY
May 5, 2020
Homeschool Heroes
About twenty years ago, I was invited to adjudicate a youth music competition in the Yukon. Travelling to one of the northernmost inhabited spots on earth, I imagined that my greatest surprise might have been a polar bear or Northern Lights sighting. But it turned out to be something entirely different. Among the 25,000 residents of the thriving metropolis of Whitehorse exists a treasure trove of talent. I could not believe the incredibly honed skills and nuanced expression with which these 11-18 year-olds played. Wondering why, I developed a theory that I now call SLoW: Sheltered Living Wonder. When long, dark days, cold climates or pandemics force people indoors, they tend to spend inordinate amounts of time on creative endeavors and skill development. In other words, they slow down and take time for wonder.
This theory has surely applied during these past few months of sheltering in place. One of the most remarkable examples has been the inventiveness that many of my friends have brought to their first attempts with homeschooling. So, I wanted to give a few shout outs to some of these Homeschool Heroes and the highly imaginative projects they’ve done with their kids.
Stunning Easter Eggs made from natural materials and dye, by my friend Jane Cox and her kids (Botany lesson)
Candy Covid virus, made by Amelia, my friend Jen Sanke’s daughter, as she learned about the virus’ proteins (Biology lesson)
But perhaps the prize for most complex homeschool project has to go to my architect friend, Bryn Davidson, who upon returning from Australia, in late March, had to fully quarantine for 2-weeks. So, with his 5-year old son Bei as helper, this Physics lesson allowed him to enjoy home delivery beer while in isolation. Just brilliant!
https://youtu.be/FF9-2dWoUtc
May 6, 2020
Living in livestream
So today, 5 million British Columbian’s awaited our “sentence” with baited breath, as word spread that our provincial prime minister would deliver the Re-Open BC plan at 3 pm. I have to admit, it felt a bit like when you were “grounded” as an adolescent and then your parents returned certain privileges to you. Of course, I’m well aware that our province has already been far more licentious than many places around the globe. We’ve been fortunate to maintain reasonably low numbers of infection (just over 2,000), with counts as low as 8 new cases per day, at this point. So, while our provincial parks closed, our beaches never did. While we were encouraged, within a reasonable range of home, to be active outdoors, we were not restricted to walks only within the 100 metre radius of our house, as my Israeli friends were. And while we could still shop at gardening and furniture stores, to make sheltering at home more enjoyable, New Zealanders had nothing but grocery stores and pharmacies open, for two months.
I have sensed the gratitude my fellow Vancouverites have felt about these privileges. But that does not mean that we aren’t still anxious to return to other aspects of living which we’ve missed. When lockdown began, ominously on the Ides of March (the 15th), I’d harboured a secret hope that certain restrictions might be lifted on my birthday (exactly two months later). And it turns out that Phase Two of the BC ReOpen plan will commence on May 19th, just 4 days later than I’d hoped. What I most look forward to experiencing again are small gatherings with friends, (we’ll soon be allowed to socialize in public with up to 10 people); meals inside certain restaurants and pubs (those that are able to function within WorkPlace BC’s safety regulations); visits to registered massage therapists; and hugs with select people, (”using one’s own ‘risk assessment’.”)
But in the long-range plan, the harsh reality for artists has been laid out, as Phase Four (which includes resuming large-venue concerts, conventions, and international travel) can not occur until either a vaccine has been developed, an effective treatment plan is widely available, or herd immunity is achieved. And this is not estimated to occur until mid-2021 or later. So, the prospects are still bleak for symphony orchestras, opera and dance companies, artists who perform in crowded bars, or musicians who travel for arena shows and festivals. This likely means that in order to satisfy audiences’ need to access live performance, and for artists to continue to share their creativity, livestream formats will still have to persist for some time. Therefore, I thought I’d share a few regular weekly livestream arts events here, both from Vancouver, LA & NY.
Canadian National Live Art Champion, Dmitri Sirenko, who we featured at our non-profit’s annual benefit on February 20th, 2020
Every Monday Night at 7 pm PST (Vancouver) Poetry Slam: https://www.facebook.com/Vancouverpoetryslam/
Every Thursday at 5 pm PST (LA): LIVE Art Battles - Watch painters do their magic in just 20 minutes: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWJoWGVwzGtk99nTOCib9vg
Every Thursday at 8 pm EST (NY): Spotlight on Plays - famous actors perform readings of theatre pieces, online: https://www.broadwaysbestshows.com/post/the-best-of-series/
May 7, 2020
Collateral Blessings
So many thoughtful writers are adding to the discourse, as we all strive to make meaning from what can feel like a senseliess time. I have so appreciated the abundance with which people are sharing these missives, right now. Every day, bursts of inspiration or flickers of insight come my way, thru texts, emails and Facebook. Like adventurers, traveling together thru the dark of night, we shine light on guideposts, anywhere we can find them, as we collectively quench each other’s thirst for wisdom.
One of the most profound writings I‘ve recently discovered came from a stranger’s blog. In The Examined Family, Courtney Martin, without ever diminishing the gravity of the havoc that this virus has wreaked, writes about some of the assets that have also come out of this time. New friendships with neighbors. A long-neglected puzzle completed with her kids. The time to draw and truly notice an artichoke in her back garden. My good friend Juan calls these collateral blessings. This reference to the accidental gifts that this cruel virus has given us, is a beautiful twist on “collateral damage”, a term coined to explain accidental friendly-fire deaths during the Gulf War. Commenting on the anticipatory nostalgia that she projects she will feel about certain things, once this time has passed, Courtney writes:
“I instantly feel overwhelmed at the prospect of schedules and stuff. I don’t want to go back to our former accumulation or frenetic pace. I don’t want to stop texting (my neighbor) my little triumphs. I don’t want to forget about the artichokes in the garden. I don’t ever want to forget this happened--the grief and the beauty of it. I’m not even sure that will be possible, but if it were, I wouldn’t want it. I don’t want to vote like it didn’t happen. I don’t want to eat like it didn’t happen. I don’t want to consume like it didn’t happen. I don’t want to schedule like it didn’t happen. I don’t want to mother or daughter or befriend or neighbor like it didn’t happen. I don’t want to sit inside this little life, noticing and appreciating and breathing, like it didn’t happen. There is unnecessary suffering all around me, and inside of me, too, but there is also necessary meaning. May we hold on to that.”
You can read her full entry here: https://courtney.substack.com/p/unnecessary-suffering-and-necessary?token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo3OTg0NDcyLCJwb3N0X2lkIjozNzU1NDMsIl8iOiJCTnk2VyIsImlhdCI6MTU4NzA1MjgyMCwiZXhwIjoxNTg3MDU2NDIwLCJpc3MiOiJwdWItMjA5MjIiLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0.puI9NMne-783ypInpvTkJ96T237WcrTo2ItDhqlkMiY
May 8, 2020
Nostalgia
I’m rarely one prone to nostalgia. My childhood photo albums are in storage. I have no family heirlooms displayed in my home. My tendency is to revel in the present or dream about the future. But this pandemic has strangely turned me into a sentimental fool. Perhaps this return to simpler times, where we seldom shop, where we wander mostly by foot, or where we get to know our neighbors better, makes us long for the past in certain ways.
For me, I’ve honored this by resurrecting my daily teenage Twizzler habit - a candy I’ve rarely eaten since then, but that now feels so satisfying during my Netflix & Chill evenings (while watching films almost as old like Groundhog Day & Anchorman).
I’m also listening a lot to Old School Hip Hop, where the explative-free rhymes of the 90’s feel so strangely innocent. It’s refreshing to listen to these musicians spit verses that merely celebrate the joys of dance and rap, rather than ranting about gun violence and other societal ills. Run DMC It’s Tricky (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-O5IHVhWj0) and Beastie Boys Body Movin’ (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvRBUw_Ls2o) happen to be personal favorites.
Last month, I was tickled by an old memory while planting a lilac bush in my backyard. I suddenly remembered a story about my college boyfriend, whom I hadn’t thought of in 30 years. Our relationship started a bit secretively, so as not to hurt his ex’s feelings. So, one May afternoon, we snuck away to a distant park that was hosting a Lilac Festival. Unfortunately, our ruse was quickly spoiled when a candid photo of our picnic under the purple blooms was plastered all over the front page of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle the next morning.
Another sweet memory returned in culinary form. Every Tuesday, for 7 years, my mother selflessly drove me an hour from home and back, for my flute lesson. And to break up the long drive, we regularly stopped at Bickford’s Pancake House for my favorite adolescent treat: breakfast for dinner. Their specialty was the Dutch Baby Apple. And I finally made my first homemade attempt at this deceptively easy delicacy, last Tuesday.
This has also been a time to return to bedtime stories (some I’ve read to friends’ kids, and others for adults to hear.) The Great Realisation by British performance artist, Tom Foolery, has been making the social media rounds. But in case you missed this touching tale that looks back on this time as if the tale is being told in a not-so-distant future, it’s a wistful story about some aspects of modern life that we may never long for in the future:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nw5KQMXDiM4
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Choose the Right Wedding Limo in Texas
There are so many moving pieces when planning your wedding day. It's very stressful no matter how much help you have, but hopefully you will get some assistance from a wedding planner or family member. It is a time to choose "big ticket" items like a venue, wedding photographer, and limo service.
1executive car wedding transportation Dallas likes to help engaged couples with the stress of picking a good limo company for their special day. It's important to show them how to pick a good provider over a bad one before they ever step foot in the car. A good and respected limo service can make sure that you get to your ceremony on time, in style, and help make your wedding day unforgettable.
1. You Must Assess Your Limo Needs
In order to gage what size limousine you require, you must know the size of your wedding party. Luckily most engaged couples know this information well in advance. You must consider what your transportation needs are. Do you just need a sedan to take the bride and groom to their hotel, or a limo bus to transport your out-of-town guests to and from their hotels.
2. Book As Soon As Possible
Wedding season is a very busy time for limousine companies. It's not as bad as prom time, but if you are getting married in peak season, you must make sure to confirm your booking Wedding limo in Texas well in advance. In colder climates the peak season months tend to be June and September, but all summer months are usually very busy; around December and the holidays it is also peak time. In warmer states couples tend to avoid the sticky summer months and choose months with mild weather.
3. Decide On the Type of Limo
The best part is choosing the limousine you want. There are potential pitfalls with any vehicle, so don't be so quick to fall in love with anyone make or model.
Older classic cars have charm, but must be very well maintained; otherwise you take the risk of a breakdown. When a breakdown at a wedding happens chaos ensues. There was a wedding limo breakdown in Cleveland that was reported on ABC the summer before last.
You should consider inspecting the limousine you are going to book. Is the interior attractive and clean? We have all the latest models.
4. Decide How Much Time You Need To Book
Usually, your wedding day will include photos, ceremony, reception, and the trip to your honeymoon hotel choice. Most wedding require the limo at least to transport the bridal party to the wedding ceremony and reception, although you’ll also need to plan how the bridal party will make it home after.
5. Cost
Although limos usually rent by the hour, some limo companies have limo packages that include red carpet service, champagne, and a set period of service. Packages sometimes don't allow for extra stops or wait time so be sure to ask these questions when booking Also, be aware of any extras: parking fees, gratuities, and other charges such as fuel or licensing tax, etc. These extras can make a good deal into not such a good one.
6. Check Yelp & Online Reviews
It's a must these days to check out reviews of any company you are going to hire, especially vendors for one of the most important days in your life. Reviews can tell you a lot about a limousine company, especially if there is a common theme, such as being late or good customer service. Positive or negative, you can gather a lot about the company. We recommend checking Yelp!
7. Have an Agreement
A good limousine service should provide you with a clear agreement, in writing, that covers the services they intend to provide, the cost of those services, and the cancellation policy. Most limo companies require 1-2 weeks cancellation, as the cars are hard to re-book on short notice.
8. Limo Safety
Be sure to ask about insurance and licensing. Is the limo service in good standing with the Public Utilities Commission, The CHP, The DMV, etc? A reputable limo company is often a member of industry groups like the GCLA, Chamber of Commerce, or the National Limousine Association.
9. Decorations
Many limo services provide wedding decorations and other extras as part of the wedding package, but if you have other ideas, ask whether the limo service can accommodate you.
Although your wedding day is shared by friends and family alike, make the limo "your space". Could you use a glass of champagne after all the excitement and stress of your wedding day? Do you want a red carpet, Flowers? Let your limo service know...
If you are planning your wedding day and still need a limousine service, get in touch with 1executive car Luxury Limousine. Visit: www.1executivecar.com
Contact Us: Company Name: DFW EXECUTIVE CAR SERVICE Address: 230 VALLEY VIEW LANE IRVING, TX 75062 SULTE 540 Phone: 214 971 0929 EMAIL: [email protected] Website: www.1executivecar.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/dfwexecutivecar
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Guides on Selecting a Good Real Estate Agency
Putting your house up for sale can be difficult. You will need to be sure that you are selling to the right person at the right deal. Finding a nice buyer is never a walk in the park. An agent would be the way to go if you seek to have it easy with the sale of your home. Real estate brokers know how to effectively make a sale. It is easy to get a buyer through an agency and as such you will avoid wasting time and resources in finding one on your own. It can be difficult trying to single out the best real estate agency among the many that exist. Consider the tips below to help you in finding the best realtor in irving ca.
You will need to consider the trustworthiness of your desired agency. You will be entrusting or your paperwork and money to the agent and thus, there is a need to be sure that they are honest people with no ulterior motives. This will guarantee security with the sale. Click here for more info about real estate.
Look into the region where the agency is found. Go for an easily accessible agency upon demand. For the sake of keeping in touch with your agent, it is important to go for one that is situated near you. If you select Showcase Agency, for instance, it will be wise to acquaint yourself with their location and check whether there are any likely obstacles when commuting to their office.
The other thing you will want to look at is the reputation of the company. In reality, so many real estate agents will be available any time you resolve to sell your house. Taking the first agency you meet will not be advisable. Take time to check their history on customer service. Consider checking what others have had to say about their past performance. It is advisable to go for an agency that has taken time to build a name for themselves.
The duration for which the agency has been in the business is a crucial element to check. Experience is the stepping block to a recommendable performance. You should choose an agency that has been in existence long enough and whose employees have high exposure in the job and are highly skilled.
Find out how much you will be needed to pay for the agency. It will be necessary to prepare a comprehensive financial plan before taking up the services of a real estate agency. Check how much they are demanding for their agency services and assess if you are in a position to meet the demands. Have different agencies serve you with their price quote so you can examine the favorable one. Learn more about real estate here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_estate_broker.
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Smoot Park Football: Remembering the game the way it used to be
The photo above, taken from the Thursday, Oct. 31, 1968, edition of The Wilkes News, shows members of the North Wilkesboro Eaglets before the team’s last game that season. The caption reads: The North Wilkesboro Eaglets finished their season Wednesday afternoon with a resounding 48-0 victory over Yadkinville. The win left the boys with a 6-0 mark for the season. They are pictured above. On the front are Tim Bundy, Mitch Blankenship, and Artie Groce. On the first row are Randy Huffman, Ken Clifton, Sonny Church, Mark Duncan, Gary Eldridge, Pat Hawkins, Ken Call, David Sink and Steve McCord. On the second row are Coach Bob Blakenship, Robert Duncan, Jack Fulk, David Brown, Steve Blankenship, Monty Minton, Mike Harris, Jim Lewis, Phillip Hennessee, and coach Harold Baker. Those on the back are Ricky Kilby, Rufus Colvard, Randy Rhoades, Mike Forester, Troy Mathis, Joe Johnson, Clate Holloway, and Irving McKenzie.
By SONNY CHURCH
Special to The Record
I had just entered the sixth grade in the fall of 1966, and I got my chance to finally play organized football.
If you put on pads before high school, back then, you had to play for Buster Bush’s North Wilkesboro Recreation Department.
The only game in town, so to speak, was based out of Smoot Park. No matter where you lived in Wilkes, if you played football before high school, you played for North Wilkesboro Recreation. You were an Eaglet, and your home turf was Smoot Park.
The Park of today is vastly different from when and where my football career began. There was no playground to speak of, save the swings that might have escaped from the carnival and that ungodly dangerous thing that went round and round expelling kids with incredible centrifugal force. There was no real swimming pool by today’s standards and there was most definitely not a locker room with showers.
Incredible as it may sound today, we actually dressed at the picnic shelters. That’s right, we stripped down to our skives for practice at the picnic shelters. We would go around to the far side of the table, take off our school clothes, put them in our gym bags and then put on our practice gear and pads. Cold, hot, rain, there was no respite from the elements except the metal roofs over the concrete picnic tables.
We were just kids and that is all we had, so we did what we were told and got ready for practice.
There were no facilities whatsoever, save the small smelly cinderblock bathrooms near the river and certainly no training room.
After practice, you unhooked your chin strap, took off your helmet and shoulder pads and walked up to the window where Danny Anderson sold those little juice box lemonades. They were 15 cents and darn well worth every penny.
There were two teams. I was on the younger sixth grade team in 1966, and the older guys were on the combined seventh and eighth grade roster.
As I recall, we had no set league to play in or definite game schedule. We played whatever team the coaches could line up a game with. Some teams were close to our size and talent. Others were on both ends of the spectrum. We never knew what we were going to be up against until we took the field. Some teams we played often, some we only played once, never to be seen again.
Most games took place mostly during the week, not really sure why, but they did. We would charter a Wilkes Transportation coach, usually paying somewhere around $2 each for the ride. We got on the bus without even a clue where we were going, we rode out of town in search of a game. From Drexel, to Lenoir, Elkin, Yadkinville, to Lansing, we played them all. One time we went as far as Thomasville and it was an astronomical $5 a head, for the bus.
Hal Church, my dad, Vernon Church, and some other fathers pitched in and took care of the transportation fee, otherwise some could not have gone. The most memorable team we played — to me anyway — was the N.C. School for the Deaf in Morganton.
We were mere children, literally playing against grown men. Most were much bigger and rougher than us. Lots of the players had facial hair and mustaches and some even had full beards.
Let me tell you, it is intimidating to be 13 years old, playing against stoic opponents that are older, stronger and larger than you.
We got our socks knocked off by grown men on a football field that was, except for the some grunts, silent on the other side of the scrimmage line. Because they couldn’t hear the referee’s whistles, you often got your clock cleaned after the play was blown dead. No flags were thrown or penalties assessed for late hits. You’ll never convince me they didn’t use this to their advantage sometimes.
Our volunteer coaches for the sixth grade team may or may not have played football, or even previously coached for that matter. They were just willing and able to show up at 3:30 p.m., at Smoot Park and blow the whistle for the seemingly endless wind sprints.
As I recall, one of our less seasoned coach’s credentials was that he owned a drive-in across the street and would feed the team hot dogs ever so often. Good enough reason for us to call him.
Another of our coaches was a man’s man of the 1960’s. I can still see his work shirt sleeves rolled up high on his biceps, hairy chest and the big cigar clinched between his teeth. At practice, one of the favorite drills was to form two single lines facing each other. There was no regard given to size or ability. You were opposite who ever came up in the front position of the opposing line
They would toss the ball to a player at the front one of the lines and scream, “Lower your head.” We would do just that, and run full tilt into each other with our heads leading the way, much like rams head butting each other.
Remember this was 1966 and we couldn’t even spell concussion.
During our first real game, we got trounced 41-6 against Drexel, and we were not allowed to even speak on the long trip back home on the bus. Later that season I scored my first touchdown on October 6th1966 against an Elkin team. My mom even got a charm bracelet engraved with that date and wore it proudly around town and to her Friday hair appointments.
Funny I can’t even remember lunch yesterday, but those things stay forever seared into my gray matter.
The next year, I got to move up to the seventh and eighth grade team. Instead of spending that summer at the Y swimming, as I had all the previous summers, I was at the new slot car track on 9th Street almost every day. I lolled about the air conditioned track and around lunch time I’d be eating and reading comic books at Horton’s Drug Store. When the first whistle blew at the park that fall, I found myself woefully pale and soft. I had a really average season and I remember little about it, but learned a valuable life lesson.
By the fall of 1968, the winds of change were blowing in the football world of Wilkes County and it threw some serious curves at a few of us. Civic clubs in the county were now sponsoring combined elementary school football teams. Wilkesboro Elementary, where I went to school, was championed by the Rotary Club. Ralph Steele and Harry Galifianakis were some of the coaches as I recall. This left myself, Art Groce, Mike Harris and a few other Wilkesboro guys as the odd men out. It was kind of like a dual citizenship.
A compromise was evidently made between the ruling powers. We could continue to play for Buster Bush’s North Wilkesboro Recreation, but not against any of the in county teams. We could continue to hop on the bus and play out of town and wear our jerseys on the sidelines at county games.
As far as I remember, no noses got bent out of shape and it really worked pretty well. I now reflect back with admiration on those wise compromises with the kids’ best interests at heart.
That year was also the first and only year that we finally beat the N.C. School for the Deaf. Big Joe Johnson romped up and down the sidelines with some huge runs and we were able to somehow match their physicality for that one game. I wouldn’t trade those surreal game experiences against the N.C. School for the Deaf for anything now.
At the end of the year, we had our little banquet at the Optimist Club House located at North Wilkesboro’s Optimist Park. The park seems so incredibly small today. The building itself is a church now and I think still holds services. I treasure a picture made that night with my mom as I was awarded Best Defensive Player of the 1968 Eaglets and given a trophy by the coaches. I had on a coat and one of those little skinny black ties. My mom was dressed like she was going to town, and my dad snapped the Polaroid in front of the fireplace hearth. It was so incredibly 1960`s I must say.
I took a lot of life lessons away with me from playing football at Smoot Park.
We didn’t have a lot, but we made do with we had. The experience made all of us better young men and better equipped us for the future on and off the field.
I still share quite a bond with those that I played with in those much simpler times. It was Smoot Park football in the 60’s…..We lowered our heads, got on the bus and, and honest to God, dressed at the picnic shelters.
Note: Sonny Church is a lifelong resident of Wilkesboro. He owns and operates Brushy Mountain Water & Coffee Company.
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Locksmith Varies - Do You Need Auto Locksmiths, Safe Specialist Or Commercial Lock Guy?
Have you misplaced the keys to your cabin at the lake or forgotten the combination to a safe at the office? Did you just break off your car key in the ignition? Maybe someone stole your purse, and you're concerned that you need to change the locks at your house. Stop worrying. you can get help right away from professional locksmith.
Automotive Locksmith Services
Can't open your car doors? Stuck in the middle of nowhere? Don't worry, because help is just a phone call away. All you have to do is get on your phone and dial one of the local 24-hour automotive locksmith services. But if you think that locksmiths just help open your car door, then think again.
Locksmiths arrive on location fully equipped to handle any emergency. They can unlock the simplest locks and decode the toughest computerized lock systems.
Many modern vehicles have automatic locks or key-less entry systems. Automotive locksmiths can repair or reconfigure these locks as easily as an old-fashioned keyed lock. Having the locksmith do this for you will save you big bucks over having your car towed to the dealership.
Professional automotive locksmiths are equipped to handle whatever strange thing you, your toddler or the local car thief may do to your car and its key systems. They possess the special tools and equipment to meet any need. Other automotive locksmith services include:
Opening your car doors or trunk in an emergency without damaging the lock.
Retrieving keys that are broken off in the lock.
Replacing and repairing ignition locks on many models
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Erasing old keys from locks
Most locksmiths offer vehicle security-related services around the clock, not only 24 hours a day but also on weekends and holidays. Keep the number stored in your phone - you will never know when you need it. Choose your automotive locksmith wisely. It's a decision that will help keep your car in great shape and keep you safe.
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Modern technology has made available better security systems to protect your home, and those systems start with good locks. A residential locksmith will help you decide what types of locks you need for all the windows and doors in your home.
Locksmiths can install locks of many different types in your home, depending on your security needs. If you live in a quiet, suburban neighborhood, for instance, your locksmith can install a simple single-side deadbolt. On the other hand, if you are protecting a valuable art collection in your home, a locksmith can provide high-tech locks that include biometric features. Locksmiths can also install safes and vaults for your jewelry, coin collection, the family silver, furs or whatever other valuables you want to keep safe.
Many locksmith services can even install an electronic access control system in your home. The electronically controlled locks that come with such a system can make your home very safe.
Many locksmiths offer 24-hour residential locksmith services. They perform emergency keying services like lock picking and lock repair. When you've forgotten the code to your electronic locks, locksmiths can even get you past the password-protected entries. They can also provide lock replacement and test your doors to appraise your home security.
Commercial Locksmiths
Commercial and industrial locks may or may not resemble residential locks, depending on what type of business they are protecting. A small town in a safe part of town may have a simple double-sided deadbolt. A high-tech manufacturing company that may have lucrative technology inside is obviously going to protect itself in a different way, perhaps with card keys or even biometric locking systems. Professional commercial locksmith services exist precisely to assess the needs of all types of businesses and meet the needs of each with a customized solution.
Other services offered by commercial locksmiths include:
Setting up a master key system
Installing professional-grade safes and vaults
Unlocking those same safes and vaults when you lose or forget the combination or codes
Installing specialty locks like rim-cylinder locks and commercial deadbolts
Re-keying and repairing locks
Professional Locksmith can Offer Much More
1. Fast Services: Professional locksmiths are ready to handle any kind of emergency and provide guaranteed services. They are trained in troubleshooting methods and can handle difficult situations with ease. Your problem can typically be resolved in less than 30 minutes, whether at your home, office or car.
2. Quality and Versatility: There are many locksmith companies that offer services customized to meet your requirements. Locksmiths are versatile and almost always certified in all fields. The same locksmith who installs new locks at your home can service your business or meet you in a parking lot to open your car door.
3. License & insurances: Most locksmith services are professional and licensed by local government and police authorities. With these professional, the security of your vehicle and home is in good hands.
4. New locks and newer locking technologies have expanded the scope of locksmiths' work. There are many good online resources for finding information on locksmith. You can get a reputable locksmith service for emergency needs or to provide your home or business with a complete lock system for your family or your company's safety.
Locksmith offer competitive rates to deliver the best solutions. If you find yourself in an emergency in the area, then call a local locksmith. Most companies guarantee a 15- to 30-minute response time from the moment your call comes through. Place your safety in their hands - locksmiths are just a call away.
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Improve Indoor Air Quality and HVAC Efficiency in Your Home With Thorough Air Duct Cleaning
While no definitive studies have been done, many homeowners just like you have seen increased airflow from their HVAC systems as well as fewer allergy ailments after giving their homes duct cleaning services. Isn't it time you found out for yourself?
As a homeowner, you understand the importance of giving your home a thorough spring cleaning each year. After all, with the milder weather and longer days, it's the perfect time to change all the linens, wash away the dust, and clear out the smelly, stuffy air of those long winter months. But why limit your vacuuming to only the areas you can see? For a truly complete sweep of your home's indoor air, contact your local HVAC provider for precise and professional air duct cleaning.
You've seen the dust and dirt that can build up inside your heating vents. Well, those types of harmful contaminants could be present throughout your home's entire ductwork system. That means that grime is also dispersing into the air every time you turn on the heat or use your central air. With an accurately performed air duct cleaning service, you can limit your family's exposure to such dust, dirt, pollen, animal dander, and other airborne pollutants. This type of meticulous vent duct cleaning can be especially helpful if you or your loved ones suffer from allergies, asthma, and other respiratory problems, particularly alleviating symptoms for children and the elderly.
To improve your home's indoor air quality and ensure that your air ducts are fully cleaned, it's imperative that you hire EPA-certified technicians who will use a professional quality Rotobrush to go over every inch of your forced air heating and cooling system, including:
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Detox Centers In Ho Ho Kus New Jersey 7423
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Single Review: “Love the Holidays” by Old 97’s
It’s the most wonderful time of the year. Or at least it will be soon, and to help usher in the holiday season Old 97’s will be releasing more than a dozen songs that capture the holiday spirit. It strikes one as being one of the last possible things that they would have thought they’d hear from one of the pioneering acts of the alt-country genre. I mean, during the course of their two and a half decade long career Rhett Miller, Murry Hammond, Ken Bethea and Philip Peeples have stayed true to form, releasing eleven (impressive) studio albums and then some (arguably getting better with age), though they’ve never displayed much interest in venturing into the holiday realm of music. Enter Love the Holidays (set for release on November 16th via ATO Records), the quartet’s surprise holiday record that will be comprised almost entirely of original songs, which in all likelihood are bound to become classics of the season – at least to some – with Old 97’s utilizing the necessary flare for such music while retaining their core sound, ensuring these pieces are entirely their own.
Take the lead single and title track, “Love the Holidays”, for example, a rollicking introduction to the album that manages to cover every key aspect of the season without sounding as if it’s an overabundance. It’s a full throttle rocker, the quick tempo being outright joyous and fun, instantly standing out as one of the strongest musical compositions the band has written. There’s a hint of a western sound to it, seeping its way into the mix of gritty rock and Americana, highlighting the acoustic guitar as much as the electric; Bethea being responsible for a captivating solo, wailing on his axe with careful precision, energizing the track that much more. Helping it fall more into the holiday category is the use of some horns, a trumpet being a key instrument that rises to prominence during the number yet also hangs in the background when it’s behooving, accenting the percussion, bolstering it by generating more of a kick. It may not be the most wintry sounding instrument of all time, though it does help achieve the desired result – and even opens up a world of new possibilities should the group decide to ever experiment with a horn section on future material. As any great song should, “Love the Holidays” just burrows its way into one’s head, proving to be absolutely infectious and begging to be turned into a sing-along. Lyrically, it touches on the excitement and chaos spurred by the holidays, a few verses delving into how overwhelming it is for children, the allure of a wrapped package being irresistible, constantly wondering and even attempting to find out what might be inside. Balancing it out are the refrains, which speak to the stress put on everyone in preparing for it, all the spending that goes on, and as insane as it might get, it’s still something cherished and not taken for granted. “Oh, I love the holidays! All the wacky, weird ways people worry and they pray…” the chorus begins, Miller seemingly making a personal assessment of those hectic six to eight weeks, as if he gets a slight kick out of the frenzy – both from watching others and enduring it himself. At times “Love the Holidays” is something of a romantic song, and at others its teeming with that childhood wonder that makes holidays like Christmas so indelible, cementing it as one of the most beloved times of the year for so many. Miller delivers it all with gusto, still sounding like a wide-eyed child who’s enamored with all the sights and sounds of it, the instruments hammering home that euphoric feeling. Seasoned veterans though they may be this is still absolutely out of the comfort zone for Old 97’s. They’ve never written music specifically like this, though just basing it off this lead single they not only seem capable of it, but they excel at it. It’s a solid start, building intrigue for the record while also introducing some new brand of holiday music, one that is a hybrid of country, Americana and rock and it should provide a fresh jolt to anyone who has become accustomed to the same old more traditional renditions of holiday songs. Pre-order Love the Holidays on: iTunes | Google Play | Amazon MP3 Visit Old 97’s websites: Official Website | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube Current Shows: 2018 November 28--Seattle, WA--Neptune Theatre 29--Portland, OR--Wonder Ballroom 30--San Francisco, CA--The Fillmore December 1--West Hollywood, CA—Troubadour 2--Solana Beach, CA--Belly Up 3--Pioneertown, CA--Pappy & Harriet's 6--Richmod, VA--The National 7--Philadelphia, PA--Theatre of Living Arts 8--Baltimore, MD--Rams Head Live! 9--Cambridge, MA--The Sinclair 10--Portland, ME--Port City Music Hall 12--Hamden, CT--The Space Ballroom 13--Asbury Park, NJ--The Wonder Bar 14--New York, NY--Irving Plaza 15--Millvale, PA--Mr. Smalls Theatre 28--Austin, TX Mohawk 29--Dallas, TX--The Statler Ballroom 2019 January 26--Ponte Vedra Beach, FL--Ponte Vedra Concert Hall 27--Tampa, FL--Norwegian Pearl 28--Tampa, FL--Norwegian Pearl 29--Tampa, FL--Norwegian Pearl 30--Tampa, FL--Norwegian Pearl 31--Tampa, FL--Norwegian Pearl February 1--Tampa, FL--Norwegian Pearl
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Hail Damage Roof Repair Cost with Insurance Dallas TX | Hail Damage Roof Claim Dallas TX
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