Thursday, September 10, 2009

Episode 5 - Sept 10 2009

Seattle, Yay!! Seattle, Boo!!
Seems like people either love living in Seattle or they don't - doesn't seem to be much in-between. Though we both moved to Seattle around 2004, Hilary and Edward T have two very different takes on our love for Seattle: Hilary loves it and Edward T...well, let's just say he doesn't.

But why? Find out in our most expansive and explosive podcast yet!

Hilary and Edward T start out discussing what they've been doing off of the mic for the last month, including Hilary's vacation, her cool new motorcycle accessory and Edward T's party and his fire-building skills. In addition, Edward T relates yet another dating debacle, which unbelievably, involves another guy with a motorcycle.

We move on to discuss what was it that attracted us to the Puget Sound area in the first place. Hilary also tells us about the things that keep her in Seattle and why she loves it so much, including the weather, the international flavor of the scientific community and the supportiveness of the gay community.

Meanwhile, Edward T taps into the rage and rants about what he dislikes about Seattle, which as you will find out, is apparently everything. He blows his stack about traffic and then delineates from a list of all the social and culture issues that rub him the wrong way, including and especially the 'Seattle Freeze'.

Then, in the Science Minute, Hilary tells us about protein, hemaglobin, Vice-Grips, changing Ph's, oxygen and the Goblet (not a character in "Lord of the Rings"), which helps your life go sooo much smoother than you could ever imagine. Find out why.


Questioning the Seattle Freeze phenomenon, including the quote about 6 ft. of Jello and a lock: "The Seattle Freeze: Bullshit or Legit Phenomenon?"

Economist magazine, June 30th, 2005:
  • Quote about Seattle: "It is home to Boeing, Starbucks and Microsoft (as well as to Ichiro Suzuki, the hippest baseball player in the world). But Seattle's other, lesser boast is that it probably has the worst transport planning in North America.
  • Geography doesn't help; traffic has to be squeezed between mountains and sea along a handful of narrow corridors. But the real bugbear is the region's conflicting or overlapping transport plans. Each local authority wants to control its own; each has its own administration, engineers and schedule planners; and all compete for passengers and funds." (Unable to provide link due to copyright issues).

The August 2008 issue of GQ magazine named Seattle the "Least Funny City in America."
  • Quote: "It's rainy and progressive and almost kind of European. It's Norway on the Pacific. Norwegians should design wind farms and plan the health care system, but they may not roast people at the Friars Club." (Unable to provide link due to copyright issues).

Enjoy!

Recorded Sunday, September 6, 2009

No comments:

Post a Comment