Saturday, July 18, 2009

In the U.S.

Yeah, yeah, yeah ... the blog has gone mostly silent for over a month. At this point nobody's paying much attention so it's a good time to post something rambling.

I left Paris a week ago today and flew first to New York, then on to Seattle, drove Portland for a few days, and then finally drove back to the Bay Area yesterday. That's a whole lot of America in a short period. A few things came into focus more this time than my previous trips back to the U.S.

Things I miss about the U.S.
  • NPR!! C'est vrai. I dunno, maybe it's all those years spent living in the Bay Area. Maybe it's the ridiculousness of private radio stations (KMTT and KFOG excepted). But damn I miss it -- all of it. And BTW Oregon, what's the deal with your radio stations? Nothing but "Christian" radio and country.
  • American grocery stores. Ahhhhh ... fresh bread, produce, and neosporin all in one store? That's three stops in Paris.
  • Space. Granted, our flat in Paris is in a pretty dense neighborhood. But yikes - driving from Portland to San Francisco is one long openspacegasm. And I didn't even get near the fly-over states!
On the flip side, as soon as I landed stateside this time I was struck by the girth. Americans are huuuge! I suggest that we all take a cue from our president and adopt a rigorous program of high stress, exercise, arugula, and smoking. That'll do the trick.

5 comments:

Zeke said...

If you have an iPhone, you might consider the WundeRadio application. You can listen to live streaming radio from all around the world. Tons of NPR.

Lora said...

on said iPhone (i have one!) when one is all around the world, can one still listen to live streaming radio without the data roaming charges??

Zeke said...

As long as you are on a wifi network no, otherwise unfortunately yes. It would hit your data plan.

Unknown said...

some of us FEED off of your blog so THANK YOU for FINALLY updating. i can sleep now.

KJ said...

too many FAT people in America. Fat tax will solve the health care reform problem.