- No Recommendations yet - go add some!
- Satire can work for some to emotionally-reach another (is not that what it takes to make a change in another?), and it has done so over history, in some degree of efficacy. While any social change requires many, satirists can be an integral and much-desired comedic relief and angle of the philosophy or attitude of change. I have found I am one who speaks straight-forward, in-earnest, with kindness and bravery, about points most-directly and seriously, with a human tongue, rather than mechanical (sometimes). For satire, I feel I am not made in terms of using it for change, though that doesn't stop me from using it. Just as you may find you are more efficacious in making important points in your life by using satire, I prefer and appreciate a straight-forward manner.
- When I was a boy, we used to travel up to a small shack of a shop in Maine. The line went out the door, and inside there was room for around ten to fifteen, and this was elbow-mashing at its most comfy. It is Flo's Hotdogs.
http://www.floshotdogs.com/
I think it might be celery salt that the dogs are steamed in, and their famous relish... Google yields an apparent desire for the recipe that people will look for because it is so so good.
For all hotdog connoisseurs, lovers, or anyone who values great food, Flo's is a must. People come from all over, from Maine to Myanmar to Mexico to Mars*, these are great dogs.
And for the record, ketchup is a cardinal sin when it comes to hotdogs.
*not intended to be a factual statement
- I remember when this podcast was broadcast one evening, and it captured me somewhat fiercely. I remember, but have yet to find, a video which was mentioned to be on this page, or associated with it. Where do I find this video?