Wide panoramic view of Jefferson Park just after a rainstorm, showing dark gray clouds, bright green grass and a yellowish and sandy baseball diamond.

(Recorded on a Canon PowerShot SD950 IS Digital Elph while standing under the eaves of that building at left in the above photo of Jefferson Park.)

Nope, we're not headed to the Taste of Chicago. The Taste can be kind of fun, but it's also a real headache to get to and you have to battle thousands of other people.

I'd say you need to embrace the hustle and bustle to fully appreciate the Taste. Sort of like how to tolerate alfresco dining, you need a high tolerance of carbon monoxide and pedestrian stares. That's a topic worthy of an entire podcast. I can understand how diners might enjoy having a meal in a secluded garden or a quiet courtyard -- but too often here in Chicago, alfresco dining means some eatery merely has jammed a dozen tables out on the sidewalk.

Bugs, carbon monoxide, allowing total strangers to waltz by and look at what you're stuffing in your pie hole. And this is a good thing? Mm-mm-good, huh?

Speaking of things that sound like a good thing but often aren't, let's talk about one of my favorite culinary topics: macaroni and cheese. I've always maintained that although Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Dinner is the gold standard against which all other such dishes are judged, the amount of powdered cheese provided just isn't enough. In fact, ever since I was a kid, I've always added extra cheese when I cook up this favorite comfort food.

Photo of a box of Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Crackers.The other day while shopping in the Walgreens across my office, I noticed a new product: Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Crackers. I bought a box and gave it a try.

Verdict: Not cheesy enough. And a few others at work reached the same conclusion. Please note this was the regular version -- imagine how noncheesy the "mild" version is. One colleague even compared the crackers to Cheese Nips, another Kraft brand.

I'm a loyal consumer of Kraft Macaroni & Cheese Dinner, but I can't get too excited about these cracker knockoffs.

In this podcast, I also talk about finding a really cool site while Googling for reviews of Carrara, an affordable CGI application. One link led me to a site promoting a proposed TV series called "Atomic City" featuring the adventures of Phil Velvet, an Elvis lookalike private eye in a kitschy, retro-future re-imagined Las Vegas.

I'm not sure just why I like the site, but I must have watched the video clip several dozen times now. Check it out and let me know what you think.

Finally, what with the ascendency of digital imaging, chemical analog photography seems destined for retro status. Yet, even as I embrace digital, I find myself clinging to film photography. In fact, some of the best work I've done of lately has been with the Holga -- which is just about as analog as you can get.

Whenever I want to reinvigorate my excitement for analog photography -- or for photography in general -- I like to check in at Filmwasters, which serves up galleries by its five founders, as well as links to other photo-related sites. But the highlight for me is the Filmwasters podcast.

Well, that's it for now. Look for some episodes next month from Colorado, plus a special podcast with Dick about geocaching.

ChicagoScope feedback line: 312-683-5272. Send e-mail to ChicagoScope@gmail.com.

Direct download: crackers.mp3
Category: podcasts -- posted at: 11:39 PM
Comments[1]

 



About Me
I'm Leigh Hanlon, a writer and photographer in Chicago. Before moving to the Windy City, I worked at daily and weekly newspapers in Arizona, Colorado and Wyoming. (Photo by Marty Larkin)


If your device is Flash-enabled, click the play button above to hear the latest audio podcast without leaving this page. To play an older podcast or a specific episode, or if you're using an iPhone or iPad, click on the "POD" logo in that episode's headline or its "Direct download" link at the bottom of its show notes.




Click above to have ChicagoScope delivered free to iTunes.



Click above to have ChicagoScope delivered free to your Zune.

ChicagoScope Orbit

Autry Cowboy Code
Am. WideScreen Museum
Kevin Banford
Ursula Barzey
Mark Bazer
The Brit and Yankee
Center for UFO Studies
Cheap Date
Chicago Bites
Common Wonders
CowboyPoetry.com
Creedence Again
Dick Smith Software
Dining Chicago
Discover Woodfield
Eblo
Michael Fioritto
Global Traveler
The Home Spa Goddess
It's Fourth and Long
Johngy's Beat
The Mike & Jeff Show
Nadablog
The People Photographer
Podcasting News
Jeff Rense
Ray's X-Blog
Retro Thing
Rodeo News
Spudart
Starbelly Studios
Paul Swansen
Thrillarama
Chuck Tomasi
TravelCommons
WindyBits
A Year at the Wheel
Leah Zeldes



Some ChicagoScope podcasts are recorded on genuine analog magnetic tape in our faithful Marantz PMD222, PMD420 and PMD430 or Sony TC-D5 Pro II cassette machines. Otherwise, content is digitally captured with Sony PCM-D50 or Marantz PMD620 and PMD660 recorders. ChicagoScope is edited in GarageBand on an Apple Mac Mini.


Real Stereo logo
ChicagoScope does its best to deliver full stereophonic sound whenever possible.








Add to Technorati Favorites




Creative Commons License
ChicagoScope Podcast Audio and Text by Leigh Hanlon is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

Categories

All Our Yesterdays
Books
Chicago
Movies
Pop Culture
Technology
Vidcast
Video
general
podcasts


Syndication


Keyword Search


July 2010
S M T W T F S
     
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031



Archives
February
April
May
June
July

May
June
July
August
November

January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November

January
February
March
April
May
June
August
September
October
November
December

May
July
August
September
October
November
December