Recently in 2000s Category

Montgomery, Alabama seems to be 10 years behind the rest of the country on restaurants and retailers (we just got our first Target, Best Buy, and PetSmart a few years ago.) While good restaurants spring up periodically, they are usually shut down with a year or two, victims of the "it's too pricey" syndrome this city seems to have. A few manage to hang around (La Jolla, Dawsons, Casa Napoli, The Olive Room, Vintage Year, City Grill) but we consistently lose great restaurants for lack of business (Felix's, Copeland's, Serrano.) We like good food and will even occasionally drive to Birmingham, Atlanta, or (less frequently) Mobile or Pensacola to hit favorite restaurants of ours, but life is changing and I'd rather go around the corner than across state lines to find good food.

Without further ado, 23 21 Restaurants I'd Like To See Come To The Montgomery/Prattville, Alabama Area:

  1. Copelands: After a failed attempt on south East Boulevard, perhaps they could be convinced to try again, perhaps on the east side this time. It appears that Copeland's has now pulled of Alabama altogether (Montgomery, Birmingham, and Mobile) and has also left Pensacola. Nearest Copelands is now in Atlanta. Oh yeah, and bring back the Pork LaBoucherie. A guy can wish, right?
  2. P.F. Chang's: Excellent, affordable American-Chinese cuisine, nice decor. Good quality Chinese food.
  3. Red Robin: This might actually happen as a new RR recently opened in Newnan, GA. Excellent hamburgers and sandwiches, endless fries. We're now have a Red Robin at Eastchase! Note: In my experiences (I've been 10 times sinece they opened) the Montgomery Red Robin has serious problems with consistency of service, food quality and dining experience. You may get lucky, but don't expect your usual Red Robin experience at this location.
  4. Bennigan's: Traditional American fare, sandwiches, soups with an Irish flavor. Good neighborhood bar and restaurant. Bankrupt 2008
  5. El Chico: American-Mex, but better than any of the flavor-deprived Mexican being served in this town today, nearest ones are in Mobile and Nashville.
  6. Other Raving Brands franchises: We already got multiple Moe's (now run by a different company) and (supposedly) a Doc Green's on the way (what happened there?). How about Mama Fu's Noodles, Planet Smoothie, and Shane's Rib Shack, maybe a Boneheads, or a Flying Biscuit?
  7. In-And-Out Burger: Excellent West Coast burger chain, always smiling, gracious staff and prompt service of great food. Imagine!
  8. Old Chicago: Great pizza and well over 110 beer choices.
  9. Baja Fresh: The franchise recently entered and exited the Atlanta market, so Montgomery luring this consistently flavorful and fresh Mex star is probably a long shot.
  10. Mimi's Cafe: French-inspired american food. (coming to EastChase in Winter 2008)
  11. Noodles & Co.: Various noodle entrees, from Mac and Cheese to Asian noodle dishes. Same idea as Mama Fu's, a noodle house.
  12. Houlihan's: Several locations in Atlanta
  13. Cozymel's Mexican Restaurant:: Great chicken and carnitas fajitas. Steak fajitas were so-so. Nearest one might be Memphis
  14. Bahama Breeze: Island food and drink. Long lines/wait, get there early. Birmingham or Atlanta
  15. Abuelo's Mexican Food Embassy: Great Mexican food, all around. Memphis/KC/OKC are the closest ones.
  16. Houston's: Up-scale sit-down American dining in a beautiful decor. Several locations in Atlanta.
  17. Uno Chicago Grill: Chicagoland dining with new creative twists. Formerly Pizzeria Uno.
  18. On the Border: Good chain Mexican. Recently closed in Birmingham.
  19. Buca di Beppo: Southern Italian food served family-style in large, delicious portions. So clean they take you on a tour through the kitchen on your way to your seat.
  20. Qdoba Mexican Grill: Similar to Moe's and Chipotle, San Francisco-style burritos with tons of flavor and spice.
  21. First Watch: A small chain of health-conscious and delicious breakfast treats in a relaxing environment
  22. Marie Callendar's: Home-cooked comfort food and great pies.
  23. Cheesecake Factory: Great cheesecake (50 different varieties and a highly diverse menu including Asian, Mexican, Italian, American, Cajun, and Spanish choices to meet everyone's needs. Their menu is a small book. The nearest ones are in Birmingham and Atlanta.

Yeah, they are mostly chains. Some people seem to get hung up about that. These are the good chains, not the ones that make you roll your eyes when you see them. If any 4 of these came to town, I'd be much happier about the dining scene in Montgomery.

I figure we could afford to lose some T.G.I.Friday's, Ruby Tuesday, Chili's, Applebee's, and O'Charley's, we'd have room for some new, good restaurants.

Photo Gallery >> Barber Vintage Motorsports Musuem

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Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum (and, in fact, the entire Barber Motorsports Park) is a jewel in the crown of Birmingham, Alabama. It should be on the top of any motorized sports enthusiast's to-do list when visiting Birmingham. They have an excellent collection of motorcycles from all eras and all manufacturers. There are approximately 750+ motorcycles and a approximately 40 or 50 sports and racing cars on display at any given point. They are beautifully restored and displayed open-air in the spacious facility. Northeast Birmingham, approximately 2 miles east of the junction of I-20 and I-459. Follow I-20 past I-459, take the first exit past the junction (Leeds), turn right and the facility is on your right about 1 mile down the road. Admission is $15 for adults, and well worth it.

I've gone to the museum the past two weekends and had a great time. The basement "paddock" area is usually closed to the public, but was open this past weekend, so I got to stroll and shoot some angles you can't normally get.

More photos from Barber Vintage Motorsports Museum

A satellite shot of the facility from Google Maps

<pander>Now, if I can just get someone from Barber to take me behind-the-scenes, or to the warehouse my journey will be complete...</pander>

The Ten Cannots (1916)

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You cannot  further the brotherhood of man by inciting class hatred.

You cannot  help the poor man by destroying the rich.

You cannot  lift the wage earner by pulling down the wage payer.

You cannot  help small men by tearing down big men.

You cannot  keep out of trouble by spending more than your income.

You cannot  bring about prosperity by discouraging thrift.

You cannot  strengthen the weak by weakening the strong.

You cannot  establish security on borrowed money.

You cannot  build character and courage by taking away one's initiative and independence.

You cannot  help someone permanently by doing for them what they could and should do for themselves.

-- Rev. William John Henry Boetcker (1873-1962)

Cost of living: November 4, 2008

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Dow 9,625.28
S&P 500 1,005.75
Nasdaq 1,780.12

Hard drive storage: $0.10/GB
(Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 1.5TB (1500GB ) 7200RPM/32MB for $149.99 via TigerDirect on November 4, 2008)

Solid-state hard drive storage: $3.63/GB
(OCZ 128GB SATA II MLC Solid State Drive for $464.99 via ZipZoomFly on November 4, 2008)

Flash memory: $2.62/GB
(Patriot 16GB SDHC Card for $41.99 via ZipZoomFly on November 4, 2008)

Highest interest rate savings with minimal deposit requirements: 4.00%
(CNB Bank Directvia money-rates.com on November 4, 2008)

Gallon of gas: $2.358
(US National Average, pulled from Gas Buddy on November 4, 2008)

What is "middle class"?

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A lot of political hay was made of John McCain's (attempted humorous) answer to the question "[at what point] do you move from middle class to rich?" Did anybody notice that Obama wasn't asked and didn't answer this question? Considering the Democrats are largely campaigning on providing and protecting the "middle class" and "ordinary Americans", doesn't it seem dishonest that they don't define this "class" as a specific range of incomes so we can evaluate their "offerings" objectively? Don't we all think we are middle class in our own heads (unless we are financially independent?) I think they are counting on it.

"Depending on class model used, the middle class may constitute anywhere from 25% to 73% of households." This assures the Democrats are selling their ideas to a majority audience.

Wouldn't you be disappointed if you bought into the Democrats pitch expecting to receive a tax cut, some service, a handout and found out that you weren't middle class at all, but either too high or too low for their definitions? This is classism. I know it hits a wide target demographic, but I don't want to be low, middle, or high class. I don't want to be included or excluded from some arbitrary class that is targeted for specific benefits. I want to be an American, who works for my own keep. I don't want some imaginary line drawn that says now you are "rich" or "upper class" and can "afford" to pay additional taxes as some sort of "political duty."

When Bill O'Reilly interviewed Obama a couple weeks ago, Obama told Bill O'Reilly that he "can afford" to pay higher taxes. There is a big difference applying that same tax rate to a small-business owner that just barely crosses some arbitrary "success line", let's say $250,000. I'm not sure why O'Reilly didn't ask Obama what right Obama had to say where Bill O'Reilly's money should be spent. I can't believe he let that one slip by.

I'm sure this ambiguity is to attract as many people as possible into the class of needy voters who want what the Democrats are offering. Don't worry everyone, the first hit is free. After that, you won't care to try to succeed hard enough to carry someone else on your shoulders. Ever read Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged? It's an excellent book. It examines what happens when you start demanding things (taxes) from the producers in society. Long story short, those with a conscience and soul intact will withdraw from producing and not allow themselves to be abused in this way. What does Obama plan to do if all the "wealthiest 5% in America" (those who would get a tax increase) decided to suddenly cut their income to below $250,000 a year? Who will pay for everyone then? Do we just assume this won't ever happen?

I'm sick of (so-called) experts predicting $4/gallon or $5/gallon gas. Now that prices are dropping the headlines read $3/gallon gas by end of Summer. I'll leave it up to you to determine whether or not I'm an expert, but if words have as much effect as it appears on market forces:

I predict that gas will be $1.50 or lower by December 2008.

I've got a 1999 Dodge Avenger ES with (just now) 210,000 miles on it. It's my second Avenger and has been a very good car. I bought it new and have been the only owner. My first Avenger (1997) was totaled in a flood. Here's a list of some of the maintenance issues I've had over the last 9 years.

* I always religiously had the oil changed, Regular oil for the initial break-in, then synthetic oil only every 5K miles.

* If you abuse (or someone has abused) the transmission, I've seen (or had) them fail in as little as 40K miles. Take it easy, it's Chrysler's basic transmission, not a performance tranny. They use it in their minivans and Neons. Use common sense. Chrysler recommends changing the transmission fluid every 15,000 miles.

* The input speed sensor was replaced at ~16K miles under warranty. I replace the output speed sensor much later myself when it failed. The car went into "limp" mode (stays in 2nd gear) and all the gauges stopped working. The output speed sensor is an easy DIY fix with minimal tools. Maybe 10 minutes tops.

* My cruise control switch assembly (in dash) broke at ~27K miles and was replaced under warranty. The original and replacement both never worked right. Sometimes it works first push, sometimes you have to press it several times to turn the cruise control on.

* For a while I was bending the 17" aluminum wheels with regularity (half dozen wheel repairs at ~$165 each in the course of a year) on the mean streets of Atlanta, but haven't had any problems since we moved away. Replacement wheels are available for ~$165 + ~$15 shipping, so no more repairs. I've averaged about 1 wheel bent per year, but most of them were the 12 months I lived in Atlanta.

* The ball joints were replaced under recall at ~51K miles. No further problems expeienced.

* Had the rear main seal replaced at ~60K miles.

We've got a new high school going in near our house, way out in the country north of Prattville, Alabama. There has been a lot of buzz about naming the new school after the (old) Marbury High School which this school will be replacing. There's been online petitions and a regular stream of articles in the local weekly paper talking about community, memories, provenance, etc.

It seems to me that building a new school is an excellent change to brainstorm, involve the community, get creative and come up with a new name for a new school. Instead everyone seemed to get stuck in nostalgia.

The (old) Marbury High School is in Marbury, a very small community in rural central Alabama. The (new) Marbury High School in not in Marbury, it is not even near Marbury. It's 8.5 - 10 miles from Marbury to the new school site depending on your route. The new school does find itself in the community of Pine Level, Alabama.

Why not rename the current Marbury High School to Marbury School (it is destined to become the new middle school) and give the new school a new name that reflects something about its new location, an honored member of the education community, or some famous individual (president, governor, etc.)?

That's my two cents, now I'll sit back and wait for the first sporting event at the school where the visiting team erroneously goes to the old school because they didn't even know there was a new school...

This is my yearly report of what crime was reported on a day in Montgomery, Alabama. My original tally was for a Thursday in late June, so I'll keep with that just to minimize variables.

On Thursday, June 19, 2008, there were:

11 Vehicle Burglaries
21 Burglaries
5 Vehicle Thefts
9 Thefts
2 Robbery
1 Domestic Violence Assault
1 Assault

reported in Montgomery, Alabama (est. population 202,000).

The estimated value of goods stolen on this one day total $85,789 with an additional $3,910 worth of damage to personal property (vehicles, homes) in the commission of these crimes. Total damages/loss from crimes committed on this day: $89,699. These are just the reported crimes, for one day. Assume those numbers are a representative sample and multiply out those numbers over the course of a week (~$627,893), a month (~$2,735,820), or a year (~$32,762,560) as it pleases you. The real picture might be slightly better or slightly worse, but the picture is ugly anyway you slice it. This is simply a tally of the crimes reported in the Montgomery Advertiser Montgomery Crime Reports section.

A recent e-mail mail from a headhunter to my monster e-mail address...

Hi David,

Hope you are doing in the best of the mood!!
I came across your resume on the job site and i feel it's a good
match for your skill's. If you feel the same do send me your most
updated profile asap, so that we can have the ball rolling.

For immediate update send your resume to ahtesham32@gmail.com. (Because nothing says professionalism like using a GMail account for your corporate e-mail)

Title: Tivoli Consultant
Location: Endicott, NY (Lockeed Martin, perhaps?)
Length: 3 Months+

Description:
Our client is looking for High Level TIVOLI consultant.

Regards,
xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
LMNOP Technology Inc. (changed)
" Committed to Human Excellence Through IT " (What?)
Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey. Why are there so many two-bit headhunter outfits in NJ?

Apparently Monster is going the way of Ebay. Remember dotcoms, enough scam business on your service will turn your whole service irrelevant to your legitimate clients. Maybe headhunting has just got that scummy.


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