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Back in L.A.

posted at 11:01 am
on Mar. 19, 2000

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Hey.

There’s that song that came out a few months ago called “Back in (to?) L.A.” That’s me, in a nutshell.

I had dinner yesterday at the Apple Pan diner.  I would consider it the quintessential American experience, the perfect bookend to a trip abroad, and I recommend everyone stop there on the way home from the airport as sort of a North American Blarney stone.

What makes it so U.S.A., baseball and apple pie (other than the great apple pie they serve)?

First of all, it’s impossible to park at the place, they only have about eight parking spots behind the restaurant.  It’s made even more difficult by the fact that I was there in a group of four people, and we brought three cars.  I had to park on the street and spent a long time deliberating over how much money to feed the meter. Like, if it’s 53 minutes to 6:00, and I put 47 minutes on the meter, will I get a ticket in those last 6 minutes? Or should I waste another quarter?  It’s not just the thought of spending $0.25 for only 6 minutes, it’s also that I know I’ll _need_ that quarter for parking later, and I might get a ticket if I don’t have it then…

The diner was one long counter with a big grill in the middle.  There was an average of 1.2 ketchup bottles per person.  The menu was:
-burger
-hickory burger
-sandwich (no one ordered a sandwich in all the time I was there)
-fries
-pies
-coke / diet / Dr Pepper
-coffee

I ordered (surprise!) a burger, fries, a drink and a slice of pie.

The burger came wrapped in wax paper, without a plate.  I guess you’re supposed to eat it in one continuous motion, never letting it alight on earth.

The chairs were red vinyl. The counter was Formica. The floor was checkerboard tiles. The waiter added up the bills by hand.  Lunch was approximately eight times more here than in Budapest on average.

And I loved it.

Overheard

“Work saves us from three great evils: boredom, vice and need.”

...who said it?

“A third of high school graduates, along with 42 percent of college graduates, never read a book after they finish school. Eighty percent of the families in the United States last year did not buy a book.”

...who said it?

“All things are difficult before they are easy.”

...who said it?

“All growth is, by its very definition, not sustainable.”

...who said it?

“We’re Justin and Dave, and this is our improbably, bacon-flavored story...”

...who said it?

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