Please Feed The Meters: The Next Parking Revolution

Why did America give up on charging for parking? A proposed solution to congestion and sprawl:

"There’s plenty to hate about driving—traffic jams, car accidents, speeding tickets—not to mention the endless headache of finding a spot to park. So what if you discovered an invention that could wean us from our vehicles, combating suburban sprawl and making city streets less dangerous, congested, and polluted? Well, that device has been around for nearly 80 years: It’s called the parking meter.

"Contrary to popular belief, the parking meter was originally designed to keep traffic moving and make more spaces available for shoppers, a measure often lauded by local businesses as much as the public who paid their hourly rates. Beginning with the first parking meter, installed in 1935 on the corner of First Street and Robinson Avenue in Oklahoma City, and spreading clear across the United States, the device was hailed as the great solution to our parking woes. Yet decades of poor meter implementation, inane off-street parking requirements, and technological stasis slowly turned our city streets into a driver’s nightmare."

(via The Browser)
PUBLISHED: Jan. 26, 2013
LENGTH: 9 minutes (2313 words)

Reprint: Nature’s Magic Bullet

Beware: The information in this post may have bodily impact on you. This is a copy of the google cache of the lost shoebusters.com page. The original page is not even on the Wayback Machine of…
PUBLISHED: March 18, 2010
LENGTH: 42 minutes (10657 words)

Billboard: 1986 Artist Of The Year, The Making of 'Whitney Houston'

Billboard: Artist Of The Year Billboard Inside Tracks, December 1986 Whitney Houston The Long Road To Overnight Stardom - By Bud Scoppa Once in a blue moon
LENGTH: 10 minutes (2613 words)

Flick Chicks

The junior executives’ office at Thinkscope Visioncloud was nicer than any room within a fifty-mile radius of the “Office” studio. After I finished pitching one of my ideas for a low-budget romantic comedy, I was met with silence. One of the execs sheepishly looked at the other execs. He finally said, “Yeah, but we’re really trying to focus on movies about board games. People really seem to respond to those.”
SOURCE:New Yorker
PUBLISHED: Oct. 3, 2011
LENGTH: 6 minutes (1535 words)
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