12
Apr 15

Catching up

We traveled. Uber to the airport. Delta from Tampa to Atlanta. A shuttle from the airport to the car. And then the car down the freeway home. All of that so I could take off my suit and then mow the lawn just ahead of the rain. And now this, catching up, with extra photos from the trip.

This is the first of the electronic waiter pagers I’ve seen. It was in the hotel lobby, a place with big palm trees, no apparent ceiling and a pretty decent music selection. I wanted to press one of the buttons to test the response time, but then I would have to order something …

And that would have been silly considering how much of our dining was done during the trip at the Colombia Cafe. It is located in one of the city’s museums, sort of a welcome center location. And above us there was great neon, like this guy:

I wanted to bring the baseball player sign home. The airline said no. Maybe I should have taken the train:

And now some of the great ceramic work adorning the outside of the Colombia, in Ybor City. Fine detail, terrific food. I’d go back again — oh wait! We did!


11
Apr 15

Our last day at SSCA

More panel sessions today. Some paper grading. A business meeting this evening for the mass communication division, where I served as chief note taker in charge of slowing down proceedings with interjections like “What was that again?” and the occasional “How do you spell that person’s name?”

For lunch we went to Colombia Cafe, big surprise. It is close — not much else seems to be — and it is delicious. We’ve been there for lunch for three days straight and, of course, went to their main restaurant last night for dinner. I could eat there a lot more before it became a chore.

Just in between our hotel and the cafe is the Amelia Center, where we saw the hockey game Thursday night. We were on the river walk and it was framed so nicely between the trees:

Sandwiches at the cafe. I did not have one, but I hear they are terrific. They do a great job with the bread, so I’ve no doubt. The secret, I was told several years ago, is in the bread:

Our friends Jenni and Gavin came to join us again for lunch. We shot this on the balcony of the cafe. There are better pictures, but I’m using this wide and high one to remind us it was an amazingly beautiful day:

The view from our hotel that we don’t have in our room. But the parking deck we can see on the other side of the building is attractive as those things go.

We had dinner with a few more of our friends and said our goodbyes. Our flight leaves tomorrow morning and we might not see them all again before then. You’re always sad to see it go, but that’s only because you bothered to come in the first place.


10
Apr 15

Another day at SSCA

Here is a panel you missed this morning. We were, I think, both entertaining and thoughtful. It was both theoretic and nostalgic. And almost all of the examples that came out of the panel were tales that started with some dystopian or post-apocalyptic backstory, which I found to be interesting. Just read the description, and imagine you were there:

It led to this quote, from our friend and co-panelist Dr. Brian Brantley, which was spot on:

And I don’t even like zombie films. Or mobster films. I think they’re kind of the same, actually.

I also chaired a panel on politics and sat in on another one where The Yankee presented, and caught a fourth session elsewhere, as well. It was a good day at the conference.

We have friends here in Tampa — Jenni, with whom we ran the Augusta half-Ironman last year and her husband, Gavin, who flies rockets and works for the county. That sounds like he flies rockets for the county, and I think he would appreciate that dangling gerund, so I’ll just leave it as is They took us here:

They took us not knowing we’ve had lunch at one of their cafes for two days in a row. That’s OK. We’re going back there again tomorrow.

The neon side overhead:

Across the street, the local branch of “My bank is more patriotic than your bank.”

Inside the restaurant, I enjoyed the roast pork “a la Cubana.” I even enjoyed the plantains, and I don’t even like plantain. Gavin, meanwhile, ordered the flaming steak. That was a first for me. He said it was delicious:

The restaurant has been around for more than a century, aimed at the working man, but has evolved somewhat over the decades. It is still a family-owned place. The menu is covered in their history. This is one of the best stories I’ve read in a menu (and I always read the stories in a menu):

Outside and around the corner, here are the six generations of that family who poured their lives into the place:

The whole block, it seemed, was dressed up in the style. I wonder what happens to those tiles when the seventh generation comes along.


09
Apr 15

Conferencing

Having registered for the conference yesterday — name tags, programs and no swag, which has disappeared entirely from this conference — we started off this year’s edition of the Southern States Communication Association in the old-fashioned way, attending panels.

My favorite of the day was one titled “From Teddy to FDR: Rhetoric and he Presidential Roosevelts.” There were papers there from Teddy’s classic 1883 Duties speech to women’s suffrage and FDR’s Lend-Lease debates. I liked it because the papers had such an impact and a chronological bent that you can trace so much of the 20th century weaved right through the words and the circumstance of the time.

There were other panels. There was also this guy:

conquistador

That’s one surprised conquistador. And so there I am, in the cafe at lunch, a ridiculous imitation of a CSI drama, trying to figure out what in his line of sight has him so startled.It made no sense. Whatever goosed him had moved on and he wasn’t talking about it:

conquistador

But the food was good at Colombia Cafe. And while I don’t normally take pictures of food, this is the sort of enthusiasm that can occur when you have a sandwich for dinner, skip breakfast and have a late lunch.

lunch

It didn’t hurt that one of our friends had already been there for lunch, said it was good, recommended that dish in particular and then decided, “I’ll go back with you.”

Conferences are special like that.

Just across the street from the hotel is the Amalie Center, home of the Tampa Bay Lightning. They were hosting the Devils tonight. We got tickets, got inside just in time for the national anthem and see the Tesla generator hanging from the ceiling spark up the dark room.

hockey

They just wrapped up the women’s NCAA finals earlier in the week. Hockey tonight, indoor football tomorrow and hockey the next day. The Amalie Center is a busy place. And so is our conference. Tomorrow we have a cool futurist panel, should be fun, if you’re in the area. Teleport your way on in.


08
Apr 15

Travel day

Breakfast at the Barbecue House. Delicious. And then we loaded the car with a few bags and drove to the airport, where all of the parking lots were full. Having congratulated ourselves for being early for a change now we were feeling the traditional airport stress. So we booked an off-property spot, because the 21st century has a way of overcoming minor difficulties on the move. Literally, the bill was paid over the phone as we pulled into the lot.

Caught the shuttle to the airport. Went through security. Went through security again, because the indifferent folks wearing blue shirts at the Atlanta airport possess a keen attention to detail.

We flew out of the new terminal and into Tampa, which forever feels like a new city. We took an Uber ride to the hotel. (My first Uber!) It was fine, nice guy, clean car, pleasant chat. That was also paid for over the phone, and so it was almost like it never happened. He was the friend-of-a-friend who also worked at an art shop and had a Disney past who had nothing to do that afternoon and was happy to take a ride. Or so it seemed. He did get paid, after all.

Checked in at the hotel. Went up to the 11th floor and were amused by our view. On the opposite side of the hotel you get the canal. Over here, the Embassy Suites and a parking deck. I shot this video, a Hyperlapse edited on my phone and mixed with a tune I made on my iPad.

We met up with our friends from the conference, swell folks from around the region that we don’t get to see enough, but enjoy too much.

We walked to a place downtown offering high end pub food. I hadn’t previously known that was a niche. Anyway, it was a lovely time with nice, smart, funny people. We walked by to the hotel and I’m going to either read or grade myself to sleep.