Mike G wrote:I've got a piece on the Reader's food blog about Robert's Fish Market on Devon, whitefish and the making of gefilte fish for Jewish holidays like today. It uses, you will possibly not be surprised, outtakes from the new Sky Full of Bacon podcast about whitefish, which also has Robert and Robert's Fish Market in it.
nr706 wrote:Have a burger and call 911.
GAF wrote:in a thinly designed attempt to get special treatment at Great Lake pizza.
GAF wrote:A-list journalists, such as DT, don't need help getting their perks and pies from the likes of me.
Aaron Deacon wrote:Ronnie and LTH get a little coverage via The Trib in the food blog of KC's weekly newspaper:
http://blogs.pitch.com/fatcity/2009/10/ ... _pizza.php
Mike G wrote:The Edzo's Burger video Sky Full of Bacon did for the Reader is now featured at New York magazine.
This is nice too!
razbry wrote:So David, did the Tribune final out the Pizza Boy story?
ab wrote:Has anyone mentioned the unmentioned but alluded to Eric M shout-out in the New Yorker, in the piece about Jonathan Gold? re: Jitilda translation.
mhill95149 wrote:Heard DH on WBEZ 848 this am. Chatting about Tweeting and Reviewer ethics....
Kennyz wrote:I can't remember the exact words, but he said it would be like putting a cup into the Mississippi River, then telling people that you're holding the river. Nice line, and illustrated well how some people are really misusing Twitter, imo.
aschie30 wrote:Kennyz wrote:I can't remember the exact words, but he said it would be like putting a cup into the Mississippi River, then telling people that you're holding the river. Nice line, and illustrated well how some people are really misusing Twitter, imo.
I heard that, too, and obviously, Mr. Hammond can speak for himself, but I understood his comment to be less about the misuse of Twitter than about illustrating the difficulty in recounting a Twitter conversation in a streaming, narrative form. In particular, that one tweet taken out-of-context is just that - a comment taken out-of-context and, because there are so many participants in the conversation, you don't really know (although you can make a very educated guess) as to who or what that comment is directed.
I was following the major players in that discussion on Twitter as it was happening and although I didn't have any issues following along, I could understand why someone (in this case, David), would not want to stand up and attempt to "officially" recount the dialogue on the air. Hopefully, David will expound more.
The foodie site picked some real winners
1. Xni-Pec (5135 W 25th St, Cicero, 708-652-8680). Without LTH, this Yucatecan joint on an industrial block in Cicero would have floundered in obscurity.
5. Depot American Diner (5840 W Roosevelt Rd, 773-261-8422). LTHers were the first to write about this West Side diner—and its great breakfast potatoes. The media—including TOC—scurried to be second.
Top foodie scuffles
3. LTHForum.com versus Chowhound.com (2004)
Internet nerds don’t have any use for fists or insults; when a bunch of them become disenchanted with a message board (as the founding members of LTH did with Chowhound), they start their own. (We’re assured that, in Internet-land, this is a major bitch slap.)
Christopher Borrelli, Tribune reporter wrote:Enter the foodie.
He's irritating, yes.
But without the foodie — who truly came into his own this decade, who used phrases such as "market-driven" and "sourcing" and discussed burgers in terms of fat-to-meat ratios — without these fussy souls willing to wait hours for meals that people wouldn't have waited 10 minutes for a decade earlier (never mind, paid triple for), Chicago might never have known Barry Sorkin's ribs and his Smoque; and Michael Cain's Kuma's would have been just a metal bar with a fantastic burger.
...
Perhaps fittingly, that 68-year-old bible of haute cuisine, Gourmet, did not make it through this upheaval intact, while in Chicago, amateur foodies founded a virtual clubhouse, LTHForum.com — and grew influential.
By Monica Eng
Tribune reporter
January 5, 2010
On a frigid February day last year, Michele Hays filed into Evanston Township High School with other concerned parents to talk with district administrators about school lunches.
One specific target of the parents' ire was a cafeteria meal called "Brunch for Lunch." As luck would have it, administrators brought a sample of the meal with them.....