5 posts tagged “redline”
A sudden cold streak has clashed today with the warm weather here, producing a fog as thick as pea soup; here, for example, is the view from the Sheridan el platform, as I wait for the train that will eventually get me to Pearl Art Supply (Chicago and Wells), where I am shopping today for drawing supplies. More later!
I don't mean I've come out as gay; I mean that for the first time in a week, the weather has gotten tolerable enough again to venture out into the world, which is what I've done. Temperatures today, in fact, are way above what they've recently been -- 40 degrees today (4 C), versus the below-freezing temps we've recently been having -- which of course means we have about a foot of snow all melting at once today, which of course has turned my entire neighborhood into a slushy, semi-frozen pond of black water and consumer waste. Nice! It's always something here, I swear.
I have nothing to do tonight, and no one to do it with; so fuck it, I'm going down to River North and seeing "City of Children" ("Children of Men! Children of Men!") by myself, since I've read so much cool stuff about it, and have been by the website which has like ten mini-trailers and I've seen them all, and each one of them rocks my ass. And I wore my leather suit jacket, too, so that I could go out to the Redhead in River North afterwards, before heading home.
Pictured: me on the red line, listening to my new first-ever iPod. I automatically feel like a badass when listening to my iPod; maybe this is a reason for why Apple has 90 percent market share in MP3 players, that everyone feels like a badass when wearing an iPod?
I spent all day getting online things done, so before the cold of this evening I thought I'd get out for some coffee and a little face time with the Hoo-Mons. I'm at Emerald City, to be specific, which just happens to be next door to the Sheridan el stop on the red line.
The network of train stops that make up the CTA, maybe 100 or so altogether, make for interesting viewing; the overall system is so old now, and with station improvements happening so randomly over the decades, that no two stations here look entirely alike, nor do most even have a unified design scheme. Take the stop in my neighborhood, for example; how the building's exterior is clearly an ornamental style from the 1920s or '30s, with a modernist glass front added sometime in the '50s or '60s, and a glowing outside sign in the '80s. (And let's not even start with the patchwork of styles found inside the station itself.)
I'm surprised, frankly, that no one yet has done a glossy coffetable book about the various el stops you find throughout the Chicago system; it's certainly a book I'd enjoy owning.