The pause that refreshes
I’m a bit under the weather today, having woken up with an aura that then segued seamlessly into a migraine.
Fortunately, I don’t get migraines too often, now that I’ve eliminated chocolate from my life. But every now and then a migraine still arrives, and today was one of those days.
Migraines are no fun, but they do have their slightly pleasant aspects. For one thing, the aura constitutes a twenty minute light show that looks something like this:
For another thing—well, that’s about it for pleasant aspects.
So I’m taking the day off from blogging and plan to return tomorrow. In the meantime, here’s a golden oldie for you—and a special bonus is that it has nothing whatsoever to do with the campaign of 2008.
HO JO’S NO GO
I heard it on my car radio this evening while I was driving. I don’t even know what they were saying about it—I just caught some fleeting mention of the name, and something about it being the last one in Maine.
The last what in Maine? The last Howard Johnson’s restaurant.
How the mighty have fallen. One with Nineveh and Tyre, and all that. My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings: look on my Works ye Mighty, and despair. Those orange roofs that had dotted the highways of my youth, gone? There were so many once, like the passenger pigeons that had blackened the nineteenth-century skies; how could they be no more?
Well, it turns out they’re not all gone. In this internet age, there is a website devoted to Ho Jo, where one can learn (as I did) that nine Howard Johnson’s still remain, the last leaves on the spindly Ho Jo tree; soon to be eight, with the sole Vermont one closing next month.
One can also learn of the great and illustrious history of HoJo’s, named after its founder, one Howard Johnson. The man was a marketing genius who almost-singlehandedly invented the fast food business. He started the first HoJo in Quincy, Massachusetts, in the 1920s; by the midst of the Depression he had 25 of them going in the state, having also invented the concept of the restaurant francise. He correctly foresaw the changes the automobile would bring, and located his restaurants accordingly. He started the practice of doing most of the cooking in a centralized location and then shipping the product to the local restaurants for the finishing touches. He came up with the idea of standardizing the architecture (and everything else), using signature orange roofs, highly visible and instantly recognizable
(Golden Arches, anyone?). He thought America needed more ice cream flavors than vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry—twenty-five more, in fact—and America agreed.
I didn’t know until I was twenty-one years old and had moved to New England for the first time (Boston) that a clam had a body part called a belly, and that this part could be eaten. Before that, I had only known Howard Johnson’s clams, and Howard Johnson’s clams were expurgated, bowlderized, sanitized. America wasn’t ready for the clam belly (or perhaps they didn’t freeze, store, and ship well?), so HoJo’s selected only the bland and rubbery feet, and fried those in quantity, ignoring the way New Englanders eat clams—whole, with the soft belly tasting strongly of the ocean.
But the piece de resistance (although no one tried to resist it), the creme de la creme, was Howard Johnson’s ice cream. I was especially partial to the flavor peppermint stick, which sounds awful but was fabulous. I do believe that HoJo’s ice cream would stand up well even now, in this era of premium and gelati and $3.50 cones.
Why did Howard Johnson’s die out? Poor management, lack of interest, cost-cutting, competition, changing tastes—whatever. It’s time had come and gone.
The last time I was at a Howard Johnson’s was in New Hampshire in 1986, at four-thirty AM in the dead of winter. We had gotten up in the middle of the night, dragged our 6-year-old out of bed, and gone with friends to see Halley’s Comet. The only way to view it, the newspaper had said, was to wait for the wee hours of the morning, and go out into the country where there were no lights to interfere.
But the night was bitter cold—way below zero—and, even though it was clear out, Halley’s Comet looked no more visible than any ordinary star, perhaps even less so. Afterwards, we passed the HoJo’s, saw that it was open, and stopped there for pancakes. We were punchy from lack of sleep, but I remember it as one of the most enjoyable meals ever, a sort of clandestine conspiratorial party, all of us up and dressed and exhausted, out at a time when the rest of the world slept on.
I knew it was virtually impossible that I’d ever see Halley’s Comet again (next time it comes, it will be the year 2062). What I didn’t know was that I’d never eat at another Howard Johnson’s.
Hope you feel better soon. Migraines are the pits. I used to get them frequently. But now that the hormones have gone south, well, the migraines pretty much disappeared.
Like that will really make you feel better…. 😉
Sounds like the Blue State liberal/socialist/thirdworldies have driven another enterprise out ot New England. Let them rot in their Islamist oriented vegetarian hell.
Please take care of yourself. But don’t just stay in. Try to get out and see something light and entertaining to take you mind off it.
Uh, oh…. She’s back.
I’m glad you feel better.
I, my grandad and my dad have suffered occasionally from migraines. In my case, brought on by bright light or “Blue Paddle Wheat Beer” or the smell of Blue Dawn dishwashing liquid….
I can’t stand smells or light when I have a migraine. Then I barf and it goes away like flipping the ‘off’ switch.
I don’t wanna think about it anymore.
http://www.ibdeditorials.com/IBDArticles.aspx?id=284256885273104
Wow, what do ya think of this!?
It goes exactly to what Mitsu and others were accusing the US of doing in Fallujah in the “ruthless” thread!
I used to eat at the HoJo’s in Ogunquit/Wells Beach during the mid 70’s, and their deep fried clams and cornbread were wonderful fast food.Not as great as ther Viking House ice cream smorgasbord, but pretty close.LOL!
I had an acquaintance in High school whos name was “Howard Johnson Jr” (obviously his dad was Howard Johnson) and they lived at 1234 Mockingbird Lane. His mother was a teacher at our school and shared the same stories all the time about having trouble with people never believing them. I know many thought his Drivers license was fake and they said his dad always had trouble passing checks.
I remember staying in a Howard Johnson’s in Fort Lauderdale as a child; I was visiting my father at the time, while he was working on a field trip.
They had good ice cream…
My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings: look on my Works ye Mighty, and order a hamburger, french fires and a black and white milkshake.
There.
Fixed it for you.
HoJo along the PA turnpike, on the interminable drive to visit my grandparents up in central PA. Along with seeing 7,248 cousins.
Our local HoJo is now a pho restaurant. I don’t think they call it HoPho, though.
Anybody seen a Stuckey’s lately? Not the new gas station convenience stores, but a genuine, open, blue-roof Stuckey’s? Maybe it’s a southern thing…
I hope you’re feeling better today. You know you have all my sympathy! Ouch!
Speaking of Halley’s Comet, I remember I was living on East Lake Road, Tuxedo Park, New York. That was an interesting time.
My wife and I remember when HoJo’s had the franchise on the New Jersey Turnpike. They always understaffed _ someone who knew said it was corporate policy, assuming they had a captive audience. Bad move, HoJo.
But you’re immortalized in “Blazing Saddles.”