----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Julia Thompson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Killer Bs Discussion" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, February 01, 2004 9:03 AM
Subject: Re: SCOUTED: Houston


> Robert Seeberger wrote:
>
> > Who would listen to me?
> > You all know I would be biased on this subject!
> > <G>
>
> I'd listen.  :)
>
> And I've got tons of friends who get all excited about going to
Houston
> for this or that cultural or sporting event, so I know there's
plenty of
> good about it.
>
> What do you think of the Super Bowl being there, Rob?  And of the
> preparations for the same?  Is it having any impact on you?
>

Having seen the preparations being made here for The Super Bowl
(something like a 10 day event with parties and festivals and such),
and having seen the city prepare for other events of slightly lesser
import, it is my belief that the IOC was foolish and short sighted to
give the Summer Olympics to NYC.
Houston is the only city in the world with 3 professional quality
Domed Stadiums, 2 of them with retractable roofs and those are pretty
much the state of the art for stadiums. ( I would think that you
baseball fans would really enjoy a game at MinuteMaid Stadium, its a
fantastic facility)
Reliant Stadium, the new football venue stands a few hundred feet from
The Astrodome, and it completely dwarfs the old dome.
http://www.space.com/php/multimedia/zoomviewer/index.php?display_img=superbowl38
 This Superbowl will be pretty nifty, the facility is pretty
spectacular.

Houston also has 3 professional Basketball arenas, and several venues
that were built for Olympic festivals (bicycling, track etc...). There
are also several large highschool football facilities (as large as
many middling colleges have) and of course there is Rice Stadium, the
site of Houston's only other Superbowl.
Houston has over 200 golf courses (if that is your bag), tennis courts
out the wazoo, and around 500 parks/greenspaces a few of which are
large enough to be measured in multiples of square miles, those mostly
inside the city limits.
Houston is a sports town.
And there is a lot of excitement surrounding the SuperBowl
festivities:
http://www.chron.com/content/chronicle/special/04/superbowl/index.html
I'm willing to bet a look at those pics would blow anyone's image of
Houston.
(BTW This is nothing compared to the crowds that showed for the
"Rendezview Houston" celebration of the Texas Sesquicentennial. It was
the largest music event [in terms of area and numbers] in history with
estimates of over 2 million people spread over many square miles.)

Its been said that there is not much to do in Houston at night.
Not true really. Just do a search for "Houston Nightlife".
Houston has more restaurants per capita than just about anywhere.
We have a world famous Symphony and Grand Opera. Within 5 miles of my
home there are 60 to 70 movie theaters. There are many stage theaters
(one less than a block from my home) including the very good Alley
Theater.
There are nightclubs in every part of the city including a heaping
helping of ahem....."Gentlemen's Clubs" (Houston is the titty bar
capital of the world.....bar none)(Never been in one myself).

Then there are the many museums, some of which are world class. The
Museum Of Natural Science is very good, it has a planetarium, an IMAX,
a butterfly livearium 3 or 4 stories tall, and pretty much the same
travelling displays you see in the better museums of this type. There
is the Houston Arboretum, Armand Bayou Park, Space Center Houston
(Across the street from me), The beautiful Fred Hartmann Bridge: (
http://www.texasfreeway.com/houston/photos/146_bridge/146_bridge.shtml
 )
, The Kemah Boardwalk: ( http://www.kemahboardwalk.com/ ) where you
can get all sorts of good seafood, The Aquarium Restaurant (downtown,
not the one in Kemah), Astroworld/Six Flags, and a ton of places I
probably haven't thought of.

Houston has the tallest building west of the Mississippi, and an
extensive underground tunnel system downtown (kind of like a mall that
goes on forever) connecting almost the entire business district.
Still...Houston is remarkably decentralized. There are several
clusters of buildings that visitors mistake for "The Downtown Area"
because the clusters are so large and the buildings so high.

I think the worst thing about Houston is the proliferation of
billboards. There are just too many of them, but the advertising
interests are very powerful here and entrenched. (I would prefer none
at all) Some people say Houston is ugly, but if the billboards were
removed it would be a vast improvement.
At least in Houston you *can* see some natural beauty. From above,
Houston looks like a forest for the most part. When you get up 15 or
more stories and look across the city, you see more trees than
anything man-made. (Of course its human nature to see the man-made
things first, ignoring the proliferation of plantlife) At worst
(barring the billboards) Houston is plain rather than ugly. There
isn't anything spectacularly beautiful in the landscape, but if you
get in among the trees (and we have lots of them in town) there are
places that are very nice to be.
It really depends on how you view things. Are prairies beautiful?
Coastal Plains? Swamps? Pine Forests?
Admittedly Houston is not Colorado and has no Grand Canyon, but it
does have "Fruited Plains" and forests.

The last week Downtown has been one big party after another. People
are really doing up the various SuperBowl celebrations in over the top
Texas style. Most of the really big events happen after working hours
so many people are leaving work and going straight to parties and
searching for celebrities at the various venues. And there are a *lot*
of venues.

I'm not very impressed by "the cult of personality" and have not taken
part in any of these doings. But some of my co-workers are very into
this and come to work each day with stories about who they saw or met
yadda yadda yadda.

I think its great to have a "BIG" event come to town, and I enjoy the
fun I see people having. People here have been very forthcoming in
welcoming and enabling the plethora of events, and I think they have
been a big part of this SuperBowls success (at least the parts of the
event beyond the game itself).

If this happens to be one of the better SuperBowl games, then this
will be quite a memorable championship game for the NFL.

xponent
No Bowl Haircut Maru
rob



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