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067 - MCM Motels

Episode 67 of the Mid Century Living podcast, hosted by Gonzalo & Jacky, titled "067 - MCM Motels" was published on March 21, 2025 and runs 42 minutes.

March 21, 2025 ·42m · Mid Century Living

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Send us Fan Mail No you're not going through deja vu! When we originally uploaded this episode, there were some technical issues that compromised the recording's quality. We wanted to make sure that you were able to get top-notch podcasting from us, so we are re-releasing this episode. Get ready for a roadtrip down the highway! Today we're going to be visiting the roadside motel of the midcentury. We cover their beginning, their peak, and their unfortunate present state (spoiler alert: they'r...

Send us Fan Mail

No you're not going through deja vu! When we originally uploaded this episode, there were some technical issues that compromised the recording's quality. We wanted to make sure that you were able to get top-notch podcasting from us, so we are re-releasing this episode.

Get ready for a roadtrip down the highway! Today we're going to be visiting the roadside motel of the midcentury. We cover their beginning, their peak, and their unfortunate present state (spoiler alert: they're not as cool now as they were before).

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Weekly Catchup ends at 6:40

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SHOW NOTES:

Interstate System: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interstate_Highway_System 

https://www.rd.com/list/things-youll-never-see-in-hotels-again/ 

https://www.printmag.com/architecture/dead-motels-usa/ 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_motels 

https://togo.hotelbusiness.com/article/motel-6-leaves-light-on-for-60-years/ 


Visit our Buzzsprout hub to listen and subscribe: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2253227

Follow the show on Instagram: @MCLpodcast
Follow Jacky on Instagram: @thoroughlymidmodern
Follow Gonzalo on Instagram: @gonzalomba 
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Music: Feather Duster by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.com 

Part 6: Section 2

Apr 11, 2026 ·11m

Part 6: Section 3

Apr 11, 2026 ·19m

Part 6: Section 4

Apr 11, 2026 ·37m

Part 6: Section 5

Apr 11, 2026 ·28m

Part 6: Section 6

Apr 11, 2026 ·18m

Part 6: Section 7

Apr 11, 2026 ·22m

1st-mid-c! 1st-Mid-C! Just keep making time count.Also keep working.Plus keep saving money.Maybe keep drinking coffee.Apathy leads to a false existence!!!1st-Mid-C! 2050 is what we got, till we ALL change our ways.Mid 1st Century, post-2000, is on the UP.CLIMATE CHANGE - It's what's happening : ) The Essays of Francis Bacon Authored by the man who is credited with having invented the essay form in English, The Essays of Francis Bacon was written over an extended period, ranging from the mid sixteenth century. They were compiled in a single edition in 1597 and later re-written, enlarged and added to in other editions in 1612 and 1625. However, their compelling and insightful quality still appears fresh and appealing to modern day readers. Reuben Sachs by Amy Levy Loyal Books Reuben Sachs is a London lawyer whose political aspirations do not include marriage to Judith Quixano, the daughter of a respectable but unexceptional family. But without Reuben, a woman like Judith might have a bleak future in mid-19th century England: a loveless marriage or lifelong dependency are apparently her only options… A feminist, a Jew, and a lesbian, Amy Levy wrote about Anglo-Jewish cultural mores and the lives of would-be independent women in Victorian society. Levy was as repelled by contemporary literature’s occasional paragon (e.g., Daniel Deronda) as by its more frequent anti-Semitic stereotypes. REUBEN SACHS was her attempt at an honest, warts-and-all account of middle class Jewish life in late-19th century London. While many of Levy’s contemporaries condemned the book as a shanda fur die goyim (an embarrassment), Oscar Wilde wrote: “Its directness, its uncompromising truths, its depth of feeling, and above all, its absence of any single superfluous word, make REUBEN The Works Of Robert G. Ingersoll, Volume 4 Robert G. Ingersoll Col. Robert G. Ingersoll, one of the greatest orators of the mid-19th century, was a highly sought after lecturer/toastmaster who sold out every hall he engaged throughout America. He was an ardent abolitionist, agnostic, humanist, humanitarian, supporter of the arts, and woman's rights, and member of the Unitarian Church, who railed against the absurdities of the Bible and cruelties of Christianity, praised technology, inventors, authors and great statemen for their contributions to the uplift of mankind. Mark Twain, a contemporary of Ingersoll, reported that no one could stir up a crowd like Ingersoll, and that by the end of the Colonel's toast at General Grant's Victory Banquet after the Civil War, everyone was standing on chairs and tables stomping, cheering, crying and madly waving their napkins. ( Summary by Michele Fry)
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