17 min

1x09 What happened to the LAND‪?‬ The Clock Starts Now

    • Documentary

Did you know one of the most popular landmarks in the world is down to 69% (haha, nice) of what it was when it was first erected? And that this is so by design? Did you know that there was a point when it was considered an ‘eyesore’ by the people who lived near it?
The landmark in question is the famous “Hollywood” sign in California, and I accidently found that there is a rich history behind the sign. Let’s just say, I went looking for the ‘LAND’ that disappeared and ended up discovering a philosophical question along the way! Listen to the episode to find out!
(NB: Yeah, I know this episode was supposed to go out last week. I mean the actual scheduled date for the episode was 5th March but I was supposed to go on a short holiday in the first week of March, so I declared a hiatus that week. Except that week pretty much turned out to be the week from hell for various reasons. So, I took another break the subsequent week just to recover – mentally and physically. And, now, here I am.)
Also, in case you missed it, the podcast now has a companion newsletter called The Tick-Tock – linked down below! You can find details of my struggles with producing the weekly episode and commiserate with (or laugh at) me if you subscribe to it. :P
Theme Music is Highway 430 by Blue Dot Sessions. Additional music by Blue Dot Sessions. Other music used in this week's episode: Tall Journey by Blue Dot Sessions
Links:
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_Sign
• https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/
• https://web.archive.org/web/20140119055147/http://www.beachwoodcanyon.org/HISTORY.htm (Archived link)
• https://web.archive.org/web/20130419031929/http://lareviewofbooks.org/article.php?type=&id=381&fulltext=1&media= (Archived link)
Connect with me:
• “The Tick-Tock" companion newsletter: https://theticktock.substack.com
• Leave a voice message : https://app.voiceform.com/to/TqFbQji2OsQJu9uO
• Mastodon: https://podcastindex.social/@clock
• Email: tcsn@itishri.me
NEXT WEEK'S THEME: "Crossing the Divide"

Did you know one of the most popular landmarks in the world is down to 69% (haha, nice) of what it was when it was first erected? And that this is so by design? Did you know that there was a point when it was considered an ‘eyesore’ by the people who lived near it?
The landmark in question is the famous “Hollywood” sign in California, and I accidently found that there is a rich history behind the sign. Let’s just say, I went looking for the ‘LAND’ that disappeared and ended up discovering a philosophical question along the way! Listen to the episode to find out!
(NB: Yeah, I know this episode was supposed to go out last week. I mean the actual scheduled date for the episode was 5th March but I was supposed to go on a short holiday in the first week of March, so I declared a hiatus that week. Except that week pretty much turned out to be the week from hell for various reasons. So, I took another break the subsequent week just to recover – mentally and physically. And, now, here I am.)
Also, in case you missed it, the podcast now has a companion newsletter called The Tick-Tock – linked down below! You can find details of my struggles with producing the weekly episode and commiserate with (or laugh at) me if you subscribe to it. :P
Theme Music is Highway 430 by Blue Dot Sessions. Additional music by Blue Dot Sessions. Other music used in this week's episode: Tall Journey by Blue Dot Sessions
Links:
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_Sign
• https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/
• https://web.archive.org/web/20140119055147/http://www.beachwoodcanyon.org/HISTORY.htm (Archived link)
• https://web.archive.org/web/20130419031929/http://lareviewofbooks.org/article.php?type=&id=381&fulltext=1&media= (Archived link)
Connect with me:
• “The Tick-Tock" companion newsletter: https://theticktock.substack.com
• Leave a voice message : https://app.voiceform.com/to/TqFbQji2OsQJu9uO
• Mastodon: https://podcastindex.social/@clock
• Email: tcsn@itishri.me
NEXT WEEK'S THEME: "Crossing the Divide"

17 min