Postcard | On the mic on the mic

(Waterbury, Vermont) What do you do when you’re covering a game in Boston on Thursday night, you have to be on a podcast the next day at 2 p.m., and there’s more than a five-hour drive and a border between one and the other ?


Option A: get up very early on Friday morning and try to get to downtown Montreal in time to check in Area exit. This scenario involves providing a cushion in case of waiting at customs, in case of a traffic jam around the island of Montreal and to find parking near the studios of 98.5 FM. Not to mention the preparation time for said podcast.

Option B: leave later, but drive very, very fast. This scenario involves providing a cushion to negotiate with the police, perhaps also with the tug if ever the vehicle is seized.

Option C: leave at a reasonable time, drive at a reasonable speed and stop along the way to record the podcast remotely.

After thoughts, prayers and discussions, it was agreed that option C would be chosen. It should be understood that the coverage of a match does not end at 9:45 p.m., at the sound of the final siren. The time to do interviews and write texts that hold up minimally, you can easily leave the arena around 11:30 p.m., if not midnight. And after an evening of work, you don’t necessarily go straight to bed, because the adrenaline has to drop a little. In short, Scenario A was not ideal.

Under the warm recommendation of our colleague Alexandre Pratt, it is therefore from the pretty village of Waterbury, more precisely from Prohibition Pig, a pleasant restaurant doubled as a microbrewery, that part of Friday’s episode was recorded.


PHOTO GUILLAUME LEFRANÇOIS, THE PRESS

Recording of the podcast accompanied by a Multigrain IPA

Check in was smooth, especially since the restaurant has a second floor where there were no other customers on this Friday afternoon. As if we were expected there.

Luckily, the establishment is located across the street from a convenience store where it must sell well all that Vermont produces in craft beer. We didn’t think we’d stop there, but Charlie was staring at us through the window, and you understand that it’s impossible to turn your back on a dog that looks sad.


PHOTO GUILLAUME LEFRANÇOIS, THE PRESS

charlie

All that to say, coverage of a game in Boston isn’t exactly torture. The city is beautiful, but the drive through Vermont is even more so. This bucolic state protects its landscapes with a ban on commercial signage – basically, a business is not allowed to display advertising anywhere but on its own property. Maine, Alaska and Hawaii also have similar laws.

The effects of the law are obvious when we arrive at the border with New Hampshire and the posters of a motel and a gas station stand before us like Stonehenge.

We also celebrated Thursday the 55e anniversary of the adoption of this law. It’s good to say.


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