Burlington
Chocolate notes
Alison Rose says speed right over to the Lindt Chocolate Store at Burlington Square on Middlesex Turnpike (NOT the one in the mall), which is having a clearance:
It's a chocolate sale, people--what more do I have to say?
Lynne says Clear Flour Bread in Brookline has chocolate croissants that are almost as good as the ones she remembers from Aix-en-Provence:
... One step inside and you'll be smitten. There are breads of every size and shape (braided, baguettes, country loaves, etc.) as well as tarts, cookies, sticky buns and other guilty pleasures. It is the closest thing that I have seen to the types of bakeries you see in France on practically every corner (those people know how to live). ...
No geniuses at the Apple Store
Rob brings his laptop over to the Apple Store in the Burlington Mall when the hard drive dies, but discovers he can't get any help from the Apple "geniuses" because they're all busy helping middle-aged women with iPod problems:
... If you take two synapses and rub them together, you get a spark. But grown women with a gallon of synapses packed unto a cranium seemingly can't generate smoke. How hard is it to figure out how to use an iPod? How difficult is it for them to find a teenager to show them? WHY IN THE WORLD WAS I LEFT WAITING FOR SOMEONE TO TALK TO WHILE A TECHNICAL SUPPORT "GENIUS" PUT AN IPOD SKIN ON AN IPOD FOR A CUSTOMER???? ...
Customer service as oxymoron
Don't expect Alison to pick up anything for you at a certain Burlington Mall store that begins with a W and ends with "onoma" and has a hyphen in the middle:
... [I]nstead of just letting me say "Thanks for looking--I appreciate that you checked in the back," (which I did) she had to earnestly buttonhole me with, "Now, I just want to make sure that you understand that I provided you with good customer service. When I found out we didn't have what you want, I told you that you can get it at Chestnut Hill. But it's your choice not to go there. So just to be clear: I provided you with choices and good customer service, but you're not going to follow up. Okay? Great! Thanks for coming in!"
Epilogue: Alison found what she was looking for - at a lower price - at Crate & Barrel.
Real Apple fans wait in line
At 9 this morning, Rebecca and Peter checked in from the Burlington Mall, where they were waiting for the opening of the new Apple store:
According to a preliminary count we are 34th and 35th in line. All of the usual suspects are here…The young guys next to us who are watching the Simpsons on their iBook, the twenty-somethings with their earbuds plugged in, the dads and moms with their excited kids ... AND the elderly mall walkers who, on each go round, question us as to why we're in line. ...
Ed. note: I am typing this at 4:40 p.m. without further word from the intrepid duo. I can only hope they were not crushed by the swarming mob when the doors opened but are simply at home enjoying their new Apple iWhatevers (since they have already ruled out trying to get in line for the opening of the IKEA in Stoughton).
Up in her cups
Alison reports:
I love driving south on Rt. 3A (Cambridge St.) in Burlington, if only for one reason: On the edge of a playing field near Burlington High, you can almost always see a message on the chain link fence.
A message in styrofoam cups.
Each cup, one per link, forms part of a letter, and the letters always spell out something positive ...
The Walking Reading Guy
Janet spots the Walking Reading Guy along the Middlesex Turnpike in Burlington:
... I see him from time to time, a white-haired older man, walking along the side of the road, backpack on, completely and utterly engrossed in a book. I've never seen him look up, and along parts of the road there is no sidewalk, yet I've never seen him trip. ...



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