Foreign.
Speaker BWelcome to the Fromer Travel show.
Speaker BComing to you this week from Utrecht.
Speaker BI'm actually in Europe recording this, and since I wanted to have it all fresh in my mind, I asked Jason to come online to have a conversation with me.
Speaker BYou know Jason, he is Jason Cochran, the editor in chief of fromers.com World Traveler, bon vivant, excellent writer.
Speaker BHey, Jason, thank you so much for coming on and talking to me.
Speaker COh, no.
Speaker CThe bon vivant description.
Speaker CNow the pressure is really on for the clever lines.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BI want bon motes.
Speaker BI want them just to flow.
Speaker CLet me get my champagne before we begin.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSo I am traveling through Europe right now.
Speaker BAnd just for listeners to this podcast, you'll be hearing this about a week after I come home.
Speaker BBut I'm traveling to Europe right now to be a groupie.
Speaker BMy daughter Veronica, my older daughter, I have two.
Speaker BShe is the lead singer of a band called Melt.
Speaker BAnd you know her work if you listen to this podcast because you hear her singing at the end of the podcast.
Speaker BThat was her first hit, a song called Sour Candy that now has nearly 15 million streams on Spotify.
Speaker BSo she and her bandmates, the band is called Melt, they are traveling through Europe, and I couldn't resist.
Speaker BI'm here to see a couple of their shows.
Speaker BPlay hooky.
Speaker BBeing a tourist, probably hopefully find some things to write about.
Speaker BAnd I went to a place I've never been before and have always wanted to go, which was Berlin.
Speaker BJason, can you believe I've never been to Berlin?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CActually, when you told me that was your first time in Berlin, I was shocked.
Speaker CShocked because you're so well traveled, because Berlin figures largely in your family history.
Speaker CSo I find it fascinating that you're there for the first time.
Speaker CWhat.
Speaker CWhat did you think of it?
Speaker CIn general?
Speaker CBut I do want to hear specifics.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBefore we leave, that my family history.
Speaker BAbsolutely.
Speaker BFor those of you who know about how the Farmer Guides was founded, my dad was drafted into the army to fight in the Korean War because he was a language whiz.
Speaker BHe spoke Russian and German, and so he got sent to Berlin, and that was the beginning of his travel writing life.
Speaker BAnd so the other day, I was looking for an ATM machine in Berlin, and I got directions, actually.
Speaker BNot an ATM machine.
Speaker BA place to change money.
Speaker BAnd I was wandering through the teeter garden, and then suddenly in front of me, there it was, the Brandenburg Gate.
Speaker BAnd there's a famous, famous in my family photo of my father standing in military costume in front of the Brandenburg Gate with a serious look on his face.
Speaker BAnd it was very moving to be there, to be in his footsteps in.
Speaker BIn those ways.
Speaker CAnd it's the Berlin that.
Speaker CThat he went to, so different from the Berlin that exists now.
Speaker CIn fact, it was even before the wall went up the first time he was there.
Speaker CSo the idea that the Brendan Brigade is still there through all of these changes to remind you of him, I think is pretty special.
Speaker BWell, yes, the Brandenburg Wall has had a lot of changes.
Speaker BI mean, I think it was Napoleon who stole the statue that was atop it.
Speaker BAnd then when.
Speaker BWhen the Germans beat the French in.
Speaker BNot in World War I or two in a previous war, they were able to get that back.
Speaker BSo it's become a real symbol of the city.
Speaker BThe city itself is so vibrant and yet in certain ways, so ugly.
Speaker BIt's a gritty, gritty city.
Speaker BAnd when you're wandering around and you notice that the wall is pockmarked, that's because you are looking at bullet holes, you are looking at mortar holes in the walls of the building.
Speaker BBecause this was a city where there was block by block fighting at the end of World War II, and because they needed to de Nazify that country, a lot of those remaining buildings and a lot was just rubble, which is why it's kind of ugly now, because it's so many new buildings.
Speaker BBut those buildings that survived, they purposefully kept them with those scars of the war, which makes it a really very moving place to wander around when you realize you're seeing history in stone and plaster.
Speaker BI mean, kind of amazing.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd the city's been very good about wiping away things that needed wiping away, but also about reclaiming some of the other old buildings they didn't want to lose Brandenburg tor being one of them.
Speaker CBut you went.
Speaker CYou went to a couple buildings that had been reclaimed, and one of them was the Reichstag, right?
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BI was worried I wouldn't get to see the Reichstag because I was really bad about planning for this trip.
Speaker BAnd I didn't make my reservations for far enough ahead to get a reservation there.
Speaker BBut I realized if you just walk up, you may have to come back.
Speaker BI walked up and I got reservations for the next day because the security is so high.
Speaker BYou really have to have your passport with you.
Speaker BThey won't take other types of id.
Speaker BAnd you go through these kind of airlocked chambers twice before you get to go up there.
Speaker BI mean, you have to remember the Reichstag was the building that in certain ways, helped solidify the power of the Nazis, they created a fire in that building to create then a state of emergency.
Speaker BAnd so you go up to the top and you see this incredible dome that was built by Norman Foster, a famous architect atop the Reichstag.
Speaker BIt's meant to mirror another famous dome in the city of a church.
Speaker BBut what I kind of loved about it was it really speaks to the ethos of modern day Berlin in that you can look down into the parliament because they want their democracy to be incredibly transparent nowadays.
Speaker BThey think that that's really important.
Speaker BAnd also this is an incredibly green country.
Speaker BSo I took the headphone tour and they're telling you about how water comes into the dome at the top, trickles down through funnel and helps cool and heat the building.
Speaker BAnd they also have this series of mirrors that go.
Speaker BThe dome is this incredible massive steel and glass dome with this mirrored column in the middle.
Speaker BAnd the mirrors aren't there just for beauty's sake.
Speaker BThey also help make the dome and the building almost, I think, carbon neutral.
Speaker BSo, wow.
Speaker BGood on you, Berlin.
Speaker BHave you seen it, Jason?
Speaker COh, I've been in it, yeah.
Speaker CIt's fantastic.
Speaker CAnd you know, the symbol, symbology of the people are allowed to be above the politicians.
Speaker CThat's why there are walkways up in that glass dome that you're talking about, so that the people are always above the servants.
Speaker CIt's interesting, it's noble, you know, it's noble symbolism.
Speaker CWho knows how these things hold on over time.
Speaker CBut it's a fascinating building because it had been ruined by the fire and it was also quite near all the center of a lot of explosions at the end of the war.
Speaker CSo they really had to rebuild that from scratch to make it what it is today.
Speaker BInterestingly, I also passed, I took a walking tour, which wasn't as good as it could have been, but we went past the Luftwasse headquarters, which was this two block wide and long building that was the head of the German air.
Speaker BWhat is that called?
Speaker CNot the navy, the German equivalent of the air force, wouldn't it?
Speaker BGerman equivalent of the air force.
Speaker BAnd it had always been used as a target by our, the Allies bombing.
Speaker BDuring bombing raids they would look for it because it was bigger than all the other buildings, but they would start hitting bombs to go when they saw it.
Speaker BSo they'd always be past it.
Speaker BAnd so it survived, whereas all the other buildings around it did not.
Speaker BAlso on that walking tour we went of course to Checkpoint Charlie.
Speaker BWe went to the wall, or remnants of the wall that used to stand between east and West Berlin.
Speaker BAnd I asked our guide, you know, there were mines in the ground, there were people with guns shooting at folks who tried to come over the wall.
Speaker BAnd because of that, not that many people were killed trying to approach the wall and getting shot.
Speaker BIn the 20 plus years it was up, this was.
Speaker BI don't know why this struck me, but the most people who were killed trying to get over the wall went into apartments, buildings that had the wall right up to the building.
Speaker BAnd they threw mattresses out and tried to jump to safety and they kept bouncing off the mattresses and dying.
Speaker BAnd then they would brick up another level of the apartment building to stop people from doing this.
Speaker BBut our guide showed us gruesome photos of people throwing their children out onto these mattresses.
Speaker BAnd you just have this visceral understanding of what it was like to be suddenly locked up, suddenly have your freedom taken away from you.
Speaker BThat was a really fascinating part of it.
Speaker BAnd because I've always been fascinated by East Germany, I went to the DDR Museum, which shows you a typical apartment during East German time.
Speaker BAnd one of the displays they had were comic books that the children would have read.
Speaker BDisney was totally verboten.
Speaker BYou could not see a Donald Duck, you couldn't see Snow White.
Speaker BBut they had these comic books with heroes that kind of looked Disney esque.
Speaker BExcept at the end of the comic book, after their heroic battles, communism would arrive and things would be much better.
Speaker BAnd that would be the happy ending in the comic book, which I thought was just hilarious.
Speaker BAnd there was a whole.
Speaker CThe people in the east were told that the people in the west were the fascists.
Speaker BYes, absolutely.
Speaker BYou know, they believe terrible things about the people in the West.
Speaker BYou learn from this museum and they showed you all the different products they had.
Speaker BThey usually only had one type of coffee, one type of tea, one type of this, one type of that.
Speaker BAnd there was a fascinating section about how during the Cold War, East Germans vacationed and one of the things they loved to do was go to nudist areas.
Speaker BThat was really big among East Germans, I guess, because it gave them a sense of freedom.
Speaker BAnd so a big part of the museum is just all these nude photos of people on vacation.
Speaker BThings I didn't expect to see at the DDR museum.
Speaker BHave you been to that?
Speaker CYeah, it's a great museum.
Speaker CIt's really interesting.
Speaker CYeah, the different products that they had.
Speaker CThe idea that, you know, Berlin had a metro system and then the wall went up across the middle of the city and so the metro was still running.
Speaker CAnd so if you're living in the west and your retro started in the west and it went through the center of the city back to the west, they just bricked up all the metro stations in the East.
Speaker CSo you'd live in the east and hear the metro going underneath your feet, but not be able to get on it to get out.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd interestingly, the west was kind of a.
Speaker BWest Berlin was an island within.
Speaker BIt was in the middle of East Germany.
Speaker BAnd so for them to go anywhere, they had to fly out today because so many of the factories closed when the Wall came down and east and West Germany were reunited, so many of the factories in East Berlin closed that people lost their jobs, lost their way to make a living, and left those neighborhoods, whereas things in the didn't change that much.
Speaker BAnd in West Berlin now, in many areas of it, that's where the slums are.
Speaker BBecause they didn't in East Berlin, because so many people left, they totally remade that part of the city, whereas nobody left West Berlin.
Speaker BAnd so these fixes couldn't be made to the same extent after the war.
Speaker BAnd you have to remember, a lot of Berlin was in rubble.
Speaker BAnd so to me, I thought that was really fascinating, that it's the west part of the city that's now the poorer part anyway.
Speaker BSo, yeah, lots of.
Speaker BLots of fascinating historic insights.
Speaker BAnd then the museums.
Speaker BOh, my goodness.
Speaker BYeah, I think, oh, my goodness.
Speaker BIt may be one of the best cities in the world for museums.
Speaker BI went to an art museum called the Gamalda Gallery.
Speaker BI hope I'm pronouncing that right.
Speaker BAnd one of the first things you see are Botticellis.
Speaker BAnd then there are works by Rembrandt, and then there are works by.
Speaker BOh, gosh, just incredible, incredible artists.
Speaker BOne of my favorites was Cranach the Elder.
Speaker BLucas Cranach.
Speaker BHe did a copy of a Hieronymus Bosch painting that was lost.
Speaker BThe original Hieronymus Basque painting no longer exists.
Speaker BSomehow in the shoals of time, it disappeared.
Speaker BAnd yet we have his painting that is a copy of it.
Speaker BAnd he was such a great artist.
Speaker BWe have this Bosch, and it's extraordinary, and yet it's not a Bosch you've ever seen because it's only the copy of it.
Speaker BAnd I'm a big Bosch fan, so I felt like I had seen all of the Bosch paintings when I was a teenager.
Speaker BFor some reason, I would stare at them and feel like I could.
Speaker BI knew what those people were feeling like in hell.
Speaker BCause, you know, I was a teenager and Bosch Spoke to me.
Speaker BSo that museum was extraordinary.
Speaker BBut what was really mind blowing and you told me to go there, was the Neue Museum, which means the new museum.
Speaker BBut it's actually filled with things that are many centuries old.
Speaker BIt's most famous for, for having the bust of Nefertiti.
Speaker BAnd in fifth grade I was really obsessed with Nefertiti.
Speaker BWe were studying Egypt and that was my Halloween costume.
Speaker BSo I spent a lot of time studying that bust.
Speaker BSo I had always wanted long, slender.
Speaker CNeck, not quite symmetrical.
Speaker CIt's so elegant and so beautiful, even though it's what, three or four thousand.
Speaker BYears old and it looks like it was created yesterday.
Speaker CIt does.
Speaker BIt's great.
Speaker BShe's slender, she's elegant, but she's also clearly an older woman.
Speaker BThere are some lines or around her eyes.
Speaker BAnd she's not in her 20s, she's probably in her 30s, which back in those days was old.
Speaker BAnd yes, she just is so vibrant and alive.
Speaker BBut what really struck me about that museum is I think they're making a very good case that our understanding of how knowledge moved from community to community or civilization to civilization wasn't quite correct.
Speaker BI mean, I was taught as a kid there were the Egyptians and they, you know, they were incredible.
Speaker BBefore them, the Sumerians and then the Greeks, then the Romans, then there was this terrible dark period and then the Renaissance rediscovered it all.
Speaker BThey show something called the golden hat, which is one of the many artifacts they show.
Speaker BAnd the golden hat is this.
Speaker BMy gosh, it must be 3ft tall.
Speaker BThis thinly gilded hat.
Speaker BStamped into it was the math for figuring out how the lunar cycle and the solar cycle intersect and help farmers to know when to plant and also tell early astronomers when an eclipse will happen.
Speaker BAnd this is information, this is knowledge that it was thought that the Greeks created.
Speaker BAnd yet this hat with these intricate mathematical formulas all over it was around 500 years before the guy who supposedly created these theorems in Greece lived.
Speaker BAnd it comes from the European Alps.
Speaker BAnd the Neue Museum on the top floor has all of these extraordinary artifacts from Germanic tribes and from central Europe, showing that it was actually quite a civilized and cosmopolitan and very forward looking culture, or many cultures, because they had a lot of warring tribes.
Speaker BBut to think that there was only one center of knowledge and everything got passed cleanly one to the next, it's.
Speaker CA total lie to why they stamped their knowledge on metal on hats so that it would endure and be able to pass it on, because any other way it may not make it to the next generation who Needed to read it.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo, yeah, so Berlin was pretty mind blowing.
Speaker BI also was there to see my daughter.
Speaker BShe played in a little nightclub called the Cassiopeia Club, which was in this absolutely adorable area of Berlin where everybody was no older than 27.
Speaker BAnd there were these incredible kind of clubs made out of old warehouses.
Speaker BThere was one club I peeked in and it was all skateboarders indoors with bars.
Speaker BSo everybody was drinking and skateboarding.
Speaker BThe next club was people doing climbing.
Speaker BAnd there was a Christmas market going on outdoors.
Speaker BAnd boy, oh boy, did that leave us Christmas markets in the dust.
Speaker BFirst of all, they had open flame everywhere.
Speaker BThere were these big torches lighting everything up and giving things an incredible medieval look.
Speaker BThere were entertainers, there were these fire dancers, a lot of fire at this place.
Speaker BThere were little booths where you could try games.
Speaker BLike my daughter and the guitarist in her band.
Speaker BThey did an archery contest against one another and these tiny little amusement park rides big enough only for children five and under.
Speaker BAnd I think the crowd was big and was huge around those rides just because it was so delightful to watch the delight of these toddlers doing this teeny tiny Ferris wheel and these teeny tiny swings that were, you know, flying through the air.
Speaker BAnd then of course, the glue.
Speaker BWine didn't hurt.
Speaker CI love Dubai.
Speaker BSo much fun.
Speaker BThat's hot wine.
Speaker BAnd so, yeah, that was a.
Speaker BThat was a real surprise.
Speaker BI didn't know we'd be able to do that.
Speaker BIt's the only disappointment.
Speaker BI had one good meal.
Speaker BI went to a place called Cafe Frida, which was absolutely extraordinary, really delicious.
Speaker BBut I don't love the food in Berlin.
Speaker BYou know, I had low, low end food, high end food.
Speaker BI don't know, is that just me or did I not go to the right places?
Speaker BI just found it kind of heavy and unsalted.
Speaker CI think some of the traditional foods are more heavy.
Speaker CThe stuff you'll get at a beer hall or beer garden, for example, tends towards that heavier stuff.
Speaker CBut like any city, you can find all kinds of food if you spend enough time there and know where to go.
Speaker CThe most common junk food they have there, you eat on the street.
Speaker CIt's the currywurst, which is like, it's like the frankfurter slathered with like this sweet curry sauce.
Speaker CAnd it's sometimes it's absolutely delicious.
Speaker CAnd sometimes you're like, I'll never have another one as long as I live.
Speaker CIt's one of those.
Speaker CIt rides that line for most palates.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI've had one of those in New York.
Speaker BAnd I didn't like it, so I avoided it this time.
Speaker BCocktails, though.
Speaker BI have a good friend named Alan Katz who's a major cocktail expert.
Speaker BHe used to be on Martha Stewart Radio talking cocktails and he owns a distillery in Brooklyn.
Speaker BAnd he sent me to a place called the Alchemist Club, where the cocktails with an eye next to them, like an eye with eyelashes, are the ones where it's kind of like a magic trick.
Speaker BAnd my cocktail came in what I can only call a bong.
Speaker BI mean, it looked like I should have been smoking weed through the glass they gave me.
Speaker BAnd it kind of filtered up to me with all of this smoke and.
Speaker BAnd it was absolutely delicious, like nothing I've had before.
Speaker BSo if you go there, do go to the Alchemist, which is a lot of fun.
Speaker BSo that was the beginning of the trip.
Speaker BAnd Melt did great.
Speaker BThey played at Cassiopeia.
Speaker BPeople loved their set.
Speaker BAnd then the next step was going to Utrecht in the Netherlands.
Speaker BAnd Jason, you've never been to Utrecht?
Speaker CI've never been to Utrecht, no.
Speaker BSo it's in certain ways very much like Amsterdam in that there are canals running through the middle of the city.
Speaker BBut some people think it's more beautiful than Amsterdam because these canals were created in a really different way.
Speaker BThey were dug out.
Speaker BThe city is very near.
Speaker BOh, my goodness.
Speaker BI'm blanking on.
Speaker BIt's that major German river that had been the outside border of the Roman Empire.
Speaker BDo you know which river I'm discussing?
Speaker CIt will come to me.
Speaker BSo they created these canals basically to use as transportation within the city.
Speaker BAnd so next to the canals they had these massive piles of dirt that came from digging out canals.
Speaker BAnd so from the dirt, they created these cellars that were part of the houses that lined the canals.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker BAnd so unlike in Amsterdam, where you look down into the canal here, you look really down into the canal.
Speaker BAnd alongside the canals are these cellars which are now restaurants and bars and clubs.
Speaker BAnd so you have this multi level life in Antwerp, which is really kind of stunningly beautiful.
Speaker BI mean, the gorgeous.
Speaker BUtrecht.
Speaker BSorry, Utrecht.
Speaker CSo the river is the.
Speaker CI think the Vest, which is a branch of the Rhine, which might have been the German river.
Speaker CYou were thinking of the branch of that.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker BAnd I took the train into the city.
Speaker BYou walk towards the medieval core.
Speaker BAnd when I was here, suddenly there were all of these adorable children in costume because in the Netherlands, Sinterklaas, his birthday is November 15th or 16th.
Speaker BAnd so Sinterklaus, which is our version of Santa Claus, but different than Father Christmas because in the Netherlands, they give their gifts in late November, early December, and then Christmas itself is more of just a family gathering and more about celebrating Jesus Christ.
Speaker BWhereas they have this Sinterklaus celebration.
Speaker BAnd so there were all of these hopped up kids because there are these Sinterklaus figures who toss cookies into crowds of children.
Speaker CAnd that sounds.
Speaker CThat sounds funny.
Speaker CYou mean throw cookies, right?
Speaker CThey'll throw up on the children.
Speaker BYes, they're throwing.
Speaker CThat would be quite a celebration.
Speaker CBut I don't know.
Speaker BAnd the children are all dressed up like Sinter Claus's helpers.
Speaker BAnd there were rides and there was music.
Speaker BAnd I just walked into town and suddenly I was in the middle of a carnival.
Speaker BIt was really amazing.
Speaker CYou know, people in the tourism world tend to think of the Christmas markets and the Christmas celebrations of Europe as being rather touristy affairs, but both of the ones you've described are very local and very family oriented.
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker CThey're really put things that the people who live there use heavily.
Speaker BOh, definitely.
Speaker BWe were the only non tourists or we were the only non locals, I should say, at the Christmas fair we went to in Berlin.
Speaker BI didn't hear anybody else speaking anything but German while we were there.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BYes, absolutely.
Speaker BAnd so it was so much fun to be here during that fest.
Speaker BI also got to run around town, see some of the top sights.
Speaker BI went to the Spielkloch Museum, which is a museum of mechanical musical instruments.
Speaker BStarting with instruments from the mid-1700s that royal family members owned that you'd have to crank up and figurines would twirl and music would come out to music.
Speaker BMachines that were used at dance halls so that orchestras could take a break and they would be fed, you know, those papers with the dots.
Speaker BWhat's the word?
Speaker BThe papers with the dots kind of cut out.
Speaker BSo that would tell the machine which was an organ.
Speaker COh, like the punch cards, the perforated.
Speaker BPush cards, that would tell the machine what instruments to play.
Speaker BAnd some of these machines had actual trumpets inside them and snare drums and organs with 50 pipes.
Speaker BThey allow you to see the inside workings of the machine, and they're extraordinary.
Speaker BIt's like a steampunk fantasy, seeing these things in motion.
Speaker BSo that was really fun.
Speaker BI went to the Catherine Convention, which is a museum of Christian art from many, many centuries, which was appropriate for Utrecht because Utrecht had originally been the city with the most churches in all of the Netherlands.
Speaker BA lot of them are now museums because you have to remember The Netherlands became Protestant and the churches were built for the Catholics.
Speaker BSo a lot of them fell into disrepair.
Speaker BPlus, in 1672, there was a weather event that basically flattened the city.
Speaker BWhen you're in the Dom Square, which is the cathedral, there's a gorgeous tower where there are bells at the top, and then there's this big square, and then there's this kind of squat cathedral.
Speaker BThat's because in 1672, the cathedral was destroyed, and it was after the Reformation, so there were no Catholics to repair it.
Speaker BAnd so for 150 years, there was just rubble in the very heart of the city before they decided to clear away this destroyed cathedral, put a wall on the part of it that was standing, and create a plaza in between it and the tower that used to be part of the cathedral.
Speaker BI learned all about this when I went on the under the Dome tour, which is this tour of an archaeological excavation underneath the cathedral.
Speaker BAnd they make the point during the tour that this may be the place where you see the longest stretch of history in all of The Netherlands.
Speaker BBasically 20 centuries of history.
Speaker BBecause this archaeological site starts with the Roman fortress that was once in Antwerp.
Speaker BAntwerp was founded by the Romans, who needed a strategic place near to the Rhine River.
Speaker BIt had just been a marshy area that various Germanic and Dutch tribes had gone through, but never really had permanent settlements on.
Speaker BAnd so you see Roman sites down there, you see parts of the first cathedral.
Speaker BAnd the way they do it could have been so hokey, but it was so fun.
Speaker BThey give you what they call a pistol.
Speaker BI don't know if that was just a weird way to translate it.
Speaker BI'd call it a flashlight.
Speaker BBut you aim the pistol, you're in this underground area that's filled with rubble.
Speaker BAnd in the rubble, they've taken these little transistors, and if you find one, you aim your flashlight at it, and suddenly in your headphone, you're wearing headphones, you hear a story about what you're seeing.
Speaker BAnd so you have to kind of search through the rubble with your pistol flashlight to hear these different stories about what you're seeing.
Speaker BAnd so it was a hell of a lot of fun.
Speaker BIt was.
Speaker CThat's an interesting idea.
Speaker CI like that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNo, I thought it was very, very well done.
Speaker BAnd you hear about all the different layers of history and at.
Speaker BThey have a movie that recreates the.
Speaker BIt's all around you, and it recreates the storm destroying the cathedral, you know, shattering stained glass windows and parts of the ceiling falling down.
Speaker BAnd it was very, very Dramatic.
Speaker BSo that was fun.
Speaker BAnd then last night I went to see Melt at one of the most gorgeous performing arts spaces I've ever seen.
Speaker BIt's called the Tivoli Vredenburg and it has nine different concert halls that are filled every night.
Speaker BThey were in the Half Moon Club, which was on the top floor.
Speaker BBeautiful views over the city through these kind of round windows.
Speaker BMassive club and it was one of the smallest ones they had.
Speaker BLuckily they sold it out.
Speaker BIt just was extraordinary to me that Utrecht can support on a Sunday night a club with, you know, nine musical venues in it.
Speaker BAnd all of them had artists going and they all had big audiences.
Speaker CWell, it's a university town, isn't it?
Speaker BThat's true, yes.
Speaker BI should have said that.
Speaker BThe big thing in Utrecht is 10% of the population is students.
Speaker BSo that makes it a lot of fun to wander around.
Speaker BI mean, it's, it's very, very lively.
Speaker BSo a beautiful medieval city.
Speaker BIncredibly lively.
Speaker BI want to come listening to this.
Speaker CThinking Utrecht sounds interesting.
Speaker CI'd like to go, but I'm going to be in amsterdam.
Speaker CIt's only 18 minutes train ride away from Amsterdam.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CAnd the trains go about every 10 minutes all day long.
Speaker CSo Utrecht can be part of your Amsterdam trip.
Speaker CWhen you're there, it's very easy to do.
Speaker BAnd I should say, I mean, Amsterdam is pushing people to go to Utrecht, so it's not untouristy when you are wandering around the gorgeous medieval section, the boutiques you see are Swarovski and Brandy Melville and all of these multinational chains, which is a bit disappointing.
Speaker BAnd a lot of the restaurants are serving hamburgers.
Speaker BSo tourism has come to Utrecht.
Speaker BIt won't feel as much like a discovery, but still there are extraordinary museums here.
Speaker BThere's a castle right on the outskirts of the city that's one of the biggest and most beautiful in Europe that I didn't get to go to.
Speaker BSo I do want to come back.
Speaker CWon't be hard.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo that's it, I guess.
Speaker BDo you have any questions for me, Jason, about Utrecht?
Speaker CI'm more curious about Berlin.
Speaker CYou said was kind of younger and scruffier.
Speaker CDoes the youth of Utrecht give it?
Speaker CExcept for the center of town, where the Swarovski and Brandy Melville's are.
Speaker CIs there any scruffiness at all to Utrecht or are their students much more well behaved than the students of Berlin?
Speaker BYou know, because I was staying in the historic quarter, I didn't get to see the more modern part of Utrecht.
Speaker BI only saw bits and pieces of it.
Speaker BSo I don't feel like I can answer that.
Speaker BWell, it didn't feel that scruffy, but I was in the beautifully preserved.
Speaker CYeah, a lot of places in Europe now if the old town is the heart of town is the historic part where the tourists always go.
Speaker CSo you're going to have that.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo I'm not sure.
Speaker BI mean, I did see in the distance some really wacky looking contemporary buildings, but I. I don't think it's that scruffy here.
Speaker BBut I.
Speaker BBut I can't say definitively.
Speaker BSo anyway, so go to Utrecht, go to Berlin.
Speaker BEven though it was.
Speaker BIt's freezing cold here, it still felt like a great trip so far.
Speaker BAnd next time I'll talk about Paris and Madrid, which are two other places I'll be going on this trip.
Speaker BSo thank you so much, Jason, for chatting with me.
Speaker CLooks like you're having a great time.
Speaker CAnd I can't wait to hear about the second half of the trip.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAll right, that's it for this week's show.
Speaker BI thank you so much for listening.
Speaker BAnd to those who are traveling, may I wish you a hearty bon voyage.
Speaker ASour candy on the table Lazy afternoons in your sweatpants watching cable well it feels so far away all the channels seem the same Trying to remember all the songs we like to play.
Speaker ACause those lazy afternoons don't come so frequently these days oh it's been so long and I cannot help but wonder Are you ever coming home?
Speaker AI like you with your sour candy in the boothouse on the lake oh but I hate, I hate, I hate, I hate, I hate, I hate the way it takes.
Speaker AI can't get you off of my mind Looking out the window where we spent so much time of our time Cuz I miss the way about.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker AI guess you can't control those damn cards with dam babe I know the both of us are everyone we're free but would it be so hard to find your freedom here with me?
Speaker AIt's been been so long and I cannot help but wonder Are you ever coming home?
Speaker AI like you with this hour candy in the boat house.