Skip to content

Random Connections

A collection of photography and exploration focusing on Upstate South Carolina and beyond.

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Photos
  • Resources
  • Other Voices
  • Post Archives
  • Podcast
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Feasting on Asphalt

Feasting on Asphalt

Posted on August 15, 2006 By Tom No Comments on Feasting on Asphalt
Entertainment, Geocaching and Maps, Restaurants, Travel

Alton Brown and BMWOK, I want Alton Brown’s job.  His latest TV show is a four-part series on FoodNetwork called "Feasting on Asphalt."  Alton and his crew ride from the Isle of Palms, SC, to Los Angeles, sampling the local cuisine along the way.  AB and crew have tried to make this a true "blue highways" experience by shunning interstates and and anything that remotely looks like fast food.

Alton’s quirky nature is instantly appealing, and his approach to the traveling food critic genre is much mcuh more palatable than anything else FoodTV offers.  I don’t think I could stand another episode of Rachel Ray’s whiney voice as she undertips her waiters.  The show also combines three of my favorite things:

  1. Travel and exploration
  2. Sampling local food
  3. GPS technology

In addition to the first two, which are obvious, "Feasting on Asphalt" gives the lat/long coordinates for each of their stops.  The FoodNetwork website has a list of the locations and addresses, but the coords are hard to find.  There is a chart on Wikipedia that does a much better job of listing the coordinates.  I keep searching to see if someone has created a Google Earth KML file for the show, but the closest I can find is a site that uses Microsoft’s new Virtual Earth.  I’m sure the KML file won’t be too far off.   Garmin is also getting some promotional mileage from this by equipping the team with GPS technology.

So far I’ve caught the first two shows.  Episode 4 airs this Saturday, August 19, and supposedly features Alton wiping out on his bike and breaking his clavicle. 

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: The Three Saludas
Next Post: Rising Waters ❯

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Categories

  • EdTech (197)
  • Entertainment (202)
  • Family (124)
  • Gear (114)
  • General Technology (98)
  • Geocaching and Maps (208)
  • History and Genealogy (275)
  • Internet (142)
  • Local (459)
  • Miscellaneous (561)
  • Music (202)
  • Paddling (268)
  • Photography (781)
  • Podcast (21)
  • Rambling (233)
  • Rants (162)
  • Recipes (37)
  • Religion (48)
  • Restaurants (165)
  • Science (48)
  • Things Overheard (29)
  • Travel (413)
  • Uncategorized (144)
  • Washington Sabbatical (113)
  • Weirdness (61)

Recent Posts

  • Carolina Ghost Towns – Fort Motte, South Carolina
  • Carolina Ghost Towns Season 3 Trailer
  • Thanksgiving at Home
  • Home!
  • Helene One Year Later

Recent Comments

  • Heath H Cowart on The Haunting of Farr’s Bridge
  • Sheryl Gunter Bingham on Chasing the Swamp Rabbit – Part 3, Sievern and Edisto Academy
  • Jerome A Mann on Update on Ghost Town Research
  • Jerome A Mann on Update on Ghost Town Research
  • Rochelle Bergren on Exploring Barnwell County – Part 3, Speedwell to Spann

Tags

blogging cemetery Christmas Columbia Edisto River edtech Entertainment family Flickr Florida Furman Furman University gear Georgia geotagging Ghost Town Ghost Towns Google Earth Google Maps GPS Greenville Greenville Chorale history Instructional Technology kayaking Lake Jocassee LCU Lowcountry Unfiltered maps Music North Carolina Paddling Photography rambling restaurant Restaurants review singing social networking South Carolina time-lapse Travel video Washington Washington State
January 2026
S M T W T F S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Dec    

Copyright © 2026 Random Connections.

Theme: Oceanly by ScriptsTown