Visit the Forum >>
Visit the Classifieds >>

NEWER POST

Breaking News: 4 Shot in Columbia Heights

OLDER POST

A Historic CVS

Verizon Center Have Some Self Respect

Verizon Center Ad, originally uploaded by Prince of Petworth.

Good lord, have you seen the Verizon Center lately? In the Gallery Place metro there are dozens of posters celebrating its 10th anniversary. And then I see this. I’m not sure if you can tell exactly just how large this sign is but it must be at least 50 feet by 50 feet. It is huge. And this is how they chose to adorn the Verizon Center on its 10th anniversary? Two and half men? Doesn’t the Verizon Center get millions of dollars for the name Verizon Center alone? That’s not enough? They have to put the biggest most garish tv ad up as well. In French we would say the Verizon Center is behaving like a Pute.

Category: Uncategorized

By: | 31 October 2007 9:44 PM | 12 Comments

  • Justin

    There is always a billboard the same size there.. They just took down the one advertising the Edward Hopper show at the NGA, and put up that one. Before that it was for various movies.

  • GforGood

    Well, Two and a half men is apparently one the most popular sit coms right now..

  • Guy Mondo

    If you look around, big ads on the Verizon Center are nothing compared to the permanent eyesores that permeate what was once DC’s Chinatown. There’s a friggin’ Hooters, Starbucks, Bennetton, Fudruckers, Potbelly, Urban Outfitters, etc., etc., etc., among the most Americanized Chinese restaurants (unless you are brave enough to venture east of 6th Street past the panhandlers to Li Ho Food or Full Kee).

    There are giant-sized ads on every available building with an unobstructed view along New York Ave. from the Convention Center to Union Station.

  • noway

    OMG, there’s a Starbucks in Chinatown?!? That must be bad because it’s a chain, right?

  • Meow

    Yup!! It’s in the rule book.
    Section 8, Paragraph 9: “When living in Penn Quarter or any other up and coming neighborhood in D.C., you must always comment on how horrid any chain is when a new store opens up regardless if that store is a chain or not. It will make you feel quite elite when you post. But over all, you’ll just sound like an ass. You will fulfill that ass perception when you are dining at PF Changs on Friday evening.”

    I’ll gladly take as many chains as we can get as long as it’ll help kick start this town into a real metro area. OMG we’re getting metered taxi’s.. It’s already happening.. nooooooo…

  • Caroline

    The nice thing about that Starbucks is that it’s open 24 hours on the weekends. I like independent coffee shops and all, but the ones in DC close way too early and tend to be too noisy for studying.

  • jimmy crack corn

    You can call it elitist if you want, but the reason a lot of people do not like chains is because they don’t want their town or city to look like EVERY OTHER town and city in America and are owned by someone with no local ties and thus no incentive other than their own good PR to care about the local area.

  • yoyoindc

    Meow, you are a hoot. I am LOL. You are so right; I have lived in Chinatown for 2 years and have never heard anything good about the neighborhood. I LOVE living here, chains and all. I can get (almost) anything I need within a 2 block radius.

    Thanks for the tip on PF Changs.

  • DC Metrocentric » Linked: Neighborhood Roundup

    [...] Verizon Center Losses Self Respect [PrinceOfPetworth] [...]

  • JS

    That was a great comment, Meow.

  • ChinaMuch?

    Seriously, have you been to China? Recently? They put a Starbucks in the Forbidden City! Guy wouldn’t know Chinese if he got hit in the face with a chopstick.

  • Guy Mondo

    Ttue, i have never been to China, but I have been out to eat with Chinese associates who know their food and most of them lamented the Americanized kitchens in the more popular restaurants. The point in my earlier post was that, with the advent of chains like Starbucks and Hooters (which are helping to revitalize a dying downtown), there isn’t much left in Chinatown that is Chinese. That to me, as a native Washingtonian, is sad. I am all for development but not at the expense of the cultural identity of a neighborhood. Trying to translate the logo for “Hooters” into Chinese characters doesn’t help preserve the identity of Chinatown, it mocks it.

    As for my knowledge of Chinese cuisine, ChinaMuch?, I have eaten in the real home-style restaurants where my judgement was, initially, questioned by servers because few Americans (especially a Black American!) had ever ordered an item before. I also spent 2 years working under an award-winning Thai chef in Atlanta so I think I am very qualified to have an opinion on what authentic Asian food should be. I am not an elitist. I’m just a guy who misses being able to get congee with marinated pig intestine or stuffed duck feet in Chinatown anymore.

    Se xian ni.



NEWER POST

Breaking News: 4 Shot in Columbia Heights

OLDER POST

A Historic CVS

116

COMMENTS

91

COMMENTS

82

COMMENTS

63

COMMENTS

PoPville Photo Archives Caption Contest

07 February 2012 1:29 PM

62

COMMENTS

12:17am

ummm i think this is not H ST NE...pretty sure it is NW neighborhood between u street and...

House of the Day
Normal Gal
12:08am

I understand the desire for consistency, but it's hard for me to imagining dealing with...

Dear PoPville – Washington Sports Clubs “rate guarantee fee”!?!?
Anonymous
12:04am

Yes, engaging the public and soliciting their views = grotesquely abusive. He is trying...

The 5pm Post – One City Summit Feb. 11th
Anonymous
11:35pm

I'll take your word for it. I was just told that the street cars on the F line -- where...

Sweet Historical Picture from Trolley Park (11th and Monroe St, NW)
11:06pm

Would you like me to introduce you to some people who have put forth much more than "the...

Huge Line for Section 8 Housing in Columbia Heights