Pennsylvania Diners and Other Roadside Restaurants

Pennsylvania Diners & Other Roadside Restaurants is a 1993 documentary created by Rick Sebak.[1] The program originated in a 1992 item in The Pennsylvania Road Show about Lee's Diner.[2] It was to be called "Pennsylvania Diners" but added "Other Roadside Restaurants" to cover other establishments than diners. When it was released on DVD in 2006, additional stories not seen nationally were included.

Reception

In 1994 the show was nominated to the Mid Atlantic Emmy Award Competition, for "Outstanding Cultural Programming".[3] David Dillon, the architecture critic from The Dallas Morning News reviewed the show describing it as "amiable, if somewhat plodding".[4]

gollark: I have loads of chargers and cables, but the spare chargers generally all provide 5V/1A or less and the cables are often short, frayed or seemingly missing data lines.
gollark: Just have the sides be covered in various exposed not-really-general-purpose GPIO pins.
gollark: Design a custom one which is subtly incompatible with all others, that never fails.
gollark: Replace the USB ports with I²C ports. What could possibly go wrong.
gollark: Is there much of a reason to not use USB for those? Implementation complexity?

See also

  • Pittsburgh A To Z

References

  1. Scott Moore (October 2, 1994), Pennsylvania Diners; A Tasty Documentary, The Washington Post, archived from the original on March 6, 2016
  2. "Pennsylvania Road Show DVD". Shop WQED. Retrieved June 25, 2019.
  3. Ron Weiskind (1994-08-24). "Local TV scores with 31 nominations in Mid-Alantic Emmys". Pittsburgh Post Gazette. Retrieved 2010-01-04.
  4. David Dillon (1994-10-05). "'Diners' has homey touch, but the appeal grows stale". Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2010-01-04.
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