Places to Be-Sam’s Corner

 

Sam's Corner, Myrtle Beach

Sam's Corner, Myrtle Beach

Hot dogs: Is there a more American food than hot dogs? Sure, some people may argue that its really a German food or that corn or turkey could be considered more American because they are native to the land. 
However, you don’t go to the ball game and order corn on the cob. You don’t celebrate the Fourth of July out in the back yard grilling up some turkey breast.
I am sure I have mentioned that hot dogs are my favorite food, and have been since … well longer than I can remember. And yes, I have been told all the dreadful tales of supposed ingredients and health risks. In fact, those culinary horror stories inspired my award-winning piece entitled “No one here gets out alive.” (Reprinted Here at PirateJournalism.com)
However, we are straying from the point, which was that hot dogs were one of the first things I ate as a new resident of Myrtle Beach.
I was meeting with a real estate agent about an apartment shortly after I had loaded up the Buick and made the 700-mile exodus to the promised land of the Grand Strand. I had basically bet everything on this trip, burned my bridges and hoped that I could find a place to live, a job and a life before my tiny bankroll ran out. Well, after signing a lease for a new apartment, I decided it was time for a reward — and lunch.
Lo and behold, right there next to the realtor’s office was Sam’s Corner. Well, okay, it was one of them. They have three locations: Garden City, Myrtle Beach and Pawleys Island. I was at the Myrtle Beach location in the plaza on the 77th North block of Highway 17. It wasn’t on a corner — closer to the center of the plaza — but I was nitpicking.
Sam’s is a narrow place with booths on one side and “old-style diner” bar seating on the other. The walls are alive with vintage style signs advertising chili-cheese fries and “state fair-style Italian sausage hot dogs.” However, this place had me at “World Famous Hot Dogs.”
I grew up as a purist of my hot dogs. Weiner, bun and ketchup — that was all that you needed or should have on a hot dog. Of course, over the years, I have matured and come to enjoy the variety of things you can put on your dog, except for maybe onions. In addition, I usually don’t go for chilidogs, but Sam’s proved to be the exception.
Their basic foot long comes with chili, mustard and onions (I get them with no-onions), and dawg-gone-it, if these aren’t the best chilidogs I have ever had.
Moreover, Sam’s is not just a one-trick pony. Their Ocean Burger — served on a pita with cheddar and American cheese and ranch dressing — is good, too. In addition, while it is not my thing, I have a buddy who raves about the El Paso sandwich — grilled pimento cheese, bacon, jalapeños and tomato on wheat.
I have also enjoyed hearty, hot breakfasts there. In addition, if you need a little pick-me-up or nightcap, they offer draft beers and a selection of cocktails and frozen drinks.
While Sam’s Corner may not be one of those big flashy touristy places to be, I am here to tell you that those chili dogs are well worth the trip.

 

(Originally published in the Myrtle Beach Herald.)

Published in: on February 20, 2009 at 23:56  Comments Off  
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Movies to See – Taken

In the past, I have talked about that dead space between Christmas and the summer movie season. Last year, that dead zone was almost non-existent, and the best that I can tell, this year it was limited to one weekend (Jan. 3, when no new movies were released).
I think Hollywood is taking a tip from TV land. In the old days, the TV season started in the fall and lasted all winter long, then reruns played throughout the spring and summer.
In recent years, seasons are shorter, and shuffled so that when one show is set to go into reruns, another series is ready to run new episodes again. There is no more “rerun season.”
Hollywood seems to have taken this to heart. The normal pre-Holiday season dead zone was missing from last year’s box office, and it doesn’t look like the pre-summer dead season is coming either. You could almost say it was “Taken” away.
“Taken” is an action thriller that stars Liam Neeson. As Bryan Mills, former longhaired Jedi and Batman Begins villain, Neeson plays an ex-CIA “preventer” going after a gang of Albanian slavers who have kidnapped his daughter.
Mills spent most of his daughter’s life “preventing bad things from happening” in Europe. Now divorced, he has retired to California to be closer to her.
However, the 17-year-old Kim (Maggie Grace) is not the little girl he remembers, and is off to visit Paris with her girlfriend. The trip to Paris turns into a nightmare when they are kidnapped.
Now, imagine it was your daughter that was kidnapped. What would you do? What could you do?
Imagine if you were a CIA assassin, had contacts throughout Europe and an array of deadly skills that would make Jason Bourne and James Bond envious. What would you do then?
Mills tears a gaping hole in the Paris underworld to rescue his daughter.
In fact, one of the things that strikes you in this movie is the complete and utter ruthlessness of Mills. He has one concern, and maybe his only redeeming quality, and that is to rescue his daughter.
Anything or anyone that gets in his way is struck down in the most efficient and often brutal way possible. This is no “punch’em in the face and knock them out” action movie. This is a strangle, stab, shoot, “punch ‘em in the throat and kill them” movie.
Moreover, Neeson brings this to life with chilling effect. He really makes you believe that he would destroy anyone who even jaywalked between him and baby girl. Talk about tough love; “Taken” takes the idea to an entirely new level.

(Originally Published in the Myrtle Beach Herald)

Published in: on February 8, 2009 at 19:28  Comments Off  
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