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I’m Traveling in Both the City and the Country. What Shoes Should I Pack?

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I’m Traveling in Both the City and the Country. What Shoes Should I Pack?

Packing shoes for summer travel is like trying to solve a Sudoku puzzle: You need to figure out how all the exigencies add up in multiple directions before you make a choice. After all, shoes are bulky, so you don’t want to take too many, which means each pair has to play multiple parts.

Ideally, you would have a single pair for touring — around cities and country — that would be sturdy enough to manage some hill and trail hiking and not look out of place with shorts. But they would be chic enough to pair with a dress or culottes for sightseeing of the more urban kind. The goal being not to have your shoes act like a neon sign that blares “tourist,” no matter where you are.

(There was a time, for example, where Germans were widely identified by, and mocked for, their penchant to wear white athletic socks with their sandals, the same way Americans were derided for their baseball caps. They were national stereotypes that proved hard to shed.)

So back to the shoe issue at hand. Does such a hybrid exist? Imagine the wholphin of footwear, the zonkey of sneakers, the grolar of galoshes.

I am not making up those names; they really do exist in the animal kingdom, albeit not in large numbers. And, increasingly, the shoe equivalent exists, too. Call it the sleaker. Or maybe the snoafer. I did invent those terms, but they have sort of a nice ring, don’t you think?

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Like the skort (the skirt/shorts) and the shacket (the shirt/jacket), the sleaker and snoafer represent the marriage of two styles (the slipper and sneaker; the sneaker and loafer), and both are distinct from the clodhopper monstrosities that took over kicks culture for awhile.

And just as the “dress sneaker” has wormed its way into Wall Street (and was recently worn by Hakeem Jeffries during a meeting in the Oval Office), so, too, the sleaker and snoafer should worm their way into your suitcase.

Light and low-profile enough to look more like a summer slipper than a hiking boot, sleakers (and snoafers) are supportive enough for easy walking. According to Dr. Elizabeth Cody, a foot and ankle surgeon at the Hospital for Special Surgery, the key is to look for a “thicker, stiffer sole.” How to identify that? “You can test the stiffness of the shoe by trying to bend it from heel to toe,” she said. “A stiff shoe will be very difficult to bend.”

Then look for breathable fabrics like light wool and canvas rather than, say, leather, and a cut that dips cleanly below the ankle bone. Think classic names, like Stan Smith, Superga and Vans, as well their newer cousin, Allbirds, and basic colors, like black and white.

And finally, as with all shoes, wear them before you pack them. It’s the only real way to know if you can walk that way.

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Every week on Open Thread, Vanessa will answer a reader’s fashion-related question, which you can send to her anytime via email or Twitter. Questions are edited and condensed.

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'Sesame Street' writers authorize a strike if they don't reach a contract by Friday

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'Sesame Street' writers authorize a strike if they don't reach a contract by Friday

In this 2008 file photo, Big Bird reads to Connor Scott and Tiffany Jiao during a taping of Sesame Street in New York.

Mark Lennihan/AP


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Mark Lennihan/AP


In this 2008 file photo, Big Bird reads to Connor Scott and Tiffany Jiao during a taping of Sesame Street in New York.

Mark Lennihan/AP

Writers for Sesame Street have voted unanimously to authorize a strike if they are unable to reach an agreement on their new contract before Friday, the Writers Guild of America East announced Tuesday.

Thirty-five WGA union members are asking Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit that produces the mainstay children’s program, for “industry standard annual raises, improvements to residuals, and union coverage for Sesame Workshop’s popular animation and social media segments,” for the show’s writers, WGA said.

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“Our demands would be extremely meaningful for the affected writers, particularly those in animation who are currently being excluded from basic union benefits and protections like pension and healthcare,” the WGA Sesame Workshop Negotiating Committee said. “We hope for a speedy and amicable resolution to these negotiations so that we can continue to do the work of helping the next generation grow smarter, stronger and kinder.”

The union and Sesame Workshop began negotiating a new contract for the writers in February. The contract expires Friday, and if a resolution is not reached, a strike would begin next Wednesday, WGA said.

The 35 unionized writers could start picketing outside Sesame Workshop’s New York City office that same day.

“No one wants to see a picket line on Sesame Street,” WGAE President Lisa Takeuchi Cullen said. “Millions of parents and families around the world are going to have a lot of questions. They might ask why the bosses at Sesame Workshop are ignoring their company’s own messages of kindness and fairness.”

In a statement emailed to NPR on Thursday morning, a Sesame Workshop spokesperson said “we’re still hopeful that we’ll come to an agreement in advance of the expiration.”

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“Our writers are integral members of our creative team, and we are engaged in good faith negotiations with the WGA,” the statement said.

The 54th season of the show began in November and contains 35 weekly episodes.

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You don't 'hike' Fiery Furnace, Utah's exclusive maze of slot canyons. You get lost in it

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You don't 'hike' Fiery Furnace, Utah's exclusive maze of slot canyons. You get lost in it

“Is that the trail?” I asked Steve, my longtime adventuring buddy. Not out of frustration or worry. I was more amazed at how this trail was marked, which is hardly at all. So you know, Steve has led me off trail only once in 10 years along dozens of hikes. He’s that good as a navigator.

“Matt — any idea?” I asked my other friend, who was head down in his GPS app, trying to decipher the snaking mess that was our location against the supposed “trail.”

The official ranger-led hike is about two miles, but if you opt to explore on your own, your trek may be much longer.

(Blake Snow)

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Before I move on, you need to understand that GPS works only within 10 feet of your actual position, which is pretty amazing for triangulating satellites that are thousands of miles away. But not quite amazing enough for those afraid of getting lost on one of the most exclusive hikes in America: Utah’s Fiery Furnace in Arches National Park. One wrong step here, and you’ll be backtracking, head scratching and disorientingly wondering whether you’ll ever find the trail again in this maze of red rock, slot canyons, towering arches, divisive fins, giant spires and blue skies.

And that’s the fun of it. Here’s what you need to know — what I wish I’d known — before visiting this mostly safe and contained playground for an afternoon or more.

Utah’s Fiery Furnace is a 30-minute drive from Moab, Utah. It’s one of the only protected wilderness areas in the national park system. Open to only 75 people a day (and no reservations longer than seven days out), it’s also one of the hardest park permits to score. Compared to other hikes, Fiery Furnace is more of a moonshot when it comes to crossing its Martian terrain. “Everyone but the park rangers get lost,” our guide told us during a pre-hike orientation. “Not even GPS will save you, so it’s best just to meander and go with the flow.”

She was right about all but one thing: Although GPS tracking in the popular AllTrails app spectacularly failed to keep us on path, it did help us get out eventually so we could make it to our next hike in Arches. But if I could have a redo, I would have accepted the guide’s advice and planed for more time and mindless wandering in this special place among an already special southern Utah.

Towering red rocks at Fiery Furnace in Arches National Park.

Be sure to look up, down and all around as you walk through this otherworldly maze.

(Blake Snow)

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Speaking of the orientation, it’s mandatory. After picking up your $10 permit, you’re required to enter a small conference room and watch a 10-minute video about what the hike demands in terms of water, following the so-called trails and complying with the strict environmental and preservation regulations. You’ll even be verbally tested on what you watched, and the rangers won’t let you leave until you get the answers right.

After that, you’re on your own. Literally and figuratively.

During our hike, our party of three encountered just three other groups in the three hours we were inside. We jokingly exchanged pleasantries and accepted that none of us knew where we were going. But we did offer helpful tips of where we had been. “There’s a cool arch back there… Watch out for the giant gap ahead… Stay to the left or you’ll dead-end at a cliff.”

I say Fiery Furnace is mostly safe because I had to jump a gap and nearly tripped into what would have been severe injury some 20 to 30 feet below. Whoops. It’s not necessarily a physically demanding or overly technical experience. But parts of the furnace are tricky, and I wouldn’t advise anyone in poor shape to go inside. But able adults and sure-footed children regularly make their way through. For everyone else, there’s a stunning view of the furnace from the oncoming road and official viewpoint.

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Scenes from freelance writer Blake Snow's trip to the Fiery Furnace canyon in Arches National Park, Utah.

The view on a trip to the Fiery Furnace canyon in Arches National Park, Utah. (Blake Snow)

Blue skies and red rocks  in Arches National Park, Utah.

Blue skies and red rocks inside Arches National Park, Utah. (Blake Snow)

Three smiling people make hand gestures at Fiery Furnace.

The author, center, and his hiking pals made it out of Fiery Furnace in time for their next Utah trek.

(Blake Snow)

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While hiking the furnace, you can expect several arches, a sea of balancing rocks and mushroom like toadstools, massive cliff walls, incredibly tight slot canyons, layers upon layers of sandstone fins that divide the landscape and even a few open spaces. There are deep canyons, dead ends, sweeping vistas of distant formations elsewhere in the park, and a deafening amount of silence.

My friends and I lunched in the spring shade of Surprise Arch, a natural stone arch sandwiched between two massive rock walls. I have no idea how it or any of us got here. But there we were, dining al fresco in this otherworldly place.

If venturing the unknown of Fiery Furnace all alone doesn’t appeal to you, park rangers offer guided tours several times a day to permitted guests.

For the lucky few who enter Fiery Furnace, my advice is this: Get rid of your GPS — at least until you’re ready to leave. Plan for a few extra hours inside, if not an entire day. Meander. Get lost. By all means hike — but don’t expect your average point to point or loop trail. You probably won’t see the whole area, and that’s a good thing. There’s reason to return and have an experience that’s entirely new.

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The ranger was right. Just go inside and enjoy the view.

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How 'Hot Ones' took wing(s) : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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How 'Hot Ones' took wing(s) : Pop Culture Happy Hour

Comedian Conan O’Brien at TBS Night Out in 2016. He recently appeared on YouTube show, Hot Ones.

Paul Zimmerman/Getty Images for TBS


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Comedian Conan O’Brien at TBS Night Out in 2016. He recently appeared on YouTube show, Hot Ones.

Paul Zimmerman/Getty Images for TBS

Hot Ones is the YouTube show where famous people answer questions while eating increasingly hot chicken wings. Hosted by Sean Evans, the series is a phenomenon. And Conan O’Brien is its most recent high achiever, and possibly the best guest ever. What exactly makes a good Hot Ones guest?

Subscribe to Pop Culture Happy Hour Plus at plus.npr.org/happyhour

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