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Press Release of the Day: Saving the world from falling icicles

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August 29, 2009

by Jay Gabler | 8/25/09 • In Elizabeth Berg's book Range of Motion, a wife struggles to cope as her husband lies in a coma. Throughout the book—which is actually quite moving and thought-provoking despite being available in a mass-market edition with gilded letters and one of those peek-a-boo diecut covers—the woman reflects on all the little things that married people sometimes take for granted when their partners are not rendered unconscious for months after being struck by an icicle.

Somebody Nobody at Mixed Blood Theater
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That's right...the villain is an icicle. Does this sort of thing happen often? Well, according to Gutterglove Gutterguard, makers of the IceBreaker gutter heater and the LeafBlaster gutter filter, "in Moscow, TASS news agency reported on February 26, 2008, 'Six people have been killed in three days by icicles falling from buildings in a central Russian region.'" Further, "Report by Rachelle Bowden of the Chicagoist.com, 'In 2000, Donald Booth, a Wisconsin man, was walking down the sidewalk past the Neiman Marcus building (in Chicago) when a microwave-size piece of ice fell from the sky, crushing his skull and vertebrae and instantly killing him.'" A little quick Googling yielded a blog entry from Albany, New York, which links to several other examples—and notes that Minneapolis is one of the risk areas. The question is, what's it worth to you to protect your loved ones (and mail carrier) from being smote by icicles?

front row seat is the blog of jay gabler, the daily planet's arts editor. to keep up on the local arts scene, follow artsorbit on twitter and subscribe to arts orbit radar.

I inquired with Gutterglove and received an extremely informative response (complete with photos) from Robert Lenney, whose title is "Co-Founder/Co-Inventor Gutterglove & Rain Harvesting Systems." Not being familiar with gutter protection technology, I had to read it a few times. The upshot is that you can protect your gutters from leaves and debris for between $2 and $9 per foot—depending on how much protection you want and how much of the installation work you want to do yourself—but if you want IceBreaker gutter guards, that's going to run you $23-$27 per foot. (You also get the anti-leaf protection thrown in as a bonus.) The Google consensus is that the average house has about 150-200 feet of gutter, which puts you in the $4,000-$5,000 range.

The question you have to ask yourself, punk, is: Do I feel lucky?

Previous Press Releases of the Day:The edge of TomatoNothing scandalous, just some booze and JengaRobots fish for prostatesThe Rake AngelListening to dirtReindeer games at the Red StagDoes St. Paul owe the Pope $3.4 million?Tonic Sol-fa visit the Don Shelby Radio ShowRybak proclaims Tonic Sol-fa Day in MinneapolisRuddy ducks, Autoharp warriors, boozing ladies, YogaSoul, Quincy Jones, and the hateful warmongers who are Tonic Sol-faA post-pop PocahontasThere will be dogsFeather ticklers and seduction sashesBlack mold and Spud Too TightFaux-tinis and Canada's culinary queenNienstedt got gameKeith Urban grills white bread, exclusively for the Daily PlanetYour #1 exotic animal Christian presentationVia Tania, by the bookGuess who's coming to dinner with the Father, the Son, and the Holy SpiritIs that a giant lipstick in your lap, or are you just happy to see me?Mr. Bubble, a barbershop legend, and unlimited spamJim Rose's ambiguous brawl, and how to find the man on the street
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