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Road Trip (2000) May 2026

The heat was biblical. The Jeep’s AC worked only on setting "4," which sounded like a jet engine taking off. We stopped at a diner where the waitress called us "hon" and the coffee was thick enough to stand a spoon in. On the radio: NSYNC’s "It’s Gonna Be Me" battling Creed’s "Higher." We threw a penny into the Grand Canyon and took photos on a disposable Kodak. We won't see those photos for three weeks.

It wasn't a road trip. It was a séance for a simpler century. road trip (2000)

We left at 6:00 AM. Not because we were organized, but because nobody slept. The thrill of Y2K having been a dud made the summer feel reckless. The map—a physical, foldable Rand McNally —was already torn along the seam of Colorado. We had no GPS. We had no cell service once we passed the city limits (my Nokia 3310 was for emergency snakebites only). We navigated by the sun, gas station attendants, and sheer optimism. The heat was biblical

This was the golden hour. Windows down. The smell of pine and gas station hot dogs. We found a bootleg Eminem tape in the glove compartment. The stars out here look fake—like a screensaver on an iMac G3. We talked about the future. About college. About whether The Matrix really made sense. We didn't check a single email the entire trip. The internet lived in a dusty computer at the public library, and for two weeks, it didn't exist. On the radio: NSYNC’s "It’s Gonna Be Me"

The Rig: A 1998 Jeep Cherokee (Forest Green) with a cracked dashboard, a six-disc CD changer in the trunk, and an ashtray full of lint instead of ash. The Crew: Three friends, two weeks, one “Mileage May Vary” budget. The Soundtrack: Kid A (just dropped), Hybrid Theory , Oops!... I Did It Again (don’t judge), and a burned CD labeled “DRIVIN’” that skips on track 7.