Eh. That’s more-or-less impossible to maintain as a standard; even if you define the edges of a time zone as strictly following the longitude lines every 15 degrees, the eastern edge of the time zone will have the sun highest at 12:30 p.m., and the western edge at 11:30.
And time zones can be much larger; EST (which should encompass an area including 75°W longitude and 7.5° on either side) stretches from the westernmost point of Ontario on its border with Manitoba (95°09’11"W) to the easternmost point of Nunavut (~60°W). That’s over two hours from when the sun is highest at the easternmost point of EST to when it’s highest at the westernmost point. Other time zones have similar extremes.
At this point, I’d be happy with just “the time of the sun’s highest point is consistent from day to day.”
Another time zone extreme: GMT-3 stretches from the easternmost point of Greenland (11°19’W) to the westernmost point in mainland Chile (75°38′57.5″W). That’s well over four hours’s difference from when the sun passes “over” one edge to the other.
(And today I leaned that I’m almost due north of the westernmost part of mainland Chile).
I don’t think that’s reasonable either since it varies throughout the year with the angle of the earth to the sun. More importantly, it just doesn’t matter. Either you care about the position of the sun (ex: if you need sunlight to see what you’re doing while gardening) or you care about the time on the clock (ex: if you’re coordinating a meeting). On rare occasions, like coordinating an outdoor activity, both may matter, but don’t need precision. Just schedule your group stargazing at night and your group sunbathing during the day. It’s extremely rare for both to matter at once and need precision.
I think now the Chamber of Commerce will have to fight to keep the change as it is just to cement themselves more visibly back into the role of Prosthetic Republican Dicks.
It’s a good impression but it doesn’t sound exactly like him to me.
Here’s a source:
Filling in for West on the PSA was Dick Gautier, best known for playing Hymie the robot on Get Smart and for having authoring numerous books on cartooning. Gautier recalls that doing the spot was a favor of sorts. He tells us, “They called me in, hoping I’d fit into the Batman costume. I could and did and then I imitated Adam’s peculiar cadence of delivery and they bought it. Let me rephrase that, as I said, there was no money.” Over the years, many viewers have recalled that it was West in the costume, a credit to Gautier’s performance. Craig noted that the actor “started his career as an impersonator and was brilliant at it.”