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Three Things

17 Dec

Three things I like about Debs Park:

  • There’s always a birthday party set up at 8 a.m. on Saturday,
  • There’s always evidence of a recent paint ball game, and
  • There are always huge people getting out of huge pickup trucks with tiny yappy dogs.

What Blew In

5 Dec

We were lucky enough to lose only one tree and two days of power.  The rest of the neighborhood had a lot more downed trees, blown leaves, and toppled fences.

This is my favorite picture from the windstorm.  This tree was full of leaves the day before, and was pretty bare the day after.  I did always think those leaves made it feel overdressed.  This, on the other hand, makes it look . . . um . . . like it’s flashing its fruit. More pictures here.
Montecito Heights 3

Intrepid Reporting–Brush Fire Edition

4 Jul

There’s nothing like a brush fire visible from the back deck to pull you out of the pool in a jiffy on this Fourth of July weekend.

A full set of photos and some video here.  The shots include video of some water dropping helicopters.

A preview in stills:
Afternoon Brush Fire
Guys Watching

@LAFD reported 60 firefighters, three helicopters, and no injuries via Twitter.

(Repost) The Fifth of July

2 Jul

Reposting this story today because it is my favorite memory of this weekend.

When I was a little kid, we were too poor to afford fireworks. I suppose I can’t blame my pyrotechnic poverty just on being poor, but more on the fact that my mother didn’t think any part of the welfare check should be spent on frivolity. If we got fireworks, we didn’t get clothes, or we didn’t get food. Sure, it was a practical choice, but as a kid, you just want to rip into the hundred dollar “Independence Day” box of fireworks.

Our fireworkslessness meant that in the days leading up to the Fourth of July every year, we’d visit our more affluent friends and watch them light fireworks. Back then this annual ritual led me to conclude that socio-economic status could be identified by the characteristics of your fireworks.

If you had no color, just sound, you weren’t poor, but you weren’t living in a mansion. You lived in an apartment and shared a bedroom with a couple of siblings. The same went for fireworks with no sound, and just smoke.

If you had fireworks that were colorful, but just rolled around on the ground, you lived in one of the houses in a duplex.

If your fireworks shot color into the air, and did so while crackling, at least one of your parents had a full-time job and probably owned a house with a yard and a driveway (or at least they’d found a way to live in one).

In my family, we didn’t have any fireworks before and up to the Fourth of July. We didn’t get to light something and have sound, or color. Maybe, if we got lucky, someone handed us a sparkler. In the bad years, they handed us the punk used to light the fireworks. Yep, there’s the poor kid, the one with the smoldering ember.

Occasionally, when the sounds of Fourth of July were so muddled that you couldn’t tell the fireworks from the gunshots fired into the air, we pretended to be fireworks. I mean, if you’re a nine-year-old and you scream from a low tone to a very high one, you sound kind of like a Piccolo Pete. And besides, by nightfall, no one even knows what’s going on in neighboring yards, driveways, or streets. Everyone is just staring into the sky, looking for something to make the darkness light. That means there is no risk of being seen joining the cacophony of Independence Day sound, while in your pajamas, from just inside your apartment’s living room window.

I watched from the shadows every year until the Fifth of July. That was the day when my cousin Reggie would come over and my mom, and my sister, and my Tía Rosalba, and my other cousins, and I would go to the local park. Salt Lake Park was the one where the big neighborhood fireworks were set off, and the official, city-sanctioned Fourth of July safe zone for amateur fireworks displays.

We never went to the show on the Fourth of July. My mom was scared that going to the park after dark would make us victims of violent crime, and my Tía Rosalba was a Jehovah’s Witness. Her family didn’t celebrate the Fourth of July.

But, on the Fifth of July, Reggie, Virginia, and I made sure to take a magnifying glass to the park. Our families would stake out a spot next to a tree, drag over a picnic bench, pull out aluminum foil-wrapped burritos, and play dominoes.

Virginia, Reggie, and I headed straight for the previous night’s launching pad.

We crawled around every inch of that soccer-field sized patch of grass, looking for unused fireworks. Although not plentiful, and not colorful, little by little, we’d find some fireworks.

At first, we’d find little black charcoal disks. While we weren’t allowed to buy fireworks, and we weren’t allowed to play with matches, we did know what unused fireworks looked like, and how to start a fire without matches, so out came the magnifying glass.

We figured out the sun’s angle, and the length of time needed to create a flame, and voilà, black plumes of ash came up from the earth and “snakes” came to life.

My sister, Virginia, tore holes in the knees of her jeans and Reggie got dirt in his eyes, before we found another unused firecracker.

Lighting our fireworks became easier with each successive find. We’d get sound, and some smoke, and then we’d laugh hysterically and roll around in laughter on the charred firecracker paper and ashes left from the night before.

Although there were never more than about ten unused fireworks for us to light every year, we had gotten the chance to shoot off some fireworks after all. On the Fifth of July we had not been denied the simple pleasure of creating marvels of sound and sight.

We all knew that our scavenging hadn’t made us children of homeowners this year, but it was understood that ingenuity would get us there some year, maybe next year.

Cool View for a Monday

8 Mar

Sometimes the view is very, very cool.

The Grammys

14 Feb

Last weekend was the Super Bowl, this weekend brought the Grammys.  Again, I lucked into tickets.

I have an admission though—I’m not a big music person.  I mean, I listen to music and I have a decent music library, but I’m not really into it.

I don’t go to a lot of concerts.  I don’t need to be the first to get a song, and I’m rarely the one discovering any new music.  I don’t even really have an ear for music.  I just viscerally like it or I don’t.

That’s probably why getting the invite to this event is slightly lost on me, but I always appreciate a good party. And that it was.

Among my observations, the red carpet was actually painted red (this enhancement stained the sagging tuxedo pants of some of the audience’s younger members).  There was a lot of spray tan on attendees.  Mick Jagger was very good (even without having to pair him up with others, as was almost everyone else who performed).  And, I still don’t understand the appeal of Justin Bieber.

The event also provided great twitter humor.  My favorite tweets of the evening:

@Brandon Millman: Cee Lo’s done gone and lost his damned mind. That’s Gaga he’s doing right now.

@melohello: Bob Dylan held together by the scotch tape of Satan. He sings with the burning rocks of hell in his throat.

@siamusic: janelle monae is my new spirit animal.

@goldengateblond: She was at the VMAs covered in meat. Now she’s at the Grammys dressed as an egg. Two more red carpets and Gaga will be a Denny’s Grand Slam.

@nickiminaj: when will.i.am looks at you like “wtf are you wearing,” you have a problem.

What’s There To Fear?

8 Feb

If you’re my mother–political calls.

Today I came home and found her in tears.  “The FBI is calling you, listen to the message,” she weeped.  To the woman who honestly believes that some all knowing (and way more organized than our government is) entity has a permanent record on each of us, the term “FBI investigation” in my house was earth shattering.

I assured her, the FBI was not calling for me.  But she forced me to listen to the voicemail.  “Listen, listen,” she said and pointed.

I did.  And then I realized what had happened.

You see, I happen to live in CD 14.  It’s the Los Angeles political district that has exactly the kind of stuff going on that keeps good people from ever wanting to engage in civic life.  There are charges and countercharges and one of them seems to involve an FBI investigation of one of the candidates.  And that’s what the caller who left a message was calling to tell my answering machine–that I should have heard that one of the candidates was being investigated.

But instead, they scared the bejesus out of my poor, agitated mother and made me wish I had better political options.

Game Time

24 Jan

Both my teams lost during yesterday’s playoff games.  I’ll now have to watch a Super Bowl with Green Bay and the Steelers.

At least it was a gorgeous day on which to enjoy my poolside tv-watching perch.

Game Time

La Alarma

20 Jan

My mom’s better than Twitter. She called to tell me about Bell’s shooting before anyone posted news to a Twitter feed.

Localizing a Bigger Story

17 Jan

We haven’t had mass animal die-offs in my neighborhood, so I guess we should worry more about looking both ways than biblical prophecy. RIP ardilla.

Animals in my neighborhood

Los Angeles is a Lie

4 Jan

A friend recently visited and complained that “Los Angeles is a LIE.”  Her point was that every time she visits, it’s too cold for shorts and she’s had to wear a jacket—regardless of the season.

I was in New York for New Year’s Eve and despite my native-Angeleno self,  I’ll admit I was a little convinced that we might be a lie.

Specifically, I point to the warmer weather in NYC every day I was out there.  This despite all the questions from my So Cal colleagues about how bad it must have been because of the blizzard.  Granted, I didn’t get caught in that storm or have real flight delays due to the snowpocalypse (in fact, my only delay was getting out of Burbank, where the winds held up our plane).

However, based on the last four days, she might be right.  The day I left for NYC it was just above 40 degrees here.  The day I returned, the temperature was the same.  NYC, on the other hand, was just under 50 degrees on both days.  I needed more layers here than there.

Granted, NYC didn’t have 60 degree temps for an outdoor football game called the Rose Bowl, but I’m still not sure that makes us less of a lie.

 

 

New in the Neighborhood

9 Aug

I’ve seen a lot of things near the Rose Hills projects.  Birthday jumpers, outdoor barbecues, graduation parties, early morning service of warrants, and now—horses.  Well, they weren’t exactly in the projects.  They were more like at the trailhead across the street.  Still, I’m not exactly sure where they came from or where they ended up.  Just an observation, I guess.
Around the Neighborhood

Not Quite Fusion

5 Jun

TacoTruck

The taco truck in residence near Rose Hills seems to have a bit of an identity crisis.

A Twist on Seasonal Brush Clearing

24 Apr

As others have noted, it’s brush clearing season in the hills. As I scanned the hills near me this morning, I noticed one spot where the hill hadn’t just (kind of) been cleared. It seems time was also spent on adding site identification to the local landscape.

Welcome to Happy Valley.
Giant HV

Photo of the Day

31 Jan

She Who Smashes the Serpent

Around the Neighborhood

26 Dec

I’ve written about interesting decorations in my neighborhood before.  In recent weeks, I found a new one to add to my list.  I don’t know how I missed this chainlink fence topper before, but she defies explanation.

Maybe an old school ad campaign I missed? Maybe she’s supposed to be hanging laundry on the clothes line that’s not exactly behind her.  I don’t know.  Like I said, it defies explanation.

Randomholiday 001

No more rain

14 Dec

Storm front moving out. From the 710 looking north.

121309

Fire Season

29 Aug

View of early morning through the smoke.
Sunrise August 28, 2009

A Little Levity Among the Seriousness

16 Nov

Can't Marry But Make Great Signs

More from the L.A. National Day of Protest here.

Rallying

9 Nov

Attended the ANSWER rally against the inequality legislated by the recent passage of Prop 8.  Estimates are that I was joined by up to 10,000 people (and what looked like seven platoons of police officers).
Some photos:
I Want What The Chickens Got
Your Kids Are Not Excuses for Your Homophobia
Others in the set here.

Signs I didn’t get pictures of:

  • Chickens 1 Gays 0;
  • Boycott Utah;
  • Keep your doctrine out of our covenants; and
  • Straight mom for gay families.

Birthdays and Bone Marrow

23 Oct

A birthday yesterday meant fabulous pumpkin baked alaska.  While it was delicious, I was more intrigued by the plate of bone marrow we were also able to have at the steakhouse where we celebrated.  Who knew bone marrow was such a good side dish?
Pumpkin Baked Alasksa

El Aviso

17 Oct

Sometimes you see warnings that just look like they shouldn’t be ignored.

Warning

El Zapatero?

25 Sep

Seen behind Plaza del Sol in ELA. Anyone have a good explanation for a truckbed full of seemingly new shoes?

El Zapatero

Veinte Años

23 Sep

I went to one of those large urban high schools fear of which drives many parents to transplant themselves to farflung locations where the myth of everpresent safety dwells.  Extreme poverty gave my mom no such choice, so I went to the local LAUSD high school. 

That place—the one with the 52% drop out rate, a year-round schedule, sparse advanced-level coursework, and a student body of over 3,500—taught me some great life lessons (like do not light a match when teenage girls are spraying extra hold Aqua Net in a crowded hallway).  I’d say it also did a pretty good job of opening up some exciting educational paths that allowed me to provide for my family in ways I never imagined.

I bring this up because the Class of 1988 celebrated its 20th Reunion this weekend.  While the crowd of 300 alums was hardly everyone who graduated with me, it was fun to hear two decades’ worth of stories and wonder how different we’d have been if only we’d known then what we know now.  But I’ll save those stories for a time when I can put them into some grander context.  For today, I’ll just hand out awards to those providing amusement value in the ”Reunion Book” (that handout where people try to capture 20 years in four sentences) and thank those who made the reunion a great event to attend.

Most In Need of Some Southeast L.A. Vibes—”I got married in 1989.  I lived and worked in California until 2000 and then moved to Hailey, Idaho.  I still don’t know what I’m doing here as I hate the weather, we have 3 months or spring and summer and the rest of the year is either freezing or snowing.  I lived in the middle of nowhere as the mall is 75 miles from where I live.  I have a son in California attending Culinary School.  My daughter is a stay at home mom, as I also now have a grandson and a grandaughter.  My youngest is getting ready to attend high school.  And for the last 19 years I have been married to the same man? I don’t know if that is good or bad.” 

Most Entitled To Judge You As Harshly As You Judged Her When She Got Pregnant—”I . . . became a Christian in 1991 and my life has never been the same.  In 1999 my family and I moved to Colorado to plant a Christian church and have been blessed to lead a wonderful group of people (2000 or so) into a deeper relationship with God.  Being a pastor’s wife is not at all what I thought I would be when I grew up.”

Least Likely to Outgrow Her Issues By The 25th Reunion—”My height still remains at 4’11″ but hey, they say great things comes in small packages.”

Least Likely To Figure Out The Meaning of the Word “Literally”—”In 2002 I won the Lotto! Literally, when I married my Hot Fireman Husband . . . .”

Best Unintended Amusement Value—to the woman who claims that life hasn’t changed much and chose an email adress of “Piojosa” followed by a number.  I must have been feeling silly because I spent most of the night wondering who the other three dozen piojosas are.

Most In Need Of A Change–”I am sure many of you have started a family and by now some of you are grandparents.  Me, still single with no kids and loving every minute of it.  I get to hang out with the same ol’ guys every weekend.  My buddy . . . bought a house one block from Bell high.  It’s directly behind the football field.  We get to hear the band Friday night’s during football season.” (Find better Friday night amusement, the band wasn’t even that good way back when we were there!!)

Full Moon

17 Sep

So, the moon’s been kind of full this week.  Although I don’t really believe in lunar-lunacy, I had a little bit of it this afternoon.

A man called my house, asked for me by name, and said he was with AAA and there to get my car.  The tow truck was outside.

Problem was, I hadn’t called AAA.

Fortunately, my mother (who had answered the phone) had the good sense to know that I wasn’t in a place where car service was an issue and didn’t respond to the request for access to the car.  She also didn’t open the front door.

Later in the day I called AAA—no service call reported for my account today. 

Then I called the police.  They didn’t take a report, but promised extra patrols.  I hope they show up.

Highlights

17 Jul

I’m not a huge Justin Timberlake fan, but the man did an excellent job hosting the ESPYs tonight.  His song and dance routine running through the year in sports was laugh out loud good. 

I won’t ruin the show for those watching Sunday by revealing winners here.  Instead, I’ll leave you with the question that kept me amused all night–why did so many non-award recipients in attendance dress to the nines?  It’s a sports-themed event!!  We were two of four people in the whole theater who got into the spirit and wore sports team jerseys. 

Underdressed?  Perhaps.  But, definitely more in the spirit than the women in super short cocktail dresses or the guys who thought that gold satin suits were a good idea.

I Got Mine

11 Jul

–Tickets to next week’s ESPY awards.  Oh yeah!

La Chusma at the Pool

28 Jun

 Wading Pool

“It’s too ghetto.”

That was the quote from one young woman talking about a public pool that had been in the news this week.

Except that it’s not a new sentiment.  Years ago, when I was a young denizen of L.A.’s public pools, I often heard that feeling expressed.  In my circles, it always engendered the “chusma” debate. 

“Solamente nada allí la chusma,” elders would say as we tried to get friends to go “swimming” with us at Little Bear Park in Bell or Salt Lake Park in Huntington Park or the high school pool in Bell or Norwalk Park in Norwalk.  In other words, they were saying, “my kids can’t swim there, only the really poor and ‘ghetto’ swim there.”

For over three decades, that sentiment has irked me.

So maybe it wasn’t always swimming.  But when you’re a little kid, you call floating in the wading pool’s six inches of water, “swimming.” 

Back then, we didn’t mind the shouts of “Everyone out of the water!!!” when the pool attendant discovered the one kid with chicken pox who decided to come to the pool.  I don’t even think I realized the ridiculousness of the situation until over a decade later.   Much later, when I was 18 and caught that ailment.

We didn’t even really mind having to get out of the pool 10 minutes after we’d gotten in simply to kick the chlorine around the pool.  Human mixers—that’s what we were.

We also didn’t register the danger flagged by the no diving sign on the gate around the two-foot-deep wading pool until years later when we were in high school sitting next to the one kid who did it and cracked his head open.  He was on the Academic Decathlon team.

The neighborhood pool is also where we took swimming lessons.  Nevermind that my first time off the high dive, Mrs. Kamiyama said she’d hold me over the side by my hands until I was ready to go in.  Shortly after I was hanging there she said, “You’re too fat, sorry” and she let go.  Belly-flopping off the high dive made me much more unwilling to go back to the pool than did the “chusma.”  I didn’t go back to that pool until almost ten years later when I was forced to take swimming lessons as part of P.E.  The full expunging of my childhood trauma came during those high school years when my friend, Linda, threw the innards of whatever we’d dissected in first period biology into the pool before second period swim class.

In the years between the belly-flopping incident and high school, I eagerly awaited summer swimming at the Norwalk pool.   My mom, sister, and I would take a 40-minute bus ride, walk half an hour to my aunt’s house, and then pick up cousins Reggie and Gloria and my Tía Rosalba.  After another half hour-long walk, we’d arrive at the biggest pool I’d ever seen.  At 9 a.m., we had free swim.  The kids went into the pool while my aunt and mother sat in the bleachers. 

Sometimes we’d swim for hours.  Other times, it was just a half hour or so.  I never realized why our swimtime sometimes got cut short.  I assumed my mom and aunt had had enough of the sun as we sat cooly in the pool.  The Times’ story makes me wonder if maybe my mom and aunt sensed something amiss in the pool and decided it was safer if we just sat dripping in the park just beyond the pool’s gates. 

And then I think, “No, didn’t a photographer just get beaten up in Malibu last week?”  There the story didn’t cast the aggressors as “ruffians” or the beach as getting “too ghetto.”  Those folks were just surfers protecting their beach, as well as Matthew McConaughey’s privacy. 

I’d like to think that the public pool is still a place where kids can enjoy the sheer glee of playing in the water and calling it “swimming,” even if they don’t really learn how to do that until much later in their lives.  I also hope that knuckleheads aren’t making it a different place, one where parents should legitimately be scared to send their kids. 

Most of all though, I hope that parents don’t think themselves so much better than the places where they live that they’d rather deny their kids some summer amusement just to make themselves feel less chusma.

Then again, maybe I’m just remembering the world the way it was when I still believed they put red dye in the public pool.  

Town Square

13 Jun

The Lakers loss as viewed from outside the window of the Pasadena yogurt shop with all the tvs.

21 Flavors
 
Lakers Lose

Dodgers vs. Cubs–Saturday

9 Jun

The good ticket karma continues. 

  • The Dodgers won;
  • I sat five or so rows behind Steve Garvey (the reason why my favorite number is 6); and
  • The people watching was fabulous.

The photoset is at flickr.  Preview below.
The Game

 

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