14 December 2007 |
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7 December 2007 This is my last year for screeners, and I won't be voting on the Awards, but if I were: Waitress, Once, Across the Universe, Margot at the Wedding (Nicole Kidman!) Lars and the Real Girl. I should also mention Eastern Promises for the performance of Viggo Mortensen. I know I sound like your showbiz reporter. Well, I'm not; but there are some wonderful films out there. You knew that. |
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30 November 2007 It's all the spitting. Have you noticed how much men spit these days? Not just jocks either. What is that? A territorial gesture? Displaced urinary marking? Fear? Some kind of gender crisis? LIsten to me. Who handles such? Anthropologists? Shrinks? Who cares? Some sumbitch gave me a cold with his atavistic behavior. Sumbitch. Hack, hack. |
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23 November 2007 When I lived in Venice thirty years ago we all used that new word gentrification to describe what we thought was imminent. Out with the artists and homeless and in with the gentry ("superiority of birth or rank"). It's finally happening I think. Tear-downs on Ocean Front Walk; my beautiful old apartment building jammed by new moderns, beach moderns. But there's still some funk around, and I must still look Venice funky. Charity groups show up on Thanksgiving to hand out food to the down-and-out. I walked up to a table where four young women, teenagers, from Food Not Bombs were giving out scones, fruit. I had on my shades, my Tilley hat, long-sleeved tee, was planning on giving them some money. "Have some food," they said. "No, I want to give you some money." "Oh, no, there's no charge; have some food." They thought I was homeless; I must still look like the old Venice. Good. I decided to move on, not try to explain. "No, thanks," I said. Another scene from yesterday, some new residents, the gentry, taking a stroll down Ocean Front Walk, a blonde, USC-type woman was saying, "Well, I can understand. You own a restaurant down here and the homeless come up and bother the customers outside the door of the restaurant; it's horrible." Yes, it is. |
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16 November 2007 This issue is dedicated to her memory. |
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7 November 2007 But before I take a breather, the image defaced below is copyrighted by the people who turned over the name of a Chinese journalist, Shi Tao, to Chinese authorities; the journalist had a Yahoo email account. The Chinese government needed information; Yahoo needed to protect its business interests in China. Shi Tao was sent to prison for ten years. Do you Yahoo? The Reporters Without Borders website has the complete story. |
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2 November 2007 |
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26 October 2007 Time to say something about my home. I've lived in Los Angeles most of my life. I was born in Alabama, but L.A. is my home. I've been here forty-two years, and I don't want to move. People are always talking about getting out of L.A.; I'm not interested. Catherine talks about Portland, says that Portland has a great system of public transportation. I wouldn't care if the Portland mayor promised to come to my Portland home, put me on his Portland back, carry me grocery shopping and buy me a vodka afterwards, I still wouldn't move there. And Portland has a great bookstore, Powell's; I don't care. And forget Seattle and San Francisco; I don't want a jewel city. I love L.A.—all glitter and strip-mall. It's my home. I've had I think nineteen addresses here. Lived with rock stars in Venice, accidentally took LSD in Malibu (I thought it was mescaline), worked in a bookstore in Beverly Hills, drove a cab out of LAX. Sipped screwtop red on the Venice boardwalk, was an actor. On and on. When the fires came I went first to the cynical, the protective. Who cares if David Geffen's Malibu home burns? Look at those idiots who bought homes near a goddamn forest. What the hell did they expect? Nice, real nice. But then you turn on the TV and watch a few of them (those idiots) with towels over their mouths, carrying a baby, dog, cat, running for their lives and the cynical goes away and you begin to worry for your neighbors. And I have to say it—risking my image of cool—to weep for your neighbors. Thirty miles away, fifty miles away, but still neighbors because L.A. is all over the place. Besides, with nineteen addresses, I've probably lived there. It's getting cooler and the skies are clearing. Some of my neighbors have gone back to their homes; I'm so very happy for them, even David Geffen. |
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"Notes From the Editor & Publisher," |
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