Tech

Jul. 17th, 2020 01:33 pm
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)
Random quote of the day:

“When did we begin to lose faith in our ability to effect change? Perhaps the demoralizing murders of John and Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King scared the civic-minded young people of the 1960s right out of their idealism into despair and then, to indifference. Perhaps it was the 1980s when the opportunity inherent in the American Dream was distorted from the land of "we" to the land of "to hell with anybody else but me." Maybe the preoccupation with technological progress has overshadowed our concern with human progress.”

—Wynton Marsalis, interview, NBC.com, July 11, 2008



Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Key and Peele, Celine Dion, or Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)

mansion from the street crop photo mansion from street crop_zpsmb1fonxb.jpg
It doesn’t look creepy from the street, nestled in the hills near the Greek Theatre, with a view of Frank Lloyd Wright’s iconic Ennis House from its backyard, but there is a place here in Los Angeles steeped in madness, murder, and obsession. In truth, there are many places like that in L.A., but this one is especially eerie not just for what happened there but for the long, weird aftermath of what happened: a perfect petri dish for urban legends, ghostly tales, and obsessive-compulsive behavior. It’s known as the Los Feliz Murder Mansion and it’s gotten more than its share of byplay on the internet. Hardly a blogger of uncanny stuff in Los Angeles has been able to resist its siren call. Oh, and the Ennis House? You may remember that from the original Vincent Price version of House on Haunted Hill. It was used for the exterior shots. The movie was released the very same year that the Los Feliz Murder Mansion became infamous.

I suspect most people’s obsession with the place began with this article from 2009 by Bob Pool, writing for the Los Angeles Times. That’s certainly when mine began.

la times pix sm photo latimes pix sm_zpsjiscza0s.jpg
In a nutshell: in the early hours of December 6, 1959, Dr. Harold Perelson, a heart surgeon, bludgeoned his wife to death in her sleep with a balpeen hammer, then tried to do the same to his eighteen-year-old daughter, Judye. His daughter fought him off, screaming, and woke up the two younger children in the house who came running to find out what was going on. Dr. Perelman told them they were having a nightmare and to go back to sleep. They went back to their rooms, but the interlude allowed Judye to escape down the long, winding driveway of the mansion to a neighbor. By the time the police arrived, Dr. Perelson had drunk either poison or acid (reports vary) and killed himself. The two younger children were safe in their rooms.

A horrible tragedy, but one that would probably have faded with time because, unfortunately, this is a scenario that has been encountered in the news many times. But here’s where the obsession kicks in. You see, the house was bought at a probate sale in 1960 by a couple named Emily and Julian Enriquez. It’s said (though I no longer remember where I read this) that the family moved in with their son, Rudy, for a very brief time, and moved back out again suddenly, leaving all the Perelson furniture and possessions behind—and, it’s said, some of their own. Since then, for more than fifty years, the mansion has sat abandoned. The Enriquez family used it over the years to store things, but to this day you can peak into its windows and see covered mid-century modern furniture, 1950s-era newspapers and magazines, Christmas presents, board games, an ancient TV, and other bric-a-brac of life back then.

interior shots photo interior shots_zpsvbda7d0i.jpg
In 1994, Rudy Enriquez inherited the mansion from his mother. He has continued their non-use of the place, steadfastly refusing all offers to buy it. The house itself is now so derelict it’s probably a tear-down, but the real estate it sits upon is some of the priciest and most desirable in Los Angeles. Estimates of its value range up to 2.9 million. But he continues to let it rot, unless forced by the city or the neighbors to do something about the upkeep of the property—at least on the outside. The inside remains a freakish time capsule of murder and abandonment.

Of course, stories abound of the place being haunted and having a weird feel. Even the Times article couldn’t resist a spooky bit at the end, telling the story of a neighbor whose curiosity got the better of her. She briefly pushed open the mansion’s backdoor to snoop, but heard the burglar alarm and beat a hasty retreat. Her hand started to throb and a ugly red vein traveled up her arm. A visit to the ER confirmed that her brief foray into Breaking and Entering had left her with the bite of a black widow spider. Two nights later, the burglar alarm on her own backdoor kept going off, but when she looked, no one was there. “It was like the ghost was following us,” she said.

Rudy Enriquez himself claims, “The only spooky thing there is me. Tell people to say their prayers every morning and evening and they’ll be OK.” Which, I have to say, does nothing to alleviate the spookiness.

Since the publication of the Times article, looky loos have driven the neighbors crazy trespassing on the property and breaking into the mansion. Those same neighbors originally encouraged the article because prostitutes and other unsavory types had started breaking in to crash. That doesn’t happen anymore since the owner put in an alarm system, but the unexpected consequences of the neighborhood stirring up the public’s curiosity and obsession is clearly a case of be careful what you wish for.

If you want to know the depth of obsession out there, visit the Find-a-Death thread on it. But I warn you, if you visit that site and read through the entire thread, be prepared to spend hours.

I also fell into the rabbit hole of obsession about this place right after I read the Times article. When I saw that Dr. Harold Perelson had a medical practice in Inglewood, near to my own home, something deep and strange clicked inside me.

My backbrain insisted this information had personal significance, that I needed to find out where the practice had been located. I immediately jumped to the conclusion that the doctor had once had an office in the old Inglewood medical building where my mother’s kidney specialist practiced. The building certainly seemed like it could date back to 1959. Who knew? Maybe his practice had been in the same office the nephrologists now occupied!

I became obsessed with finding out. I scoured the internet for online collections of street maps and phone books. There were many, but nothing online for Inglewood of that time period. I knew I would have to physically go to one of the libraries containing these holdings and look up the information, but my life was so frantic by then with being a full time caregiver and working full time that, well, time was the one thing I didn’t have. I couldn’t even take an afternoon off to go to a library.

I’d let it go for a while, but the obsession still gripped me. Every now and then, I’d revisit the online archives to see if the phone books, et al., had been uploaded, and I’d search out more articles and information on the case, finding the most obscure things to download to my mystery folder. I’d visit Find-a-Death, too, to see what they’d come up with.

Then I stopped being a caregiver through the inevitable way those things happen.

I didn’t immediately think of the Los Feliz Murder Mansion, but a month later while clearing out old files from my computer, I came across the folder where I kept my mystery stories. Los Feliz, being the most obsessional of them all, jumped out at me. Out of idle (okay, not so idle) curiosity I decided to head back to Google. My old “friends” at Find-a-Death (I’m not a member, although I have taken Scott Michaels’ tour) popped up so I visited the site. I went to the most recent page to work my way backward for the “newest” posts about this old mystery. People still post about it, the mansion is still abandoned, still owned by Rudy Enriquez, still a burden to its neighbors, still spooky as hell.

Several pages back from the last entry, a post from November 2014 gave the address of Dr. Perelson’s medical practice. The poster believed it was now a family dental clinic. I was thrilled and disappointed at the same time. It wasn’t the address for the building in which my mother’s doctors practiced. What the heck could my backbrain have been thinking? Clearly, not for the first time, I’d fallen prey to flights of morbid imagination.

But the address—3108 W. Imperial Highway—did have something of a personal connection, after all. You see, I’d driven along portions of Imperial Highway 3-4 (or more) times a week for the last five years. My mother’s dialysis clinic was on Imperial Highway. I didn’t think I was emotionally ready to make that drive again, so I looked up the address on Google street view. The building housing the family dental clinic was gone. That area has seen a vast revival, and a new mall exists where the office once stood. That’s why Google maps showed the address in the middle of an intersection. It doesn’t exist anymore.

But I knew that intersection, knew it well. I sat staring at it in shock a long, long time. Because, you see, I’d driven through it 3-4 (or more) times a week for the last five years. It was located approximately a half block from my mother’s dialysis center.

Click here to see pictures of that intersection.

Is my obsession gone? Once I’d made the personal connection it did fade. But old obsessions are hard to kill and I feel it grabbling for my attention even now. I think sometimes we prefer our mysteries unsolved so we can reside forever in the sweet tantalization of speculation. Certainly, I believe the scores of people doggedly pursuing this story will be disappointed once Rudy dies and the mansion invariably gets sold off and torn down.

But you never know. Maybe new mysteries will spring from its footprints. Ghosts are as hard to get rid of as obsessions and not always banished by the rational expediency of tear-down. For what are ghosts if not the stubborn obsessions of human souls unready and unbelieving in death, unable to give up their unfinished business, playing and replaying their moments of personal nightmare?

UPDATE, 3/31/16:

Rudy has passed away. The Murder Mansion is for sale: http://www.australianetworknews.com/want-to-stay-with-ghosts-murder-house-haunted-by-ghosts-for-sale-in-la/

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (Default)

horse
 

Here’s another ancient oddity, taken from Pausanias (2nd c. AD). In his “travelogue” called Description of Greece (also known as Guide to Greece) he describes a phenomena which occurs at the chariot racing stadia of Olympia, Isthmos, and Nemea. The translation below is public domain, by W. H. S. Jones , 1918. It can be found in its entirety here. Mr. Jones talks about a type of ghost or demon called a Taraxippus. He doesn’t bother translating that, but Peter Levi who did a Penguin Classics edition in 1971, translates that as “horse-scarer,” and it’s been rendered “horse frighteners” in other places (Theoi.com encyclopedia).

[6.20.15] The race-course [at Olympia] has one side longer than the other, and on the longer side, which is a bank, there stands, at the passage through the bank, Taraxippus, the terror of the horses. It has the shape of a round altar, and as they run along the horses are seized, as soon as they reach this point, by a great fear without any apparent reason. The fear leads to disorder; the chariots generally crash and the charioteers are injured. Consequently the charioteers offer sacrifice, and pray that Taraxippus may show himself propitious to them.

[6.20.16] The Greeks differ in their view of Taraxippus. Some hold that it is the tomb of an original inhabitant who was skilled in horsemanship; they call him Olenius, and say that after him was named the Olenian rock in the land of Elis. Others say that Dameon, son of Phlius, who took part in the expedition of Heracles against Augeas and the Eleans, was killed along with his charger by Cteatus the son of Actor, and that man and horse were buried in the same tomb.

[6.20.17] There is also a story that Pelops made here an empty mound in honor of Myrtilus, and sacrificed to him in an effort to calm the anger of the murdered man, naming the mound50 Taraxippus (Frightener of horses) because the mares of Oenomaus were frightened by the trick of Myrtilus. Some say that it is Oenomaus himself who harms the racers in the course. I have also heard some attach the blame to Alcathus, the son of Porthaon. Killed by Oenomaus because he wooed Hippodameia, Alcathus, they say, here got his portion of earth; having been unsuccessful on the course, he is a spiteful and hostile deity to chariot-drivers.

[6.20.18] A man of Egypt said that Pelops received something from Amphion the Theban and buried it where is what they call Taraxippus, adding that it was the buried thing which frightened the mares of Oenomaus, as well as those of every charioteer since. This Egyptian thought that Amphion and the Thracian Orpheus were clever magicians, and that it was through their enchantments that the beasts came to Orpheus, and the stones came to Amphion for the building of the wall. The most probable of the stories in my opinion makes Taraxippus a surname of Horse Poseidon.

[6.20.19] There is another Taraxippus at the Isthmus, namely Glaucus, the son of Sisyphus. They say that he was killed by his horses, when Acastus held his contests in honor of his father. At Nemea of the Argives there was no hero who harmed the horses, but above the turning-point of the chariots rose a rock, red in color, and the flash from it terrified the horses, just as though it had been fire. But the Taraxippus at Olympia is much worse for terrifying the horses. On one turning-post is a bronze statue of Hippodameia carrying a ribbon, and about to crown Pelops with it for his victory.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (mysteries)

mansion from the street crop photo mansion from street crop_zpsmb1fonxb.jpg

It doesn’t look creepy from the street, nestled in the hills near the Greek Theatre, with a view of Frank Lloyd Wright’s iconic Ennis House from its backyard, but there is a place here in Los Angeles steeped in madness, murder, and obsession. In truth, there are many places like that in L.A., but this one is especially eerie not just for what happened there but for the long, weird aftermath of what happened. It’s known as the Los Feliz Murder Mansion and it’s gotten a certain amount of obsessive byplay on the internet. Hardly a blogger of uncanny stuff in Los Angeles has been able to resist its siren call. Oh, and the Ennis House? You may remember that from the original Vincent Price version of House on Haunted Hill. It was used for the exterior shots. The movie was released in the very same year that the Los Feliz Murder Mansion became infamous.

I suspect most people’s obsession with the place began with this article
from 2009 by Bob Pool, writing for the Los Angeles Times. That’s certainly when mine began.

la times pix sm photo latimes pix sm_zpsjiscza0s.jpg

In a nutshell: in the early morning hours of December 6, 1959, Dr. Harold Perelson, a heart surgeon, bludgeoned his wife to death in her sleep with a balpeen hammer, then tried to do the same to his eighteen-year-old daughter, Judye. His daughter fought him off, screaming, and waking up the two younger children in the house who came running to find out what was going on. Dr. Perelman told them they were having a nightmare and to go back to sleep. They went back to their rooms, but the interlude allowed Judye to escape down the long, winding driveway of the mansion to a neighbor. By the time the police arrived, Dr. Perelson had drunk either poison or acid (reports vary) and killed himself. The two younger children were safe in their rooms.

A horrible tragedy, but one that would probably have faded with time because, unfortunately, this is a scenario that has been encountered in the news many times. But here’s where the obsession part kicks in. You see, the house was bought at a probate sale in 1960 by a couple named Emily and Julian Enriquez. It’s said (though I no longer remember where I read this) that the family moved in with their son, Rudy, for a very brief time, and moved back out again suddenly, leaving all the Perelson furniture and possessions behind—and, it’s said, some of their own. Since then, for more than fifty years, the mansion has sat abandoned. The Enriquez family used it over the years to store things, but to this day you can peak into its windows and see covered mid-century modern furniture, 1950s-era newspapers and magazines, board games, an ancient TV, and other bric-a-brac of life back then.

interior shots photo interior shots_zpsvbda7d0i.jpg

In 1994, Rudy Enriquez inherited the mansion from his mother. He has continued their non-use of the place, steadfastly refusing all offers to buy the mansion. The house itself is now so derelict it’s probably a tear-down, but the real estate it sits upon is some of the priciest and most desirable in Los Angeles. He could make a fortune selling it. Estimates range up to 2.9 million. But he continues to let it rot, unless forced by the city or the neighbors to do something about the upkeep of the property—at least on the outside. The inside remains a freakish time capsule of murder and abandonment.

Of course, stories abound of the place being haunted and having a weird feel. Even the Times article couldn’t resist a spooky bit at the end. Rudy Enriquez himself claims, “The only spooky thing there is me. Tell people to say their prayers every morning and evening and they’ll be OK.” Which, I have to say, does nothing to alleviate the spookiness.

Read the rest of this entry »

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

Took an ax

Aug. 26th, 2014 09:29 am
pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

“Hateful, the writer who talks about and exploits what he has never experienced. But be careful, a murderer is not the best man to talk of crime. (But isn’t he the best man to talk of his crime? Even that is not certain.) Essential to imagine a certain distance between creation and the deed. The true artist stands midway between what he imagines and what he does.”

—Albert Camus, The Notebooks, 1942-1951 (tr. Justin O’Brien)

 lizzie4W@@@

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: quotes (quotei)


Random quote of the day:

“When a man wants to murder a tiger he calls it sport: when the tiger wants to murder him he calls it ferocity. The distinction between Crime and Justice is no greater.”

—George Bernard Shaw, “The Revolutionist’s Handbook and Pocket Companion,” Man and Superman

 tiger4WP@@@

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: astronomer (observing)

1 Oct
I have bookmarks from book stores that have been out of business for twenty or thirty years. They’re raggedy and limp, but I haven’t the heart to throw away the last vestiges of places I loved.

2 Oct
I was up half the night with stomach crud. I just can’t get a break lately. I’m feeling better this afternoon, escaping the heat under the peach tree. As is often the case in SoCal we’re having our hottest summer weather in September and October. Really looking forward to real autumn.

4 Oct
The sign spinner at the corner of Admiralty and Via Marina whose specialty appears to be dropping the sign.

5 Oct
Just shifted around my retirement funds. I still can’t retire before OhGodI’mSoOld but at least it felt like progress.

5 Oct
It’s mostly on TV and in crime books that people need Big Motives to murder. In real life they murder for a pittance.

6 Oct
If it’s Ye Olde Anything Shoppe you know it’s going to be terrifyingly quaint.

7 Oct
The Simpsons do the Mayan prophecy: “The world will end in 2012 and it will be Obama’s fault.”

8 Oct
I’m trying to live my creative life not asking favors of anyone since I haven’t got time to return them, but sometimes it’s very hard.

9 Oct
I love my habits more than I love my health.

10 Oct
Just when you think you’ve learned a few things, that maybe you are a grown up after all, your Inner Five Year Old reasserts herself and makes you the fool. Hypothetically speaking, of course. I couldn’t possibly be talking about myself.

10 Oct
I asked my 91-year-old mother if she wanted to read up on the State Propositions before voting. She said, “No. I just want to go and vote for Obama.”

10 Oct
A mega-billionaire/hypocrite threatens to lay off employees if Obama is re-elected: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/ceo-workers-youll-likely-fired-131640914.html  The Koch Brothers threatened to do the same thing: http://bit.ly/PxPWMx

10 Oct
Mercy me. A printed hardcopy book from a reputable house in which passed got confused with past. The world is not what it was

11 Oct
Mom on the Ryan/Biden debate: “Who is that young putz?” Me: “Congressman Ryan.” Mom: “He’s an arrogant little s***.”

Mom on the debate: “This is a good debate. Joe Biden is kicking butt.”

12 Oct
Mom on a debate she’d like to see: “I want to see Michelle Obama debate Ann Romney. Michelle would clean the floor with her.” In case anyone wonders, my mother adores Michelle and doesn’t think much of Ann Romney.

12 Oct
Lindsay Lohan is voting for Romney. I rest my case.

12 Oct
I was home with a bad stomach, sleeping. I kept hearing helicopters circling and circling, usually an indication of a celebrity arrival at LAX or a big accident somewhere nearby. When I finally woke up out of the half haze, I realized that today was the day they started moving Endeavour from the airport.  It’s traveling right through my ‘hood, starting about six blocks from here. I was too sick to go out, but I watched it for hours on TV. So weird/weirdly exciting to see all my familiar landmarks on television. “Oh, there’s my Starbucks. There’s Mom’s doctor’s office. There’s my local Del Taco,” and etc. Here’s some of the “live feed”:

Watching Endeavour on mute now. Does anyone enjoy the endless patter?

Now I know why they laid down all those steel plates on Manchester.

The shuttle is inching past Jet Car Wash.

The shuttle is approaching Randy’s Donuts, that giant donut you see in every montage of L.A., at the corner of Manchester and the 405 freeway. Apparently, Randy’s Donuts made special Space Shuttle Donuts which they can’t sell today because the city asked them to stay closed for crowd control issues. I guess there’s always tomorrow. (And Toyota paid them for the use of their lot to film a commercial, so it’s not a total loss.)

And now the shuttle is waiting be towed across the 405 by a Toyota truck while they film a commercial. Toyota have been big contributors to the museum (millions, I hear). If my stomach wasn’t bad I might go buy one of the commemorative donuts tomorrow. But as a friend pointed out, donuts freeze really well.

13 Oct
On the way to dialysis this morning while traveling on the elevated 105 freeway I saw the shuttle’s tail and back in the distance as it moved along Manchester. No shuttle on the return drive to dialysis. It’s turned north and disappeared, alas.

I told my pharmacist that I saw the shuttle and she thought that was neat but added, “I want one of those shuttle donuts from Randy’s.” Yes, as does everyone else in L.A., apparently. I’d swung by Randy’s earlier to see about those special but the line was down the block so I kept going. Only a three and a half hour window to get my errands done before I have to pick Mom up again at dialysis. At least I’m not sick this morning.

Donut Quest 2012: Mom and I stopped by Randy’s at 2:30 on the way home. No lines, but they’d sold out of shuttle donuts until Monday. How did they sell out for tomorrow already? The bakers went home for the weekend. I’m hoping they’ll recognize they’ve got a little gold mine there and keep making them. I’ll keep trying. We now have a nice stash of non-shuttle donuts in the freezer. (You didn’t expect we’d leave empty-handed, did you?) I’m glad to report that Randy’s isn’t just a tourist attraction. They make good donuts.

14 Oct
This morning I was singing “I Kissed a Kitty and I Liked It” to Min and she was all, like, “Yuck, ick!” But she purred as she said it.

14 Oct
Today I got to clean out the pigeon coop that hadn’t been cleaned in a year. I bet you’re envious. I won’t let it go quite so long next time. A half hour shower didn’t seem long enough.

14 Oct
The hazards of sitting in the fall garden: my favorite chair was infested by a nest of baby spiders. I didn’t know I could still move that fast.

15 Oct
It’s probably a bad sign when you start writing a negative review halfway through a book. I’d never post it without finishing. Still.

 

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: quotes (quotei)

Random quote of the day:

 

“I learned in Murder in the Cathedral that it’s no use putting in nice lines that you think are good poetry if they don’t get the action on at all.”

—T. S. Eliot, interview, The Paris Review, No. 21, Spring-Summer 1959

 

Disclaimer:  The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.

Mirrored from Better Than Dead.

pjthompson: (mysteries)
This mystery isn't completely unsolved like the cases I usually feature in these posts. It does contain the strange and puzzling elements I favor, juicy bits to make the eyes tingle as they read. Ultimately, though, this story is about the grandest mystery of them all: the twisting, turning, tangled terrain of the human heart.

I'll get to the strange and mysterious part, but first I have to introduce the main character.

When I was a tiny girl, I actually loved going to my pediatrician. Oh yeah, I dreaded shots as much as any kid, but I loved Dr. Raymond La Scola. The gentlest of men, he had shining eyes that I remember as being dark, but it was a long time ago and I was little, so God only knows. The important part was that those eyes broadcast joy at being around children. Kids can tell that stuff, when a grownup really likes being around them and when they're just going through the motions. Dr. Ray loved kids. He had a melodious voice, so soothing and comforting, and when he talked to me, he talked to me and listened attentively to what I said. Pretty heady stuff for a little kid.

My mom loved him, too. He was the most compassionate of doctors. We were desperately poor, my father working only now and then, my mom struggling to make ends meet by babysitting and sewing and whatever else she could think up. We lived in a ramshackle old house back then in one of the poorest neighborhoods in L.A. When my mother was especially hard up and I needed care, or my shots, Dr. La Scola often waived his fees. Once when I was so sick I could hardly get out of bed, he came to the house—a momentous, archetypal event in my young life. I remember his dark fedora and stylish overcoat, the leather doctor's bag he carried, his shining stethoscope hovering over my chest, his sweet-sad smile. I remember his comforting voice, telling me it was going to be all right, that I was going to be all right. I remember the quiet ebb and flow of his words talking to my mother, telling her it would be all right, too.

He didn't charge for that visit, either. I confirmed this with my mother when I was an adult.

Dr. Ray was also something of a Renaissance man. He published a novel, The Creole, and gave my mother an autographed copy which I still have. He was a concert pianist and before becoming a doctor, he tried his hand at being a lawyer. He had a restless spirit, always looking for something to fill his soul. He looked for love, too, but rarely found it. In the bad old days, being gay meant always hiding an essential part of yourself. He had a crush on a policeman friend of my mother's. J. wasn't insulted or jeopardized by this. He was secure in his manhood and let Dr. La Scola down easy. J. appreciated what a good man he was because he treated J.'s kids, too.

After I'd moved on to a grownup doctor, my mother one day found herself in the medical building where Dr. La Scola practiced. Since it had been a few years since she'd seen him, she thought to drop in and say hello. "You wouldn't believe the strange people in that waiting room," she later told me. "No kids. It looked like he'd gone down to Venice Beach and found the roughest, skunkiest people around." Venice Beach was where the hippies and druggies hung out back then. It still is, in parts, but it's also become a tourist mecca and quite upscale in parts. Mom left the office without saying anything to the receptionist or Dr. Ray.

On August 25, 1980, Dr. Raymond La Scola was charged with murder.

Read more. )
pjthompson: (Default)
And so, the man who gunned down the doctor while he was serving as an usher in church is thinking of pleading justifiable homicide.

"Until this moment, I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness."

Demagogues do what demagogues do, and it's up to the rest of us—who do have a sense of decency—to tell them they are vile and base murderers. They are not Christians, not even close. They think of themselves as blessed martyrs fighting the good fight, but they are thugs and completely opposed to the true spirit of Christ.

Always

Jul. 15th, 2009 08:49 am
pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


"When I despair, I remember that all through history the way of truth and love has always won. There have been tyrants and murderers and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the end they always fall—think of it, always.

—Mohandas K. Gandhi, Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments with Truth





Illustrated version. )




Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)
Random quote of the day:


"I was born with the devil in me. I could not help the fact that I was a murderer, no more than the poet can help the inspiration to sing."

—serial killer H. H. Holmes, Confession, 1896








Illustrated version. )




Disclaimer: The views expressed in this random quote of the day do not necessarily reflect the views of the poster, her immediate family, Siegfried and Roy, Leonard Maltin, or the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. They do, however, sometimes reflect the views of the Cottingley Fairies.
pjthompson: (Default)
• On the side of the Dreyer's Slow-Churned ice cream carton it says (paraphrase), "Scientific studies have shown that consuming moderate amounts of dairy products daily leads to a healthy lifestyle." It was Dreyer's Lite, but somehow I don't think that's what the studies meant.

• I'm having so much trouble buying a necklace for my mother online. The post office stole the first one. This isn't the first time a package has gone missing, always when a particular mail carrier is on duty, so I feel comfortable with the word "stole." Then yesterday I got an email regarding another necklace I ordered through an Amazon vendor. At the time they guaranteed delivery by December 24, but it now has a revised delivery date of December 29. Too late to cancel—it's already mailed—they just used the slow boat to China method. I guess I'll be wrapping up a picture of the necklace and giving it to Mom for Christmas. I'm thinking of taping it to a rock or something so the package at least has some heft . . . but that seems like a rather dirty trick. Even though the gift is on the way—really, Mom! Unless the post office steals this one, too.

• I've been doing an inordinate amount of comfort reading this year. I just finished rereading Naked in Death because J. D. Robb is sort of my ultimate comfort read—which is ironic, since those books are all about serial killers and violent murder. But I just love hanging out with the regular characters in her books. I hadn't read Naked in years, since it's the first in the series, but I found I had a hankering to revisit it. I couldn't find my old copy—I suspect it's still packed away in the garage—so I bought a new paperback.

And wow, La Nora must have rewritten it at some point. Although when I first read it I found myself captivated by the characters of Eve and Roarke and their friends and acquaintances, I always thought the writing in that first book wasn't up to the rest of the series. There was a great deal of head-hopping, as I recall. I remembered one short scene which must have jumped into four or five different heads, including people who were completely incidental to the story. But that's gone. There's still a bit of head-hopping, but way less, and the prose has been smoothed out and beefed up. It's the same story, for the most part, but one crucial scene in which Roarke finds out Eve's big secret is gone. Nora/Robb replaced it with something subtler, something that allows Eve some choice in the revelation and Roarke some time to figure things out beforehand. It's a good change, but I'd been anticipating the emotional wallop of that other scene. I have to say, I missed it, and it lessens the impact of the book's final exchange between Roarke and Eve, which refers back to the stark emotion of the original scene. But I guess the change serves the characters better, in the sense of making them less passive victims of circumstance.

So there's a writing lesson there, I suppose: in every revision, something is lost and something gained, and it's all a matter of what you're willing to give up. Your readers may not agree with your decision, however, and after publication, I'd say the book belongs to them at least as much as it does to the writer. Or am I completely off base there? I know writers often wish they could change the books that have already gone public. Few have the clout of Nora Roberts which allows it, though.

I still enjoyed hanging out with those characters, getting to see them at the beginning of their arc, and still derived my necessary comfort, so I'm good. I don't know if I'll reread the entire series. But I might.
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Purchasing news of the day:

I managed to resist the siren call of connectivity and went for the plain Jane word processing-only Alphasmart Neo. I should have it in my hot little hands by midweek next week. No more longhand at lunch! Yipppeee!

We'll see if it really makes any difference in my word count. Some days (as today) the words just refuse to come, longhand, keyboard or not. But I'm hoping. I'm a very hopeful girl.

Book news of the day:

I'm reading Black Dahlia Avenger by Steve Hodel right now. Fascinating true crime story. This guy was with LAPD for twenty-three years, a Homicide detective for many years, and when he was going through his father's papers after daddy kicked the bucket, he got a unpleasant surprise—and became obsessed with solving a fifty year old (at the time) murder. His own siren, I suppose. He writes pretty well, too. Maybe I'll do a proper review when I finish.

It's always so much more interesting to read about other people's train wreck families then living with one's own, isn't it?

Random quote of the day:

"There can be no knowledge without emotion. We may be aware of a truth, yet until we have felt its force, it is not ours. To the cognition of the brain must be added the experience of the soul."

—Arnold Bennett


And here are some random dashes for [livejournal.com profile] buymeaclue:

I swear—really!—I am not trying—as of yet—to be—much—of a smartass—well, any more than usual.
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Enough with John Karr already, 'kay?

I live near LAX. Our house is less than a half-mile from the north runway and the airspace over our house is often used as a holding pattern for news helicopters covering events at the airport. Around 9 Sunday night, the air was suddenly filled with the thick, loud tom-tom of helicopters hovering low. I don't know how the news media manage it, but even the rotars of their helicopters sound frantic and febrile when after an Event. I was trying to watch that John Cameron "Exodus" show on the History Channel and wasn't in the mood for the interruption and the news media—I just didn't care what was going on because I've been through this too many times, have really had it with the infotainment industry—so I stubbornly kept turning the TV up and trying hard to ignore the roommate when she popped in every five minutes saying, "I wonder what's going on???" Finally, at the next commercial break, I switched to Channel 9 News and found out what was going on: the plane carrying attention-freak John Karr had landed. "Turn on Channel 9!" I yelled to my roommate, and switched back to the History Channel.

After about an hour the worst of it died down, but there were still some holdouts for the 11 o'clock news. The last helicopter didn't leave until about 11:15 or so.

Me personally? Don't give a hairy rat's posterior about John Karr and a ten-year-old murder case, as awful as the death of that little girl was. And I don't think Karr's the guy. He's getting his rocks off too much over the attention. I think he "confessed" for that attention-seeking or because he'd rather spend jail time in the U.S. than in Thailand.

And speaking of rats of the day: Remember our horrific experience with the dead possum? Yesterday morning it was a dead rat and closer than the garage—and I ain't sayin' no more than that because you may have just eaten or something. Suffice it to say, the roommate and I are wondering what kind of bugacious karma we're living through—and why???

Quotes of the day:


"The voices of authority are chiefly four: delays, corruption, roughness and facility."

—Sir Francis Bacon, 1561-1626

(All day yesterday after I pulled this from the quote file, I kept hearing Eric Cartman's voice yelling, "Authori-TAI!")


"Everything that is created must end. All, all round us must perish."

—Michelangelo

(Which explains why he was known as "Chuckles.")
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Quote of the day:

"Every work of art is an act of faith, or we wouldn't bother to do it. It is a message in a bottle, a shout in the dark. It's saying, 'I'm here and I believe that you are somewhere and that you will answer if necessary across time, not necessarily in my lifetime.'"

—Jeanette Winterson


So! The Dearly Departed tour was tons of fun. We wound up going on the regular tour rather than the Helter Skelter tour, which was good. It was so much fun to play tourist in my own town. We drove past some places I'd passed a zillion times, sometimes knowing the shady history, sometimes not, and we also got into some obscure corners of H-town. (Actually, Hollywood, West Hollywood, Beverly Hills, Bel Air, Hancock Park.) It was amazing to see it all from the other side of living here.

Scott Michaels, the owner/operator, puts on a good show for his vanload: his commentary is entertaining, combining humor, respect, pathos, and a clear love for his adopted hometown of Hollywood. His knowledge and research is extensive. (I know because I've done some of this research myself.) There is snark--of course there is snark!--but it wasn't a snarkfest. Just darn funny, and lively. And it covers not only the dark side, but the alive side of Hollywood.

The tour doesn't just consist of his running commentary. He combines it with a picture book and a soundtrack, ranging from 9-1-1 calls to movie music and voice tracks. I appreciated that he allowed the tour participants the option of whether they wanted to view the more explicit shots by covering them up. You have to lift the flap yourself if you want to see. And the subject matter wasn't just murder and death. You got a little bit of everything: old Hollywood/New Hollywood, history and context, film locations, tours of the stars' homes, infamous murder sites, haunted places, then-and-now comparisons.

I found that to be one of the more interesting things. He took us to a residential corner in Hollywood. In the picture book, we saw it as it was when D.W. Griffith used it to build the set for Intolerance: open fields with three little California bungalows in the foreground. Now it's jam-packed with buildings, but amazingly, two of those three bungalows are still there. In fact, he said a guy who lives in one of those houses once came out to ask why Scott always stops his van in front of his house. "I'm not telling you! You'll have to take my tour!" He said the same thing to Billy Bob Thornton when he asked why the van parked in front of a neighbor's house, and to some fellows who bought another house where...I can't remember what happened. But they actually did take the tour and had a great time.

It's a very full three hours. I can't remember half of what we saw, but: some Manson locations, the Menendez brothers house, the Viper Room, the former Mack Sennett and Desilu studios, Paramount, Hollywood Forever cemetery, star homes, a spectacular view of the Hollywood sign and the little house Peg Entwistle lived in before she hiked up there and threw herself off the sign, the Alto Nido hotel (where William Holden's character lived in Sunset Boulevard), the Las Palmas hotel (where the famous balcony scene at the end of Pretty Woman happened), Vampira's favorite coffee shop, some James Dean locations...tons and tons of stuff. It was a real good time!

http://www.dearlydepartedtours.com/DDT/index.html
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Cut another 500 words today from more tightly written chapters, for a total of 6,000 words and 24 pages cut. I still have quite a bit of ms. to go, so I'm confident there's another 15k to be gotten rid. Maybe more to make room for the wee bit of a new beginning. That would be really nice.

Crime scene of the day: Well, of tomorrow.

Tomorrow we take Lynn for her birthday treat: a Dearly Departed tour of L.A. murder sites. That should be festive—for a crime aficionado like her. Have to get up early to do it, too, because the normal 1 p.m. tour was sold out. I guess she's not the only one who grooves on the Manson family murders, baby.

Then lunch at the Raymond, a truly nice restaurant in Pasadena, where she lives.

So I'm thinking there won't be much writing or cutting of writing tomorrow. I'm going to let life get in the way for a change. And that's a good thing.
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Irony of the day:  Yesterday, the day that the guilty verdict was announced in Philadelphia, Mississippi in the infamous murder of the three young civil rights workers—Cheney, Goodman, and Schwerner—was the anniversary of the day they disappeared.

Bitter irony of the day:  When the Senate recently signed an apology for not passing anti-lynching laws, both senators from Mississippi—Trent Lott (Republican) and Thad Cochran (Republican) refused to sign. 

Other irony of the day:  Newstory:  a couple bought a painting at a garage sale for next to nothing.  Later, they had it appraised and it turned out to be by a plein-air master.  It was worth an estimated half million dollars.  Recently, their home was one of those destroyed in the California landslides.  They lost everything—but while picking through the wreckage they found this painting undamaged.  They're going to sell it to help rebuild their house since they couldn't get landslide insurance.  One hopes they aren't going to rebuild in the same spot, but one suspects they will.

Amusing thought of the day:  Inspired by a comment from  [livejournal.com profile] frigg — what if they added another level after Master Reviewer on the OWW?  If you do 500 crits, you get to be an Enlightened Master Reviewer.  :-) I think  [livejournal.com profile] kmkibble75 must already be at Enlightened Master level.  Right, Kev?  And let's see...after 750, you get to be an Ascended Enlightened Master...And at 1000 reviews, you attain Bodhisattva Reviewer status...Yeah, this has possibilities. 

Please note:  My tongue is firmly planted in my cheek.

Exciting news of the day:  My friend got back from a hiking tour of Provence.  It was fun, fascinating, a challenge, and her entire right side is bruised from a fall on rocks, but she's otherwise unharmed.

Socks of the day (inspired by [livejournal.com profile] frigg): Lavender pedi-socks.

Darling du jour: n/a - Nothing floated in my moat. 
pjthompson: (Default)
The highlight of the day was driving to the post office to mail my taxes. Now, the post office is a block and a half away and I usually walk, but no way. Even driving there wore me out. I am ready to feel better now.

There was a freeway shooting on the 110 freeway today. Yesterday, an elderly couple was murdered in La Habra. The day before two La Habra police officers were shot down. They survived.

Jeff Corwin was entertaining today, but sad. About the orangutans in Indonesia. There is nothing on earth cuter than a baby orangutan. The show was also about the illegal trapping of these lovely creatures, and about the good folks who are rescuing them and returning them to the wilderness. Where illegal logging is destroying habitat at such a rate that if it continues like this it's estimated there will be none left in six years.

Oprah was a real tearjerker. All about people who accidently killed their loved ones or lost their loved ones in the forest...

Michael Jackson testimony was dramatic as the mother of the boy continued her testimony about how her son was molested.

I am really ready to feel better now.

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