Rejected video for Cinco De Mayo post
May. 5th, 2023 01:23 pmPodcast on La Brea Woman
Mar. 16th, 2022 03:04 pmThe Only Human In The La Brea Tar Pits
This is a story I learned when I worked at the Tar Pits museum from 1985-1989.
Rejected video for fire risk post
Feb. 23rd, 2022 01:43 pmThe 132nd Tournament of Roses Parade will not take place on Jan. 1, 2021, because of the coronavirus pandemic, parade officials announced Wednesday morning.
I was very happy with the amount of flagwork I put in the show and pretty happy with how it was executed. I put two things in here that I probably wouldn't have if this hadn't been a U$C game, the flag toss in the middle of the opener and the headchoppers in "Moondance." Both of those were "F-you, can you do this?" to the U$C flag line, especially the flag toss. The headchoppers were recycled from "Dream Police" in the Punk show performed at Cal; I used them because they were impressive and I knew the flag line could pull them off.
In case my readers can't tell what the last formation is, it's the Los Angeles Bicentennial logo. The camera is just looking at it upside-down.
After all, the entire show was a salute to L.A. on its 200th birthday. This wasn't the first anniversary logo. The entire time I marched and instructed, the opening set of the pregame show was the arcs from the UCLA 50th birthday logo (that anniversary was the inspiration for the 1979 U$C show, too). Unfortunately, that image hasn't survived on the internet.
The band's performance wasn't what was most memorable about this game. Instead, it was the environmental conditions. Note that this was a day game, but there is no sunlight. This game also was played in early fall, too late for a coastal cloud deck yet too early for rain. What could create the overcast? I'll explain that after the video.
The one thing that can produce overcast like this in southern California during summer and early fall is fire. When this game took place, there were forest and brush fires all around Los Angeles, large enough to completely cover the sky even in the middle of the city. Worse yet, ash was falling out of the sky like snow. It was depressing and foreboding, the kind of day that fits my description of Southern California that I tell my students: "364 days a year the weather is beautiful and the people are too, so everyone forgets that one day a year, everything goes to Hell." Things were going to Hell that day.
The pall of smoke over L.A. even affected the cheerleaders. During the 1970s, one of UCLA's Yell Leaders was a grad student nicknamed "Frisbee." His traditional cheer was a bit of call and response prop comedy. He'd hold aloft a football and ask the students "Is this a football?" They would answer, "Yes, that's a football!" He'd point at the field and ask "Is that a field?" "Yes, that's a field!" the students would reply. Then he'd point at the visiting team and ask "Is that the loooosing team?" "Yes that's a loooosing team!" the students respond. "Are we the winning team?" "Yes, we're the winning team!" "Are we the Bruins?" "Yes, we're the Bruins!" He'd conclude with UCLA's traditional cheer, an 8-clap. At the start of this game, Frisbee inserted this comment on the weather. Between pointing at the field and the away team (OSU clobbered UCLA that day, so they weren't the losing team), he pointed at the sky and asked "Are we sick of this?" "Yes, we're sick of this," the students answered. I don't recall that happening at any other UCLA game I attended.
Next up, the Stanford pregame. Stay tuned.
Another two for one.
Book recommendation: Stuffed and Starved

Stuffed and Starved
Markets, Power and the Hidden Battle for the World’s Food System
In this book, Raj Patel gives a piercing critique of the way global capitalism shapes what humans grow and eat, exposing many of the flaws in the food system that contribute to collapse and what can be done about it. It's also an entertaining and informative read and Raj Patel is a charming and compelling person who knows his gin.
Food News from La La Land


From PoliticusUSA:
ABC’s Food Revolution May Have Prompted Change in LA Schools’ Lunches
This season “Food Revolution” is filming in Los Angeles, even though the Los Angeles Unified School District refused Oliver and his show access.Much more, including a video, at the link.
Time to run. I have an event to go to tonight. Hey, I can't be all doom all the time.