The only downside to spending five days surrounding Rosh Hashanah in Seattle with my fiancé Shira occurred upon arrival at LAX. Leaping from a friend’s car as we drew up to a skycap, I retrieved my luggage, bid him farewell and proceeded to check in. Horrors. Approaching the TSA counter, I reached for the pocket where my cell phone safely … Read More
Meet the Man Who Stood Alone on the Dais
City Councilman Goran Eriksson and Mayor Jeff Cooper have brought tintedly opposing philosophies to the dais, and their differences created a compelling pastiche at this week’s Council meeting. Alright, boys, who is right? Shlepping an armload of information on how smoothly – and urgently – laws on newly legalized marijuana need to be formalized, the mayor said he was hurrying … Read More
How Meghan and the Mayor Remained Undefeated
In a cannabis mood, Mayor Jeff Cooper and Councilwoman Meghan Sahli-Wells sounded convinced Monday evening that nothing possibly can go wrong with the most confusing, complicated project any City Council here ever has confronted: Designing the seemingly exhaustive routes by which cannabis retailers will be vetted and How neighborhood sites will be sensitively chosen/approved, supposedly hinging on whether nearby residents … Read More
Council Approves ‘Up to 3’ Cannabis Retail Outlets
To the surprise of no one who has been tracking Culver City’s seven-month path to shaping laws for newly legalized marijuana, the City Council voted 4-1 last evening to license “up to three” retail cannabis dispensaries next year. Standing firmly and alone throughout the two-hour discussion, Goran Eriksson cast the lone resistance vote. He said his colleagues were running much … Read More
Seals Trained to Obey Their Instinks
One week after the trained seals of Hollywood buried their imaginations in the same shallow grave at a nearby cemetery, the most inarticulate figures in public life, the trained seals of the National Football League, aimed their seldom taxed minds at President Trump. In the tradition of professional football, uh, players, some trained seals asked who was president. Spelling his … Read More
Eden Winslow Runs Fast Academically, Too
Culver City High School senior Eden Winslow has been named a semifinalist in the National Merit Scholarship Program. She is eligible to earn awards to defray college expenses. The four-year Centaur cross-country team runner, who will study biomedical engineering, was among 1.6 million students to take college-bound tests in their junior year. Sixteen thousand of the top scorers qualified as … Read More
Avatars for Great-Grandma Sue’s Party
In just three short months, it will be my mother’s 100th birthday. I am getting ready to produce a 15-minute video presentation to show at Great-Grandma Sue’s birthday party. The presentation, made with iMovie, will consist of photos and video clips, and will be projected onto a large screen in my living room. Some photos go back to my mom’s … Read More
Criminal Aliens Welcome, Says de Leon
Let me know when politically drunken state Senate leader Kevin de Leon is mailed to North Korea to clean toilets with a bristle-free toothbrush for the rest of his unnatural life. For fastidiously flaunting the immigration laws, the floozy father of the once unthinkable sanctuary state concept deserves the opprobrium of every Californian who can read or write. Like other … Read More
How Vice Mayor Small Will Decide His Cannabis Retail Vote
Here is precisely why Culver City voters elected Thomas Small to the City Council a year and a half ago: His thoughtfulness and tendency to reflect at appropriate length. That is a remarkable endorsement for a freshman politician – especially when he is posted in the center ring between two opposing factions. That is the situation going into this evening’s … Read More
Whoa – Centennial Year May Not Be Over
The Centennial Year fun was supposed to close 48 hours ago when the year sort of officially ended. Not so fast, though. Still glowing over last Saturday’s well-attended Birthday in the Park, a semi-final ending to Centennial Year, City Councilman Jim Clarke, father of the Centennial, was asked how he could keep the magic going. Mr. Clarke recalled a conversation … Read More