Local News

Drew Barrymore Can Still Throw the Kind of Party That Pisses Off Her Neighbors

October 30, 2011
Drew Barrymore Can Still Throw the Kind of Party That Pisses Off Her Neighbors

Drew Barrymore might be a reformed wild child who has a respectable career acting, writing, directing and generally pulling in a lot of box office dinero — but she still knows how to throw the kind of party that pisses off her neighbors. more › See the rest here: Drew Barrymore Can Still Throw the Kind of Party That Pisses Off Her Neighbors

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Occupy San Fernando Valley Was Not An Overnight Success, LAPD Halts Camping Under Mayor’s Orders

October 30, 2011
Occupy San Fernando Valley Was Not An Overnight Success, LAPD Halts Camping Under Mayor’s Orders

Same city, same cause but the effort to get a second 24/7 Occupy Wall Street movement off the ground in Los Angeles City limits was shut down by police last night, according to Sherman Oaks Patch . more › See the original post here: Occupy San Fernando Valley Was Not An Overnight Success, LAPD Halts Camping Under Mayor’s Orders

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LAist Interview: Author Mark Z. Danielewski on ‘The Fifty Year Sword,’ the Written Word, and One of the Scariest Moments of His Life

October 30, 2011
LAist Interview: Author Mark Z. Danielewski on ‘The Fifty Year Sword,’ the Written Word, and One of the Scariest Moments of His Life

Novelist Mark Z. Danielewski is frighteningly good at what he does. His books have imparted an international cult following for their courageous and mind-bending subjects, experimental typography, and innovative approaches to story-telling. more › Follow this link: LAist Interview: Author Mark Z. Danielewski on ‘The Fifty Year Sword,’ the Written Word, and One of the Scariest Moments of His Life

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Regret & Redemption For Former Mr. Jelly Belly

October 30, 2011

COVINA, Calif. — He’s the Willie Wonka of this small suburban town east of Los Angeles, the rotund man in the T-shirt and shorts who joyfully takes just about anybody who walks through the door on a tour of his tiny candy factory. But David Klein was once much more. The confectioner, who these days makes a comfortable living selling various chewy, crunchy concoctions with funny names like Candy Barf and Zombie Heart (the latter squirts strawberry-flavored “blood” when you bite into it), was once at the center of a sweet-tooth revolution. He was Mr. Jelly Belly. In 1976 Klein launched the gourmet jelly bean craze when he improbably envisioned that people would be willing to pay 10 or 20 times more for jelly beans if they simply tasted better, came in scores of natural flavors and had a clever name. Then, with only $800 in hand, he somehow talked a small, family-run candy company in the San Francisco Bay area into going into business with him. The result was the Jelly Belly, a precociously flavorful little gob of sugar, syrup and corn starch that quickly became the favored treat of millions, including President Ronald Reagan. And Klein, a one-time nut distributor who had begun selling his creation in just one candy store, was the gourmet bean’s mascot. Decked out in a Jelly Belly-bejeweled top hat and a matching white cowboy suit, he was everywhere in the late 1970s. He was photographed for People magazine sitting in a bathtub filled with Jelly Bellys, some stuck to his hairy chest, others lodged between his toes. He dropped by TV programs like “The Mike Douglas Show” to trade quips with the host and cajole the celebrity guests into sampling his new flavors. Then, for reasons Klein still has trouble coming to terms with, he and his partner sold their interest in the Jelly Belly name in 1980 for $4.8 million. He collected his half of the money in monthly installments over 20 years, and he faded into obscurity. “I went from hero to zero in about 60 seconds,” the usually upbeat candy maker says morosely when the subject is raised. “I was Mr. Jelly Belly for four years. And then …,” his voice trail off. While Jelly Bellys were being passed around the table at Reagan administration Cabinet meetings and carried into outer space by astronauts in the 1980s, Klein was trying in vain to come up with another big thing. He brought out a version of sugar-free salt water taffy. He tried to hit it big with sour licorice until more well-heeled competitors squeezed him out. He pioneered gross-out candy with a chocolate bar shaped to look like – well – you get the idea. It never caught on. Through it all, he moped about his and his late partner’s decision to sell their 50-50 interest in Jelly Belly to the Herman Goelitz Candy Company, which renamed itself the Jelly Belly Candy Company. “It caused a lot of pain in the family,” says his son, Bert Klein, who produced the documentary “Candyman: The David Klein Story.” So much so that his son, a veteran Hollywood film animator, says that as a child he stopped telling people his father had ever been Mr. Jelly Belly. It was too painful and most people didn’t believe him anyway. Now, with another holiday candy season upon us, Klein is back and hoping, at age 65, to regain the mojo that once made him the talk of the candy world. His company, Can You Imagine That!, is working with Leaf Brands in developing a new treat called Farts. (Yes, you read that right.) Leaf, which created Milk Duds, plans to have Farts in stores by Christmas, and when it does Klein predicts they will make people forget all about Nerds, a similar looking but crunchier candy. Then there is Dave’s Signature Beyond Gourmet jelly beans. They will mark Klein’s return to the candy bean business with such exotic flavors as ginger, jalapeno and bacon. He’s predicting they will also make people wonder what they ever saw in Jelly Belly, a company with which his relations have grown increasingly acrimonious over the years. Klein has long maintained that Jelly Belly’s chairman, Herman G. Rowland Sr., bullied him into selling out at a rock-bottom price so he could have the Jelly Belly empire all to himself. It’s an allegation Rowland emphatically denies. “I loved Dave,” Rowland said recently from his office in Fairfield, before quickly adding he wanted to make sure his listener had heard him correctly: He had said “loved,” not “love.” Still, Rowland chuckles often when he recalls the heady, early days of Jelly Belly and the promotional schemes Klein would come up with. He acknowledges it was Klein’s idea to call the candy Jelly Belly, a name Rowland didn’t think much of at the time. He thought even less of the portly Klein’s decision to be photographed naked in a bathtub full of jelly beans. “When I saw that thing, I went, `Oh my God, this is the end of Jelly Belly. No one will ever want to eat one,’” he recalls with a laugh. “Well, I was wrong.” He only pressed to buy Klein out, he says, after learning he had given his late partner half of his Jelly Belly distribution business and his partner in turn had trademarked the product’s name. He realized then, Rowland said, that if he didn’t buy Jelly Belly the name could be taken to any other candy maker. Meanwhile, Jelly Belly had become so popular that the small company Rowland’s great-grandfather had founded in 1869 was struggling to keep up with production while spending money to expand so it could make more Jelly Bellys, which it sold only through Klein. “Now maybe he doesn’t know these things or maybe he doesn’t remember them,” Rowland said. “But I protected his a– completely.” Klein, for his part, says he does understand. But then he thinks again of those days when he’d put on his Mr. Jelly Belly costume and go on television. And he becomes wistful and wishes he’d never relinquished the name. If he hadn’t he figures he’d still be Mr. Jelly Belly. “Col. Sanders created a product and when he sold it he was still Col. Sanders,” Klein says earnestly. “His picture was still on the buckets and everything.” Originally posted here: Regret & Redemption For Former Mr. Jelly Belly

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Get Out: Female Blood-Wrestling, Avant-Garde Film & Angela Davis

October 30, 2011
Get Out: Female Blood-Wrestling, Avant-Garde Film & Angela Davis

Get out so you can watch female blood-wrestling, avant-garde film or hear Angela Davis speak. more › Read more here: Get Out: Female Blood-Wrestling, Avant-Garde Film & Angela Davis

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No Home Sweet Home for Normans

October 30, 2011

The Beverly Hills High School campus was adorned with Halloween decorations like jack-o-lanterns, spider webs and skeletons, but it was the Normans who got spooked in Friday night’s homecoming game at Nickoll Field. Indeed, defending Ocean League champion Inglewood was the scariest thing BHHS encountered all evening, as the visiting Sentinels forced five turnovers and dominated from start to finish in a 42-0 drubbing that left the Beverly Hills players and coaches looking like they had seen ghosts. “I knew that they were a good team,” BHHS coach Donald Paysinger said. “Our game plan was to establish the run. It was a combination of them being more physical and us not executing the way we needed to. We planned on using both quarterbacks [Brandon Adams and Cameron Countryman] all along and we did, but neither one could get into a rhythm.” Inglewood scored its first points on Devian Shelton’s 14-yard run midway through the first quarter. In the second quarter, he scored on a 36-yard fumble return, Deandre Johnson caught a 16-yard touchdown pass from Derrick Woods and Woods scored on a quarterback sneak to give Inglewood a 28-0 lead going into halftime. “I was really impressed with our defense,” said Inglewood coach Stephen Daniel Thomas, who lost 35 players to graduation off last year’s 9-3 squad that reached the quarterfinals of the CIF playoffs. “Offensively, I think we were a little sloppy, but our defense has played well all year.” After a festive halftime show, which included performances by the BHHS cheer squad and marching band, and the announcement of the homecoming court, the Normans came out determined to give their fans something to cheer about early in the second half. After Beverly Hills was forced to punt on its first possession, the Sentinels fumbled at their own 35-yard line and the Normans recovered. They failed to capitalize, however, driving inside the 5-yard line before running back Frank Brown was stuffed behind the line on fourth-and-goal. “I was more disappointed in our passing game,” Paysinger said. “Whether it’s running or throwing, you need one or the other working and tonight we had to be able to pass a little to open up the running game and we couldn’t do it.” Shelton scored on a 67-yard run in the third quarter and Johnson caught a 32-yard touchdown pass from Woods in the fourth quarter to close out the scoring. “Losing Broderick Smith and Willie Green definitely hurt our offense because they are big-play guys, but things like that happen,” Countryman said of his two teammates who are out due to injury. “There are no excuses. We thought we’d win. The bottom line is we’re not playing very well as a team. The last two games are huge just from a pride standpoint. We want to finish strong.” The loss dropped the Normans into a tie for fourth with Hawthorne in the league standings. Santa Monica is one game ahead of Culver City and Inglewood going into Week 9. The Normans face last place Morningside in an away game next Friday, then host Culver City in their league finale Nov. 10. “The fact that we were playing the defending league champions doesn’t change anything,” Paysinger said. “If you asked most of our players who won league last year they couldn’t tell you. We don’t look in the past, we look at what’s in front of us. We have to get better.” Score by Quarters 1 2 3 4 Final Inglewood 7 21 6 8 42 Beverly Hills 0 0 0 0 0 Scoring Summary 1st Qtr. Inglewood — Shelton 14 run (kick good) 2nd Qtr. Inglewood — Johnson 36 fumble return (kick good) Inglewood — Johnson 16 pass from Woods (kick good) Inglewood — Woods 1 run (kick good) 3rd Qtr. Inglewood — Shelton 67 run (kick blocked) 4th Qtr. Inglewood — Johnson 32 pass from Woods (Woods run) Records: Inglewood 3-5, 2-1; Beverly Hills 2-6, 1-2. Be sure to follow Beverly Hills Patch on  Twitter  and “Like” us on  Facebook . See the rest here: No Home Sweet Home for Normans

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Witness: Michael Jackson Caused His Own Death

October 30, 2011

LOS ANGELES — With dramatic courtroom testimony, attorneys for Michael Jackson’s doctor have dropped the bombshell they’ve been hinting at for months – an expert opinion accusing the singer of causing his own death. Dr. Paul White said Jackson injected himself with a dose of propofol after an initial dose by Dr. Conrad Murray wore off. He also calculated that Jackson gave himself another sedative, lorazepam, by taking pills after an infusion of that drug and others by Murray failed to put him to sleep. That combination of drugs could have had “lethal consequences,” the defense team’s star scientific witness said Friday. Murray has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter. White showed jurors a series of charts and simulations he created in the past two days to support the defense theory. He also did a courtroom demonstration of how the milky white anesthetic propofol could have entered Jackson’s veins in the small dose that Murray claimed he gave the insomniac star. White said he accepted Murray’s statement to police that he administered only 25 milligrams of propofol after a night-long struggle to get Jackson to sleep with infusions of other sedatives. “How long would that (propofol) have had an effect on Mr. Jackson?” asked defense attorney J. Michael Flanagan. “If you’re talking effect on the central nervous system, 10 to 15 minutes max,” White said. He then said Jackson could have injected himself with another 25 milligrams during the time Murray has said he left the singer’s room. “So you think it was self-injected propofol between 11:30 and 12?” asked Flanagan. “In my opinion, yes,” White said. The witness, one of the early researchers of the anesthetic, contradicted testimony by Dr. Steven Shafer, his longtime colleague and collaborator. Shafer earlier testified Jackson would have been groggy from all the medications he was administered during the night and could not have given himself the drug in the two minutes Murray said he was gone. “He can’t give himself an injection if he’s asleep,” Shafer told jurors last week. He called the defense theory of self-administration “crazy.” White’s testimony belied no animosity between the two experts, who have worked together for 30 years. Although White was called out by the judge one day for making derogatory comments to a TV reporter about the prosecution case, White was respectful and soft spoken on the witness stand. When Flanagan made a mistake and called him “Dr. Shafer” a few times, White said, “I’m honored.” The prosecution asked for more time to study the computer program White used before cross-examining him. Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor granted the request, saying he too was baffled by the complicated simulations of Jackson’s fatal dose. He recessed court early and gave prosecutors the weekend to catch up before questioning White on Monday. The surprise disclosure of White’s new theory caused a disruption of the court schedule, and the judge had worried aloud that jurors, who expected the trial to be over this week, were being inconvenienced. But the seven men and five women appeared engaged in the testimony and offered no complaints when the judge apologized for the delay. Prosecutors could call Shafer back during their rebuttal case to answer White’s assertions. Among the key issues is how White calculated that a large residue of propofol in Jackson’s body could have come from the small dose that Murray says he administered. Shafer assumed Murray had lied, and he estimated Jackson actually was given 1,000 milligrams of the drug by Murray, who he said left the bottle running into an IV tube under the pull of gravity. White disputed that, saying an extra 25 milligrams self-administered by Jackson would be enough to reach the levels found in his blood and urine. White also said a minuscule residue of the sedative lorazepam in Jackson’s stomach convinced him the singer took some pills from a prescription bottle found in his room. He suggested the combination of lorazepam, another sedative, midazolam, plus the propofol could have killed Jackson. “It potentially could have lethal consequences,” said White. “… I think the combination effect would be very, very profound.” White’s testimony was expected to end Murray’s defense case after 16 witnesses. It likely will be vigorously challenged by prosecutors, who spent four weeks laying out their case that Murray is a greedy, inept and reckless doctor who was giving Jackson propofol as a sleep aid in the singer’s bedroom. Experts including Shafer have said propofol is not intended to treat insomnia and should not be given in a home. White’s theory was based on urine and blood levels in Jackson’s autopsy, evidence found in Jackson’s bedroom and Murray’s long interview with police detectives two days after Jackson died while in his care. While accepting Murray’s account of drugs he gave Jackson, the expert’s calculations hinged on the invisible quotient: Jackson’s possible movements while his doctor was out of the room. With no witnesses and contradictory physical evidence, that has become the key question hanging over the case. Those who knew the entertainer in his final days offered a portrait of a man gripped by fear that he would not live up to big plans for his comeback concert and worried about his ability to perform if he didn’t get sleep. He was plagued by insomnia, and other medical professionals told of his quest for the one drug he believed could help him. He called it his “milk,” and it was propofol. Jurors have now seen it up close as both Shafer and White demonstrated its potential use as an IV infusion. With White’s testimony, the defense sought to answer strong scientific evidence by the prosecution. But they did not address other questions such as allegations that Murray was negligent and acting below the standard of care for a physician. Flanagan, the defense attorney, produced a certificate from Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas showing Murray was certified to administer moderate anesthesia, referred to as “conscious sedation.” However, the document showed several requirements including that the physician “monitor the patient carefully” and “provide adequate oxygenation and ventilation for a patient that stops breathing.” Medical witnesses noted that Murray left his patient alone under anesthesia and did not have adequate equipment to revive him when he found him not breathing. The coroner attributed Jackson’s June 25, 2009, death to “acute propofol intoxication” complicated by other sedatives. See the original post here: Witness: Michael Jackson Caused His Own Death

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Designs for the Cure Gala

October 30, 2011

On October 28th American Fashion Designer David Meister hosted the first annual Designs for the Cure Gala to benefit Susan G. Komen Los Angeles. See the article here: Designs for the Cure Gala

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Ricki Lake says ‘Dancing with the Stars’ has spiced up her sex life

October 30, 2011

Derek Hough and Ricki Lake at the Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Los Angeles’ “2011 Rising Stars” Gala. See the rest here: Ricki Lake says ‘Dancing with the Stars’ has spiced up her sex life

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LA Residents: The Fifty Year Sword Returns For Halloween

October 30, 2011

This year Halloween falls on a Monday, which means a weekend of partying, but killsA – pun intended – any raging plans for the night of . Here is the original post: LA Residents: The Fifty Year Sword Returns For Halloween

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Raw Police Video