"...And the ancient empty street's too dead for dreaming" by kpe II via LAist Featured Photos Pool on Flickr
- Newly elected state speaker, a Democrat named Karen Bass who was raised in Los Angeles, has made friends on both sides of the aisle, the LA Times said. She is the first African-American to assume the top spot and has some pretty lofty goals, including providing healthcare and improving education. Wait, those are things EVERY politician should be doing.
- Of course, by now you know all about the L.A. Marathon. But you may not have heard that the Los Angeles Fire Department treated 73 participants; transporting 23 of them to area hospitals. None of the injuries were life-threatening, they said.
- What's one of the best part about Spring Training? Rumors! The Daily News reports that Nomar could play a "handful of games" at shortstop this season. Just four more weeks until Opening Day.
- The blood in my veins is Dodger Blue, but the color of my face when driving to games is sometimes red. So, I applaud the City Council for at least broaching the possibility of public transportation to Dodger Stadium late this week.\
- An El Segundo woman warded off an attacker last night with pepper spray as he pinned her to the ground straddling and fondling her. She reached for the pepper spray and ran away, gagging and coughing.
- But her weapon of choice would not have worked if she was a reporter at the Daily News. Yesterday, we told you that the Daily News laid off 22 staffers earlier in the week. Today, the list of the fireds was published. The deceased includes Alex Dobuzinskis, a great reporter who covered Glendale and Burbank and the News' lone Washington D.C. reporter.
- The newspaper business is not the only one hurting these days. Nearly 1,600 teachers could lose their jobs as Orange County's 28 school districts scramble to find ways to cut from their operating budgets amid a mounting state budget crisis.
- Is Hillary Clinton being subversively endorsed by Saturday Night Live? Last week, SNL feature a skit parodying the media's "love affair" with Barack Obama and last night, they had Clinton on the show getting two minutes of free campaign air time. SNL has not officially endorsed Clinton, but should media outlets allow candidates a free shot at advertising? If NBC allowed Obama two free minutes, don't you think the Clinton camp would be the ones needing a pillow?
Below are clips of Hillary Clinton on SNL last night and of Barack Obama's appearance last November (can't find the Obama one on NBC's official video site hulu). -- Andy Sternberg




Obama, of course, did appear on SNL last year in the last episode before the strike - the Clinton campaign didn't complain. And I don't believe the Obama camp has complained about her appearance yesterday.
So long as they offer equal time for each - as well as McCain, no harm, no foul.
1. Before the strike was a different story. Clinton was ahead and the Democratic campaign wasn't in its last throes. The stakes are different now.
2. Obama has no reason to complain about the slight because he is ahead.
3. Fair time is a worthy goal, but fair time at the same time is ideal. See: 60 Minutes. When they feature Obama and Clinton interviews, they most always feature both candidates on the same show.
I shouted "YES!" out loud when I saw that pepper spray story on the news. You never hear a 'good' ending to attempted rapes.
I thought it was really Hillary who got slighted in the 8:30 minutes cold open to SNL. But it was funny anyway
http://www.hulu.com/watch/11208/saturday-night-live-democratic-debate-2.
Once last year, Chris Rock gave a stirring opening monologue on why Barak Obama would win. And Tina Fey is an ardent Clintonite.