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A Brutally Liberal Cartoonist: The Secret to Newspaper ‘Credibility and Prestige’?

Long-time Los Angeles Times political cartoonist Paul Conrad has died, but the most interesting paragraph of his obituary in The Washington Post is the little hint by Post writer Matt Schudel that great newspapers only gain that reputation once they become liberal: He won his first Pulitzer in 1964, then left Denver for Los Angeles. Mr. Conrad’s incisive cartoons, which he drew six days a week, helped raise the reputation of the once-moribund Times, which had parroted the Republican Party line for decades . A similar version of this trope appeared in the Los Angeles Times itself in a story by James Rainey, but at least it suggested that there might be a difference between mediocre reporting and a Republican viewpoint. Conrad viciously attacked Nixon and Reagan with his pen, which was and is apparently the secret of media prestige: In the early 1960s, The Times was just beginning to rouse itself from decades of mediocrity. The newspaper had been politically and economically dominant in Southern California but a laughingstock in most of the country because of its mediocre journalism and blatant Republican boosterism. Otis Chandler took control as publisher in 1960 and, with Editor Nick Williams, decided to hire top talent to lift the paper to a higher level. The duo, determined to bring Conrad to Los Angeles, impressed him with their resolve. “The one thing I said,” Conrad recalled, “was, ‘Nobody tells me what to draw.'” The arrival of Conrad jarred many Times readers, not least the ultra-conservative members of the extended Chandler family, who already were displeased that their more liberal cousin, Otis, had taken control of the family business. “Nick [Williams] saw that Paul was this strident and very dedicated liberal and Nick thought that I would take a real beating, which I did,” Chandler said in a 2006 PBS documentary about the cartoonist. “But it was worth it, because he’s a real genius. He brought enormous credibility and prestige to The Times .”

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A Brutally Liberal Cartoonist: The Secret to Newspaper ‘Credibility and Prestige’?

Paul Conrad Dies at 86 | Pulitizer Prize-Winning Political Cartoonist Made Him One of Leading Provocateurs | Helped Push The Los Angeles Times to National Prominence

Political cartoonist Paul Conrad dies By James Rainey | 12:52 p.m. His fiercely confrontational cartoons made him one of the leading political provocateurs of the second half of the 20th century and helped push the Times to national prominence. He was 86. ' Paul Conrad dies at 86; Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist helped bring The Los Angeles Times to national prominence http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-paul-conrad-20100905,0,3650589,full… . PART ONE… By James Rainey, Los Angeles Times September 4, 2010|12:52 p.m. Paul Conrad, whose fiercely confrontational editorial cartoons made him one of the leading political provocateurs of the second half of the 20th century and who helped push the Los Angeles Times to national prominence, has died. He was 86. Conrad died early Saturday of natural causes, surrounded by his family at his home in Rancho Palos Verdes, said his son David. Conrad won three Pulitzer Prizes, a feat matched by only two other cartoonists in the post- World War II era, while both thrilling and infuriating readers for more than 50 years with an unyielding liberal stance, rendered in savage black and white. Mayors, governors and presidents cringed at the prospect of being on the business end of Conrad's searing pen, while many Southern Californians made him their first stop as they sifted through The Times, the newspaper that was his principal home for nearly 30 years. While many other cartoonists angled for whimsy or the easy one-off, Conrad “specialized in hair shirts and jeremiads and harpoons to the heart,” former Times Editor Shelby Coffey III once wrote. The cartoonist, loud and often profane in person, viewed himself as a champion of the common man and relished combat with those he saw as protectors of the rich and privileged. His most prominent and enduring foils came in the person of two California politicians who rose to the presidency, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. The scandal-plagued Nixon named Conrad to his “enemies list” — a designation the cartoonist described as one of his greatest honors. Former Times Publisher Otis Chandler became accustomed to his breakfast being interrupted by either Reagan or wife Nancy, furious that the then-governor had been depicted, again, as dimwitted, mean-spirited or out of touch. “Conrad is … more than a legend in cartooning and an institution in American journalism,” Doug Marlette, one of many cartoonists inspired by that work, once said. “He is a force of nature; you measure Conrad on the Richter scale.” The author and essayist Pete Hamill called Conrad “a voice. And the voice is his alone: alternately savage, compassionate, brutal and ironic.” Conrad rose to prominence in a post-World War II era when many newspapers were at the height of their power and when he and other widely syndicated editorial cartoonists — including Herbert L. Block (Herblock), Bill Mauldin and Pat Oliphant—held a particular grip on the American psyche. Just before his death in 2007, the onetime editor of The Times' editorial pages, Anthony Day, worried that the skittish and contracting newspaper industry would no longer support a “genius” like Conrad. “It's easier to not make trouble,” Day said, “than to make trouble.” And Conrad loved making trouble. His righteous indignation was guided by a modest Midwestern upbringing, an abiding Catholic faith and what one chronicler called “a fanatic heart.” Many journalists like to talk of the imperative of afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted. Conrad embraced the credo with abandon. “Don't ever accuse me,” he liked to say, “of being objective.” CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan

New Study Shakes Up Scientists’ View of California’s San Andreas Earthquake Risk

Study shakes up scientists' view of San Andreas earthquake risk Researchers find major quakes on the southern section, on average, every 88 years — three times as often as previously thought. It's the strongest evidence yet that we're overdue for a massive quake. San Andreas fault study Photo: Sarah Robinson, 23, a graduate student at Arizona State University, runs along a trench at the Bidart Fan sector of the San Andreas fault in June 2009. She is on a team of geologists trying to construct a history of earthquakes on the San Andreas fault by reading lines of sediment in the earth. (Ricardo DeAratanha / Los Angeles Times / June 1, 2009) ___ By Rong-Gong Lin II, Los Angeles Times August 21, 2010 Southern California is long overdue for a major earthquake along the San Andreas fault, according to a landmark study of historic seismic activity released Friday. The study, produced after several years of field studies in the Carrizo Plain area about 100 miles northwest of Los Angeles, found that earthquakes along the San Andreas fault have occurred far more often than previously believed. For years, scientists have said major earthquakes occurred every 250 to 450 years along this part of the San Andreas. The new study found big temblors on the fault every 88 years, on average. The last massive earthquake on that part of the fault was in 1857, leading scientists to warn that another such temblor is likely in Southern California. “The next earthquake could be sooner than later,” said Lisa Grant Ludwig, a UC Irvine earthquake expert and co-author of the study, which was published online in the journal Geology. “It was thought that we weren't at risk of having another large one any time soon. Well, now, it might be ready to rupture.” Other seismic experts described the revelation as a major change in the way they think about earthquake risks along the southern San Andreas fault. Thomas Jordan, director of the Southern California Earthquake Center, said the fault is “locked and loaded. It's been a long time since an earthquake has occurred on that fault — over 150 years.” To reach the new conclusion, scientists dug trenches deep into the Carrizo Plain. They used carbon dating and sophisticated imaging technology known as lidar to find signs of earth movements. They were able to detect earthquakes dating back to the 15th century, creating a far more complete record than had previously been known. The research found that earlier examinations of the San Andreas had badly undercounted the number of major earthquakes. Those were based on observations made in the 1970s when scientists used measuring tape to look for evidence of past earthquakes. “Now we have better techniques,” Grant Ludwig said. “We can see there's actually more earthquakes.” Scientists now estimate that earthquakes occurred on that section of the fault in 1417, 1462, 1565, 1614 and 1713. The finding adds weight to the view of many seismologists that the San Andreas has been in a quiet period and that a major rupture is possible. A 2009 study, which Grant Ludwig also participated in, suggested that the San Andreas was overdue for a rupture. But Friday's report offers a much more grim estimate of how frequently quakes have occurred on that segment of the fault. The San Andreas fault is considered one of the most dangerous in Southern California, partly because it is so long that its southern section is capable of producing a temblor as large as magnitude 8.1. By contrast, earthquake experts consider 1994's destructive 6.7-magnitude Northridge quake, which occurred on a different fault, to be a medium-sized quake. The San Andreas is a sleeping giant. It's hard to imagine the power of a huge quake on the southern section because the last one occurred more than a century ago when the area was sparsely populated. Just 4,000 people lived in Los Angeles at the time. The 1857 temblor, with an estimated magnitude of 7.9, is known as the Fort Tejon quake, but that's a bit of a misnomer because it is thought to have started farther north, way up in Parkfield in Monterey County. The quake then barreled south on the San Andreas for about 200 miles, through Fort Tejon near the northern edge of what is now Los Angeles County, then east toward the Cajon Pass in San Bernardino County, near what is now the 15 Freeway. The quake was so powerful that the soil liquefied, causing trees as far away as Stockton to sink. Trees were also uprooted west of Fort Tejon. The shaking lasted 1 to 3 minutes. The study was conducted by scientists at UC Irvine and Arizona State University. As preliminary data went out for peer review, other earthquake scientists immediately took note. The U.S. Geological Survey was so concerned that it dispatched its own team of investigators to the Carrizo Plain to look over the initial findings and review the evidence in the trenches. “These investigators really were challenged by their scientific peers,” said Ken Hudnut, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey. “And they made it through. They ran the gantlet and came through with a really solid paper.” Hudnut said the “Big One” wouldn't compare to most quakes Californians have endured. Such a large quake on the San Andreas, generally above a magnitude 7, would send enormous V-shape energy waves spreading out from the fault. If the earthquake energy hit the Los Angeles Basin, the soft sediment underneath it could actually amplify the waves, making the shaking worse. Hudnut said the study offers both “bad news and good news,” noting that it also concluded future earthquakes along that section of the San Andreas could be smaller than the 1857 quake. “It's not the kind of news that ought to make people crawl into the fetal position. Rather, it's the kind of information that ought to once remind people about basic earthquake preparedness,” Hudnut said. Grant Ludwig said her research should motivate people to prepare. “If you're waiting for someone to tell you when we're close to the next San Andreas earthquake, just look at the data,” she said. “If we look at the only data we have, it's not very comforting. I'm preparing for that possibility.” added by: EthicalVegan

Prop 8: Federal Appeals Court Puts California Same-Sex Marriages On Hold Indefinitely | Updates

Federal Appeals Court Puts Same-Sex Marriages On Hold Indefinitely http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_KrNl-GdSDb4/SF_T82PjUSI/AAAAAAAAAcY/fecu5sd8RO4/s400/s… Breaking: Ninth Circuit Stays Prop. 8 Decision _____ http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/08/federal-appeals-court-blocks-enfor… Los Angeles Times Southern California — this just in No gay marriages in California before December, court rules August 16, 2010 | 3:58 pm The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday agreed to keep same-sex marriages on hold until at least December. In a brief order, a three-judge panel agreed to an expedited review of U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker's Aug. 4 ruling that overturned Proposition 8 as a violation of the federal Constitution. The panel agreed to hold a hearing on the case during the week of Dec. 6 and ordered both sides to present arguments on whether the campaign for Proposition 8 has legal authority to appeal Walker's order. Walker had declared Proposition 8's ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional, saying it violates gay men's and lesbians' rights to equal protection and due process. The defendants in that case were Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown, but they declined to defend the law. As the losing parties, they have the authority to appeal Walker's ruling. But they hailed Walker's decision and said they would not appeal. A private group that opposes same-sex marriage, ProtectMarriage.com, defended Proposition 8 during the trial Walker held earlier this year. The group wants to appeal his ruling but may lack legal standing to do so. — Maura Dolan in San Francisco added by: EthicalVegan

Prop 8 Breaking News: Federal Appeals Court Puts California Same-Sex Marriages On Hold Indefinitely

Federal Appeals Court Puts Same-Sex Marriages On Hold Indefinitely http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_KrNl-GdSDb4/SF_T82PjUSI/AAAAAAAAAcY/fecu5sd8RO4/s400/s… Breaking: Ninth Circuit Stays Prop. 8 Decision _____ http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lanow/2010/08/federal-appeals-court-blocks-enfor… Los Angeles Times Southern California — this just in No gay marriages in California before December, court rules August 16, 2010 | 3:58 pm The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday agreed to keep same-sex marriages on hold until at least December. In a brief order, a three-judge panel agreed to an expedited review of U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker's Aug. 4 ruling that overturned Proposition 8 as a violation of the federal Constitution. The panel agreed to hold a hearing on the case during the week of Dec. 6 and ordered both sides to present arguments on whether the campaign for Proposition 8 has legal authority to appeal Walker's order. Walker had declared Proposition 8's ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional, saying it violates gay men's and lesbians' rights to equal protection and due process. The defendants in that case were Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown, but they declined to defend the law. As the losing parties, they have the authority to appeal Walker's ruling. But they hailed Walker's decision and said they would not appeal. A private group that opposes same-sex marriage, ProtectMarriage.com, defended Proposition 8 during the trial Walker held earlier this year. The group wants to appeal his ruling but may lack legal standing to do so. — Maura Dolan in San Francisco added by: EthicalVegan

Lindsay Lohan Goes To Jail ‘Accepting Responsibility,’ Lawyer Says

Sheriff’s spokesperson said actress was very ‘cooperative’ as she entered detention facility. By Gil Kaufman Lindsay Lohan with her lawyer Shawn Chapman Holley on Wednesday Photo: Mark Ralston/ Getty Images Lindsay Lohan was stoic as she prepared to get handcuffed and taken off to Century Regional Detention Facility in Lynwood, California, on Tuesday (July 20) morning. But behind that brave face was a 24-year-old who was frightened of what the next 90 days in jail would be like. “She’s scared as anyone would be,” Lohan’s attorney, Shawn Chapman Holley, said after Lohan was escorted away, according to People.com . “But she’s resolute and she’s doing it. … She asks for your prayers and support.” Holley represented Lohan after resigning as her attorney earlier this month and being briefly replaced by by O.J. Simpson attorney Robert Shapiro, who stepped down from the case on Monday. She added that Lohan “is accepting responsibility and [has] stepped up to the plate and is doing what has been asked of her.” Lohan will likely only serve 23 days of her 90-day term due to jail overcrowding, but it will not be easy time, as she will spend nearly 23 hours a day in a 12-by-8-foot cell by herself. In a press conference following Lohan’s transfer, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson Steve Whitmore said that the actress was “extremely cooperative” during her booking into jail to serve the sentence for violating the probation on a pair of DUI cases from 2007. Whitmore said the expected length of Lohan’s incarceration would be announced later in the day. “The crowd out here is a little unusual,” Whitmore said after Lohan was delivered to the Lynwood jail. “But inside, it’s business as usual.” According to the Los Angeles Times, after her booking, Lohan entered the jail’s triage, where she was slated to get the standard medical and psychological evaluation. Whitmore said all the usual state guidelines for prisoners would apply to Lohan, though he stressed that “people with notoriety are kept away” from the general jail population for security purposes. An employee at the detention center said the building went into lockdown when Lohan arrived around 10:11 a.m. PT. During that time, employees in the jail’s work-release program were asked to leave early, and inmates were held in their cells without restroom privileges or recreation time. Related Photos Lindsay Lohan Goes To Court The Highs And Lows Of Lindsay Lohan Busted! Celebrity Mugshots Related Artists Lindsay Lohan

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Lindsay Lohan Goes To Jail ‘Accepting Responsibility,’ Lawyer Says

Actress Vonetta McGee Dies At Age 65

She appeared alongside Clint Eastwood in ‘The Eiger Sanction’ and in many blaxploitation films. By Kara Warner Vonetta McGee Photo: Los Angeles Times Actress Vonetta McGee, best known for her leading roles in the blaxploitation films “Blacula,” “Hammer” and “Shaft in Africa,” has died at age 65. The Los Angeles Times reports that McGee died Friday (July 9) after being admitted to a Berkeley, California, hospital for cardiac arrest, for which she was put on life support for two days. Born Lawrence Vonetta McGee in San Francisco on January 14, 1945, she caught the acting bug while attending college and landed her first film role in the 1968 spaghetti western “The Great Silence.” Times movie reviewer Kevin Thomas called McGee “one of the busiest and most beautiful black actresses” in 1972, the year “Hammer” and “Blacula” were released. She later appeared alongside Clint Eastwood in the action-thriller “The Eiger Sanction.” Other film credits include “The Lost Man,” “Detroit 9000,” “Brothers,” “Repo Man” and “To Sleep With Anger,” as well as many successful roles in television. Her “Hammer” co-star Fred Williamson said he was most pleased to see her alongside Clint Eastwood. “Not many black actors had that opportunity to be in a movie where color doesn’t matter,” he said. “Vonetta McGee was like a lot of actors and actresses at that time, like myself, Jim Brown, Richard Roundtree, Billy Dee Williams and Pam Grier, in that we had more talent than we were allowed to show because everything was perceived as a black project. Once they categorize you, your marketability becomes limited.” Though she is known primarily for her roles in blaxploitation films, McGee outwardly criticized Hollywood’s profligation of the term. She told the Times in 1979 that the wording was “like racism, so you don’t have to think of the individual elements, just the whole. If you study propaganda, you understand how this works.” She is survived by her husband, Carl Lumbly; son Brandon; her mother; three brothers; and a sister. Share your memories of Vonetta McGee in the comments below.

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Actress Vonetta McGee Dies At Age 65

Kelly Soo Park picture(Juliana Redding Murder)

According to authorities, the murder suspect – 44-year-old Kelly Soo Park – was paid $250,000 three weeks before the slaying and had another $113,000 wired to her relatives through a South Korean bank a few days before her arrest, The Los Angeles Times reports. Then last week came a break, with a twist: Police arrested a Camarillo, Calif., woman in the murder. Authorities have not officially said what happened, but there are hints that the murder may have been linked to her father#39;s business

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Kelly Soo Park picture(Juliana Redding Murder)

Kyle Boller and Carrie Prejean married

Carrie Prejean, 23, and Kyle Boller, 29, met last July and have been engaged since February. Former beauty queen Carrie Prejean picked up a new title on Friday: Mrs. The former Miss California USA – who was stripped of her crown last year – said “I do” to Oakland Raiders quarterback Kyle Boller in San Diego, E! Online reports. The couple wed at Capella Church inside the Grand Del Mar hotel. The bride wore a one-shoulder mermaid style gown and her groom donned a traditional black tux. The cou

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Kyle Boller and Carrie Prejean married

‘Jersey Shore’ Wisdom Comes To Life With Jackson Rathbone, Others

Quinton ‘Rampage’ Jackson and other celebs re-enact the best lines from ‘Gym, Tanning, Laundry: The Official Jersey Shore Quote Book.’ By Jonathan Goldner, with reporting by MTV News staff The Situation, J-Woww and Pauly D from MTV’s “Jersey Shore” Photo: MTV Everyone remembers those classic moments from season one of “Jersey Shore.” Snooki getting punched and Pauly D taking the grenade will no doubt live on in our hearts forever. But there were actually a lot of life lessons hidden amidst the GTL high jinks. The best of those — Women really are a game. Thanks, Pauly! — are collected in “Gym, Tanning, Laundry: The Official Jersey Shore Quote Book,” which hits bookstores Tuesday. In honor of this momentous occasion, MTV News asked some of our favorite visiting celebrities to get their Seaside on and deliver their best recitations of those famous “JS” Zen moments. First to take up the challenge was former professional wrestler Mick Foley, who proudly channeled Snooki, proclaiming, “My boobs are so tight I can’t breathe. Is that normal?” He also did a bang-up job of JWoww’s legendary “ham and water” moment. Jackson Rathbone gave us a suspiciously good impression of “The Situation” that needs to be seen to be believed. Next to step up to the plate was MTV’s own Warren the Ape , who one day might attain “Shore”-level fame himself. He hopes. After lamenting the number of metaphors we asked him to recite, Warren made Ronnie sound like Shakespeare himself with a thunderous reading of “You just take your shirt off and they come to you. It’s like a fly comes to sh–.” Applause could be heard up and down the halls of MTV News as employees wept openly at the raw drama shown by the ape. All that is to say nothing of UFC’s Quinton “Rampage” Jackson giving us his best JWoww with “No man will ever touch me like that ever twice.” Rampage, indeed! But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Watch the video, pick up the book and get ready to hit the beach again when season two of “Jersey Shore” starts July 29 at 10 p.m. What is your favorite “Jersey Shore” quote? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos The Wisdom Of ‘Jersey Shore’ Related Photos Exclusive Pages From The Official ‘Jersey Shore’ Quote Book

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‘Jersey Shore’ Wisdom Comes To Life With Jackson Rathbone, Others