Apr 9, 2008 | 9:37 PM
Category:
News
Nature....it's
a beautiful thing but at times, it's not very pretty.
Like tonight.
It
started out as a great assignment. For a change, it was good news that I would
be delivering. Nothing earth-shattering but the kind of story that would make
you go 'ahhhh'.
Freelance photographer Glenn Zachman had been driving down West Street in Garden Grove when a duck jumped in front of
his truck and began quacking away at him.
As she quacked, she also nervously paced back and forth between his truck and a
manhole cover, leading Glenn to think something was wrong.
There was something wrong. 14 ducklings were stuck and Mama Duck needed help.
A serious of phone calls later and OC Animal Control had managed to rescue all
the little duckies. Officers then followed Mama on foot as she led them two
blocks away to the West
Street Basin,
where the feathered family was reunited.
All of
this captured on video by Glenn, of course.
Cool,
no? A fun little story with a happy ending for a change.
Not.
When
FOX 11 photographer Steve Boyajian and I arrived at the basin to shoot some
more footage, we immediately spotted mama and her brood floating by.
That’s
when the gang of Canadian Geese – two of them – made their move.
Right
before our eyes, they swooped in and attacked…managing to grab one duckling and
drown him in seconds.
Mama Duck
was desperate, as were we, but there was nothing we could do. Only feet away
from them but with a chain link fence separating us, we watched as the baby
duck drowned…all awhile being pecked at by the geese.
Then
it happened again…the geese went in for the kill and while Mama and Papa (he
was there too) did their best to shoo them away while protecting the others,
they were outsized by the large geese.
Another
baby duckling was drowning as Steve and I screamed at the geese, to no avail.
Mama
Duck, followed by Papa, then led their remaining flock of five….five, remember
there were originally fourteen – to
the bank of the basin and began pacing in front of us.
She
walked the entire length of the fence, the ducklings waddling behind her, in
what seemed to us as a desperate attempt to get them out of there.
All
awhile, the predator geese sat nearby, planning their next move.
Meanwhile,
I was calling Animal Control to come help them. Then I called my producer,
almost in tears, to tell him what was happening.
“The
ducklings are dead”, I cried. “They’re being eaten right in front of us. This
story does not have a happy ending.”
The
story was dead, the station decided. As dead as the ducklings were.
As I
continued to try and get someone to help the ducks, I got a text message from a
friend who was at a business dinner and had no idea what story I was working
on.
His
message read “Our 1st course is duck. I’m not sure how I feel about
eating Donald & Daffy”.
I kid
you not. Steve and Glenn are my witnesses.
Talk
about timing.
To sum
up the next two hours, after finally reaching the director of Animal Services,
a very kind officer came out but there was really nothing that could be done.
Plus,
the “Migratory Bird Treaty Act” prohibits anyone from removing wildlife unless
they are injured or in imminent danger from a human. (to sum it up).
“It’s
nature”, everyone kept telling me, “It’s nature taking its course.”
Fine,
but like so many other things I see and report on, I still don’t understand it.
And I
never will.
Mar 31, 2008 | 1:08 AM
Category:
News
Is it just me, or is 2008 starting to seem like a very violent year in LA to you?
Sunday, yet another senseless murder -- like if there were ever any murders that made sense, right?
A 20 year old is driving down the 101-East at 8 o'clock in the morning when he is shot in the head -- most likely from another car.
Marlon Gordillo Sical then lost control of his Honda, slammed into the sound wall and that impact sent him spinning across the freeway where he crashed into the center divider.
Why? Road rage? A stray bullet?
Who cares, it's still another act of unexplainable violence that put so many others at risk.
And when I say this has been a violent year, it's not only the crime I am talking about.
This weekend there was yet another wrong way driver on the 118 -- going east in the westbound lanes. This guy slammed right into a pickup truck killing the two people inside and himself.
Less than two weeks ago, it was another guy who did the same thing...except only he died. Oh, he did kill two cats that were in a semi-truck.
What the heck is going on? Is the moon stuck in full? Is it the year of the Rat?
What's happening? And when is it going to stop?
Mar 27, 2008 | 2:50 AM
Category:
News
As others rushed out, he rushed in.
Moments later, he was dead.
The Los Angeles City Fire Department lost one of it's own last night when Firefighter Brent A. Lovrien died in the line of duty.
The 35 year old was a 10 year veteran of the LAFD, assigned to the 'A' Platoon at Fire Station 95 since October 2005.
Lovrien, and his fellow firefighters, had been responding to an explosion in a shopping center near LAX when he was killed in a subsequent blast.
In that same explosion, Engineer Anthony J. Guzman suffered multiple fractures and facial trauma. He remains hospitalized in serious condition following surgery.

Details are still sketchy about exactly what happened but there is one thing we know for sure: another hero is dead.
Our thoughts and prayers go out to Firefighter Lovrien's family, friends and the LAFD.
And to Firefighter Guzman, our wishes for a speedy recovery.
Mar 23, 2008 | 9:22 PM
Category:
News
He's a beautiful little boy...sound asleep in his car seat, his lips in a cute pucker, he is adorable.
And for a fraction of a nanosecond I am tempted to swipe him...for a good cause, of course.
You see the baby that I am a few feet away from is all by himself in the back-seat of a parked car. The windows are rolled down, the doors are unlocked and no one is there to watch him.
His mother/relative/friend/sitter is inside the dry cleaners from which I have just left. She is busy talking to the cashier as she waits for her cleaning to come down on the clothes-merry-go-round thingy.
And there I am, standing next to the car, knowing that it would take me -- or someone else - only seconds to grab the months-old baby and disappear.
And that, my friends, is where the thought -- the one that lasts only a fraction of a nanosecond -- to grab the baby and hide around the corner with it pops into my mind.
But of course, as quickly as it pops in, it pops right out.
Sure, my intentions are good -- I want to scare the living daylights out of his mother/relative/friend/sitter, or whoever she is, so that she learns her lesson!
YOU NEVER LEAVE A BABY UNATTENDED -- NO MATTER HOW CLOSE YOU'LL BE OR HOW MANY SECONDS YOU'LL BE GONE!
Hello!!!
But I don't do it.
I figure the police wouldn't understand, she wouldn't understand and my boss wouldn't be at all pleased with my well-intentioned but dumb idea.
So instead I get in my car and do what this woman should have been doing and that's watch her child.
I wait there for a few minutes until she comes out, making sure the baby is all right. We make eye contact and I hope she can read my mind.
I debate telling her that I am a reporter and that I both see and do too many stories about stolen babies and pets from cars.
I want to warn her that this is a dangerous world we live in; that there are a lot of sickos and crazies out there but deep in my heart I know my words will fall on deaf ears.
Common sense and a mother's instinct are two things that no one can teach you or preach to you. Either you have them or you don't.
She obviously didn't.
Mar 1, 2008 | 5:02 PM
Category:
News
It felt like both a funeral and an estate sale...just not right.
Like if the body was right there in the room; still warm to the touch while all the belongings were being sold off.
People were everywhere. Carrying vases, end tables, rugs...pretty much anything they could get their arms around.
While some were sprawled on the furniture with a "this is mine, don't even think about it" look on their face, others were ripping things off the wall.
On a counter, dozens of handwritten signs read "50% off"...but the sales people hadn't even had time to put them out before people began arriving.
I was at Wickes Furniture today.
A sluggish economy and the housing slump/crisis has finally killed off the already ailing chain and today was their goodbye sale.
I've been there a million times and never bought anything but as I watched the store being decimated, I felt incredibly sad.
Wickes was....well, it was Wickes. A store that was always there and now it's about to be gone.
Along with Levitz...and Broadway...and May Company...and Robinson's...and Robinson's May.
Anyone remember Ohrbach's on Wilshire? Zody's on Sunset Boulevard? Tiny Naylors on La Brea? Ada's Hamburgers on Selma Avenue?
The list goes on and on.
Any favorites that you remember? That you miss?
Meanwhile, bye-bye Wickes.
Feb 15, 2008 | 12:40 PM
Category:
News
Thousands are standing right now to give Randy Simmons a much-deserved round of applause for what the Pastor called "a life well lived".
And from everything we have learned about Randy, he truly lived life to the fullest.
I am taking the liberty of referring to him here as simply Randy and I do it with the utmost respect. For you see, I have learned that LAPD SWAT Officer Randal Simmons was so much more than just a "cop".
Yes, he loved his job, his uniform and his partners in crime fighting but the man with what friends describe as a huge heart, loved and did so much more for so many.
To his family, he was a loving husband and dedicated father. "The ultimate man" is how his wife Lisa described him according to Chief William Bratton. "The ultimate man". Powerful.
To his Church, he was the "Deacon" -- a man of undying and unwavering faith.
To his "Glory Kids", he was a both a mentor and a minister. Randy was their inspiration and guiding light.
And to us he was Officer Simmons, a man of the law. He protected, he served and he lost his life doing it.
Finally, the word "hero" can be used in it's true meaning.
God Bless you Randy.
And God Bless your family. May they take comfort in the memory of a man who will not soon be forgotten.
Feb 7, 2008 | 6:35 PM
Category:
News
I just interviewed a friend of one of the victims whom she identified as Andy Rivera. Andy was the older brother, she says, of the shooter.
While she didn't know the shooter, she describes Andy as a good guy -- a mortgage banker and hard worker. "They were a normal family", she says.
But last night, one part of what may very well have been a "normal family" snapped and basically killed his entire family.
In the process, killing LAPD Officer Randy Simmons and critically injuring Ofcr. James "Jimmy" Veenstra.
So many lives changed forever...it just begs the question: why?
More from the scene here in Winnetka later.
Feb 7, 2008 | 1:08 PM
Category:
News
This morning LAPD SWAT Officer Randy Simmons, 51 was shot to death in Winnetka during a standoff with a suspect who had already killed three other men.
Officer Randy Simmons
Meanwhile his fellow LAPD officer, James Veenstra was severely injured -- receiving a bullet to the face which blew most of his jaw off.

Officer James Veenstra
It is truly a tragedy anytime an officer loses his life or is injured in the line of duty.
Our deepest condolences go out to the Simmons family today.
And our prayers will be with the Veenstra family --- in hopes of a full recovery.
Last night, on my way home from my story, a SWAT team member raced by me, lights and siren, most likely on his way to this standoff since it was nearby. I cannot help but wonder if it was Officer Simmons or Veenstra....rushing to help in what was a critical situation in a residential neighborhood.
For Simmons, it would be what some departments call his "End of Watch" -- for Veenstra, the beginning of a long and painful recovery.
God Bless them both.
I am leaving to the scene now and will have more for you later.
Feb 5, 2008 | 11:33 PM
Category:
News
No doubt about it, the young senator from Illinois has had quite a victorious night...just not here in LA or California.
That said, this is a victory party for Barack Obama. There is not a sad face in the crowd and their joy is genuine.
Now, let's talk behind-the scenes here...
I just went live a few minutes ago with former State Controller Steve Westly. He is the Co-Chair of Obama's California campaign.
The problem is he was still on stage addressing the crowd and the countdown to my live-shot was on.
So Meera Cheriyan, my producer here at Avalon, wasted no time and flew (literally) into action.
She ran downstairs and grabbed (literally) the man off the stage and delivered him in front of the camera as I was ready to introduce him.
It was one of those adrenalin filled TV moments that you see in movies -- like the scene where the producer runs down the hall, tape in hand, and manages to pop into a machine seconds before it airs...only this time it was Meera running with the former Controller in hand.
Priceless...just priceless.
And Steve was a great sport about it all so a big thank you to him also for making live TV happen.
PS: In a few minutes, we are going to do it live all over again for MY 13 News...this time though, Meera is making sure Mr. Westly stays right here.
Feb 5, 2008 | 10:03 PM
Category:
News
Senator Barack Obama may be speaking in Chicago right now but it feels like he is here , in Hollywood, in this room....the crowd is cheering and going wild.
The prelim numbers are just trickling in for California but of course it's way too early in this race to call it.
OK, back to listening to the man who could be our next President...and please note, I have said that about every candidate that I listen to -- from both sides of the aisle and further.
Feb 5, 2008 | 7:40 PM
Category:
Political
This post has been edited by an administrator
It's Super-Tuesday and for us political junkies, this is the day...well, at least until the real day in November.
My "team" and I are live at the Avalon...for you Hollywood party old timers, this used to be the "Palace".
Tonight, it is Obama's West Coast Party Headquarters -- party as in "fiesta", not political party.
Right now, they are still laying down the carpet; painting the walls and getting ready for the hundreds and hundreds of supporters and volunteers that will begin arriving after 8 pm.
Meanwhile, we are live on the web for your viewing pleasure at www.myfoxla.com
More later...
PS: Did you vote today? It's a right for most of us; a privilege for all us and as I see it, our civic duty.
Feb 3, 2008 | 12:02 PM
Category:
Political
The first time I registered to vote I was 18. Not being a fan of any particular party, I signed up as an "Independent".
It was a dumb but very common mistake since in California the box I should have checked was "Declined to State", since as most of you know "Independent" is an actually party.
I have since rectified that mistake but one thing remains the same: I really dislike partisan politics.
I don't vote based on "parties" but on "people" -- i.e. who is the best qualified; who represents the majority of my positions on the issues that matter; whose record shows the integrity and judgment to hold that particular office.
I cannot imagine voting based only on what party the candidate belongs to, yet every year millions of people do exactly that.
I know someone who told me that they absolutely HATED their parties candidate -- they thought the person was an IDIOT and didn't agree with anything they had done in office.
Yet come election day, to my SHOCK, they voted for that person ANYWAY.
"I just couldn't bring myself to vote for the other parties guy", this person said to me.
"But you told me you HATED your parties candidate!", I replied in disbelief.
"I do, but you have to understand that I've been voting for my party all my life", they said. "I couldn't switch now."
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!
Disqualifying someone based on their political affiliation is like not reading a book because you don't like the cover.
And while I'm here, let me add a quick thought (and reveal yet another dumb mistake I used to make) about voting for propositions.
Anytime any measure, bond act or prop included the words "will help fund POLICE, FIREFIGHTERS, SCHOOLS, TEACHERS, EDUCATION, HIGHWAYS or HOSPITALS, I voted "YES".
Stupid. Just plain stupid, Gigi.
Thankfully, I learned a long time ago to READ the measures. Yes, the whole darn boring thing.
Just because a worthy cause is mentioned does not necessarily mean they will get the extra $$$ I end up paying on my property tax bill.
And the titles of these propositions can be misleading. I can think of a few on this Tuesday's ballot right now.
So please, READ before you ink-blot away. Please.
Jan 30, 2008 | 11:52 PM
Category:
News
Well here I sit in an almost empty spin room.
The spin cycle has ended and right now Hal and I are on fluff and dry.
(And if you missed our stories, we'll be on again at 11 pm on My 13 News -- at 1 am on the Channel 11 rerun -- 3 am on the Channel 13 rerun and here on the website for the next two years -- how's that for service?)
If you like politics, like I do, the whole process is fascinating and can lead to endless observations and conversations.
The spin room is especially fun and entertaining as we watch all the candidate spokespeople spin their version of what happened.
And I have to say they can all be very convincing...if it wasn't for the fact that like most politicians, they are all contradicting themselves.
But they all do it with a very straight face! ;-)
That's why it's important to do some research -- the independent kind -- before you vote.
And that is particularly true when it comes to the propositions facing us next Tuesday.
I'll have more thoughts on that in a blog later this week.
For now, one more live shot and we'll call it a day.
A special thanks to our great crew here today -- the men behind the cameras -- Bill, Larry and Steve!! Thanks guys! As always, good job.
Jan 30, 2008 | 7:32 PM
Category:
News
I am now leaving the "Filing Room" to go to the "Spin Room"...there I will look for the "experts"; the political analysts who will tell me what they think happened during the last 90 minutes.
Who do you think "won"? Is there a clear winner tonight?
Talk amongst yourselves.
See you later...10 pm on 11, 11 pm on 13.
Oh, maybe I'll have a post-spin blog.....
Jan 30, 2008 | 7:29 PM
Category:
News
Huckabee is fighting to be heard but it's hard....all the questions are being directed at the frontrunners, McCain and Romney.
That leaves Huckabee and Paul with a token question here and there.
Politics and television -- two difficult mediums that don't always come together easily...or fairly.