I walk past the stately movie theater and read the marquee
once again. It's there, in all Capital letters,
SAFETY NOT GUARANTEED,
Is this the name of a film, or something necessitated
by the construction zone immediately next to the theater's entrance?
I've been wondering this for a couple of weeks now.
This aging Norma Desmond of a movie palace just might be protecting its patrons. This condo being built right next door to the theater is rife with cement blocks, nails, and all the scraps of metal and wood such a project can provide. The two are just a few feet apart. This condo will literally be backstage. (well, almost)
Then again, this warning phrase could just be a film title for the 8:25 showing.
Why the marquee?
People don't read the marquee standing under it.
Safety Not Guaranteed is the story of a disaffected WWII vet new to Los Angeles.
He begins his postwar career as a private investigator whose insomnia
Takes him over the hilly streets of Hollywood to the fast decaying but barely detectable LAPD.
Chinatown Olvera street, City Hall, Griffith Park, Hollywood Bowl, Brown Derby, Santa Claus Lane Parade, UCLA, Pacific Coast Highway, Santa Monica Pier, Mulholland Drive, and
He stalks them all...
Like the butter flavoring in the popcorn,
Like the wine stained allies,
the sidewalk in front of the theater,
Safety Not Guaranteed.
I want to tell you about something. Something I've carried inside myself for a number of years now. Perhaps if I were a different kind of person I wouldn't need to talk about it. I'm not. My need to tell it is stronger than your need to hear it. Because, however, there are a number of teachers and former students of mine who may read these meanderings from time to time, I need to tell this story all the more. About 7 or 8 years ago I was asked if I would allow a university PhD. candidate to observe an English class. At first I decided against it because I was scheduled to have a student teacher placed with me the second half of the semester in question. After some urging, however, at the request of a respected colleague, I agreed. Soon I was committing to extra meetings, signing documents and explaining to the class in question who the young woman who thoughtfully pounded away on a laptop in the rear of the classroom three times a week was. I knew that the topic of ...
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