I hated L.A. bike lanes. Then I fell in love
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Good morning. Hereâs what you need to know to start your day.
- Why a former bike lane pessimist is excited for the future of Hollywood Boulevard.
- San Diego politicians want to block Trumpâs deportations. The sheriff refuses, sparking an immigration battle.
- No holiday plans? This social app will match you with a group of strangers for dinner.
- And hereâs todayâs e-newspaper.
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The Hollywood Boulevard revolution
Few streets in Los Angeles have a more tortured history with the automobile than Hollywood Boulevard.
Its development in the 1920s coincided with the boom in vehicle sales that would eventually make L.A. the car capital of the world. Hollywood quickly became flooded with cars, creating traffic gridlock and an acute lack of parking that left the business district struggling practically from Day One.
And traffic got only worse with time. The adage that has become a two-word L.A. survival guide, âTake Fountain!â (attributed to many people including Elizabeth Taylor and Bette Davis), underscores how the grand boulevard is about the worst way to get across Hollywood.
Thatâs what makes the transformation now underway so remarkable. L.A. officials are rethinking of Hollywood Boulevard wholesale. Traffic and parking lanes are giving way to bike routes that will eventually connect Los Feliz to West Hollywood. Bus lanes and wider sidewalks are also coming, with less real estate for cars.
It is L.A.âs most ambitious â and controversial â âroad diet,â as well as a serious effort to make life easier and safer for cyclists.
More than a decade ago, the city Weight-Watchered Spring Street in downtown L.A., complete with special traffic lights for bicyclists. I shook my head when I looked down at the green-painted bike lanes from my desk in the old Los Angeles Times newsroom. Itâs just going to make gridlock worse! Look, there are barely any cyclists using it! What a waste of taxpayer money!
How an L.A. bike lane hater found love
My tune changed during the pandemic when I bought an electric bike. My gym closed, and I vowed not to let COVID-19 push me past the 340-pound mark. The real gift of battery-powered cycling is how it helped me experience a world Iâd missed for so long because of my weight. The beach. CicLAvia. Cruising up river bike trails. Circling the Rose Bowl, Santa Fe Dam and UC Irvine. All places that felt off-limits for so long.
Iâm not sure I burn that many calories, but Iâm racking up personal vindications left and right.
Last month, I went to New York for a few days. Typically, the journey would be filled with anxiety. Subway steps. Crowded sidewalks. A culture of walking. My first trip to the Big Apple was in 2011 after The Times won the Pulitzer for our investigation into corruption in the city of Bell. My mobility crisis was so intense that I rented a Chrysler 300 from a Midtown Hertz dealer each morning, slyly sharing my New York adventures on Instagram as if I was a master straphanger hustling across Manhattan.
This time, I let those electric Citi Bikes do the work. One morning I ventured into Central Park for the very first time. It always felt so intimidating for someone who struggled to walk even moderate distances. But on two wheels, I managed to make two full loops around the park and fell in love.
The next day, I hit the bike trail along the Hudson River, zooming down from Columbia University to Battery Park. After a late lunch with friends, the sun was setting and I faced a predicament. I could not figure out how to get back to Upper Manhattan by subway. Uber would cost $60 and take more than an hour. So I rented another e-bike and made the trek north through the very center of Manhattan, through Greenwich Village into the heart of Midtown, past Penn Station, the Empire State Building, Times Square and around Columbus Circle. In the dark. It was the riskiest act of physical activity Iâd ever attempted, and it left me with a thrilling âwhat doesnât kill you makes you strongerâ high.
A few weeks later, I was in Washington, D.C., during a cold snap. My iPhone said â28 degrees but feels like 5 degrees.â Friends warned Iâd die of pneumonia if I tried to repeat my e-bike adventure. But I had something to prove. This lifelong Californian got some gloves and earmuffs, layered myself four times over and headed to the National Mall for the first time ever.
Maybe âtake Franklinâ isnât the answer
So it should be no surprise that my views of bike lanes have changed a lot. If they ever build that Hollywood Boulevard bikeway, Iâll use it without worrying how much itâs delaying cars or trucks. I actually got a preview in August when CicLAvia closed down the boulevard for a day.
There is something magical about biking down a route youâve driven hundreds of times before. It feels both slower and fast at the same time. You observe the cityscape at an optimal speed, less obsessed with traffic and annoying fellow drivers.
As I passed the Chinese Theatre, I wanted to send Bette Davis (or Elizabeth Taylor) a message: You were wrong about Fountain!
Todayâs top stories
San Diego politicians want to block Trumpâs promised deportations. The sheriff refuses, sparking an immigration battle
- San Diego County supervisors voted to restrict law enforcementâs cooperation with federal immigration officials, but Sheriff Kelly Martinez said she would not comply with the policy.
- Officials are now locked in a standoff in what could be a preview of local immigration politics after Trump retakes office in January.
A comeback for California manufacturing? Trump 2.0 raises hopes â and some worries
- President-elect Donald Trump has vowed that his return to the White House will bring about a resurgence of blue-collar work across the country.
- The Golden State is still home to 1.3 million factory workers â the most in the nation â who make seemingly everything, from computer chips to tortillas.
More than 100 women victimized at a California prison will get a record $116-million settlement
- The women said they were sexually abused by employees at a now-shuttered federal prison in Dublin that was dubbed the ârape club.â
- The developments are the latest twist in a years-long scandal surrounding the facility. Since an FBI investigation was launched and resulted in arrests in 2021, eight prison employees have been charged with sexually abusing inmates.
Hannah Kobayashi spoke out for the first time since returning to the U.S. from Mexico
- Kobayashi, the Hawaii woman whose disappearance at LAX prompted a weeks-long search, said she didnât learn of the media coverage around her family reporting her missing until she returned.
- Kobayashiâs disappearance was the second case in which a woman was reported missing by their families to the LAPD and their statements conflicted with the official police narrative.
What else is going on
- The future of Californiaâs decades-long dream of a high-speed rail is again under threat as a Trump administration redux looms.
- A jury convicted a tech consultant in the fatal stabbing of Cash App founder Bob Lee in San Francisco.
- PG&E was offered a $15-billion federal loan to help upgrade its transmission lines, which have been blamed for causing wildfires.
- Did sheriffâs officials conspire to set up a whistleblowing lieutenant?
- The feds closed Mt. Baldy to hiking until December 2025. A rebellion is brewing.
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Commentary and opinions
- Bird flu is coming for humans. We can either get ready or court disaster, writes Peter Chin-Hong, a professor of medicine and an infectious-disease specialist at UC San Francisco.
- The U.S. economy is doing very well. But donât give too much credit to Biden â or Trump, columnist Jonah Goldberg writes.
- More evidence emerges that RFK Jr. would be a disastrous health secretary, columnist Robin Abcarian writes.
- Letâs stop killing animals in shelters and get more of them adopted out, the Editorial Board writes.
This morningâs must reads
California vowed to shut down kennels where hundreds of captive dogs supply blood for veterinary care. But blood from these âclosed coloniesâ is still crucial for saving lives.
âI donât want to see captive dogs,â said a clinical director of a blood bank in the state. âHowever, itâs a necessary evil at this point.â
Other must reads
- Three dead girls and a man on death row. Did lies put him there?
How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to [email protected].
For your downtime
Going out
- đ´ No holiday plans? This social app will match you with a group of strangers for dinner.
- đˇ An acclaimed New York jazz club will open a venue in Hollywood in March.
- đ¨ A portrait of Queen Mariana, on loan to Pasadenaâs Norton Simon Museum, is loaded with royal intrigue and mystery.
- đ Attention SoCal stargazers: Next year brings a rare peek at Mercury and a total lunar eclipse.
Staying in
- đş Cookie Monster, Big Bird and Elmo need a new âSesame Streetâ address.
- đŚ âSquid Gameâ has plenty more to say about human nature in a second season that drops Dec. 26.
- đ The box-office haul for âDune: Part Twoâ doesnât seem too shabby until you compare it to top sci-fi movies of the past.
- đ§âđł Hereâs a recipe for Kismetâs pickley cheesy greens.
- âď¸ Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games.
A question for you: Do you have a tradition of making tamales with family and friends? Or where do you get your tamales?
Share your tamale tips, memories or recommendations with us (along with your name) at [email protected]. Your stories could be included in an upcoming edition of the newsletter.
And finally ... your great photo of the day
Todayâs great photo is from Mary Gill of Fort Bragg: the natural beauty of the Lost Coast in Northern California.
Mary writes: âItâs special because we are so fortunate to still have wild lands and coastal areas that can only be accessed by jeep roads and rigorous hiking trails, lands that were so rugged the developers gave up.â
Show us your favorite place in California! Send us photos you have taken of spots in California that are special â natural or human-made â and tell us why theyâre important to you.
Have a great day, from the Essential California team
Ryan Fonseca, reporter
Defne Karabatur, fellow
Andrew Campa, Sunday reporter
Hunter Clauss, multiplatform editor
Christian Orozco, assistant editor
Stephanie Chavez, deputy metro editor
Karim Doumar, head of newsletters
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