2012 Solar Eclipse

LA Times reports —What is the best time to watch this Sunday’s solar eclipse? Below is a list of times to view the evening astronomical show from a handful of places in California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah and New Mexico.

The places with the best view will see a “ring of fire” eclipse, or an “annular” eclipse, in which the moon will appear to cross into the dead center of the sun, blocking almost all the light except for the sun’s outer fringes, creating a burning ring.

The best spots for viewing include the far northern edge of California, Arizona, southern Utah and New Mexico.

Closer to Southern California, viewers will see a partial, crescent-shaped eclipse, with the moon covering about 85% of the sun’s diameter — an impressive bite. Check out this NASA Google map to find locations wherever you live.

Location Start Partial Eclipse Start Annular Eclipse Max Eclipse End Annular Eclipse End Partial Eclipse % of sun diameter covered
Crescent City 5:07 pm 6:23 pm 6:26 pm 6:28 pm 7:35 pm 97%
Albuquerque, N.M. 6:29 7:33 7:35 7:38 8:36 97%
Redding 5:11 6:26 6:28 6:30 7:36 96%
Zion National Park 6:23 7:31 7:34 7:36 8:37 96%
Lake Tahoe 5:15 6:29 6:31 6:32 7:37 95%
Chico 5:13 6:28 6:30 6:31 7:37 95%
Eureka 5:09 6:25 6:27 6:29 7:36 95%
Grand Canyon 5:25 6:33 6:35 6:37 7:38 94%
Yosemite Village 5:18 6:33 7:39 92%
Sacramento 5:15 6:31 7:38 92%
Las Vegas 5:23 6:35 7:39 92%
San Francisco 5:15 6:32 7:39 90%
Monterey 5:18 6:34 7:41 88%
Palm Springs 5:26 6:38 7:42 86%
Lancaster 5:24 6:37 7:42 86%
Downtown L.A. 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Malibu 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Griffith Observatory 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Burbank 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Woodland Hills 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Chatsworth 5:24 6:37 7:42 85%
Santa Monica 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Alhambra 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Arcadia 5:24 6:38 7:42 85%
Rowland Heights 5:25 6:38 7:42 85%
Ontario 5:25 6:38 7:42 85%
Anaheim 5:25 6:38 7:42 85%
Oxnard 5:25 6:38 7:42 85%
Long Beach 5:25 6:38 7:42 84%
Redondo Beach 5:25 6:38 7:42 84%
Palos Verdes 5:25 6:38 7:42 84%
Huntington Beach 5:25 6:38 7:42 84%
San Diego 5:27 6:39 7:43 83%
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From the “Taylor Allderdice” mixtape coming soon…

Los Angeles City Approved An Ordinance To Limit Commercial Selling on Venice Beach’s Famed Ocean Front Walk

WOW! I am not sure how many of you have been to Venice Beach, but there are tons of people selling everything from incense to your name on a grain of rice. Most of them are artists/performers/transients trying to get by in life. Some are just acts like the infamous, TIN MAN “Silver Man”, who puts on shows for those walking the boardwalk (video below). However, most of these items are now banned from being sold on the boardwalk. :(

LA Times reports — The Los Angeles City Council on Tuesday unanimously approved an ordinance to limit commercial selling on Venice Beach’s famed Ocean Front Walk. The ordinance is the latest in a series of efforts to tame the popular but unruly attraction, which draws about 16 million visitors annually but has lately seen more than the usual number of transients and violent crimes.

The city’s earlier attempt to impose a lottery and permitting system for the western side of the boardwalk was blocked in October 2010 by a federal court on the grounds that it violated the 1st Amendment. Since then, residents and merchants say, a “survival of the fittest” mentality has prevailed, with some vendors harassing and assaulting others to secure locations among 205 selling slots.

“People have been beaten over spaces,” said Councilman Bill Rosendahl, who represents the area. Young transients have descended on the area to earn money by saving spaces for vendors. Meanwhile, some merchants on the boardwalk’s eastern side, who pay taxes and rent, said they can’t compete with vendors selling similar merchandise in the unregulated market.

Under the ordinance, which amends Los Angeles Municipal Code 42.15, performers and artists will be allowed to sell paintings, photos or sculptures as well as audio or video of their work. Free-speech advocates will be allowed to offer bumper stickers, leaflets, patches, buttons and books. Henna painting will also be allowed.

But merchandise with more than “nominal utility” beyond protected speech would be prohibited. Banned items would include clothing, sunglasses, incense, perfume, lotions, candy, toys, housewares, auto parts, crystals and jewelry.

“This is a public safety issue,” said Los Angeles Police Capt. Jon F. Peters, commanding officer for the Pacific area. Since October 2010, he said, the area has experienced “a general sense of lawlessness,” with aggravated assaults up by 16%.

A cast of colorful characters, many of them longtime boardwalk denizens, testified for and against the measure in council chambers. A few speakers vowed to take the city to court, but Assistant City Atty. Valerie Flores said the ordinance incorporates definitions and standards that have held up against challenges.

M Hat “$100.00 HUNDRED DOLLARS” Official Music Video

Shout out to my G aka my brother from another M-Hat…special shout out today, NOVEMBER 11, 2011 it’s M-Hat’s GDAY!!! So if you see him in the streets give him some GDAY LOVE.

Gz UP All Tha Time

It’s Time For Raise California’s Gas Tax, Last Boost Was 21 Years Ago!

I couldn’t agree more our infrastructure is falling apart, imagine if we hit 50 million people; we are already at 40 million & our infrastructure was built to support 25 million people. It has been 21 years, now if the price of gas continues to rise than I foresee this being  a problem but if not I am all for it. Something has to give, and if we CALIFORNIANS need to give back & help out by a boost in gas tax than so be it!!!

LA Times reports — California urgently needs more money to rebuild its public facilities. Increasing the gas tax, last boosted 21 years ago, would let the state pay for much-needed transportation projects without costly borrowing.

There are three main reasons why the state has not been rapidly rebuilding California’s public facilities, despite an urgent need. Two of them I’ve written about recently: gubernatorial ambivalence and bureaucratic inertia.

But the third is a more long-term problem. The state simply does not have enough money to build all that it needs. A massive public works program is essential to stimulate the stagnant economy, create tens of thousands of jobs and — over the long haul — restore California to greatness after decades of sweeping its decaying infrastructure under the political rug.

There have been fits and starts. In 1990, then-Gov. George Deukmejian led a campaign for voter approval of a gas tax increase to finance a major highway construction program. But the Loma Prieta earthquake devoured much of that new money.

In 2006, then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger won voter approval of an unprecedented $43-billion public works program for transportation, housing, education, flood control and water facilities. But five years later, only roughly half the bonds have been sold. And of that money, just 70% has been spent. Too many projects aren’t shovel-ready.

The yellow light for public works was first flashed by Gov. Jerry Brown when he was governor the first time in the 1970s. Unlike his father, Gov. Pat Brown — the legendary builder — Jerry Brown preached an “era of limits” and pulled back on capital outlay. He later admitted it was a mistake.

“I surely didn’t expect California to grow like it did,” Brown told me last year as he was starting to run for governor again. “We had tremendous growth. And when you have growth, you’ve got to build: energy, water, roads, transit, schools, jails.”

But the Democratic candidate added a caveat: “We need a design change. We can’t just keep paving over. We’ve paved over the San Fernando Valley. We’ve got to use the land better. We’ve got to use our energy better — the natural resources, the wind, the sun, geothermal.”

Gov. Jerry Brown II has been promoting renewable energy, but hasn’t gotten around to the “design change” on other public works. He has been focused on truly the state’s No. 1 priority: balancing its books.

In the meantime, as I’ve written, billions of sold but unused infrastructure bonds have been piling up in the bureaucracy. As of last month, the total came to $9.1 billion. Brown protested that he actually had inherited a $13.4-billion stash of idle money and is bent on whittling it to $3 billion by next July. Since then, however, the state has sold another $1.8 billion in infrastructure bonds. And there’s an additional $35 billion in voter-authorized bonds available for selling.

Hoarding borrowed billions that you’re making loan payments on but not spending makes no sense. But borrowing the remaining $35 billion and asking voters to approve still more bonds in future elections — as is a virtual certainty — makes little sense either until the state figures out a better way to pay them off.

Generally, every borrowed dollar costs another dollar in interest; $1 billion costs $2 billion. That’s $1 billion in taxpayers’ money lining the pockets of investors instead of paying for operating schools, clinics, parks or prisons. The state budget already is pinched. The General Fund, which finances 80% of infrastructure bonds, has been slashed by 17% in the last three years.

“If you want to pay for capital outlay, you can’t pay for schools, colleges, parks or something else,” notes Democratic state Treasurer Bill Lockyer. California’s infrastructure was designed for 25 million people, but we’re fast approaching a population of 40 million.

“We’ve got a lot of needs, but we’re never going to be able to finance them with the General Fund,” Lockyer says. “It’s too big a price tag.”

“And we’re going to have to ration,” he continues. “Whatever the bond flavor of the year may be — whatever the politics — there needs to be more discipline figuring out how to divide up the pot of money.”

Good luck with that one. The likes of a bullet train fantasy always seems to attract starry-eyed voters and politicians, governors included. Lockyer long has advocated shifting more bond financing out of the General Fund and into kitties paid for by facility users. The nonpartisan legislative analyst has promoted the same idea. An August report on infrastructure spending suggested more toll roads and charging fees based on miles driven.

Ideally, the state would take a big step toward pay-as-you-go financing for highway construction and borrow less. To do that, it would need to again raise the gas tax, which hasn’t been hiked in 21 years. “It makes no sense to borrow if you can have a cash flow,” says veteran highway construction lobbyist Dave Ackerman, once an official in the Deukmejian administration. “A cash flow comes from increasing taxes. Republicans look at that and say, ‘We can’t go for any more taxes.’ Yet this borrowing is killing us.”

The 1990 gas tax boost long ago lost its punch because of inflation and more efficient engines. Motorists are buying less gas to travel the same distance. But they’re causing the same wear and tear on roads. That’s why there’s a mini-movement toward charging motorists a fee per mile driven.

“We’re using the same concrete that was poured in Pat Brown’s day, and it’s starting to fall apart,” Ackerman says. “His infrastructure is the underpinning that made our state strong. “There are rusty hinges on the Golden State.” The governor needs to get out his grease gun.

X- FACTOR: Chris Rene “Young Homie”

I am sitting here watching X FACTOR & this kid just rocked it…he is from Santa Cruz, California 28 years of age & has been sober for the past 70 days….he has a SON who is 2 & 1/2 years old & has decided to turn his life around. I really hope that he takes this WIN & that this is what makes his whole LIFE what he always dreamed of…that all the years of using drugs will be a distant thought, a dead memory. I wish you the BEST love!!! GOD BLESS you and your SON!!!

Garfield Adams “For My City” FT Josh Koslow

“For My City” is the lead single from my debut album release titled “1st Things First” which drops 11.11.11! Visit http://garfieldadams.bandcamp.com/ to download the song for free and for other Garfield Adams releases.

This video is dedicated to all cyclists, musicians and lovers of good music who take pride in their respective cities. When the song was conceptualized, my intention was to capture that feeling that you get when you’re riding through the city with nothing but your tunes, your bike and open road. The end result is something I believe is so much more universal than just our Los Angeles bike scene and all the amazing people in it and I hope this includes YOU…ENJOY!

Directed by Joris Debeij | http://www.jorisdebeij.com

BIGUPS: Treats & Beats, Black Kids On Bikes, Rick & Ray Creative Management and YOU, the people of Pasadena, Los Angeles, WORLDWIDE!

BIGUPS and RESPECTS to Derrick Ah Sam and Nathan Chandra for manning the whip without wrecking or driving Joris insane!

http://www.garfieldadams.com
http://www.garfieldadams.tumblr.com
http://www.twitter.com/garfield_adams

Booking and info: Rick & Ray Creative Management (info@rickandray.com)

Support good music…support your local artists!  Peace and continued Blessings!

ON A PERSONAL NOTE to GARFIELD ADAMS:
yo SON this is sick, for those that don’t know you…wont’ get why this is so YOU, but I do some I’m gonna RUN because I’m HUNGRY…ay, YOU TRYNA EAT?!?!
You already know T3Z for LIFE!!!

BofA To Cut At Least 40,000 Jobs

LA Times reports — Bank of America Corp. is preparing to slash 40,000 or more jobs nationwide, a dramatic retrenchment that reflects the deepening woes of the country’s largest bank and the magnitude of the U.S. economic slowdown. The layoffs will come mainly from the BofA’s sprawling consumer-banking operations, which will take a heavy toll on branches, loan centers and other offices throughout California.

Bank of America has 45,000 employees in the state, about 1 in 6 of its nearly 300,000-person workforce, and is expected to roll out the job cuts over the next several years. The company, which for years was based in San Francisco and maintains its huge mortgage unit in Calabasas, also is in the process of closing 10% of its branches nationwide. California has the highest concentration of BofA branches in the U.S. with 956 throughout the state, though it has been losing ground in recent years to rivals like Wells Fargo & Co. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The layoffs are another blow to California, with its battered economy and nearly 12% unemployment rate. From tellers to middle managers, laid-off Bank of America employees are likely to have a tough time finding new jobs.

“We don’t need to lose any jobs in this environment, whether in financial services or anywhere else,” said Esmael Adibi, a Chapman University economist.

The details of the cutbacks were not officially announced, but the information was disclosed by three Bank of America executives who have been briefed on the plan but were not authorized to speak publicly. Brian Moynihan, Bank of America’s beleaguered chief executive, is expected to unveil details at an investor conference Monday in New York.

Investors sent shares of the BofA down 3.1% to $6.98 on Friday on a day banks led the overall market sharply lower on more worries about global economies falling into a recession. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 303.68, or 2.7%, to 10,992.13

Executives met at the bank’s Charlotte, N.C., headquarters Thursday and Friday to finalize the plan, which has been under discussion for months. Moynihan is grappling with how to wring more profit from the bank’s core customer base, which includes about 58 million consumer and small-business accounts.

At least one analyst said the cutbacks could weigh heavily on BofA’s millions of Southern California customers, who would have to deal with fewer branches and longer lines for tellers.

“You’re definitely going to see decreased service levels for consumers,” said Christopher Whalen, a bank analyst at Institutional Risk Analytics. “They’re talking about either closing branches or reducing the head count in the branches.”

Moynihan hopes to fashion a smaller but more focused company that can withstand the fallout from its disastrous 2008 takeover of mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp. in Calabasas. The home-lending unit has run up $30 billion in losses, and faces billions more in potential liability from a barrage of mortgage-related lawsuits.

Federal regulators and private investors allege that Countrywide misled them about the quality of loans and bonds tied to high-risk mortgages bought during the housing boom. Earlier this month, federal regulators sued Bank of America and 16 rivals, contending that the banks sold loans to housing goliaths Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac under false pretenses.

Bank of America’s retrenchment is also being driven by the slack U.S. economy and darkening outlook for the banking industry. Intensifying worries about its prospects have cut Bank of America’s stock price by more than half since mid-January, a far larger hit than its peers have suffered.

“The financial-services industry as a whole is going to shrink,” said Nancy Bush, a banking analyst and contributing editor at research firm SNL Financial. “We don’t need as many loans, as many credit cards, as many mortgages as we did in the past two decades.”

The flailing economy has struck particularly hard at Bank of America, which critics say has been beset by poor management and a flawed growth strategy of rapid-fire acquisitions of other companies. To overcome its woes, BofA executives have worked for much of the past year on the ambitious restructuring known as Project New BAC, a reference to the ticker symbol for the company’s stock.

Moynihan has made a number of bold steps in recent weeks, including signing on billionaire Warren Buffett as a major shareholder. This week he ousted two senior executives, including Sallie Krawcheck, one of the highest-ranking women on Wall Street.

The first phase of New BAC is designed to streamline the consumer businesses, including home loans, credit cards and wealth management. It also will make cuts in the corporate support staff, such as legal, marketing, human relations and finance employees.

The bank previously had announced another 6,000 job cuts this year and has closed, sold or put on the auction block former Countrywide divisions that made loans through independent brokers, bought loans from smaller lenders and sold specialty insurance.

Two Bills Dubbed ‘Caylee’s Law’ Proposed in California

R.I.P Angel Face

LA Times reports — The death in Florida of 2-year-old Caylee Anthony, who was not reported missing for 31 days, has spawned legislative proposals all over the country, including two measures in California.

The child’s death was ruled a homicide, but her mother was acquitted of a murder charge this month.

Assemblywoman Holly Mitchell (D-Culver City) has introduced AB 1432, which she dubbed “Caylee’s Law.” The measure would make it a felony in California to fail to report the death or disappearance of a child, age 14 or younger, to law enforcement authorities within 24 hours.

“Law enforcement has known for years that the first 48 hours of a person’s disappearance are critical to the chances of finding that child alive and successfully prosecuting any related criminal behavior,” Mitchell said.

Meanwhile, three other Assembly members announced Friday that they plan to introduce their own “Caylee’s Law.”

The proposal by Isadore Hall III (D-Compton), Paul Cook (R–Yucaipa) and Cathleen Galgiani (D-Tracy) would make it a felony for a parent or guardian to fail to report the death of a child to authorities within two hours. It also would create a felony for failing to report a missing child under the age of 12 within 48 hours of the child’s disappearance.

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Theme: Esquire by Matthew Buchanan.

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