February 2004
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There are two things you should know about New York Times reporter Charlie LeDuff, who is covering all things California from the Los Angeles bureau in his latest high-profile writing gig. First, he is really good, a fearless reporter and go-for-the-gut storyteller who in nine years, briefly under executive editor Howell Raines and now in the post-Raines, post-Jayson Blair era, has shot through a galaxy of assignments that most reporters don't experience in a lifetime. In a Times career spanning more than 400 articles, he's navigated the streets of New York for five days as a blind person, detailed the emotional fallout of a Brooklyn fire station in the ash of September 11, embedded himself with Marines in Iraq, and worked for almost a month in a tacitly segregated pork slaughterhouse in North Carolina, a story in the Times series "How Race Is Lived in America," which won a Pulitzer Prize.| Links to original articles and corrections: Rolling Nowhere (1984) and LeDuff's article (1995) Los Angeles River (1999) and LeDuff's article (2003) New York Times correction (2003) East Bay Monthly erratum (1995) |
5/8/08—Extra Extra! Scott Hocker delivers another batch of authentic Mexican dishes. Round 2: barbacoa de borrego.
5/1/08—Extra! Scott Hocker delivers another batch of authentic Mexican dishes. Round 1: tacos de chicharrón.
4/29/08—Supe Ammiano's crew is Dining Out for Life and tipping big. But one pal balks at the four percent surcharge. Scott Hocker asks: Irony, party of six?
4/25/08—Philanthropists Jim and Patsy Ludwig’s home is a showcase for their passions: tribal and modern art, the ballet, and the San Francisco Zoo.