While Washington continues to focus on gun control this week, Gangster Squad, the Warner Bros. crime film over the weekend attracted flocks of (mostly young) moviegoers glued to their seats as the screen showed explosions, machine guns, smashed cars and general violence --- as a screenwriter viewed things in Los Angeles in the late 1940s, notes Grumpy Editor.
Despite the screen notice that the film was “inspired by a true story,” that’s not the way it was in the City of the Angels at that time.
The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce must be grumbling over the extraordinary amount of mayhem depicted in the story, fictionalized by Will Beal’s screenplay from the book by Paul Lieberman.
The cast includes Josh Brolin, Ryan Gosling, Nick Nolte, Emma Stone and Sean Penn in a script that focuses on six Los Angeles Police Department officers recruited to be as ruthless as mobster Mickey Cohen (played by Penn).
A veteran newsman, who worked in the LAPD press room in City Hall, recalls no such continuous violent action at that time.
Police reporters from the Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Mirror, Herald-Express, Los Angeles Examiner and Los Angeles Daily News were busy feeding tips to city desks regarding traffic accidents, robberies, burglaries and such --- when they weren’t playing cards. Certainly a machine gun-riddled LAPD patrol car and shootouts around the city, as seen in the film, would have made front pages.
Those were the days when newspaper competition was keen, with up to six deadlines a day.
Cohen, who mingled with Hollywood stars, died peacefully in his Los Angeles home on July 29, 1976.
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Gun control reports continue with front page coverage this week boosted by Vice President Joe Biden’s recommendations to President Barack Obama tomorrow.
Focus will be on background checks of gun buyers, restrictions on high-capacity clips and other measures.
A popular phrase with news anchors last week on NBC, ABC and CBS television networks was “gun violence.”
What none covered, however, was what to do about criminals possessing illegal weapons and not obeying laws.
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In case you missed these…
For dramatic effect? CNN’s Wolf Blitzer broadcast an interview in segments last week with Egyptian president Mohamed Morsi. Blitzer asked questions in English. Morsi sidestepped English, answering via a translator despite being a former student at the University of Southern California and later teaching, as an assistant professor, at Cal State Northridge from 1982 to 1985…Senate reporters coverup. Few TV viewers or newspaper readers are aware that the U.S. Senate has been in a two-week recess, convening next Monday for inaugural ceremonies…Farewell to green? The New York Times is closing its environmental desk.
A missing element with coverage of the Journal News, Westchester, N.Y., that published an interactive map showing names and addresses of licensed pistol permit holders in its area: it’s one of 90 daily Gannett Co. newspapers…Time magazine goes to 48 issues this year, a reduction of three, as ad page count is off by almost 50 percent in five years…The Los Angeles Times, with another periodic piece to shake up readers, on Wednesday detailed a statewide California earthquake may be possible after all… Forbes magazine’s Jan. 21 issue runs an out-of-focus, blurry photo --- a trend with some publications these days --- that spans a full page and extends almost half way into an adjoining page to illustrate a “Bad Medicine” article dealing with patient satisfaction surveys…Fox News Channel for the 11th consecutive year dominates cable news with the top 11 programs in total viewers, finds Nielsen Media Research.
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