ANDREW GLAZER -- Reporter’s Notebook
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Mounted riot police loaded with tear gas canisters, batons and the
fear of appearing too lax or too aggressive, can be ingredients for a
great story.
Add a few thousand protesters distrustful of police and society and
the government’s environmentally devastating, human rights-repressing
corporate structure, and catalyze that with a blazing orange sun and
you’ve got the potential for mayhem.
A powerful front-pager.
I’m talking extra bold headlines and multiple photos of gas masks,
sweating faces twisted and contorted with rage and fear and human
stampedes.
The opportunities for reporters to cover what could have become a real
hellish disaster drew thousands -- including myself -- from the
air-conditioned hotel halls filled with Democrats clinking glasses and
exchanging two-cheek kisses, to the steamy streets teeming with police
and sign-carrying demonstrators.
Together we waited Sunday on the Santa Monica Pier, where a group of
roughly 30 activists calling themselves “Billionaires for Bush (or
Gore),” picketed the entrance to a fancy fund-raiser for the Democratic
Party and taunted stone-faced riot police.
The officers, riding sidestepping horses, cleared a gully in the crowd
for bewildered Democrats being shuttled to the party in a white van.
“If your horses kick my daughters, I’ll sue you!” shouted a woman,
white spittle forming in the corner of her mouth as she shoved two
terrified girls, both no older than 10 years old, precariously close to
the horses.
A half-dozen photographers and camera crews swarmed around her,
illuminating the pier with flashes of bright light.
On Monday, thousands of demonstrators gathered at Pershing Square and
danced to the beats of a drum circle, exchanging fliers.
At about 5 p.m., more than 10,000 people marched peacefully to Staples
Center, where two trucks from the Los Angeles City Fire Department
sprayed the crowd with fire hoses to cool the demonstrators, not disperse
them.
After the march, I checked into a computer terminal at a Kinko’s
Copies on Wilshire Boulevard.
Two other reporters sat on each side of me, turning the normally quiet
room into a makeshift press box. They typed while shouting to their
editors on their cellular phones.
“Change that first paragraph I wrote yesterday,” said one, sounding
slightly disappointed and defensive. “There was nothing major to report.
Hardly any arrests. Everything went really smooth.
“The kids seemed to have fun.”
* ANDREW GLAZER covers the city of Costa Mesa for the Daily Pilot.
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