Good morning, and welcome to the
Essential California newsletter. It’s
Thursday, May 16, and I’m writing from Los Angeles.
Like many Angelenos, I spend a lot of time in harried transit. I take a subway and then a bus to our offices in El Segundo every morning. It’s an hour or so spent in maximum information overload: I eavesdrop on strangers, rabidly refresh Twitter and triage emails, read things and stare out the window. I gulp down far too much and truly take in far too little.
I don’t stop until I get to the office elevator,
where all three walls are printed with the text of a nearly decade-old story by
Nita Lelyveld. It is a perfect (and perfectly placed)
story about an elevator operator named Ruben Pardo. It’s the kind of story that makes you suddenly feel as if you know the person she’s writing about, and also know a little more about what it means to be a person in general. I can’t help but give it my full attention, even in a sometimes crowded elevator.
After several years as an editor, Nita
returns to writing her
City Beat column today. The column
chronicles intimate moments around thecity in a close-up, personal way. Ahead of the relaunch, I talked to Nita about City Beat, the challenges of writing about L.A. and how she plans to tackle big issues through the stories of everyday Angelenos.
No comments:
Post a Comment