Saturday, April 16, 2022

The Inside Story (at 47)

On Saturday, my co-author Howard Kohn and I returned to the site of the former Rolling Stone office at 625 Third Street in Soma where we wrote our three-part series about the Patty Heart kidnapping 47 years ago.

And here we are in 1975 being interviewed by NBC about part one of the series, called “The Inside Story.” 

Our former colleague, Ben Fong-Torres, wrote a song about the Hearst saga and performed it at a nightclub when we were in attendance. 

In Ben’s words:
"I wrote … songs for amusement…at Rolling Stone magazine in the Seventies…at least two (of my) songs were performed. One, to the tune of Bob Dylan's Hurricane (The Ballad of Reuben Carter), celebrated the magazine's big scoop in 1975 on the Patricia Hearst/SLA kidnap and aftermath. I vaguely recall doing the song, with real musicians behind me, on a couple of occasions, including a nightclub, the Boarding House:

Doorbell rang out in the Berkeley night
Into the apartment house they burst
Knocked down Steven Weed with hardly a fight
And made their getaway with Patty Hearst!

Here comes the story of the Rolling Stone
Of David Weir and of Howard Kohn
They found the trail of Patty Hearst
And they wrote about it first."

Although Howard and I have remained close friends and colleagues to this day, and worked on countless projects together over the years, especially in Hollywood, we never actually co-authored any other major stories together after the Hearst trilogy.

And our recent visit to the old office building was one of the first times we have been back there together since the magazine left San Francisco for New York in 1977.

The same building now serves as the local headquarters for Ubisoft, the French video game company.

Today’s News (47):

  1. Seven Killed in Russian Missile Strikes on Ukraine’s Lviv as Russia Steps Up Attacks (WSJ)

  2. Missiles hit Lviv in Ukraine's west as Russia bombards cities (BBC)

  3. Ukraine Marine commander tells Pope that Mariupol is 'what hell on earth looks like' (Fox)

  4. Russia batters eastern Ukraine, but forces in Mariupol refuse to surrender (NPR)

  5. In the besieged and broken city of Mariupol, Ukrainians vow a ‘fight to the end.’ (NYT)

  6. US State Department: Russia's recent attacks in Ukraine show a "campaign of terror" (CNN)

  7. In Ukraine’s South, Russian Occupiers Tighten the Screws (WSJ)

  8. Russia bombards cities across Ukraine as attacks intensify (BBC)

  9. Lethal darts were fired into a Ukrainian neighborhood by the thousands (WP)

  10. Zelenskiy: Ukraine could become EU candidate within weeks (Reuters)

  11. ‘They Are Gone, Vanished’: Missing Persons Haunt Ukrainian Village (NYT)

  12. What Russians think of the war in Ukraine, according to an independent pollster (NPR)

  13. In clash with Russia, U.S. and Europe revive Cold War ‘containment’ policy (WP)

  14. Atrocities in Ukraine War Have Deep Roots in Russian Military (NYT)

  15. After Russian pullback, Ukraine's northern Sumy region prepares for new assault (Reuters)

  16. Russian Orthodox leader backs Ukraine war, divides faith (WP)

  17. I Didn’t Think My Mother Would Escape Putin Twice (NYT)

  18. US Treasury insists Russia sanctions will not fragment the global economy (Financial Times)

  19. Western exodus could cost 200,000 jobs in Moscow, says mayor (CNN)

  20. Russia expresses disappointment over progress of ceasefire talks (NHK)

  21. The World’s Broken Promise of Asylum (NYT)

  22. The nuclear missile next door (WP)

  23. Patriots vs globalists replaces the left-right divide (Financial Times)

  24. The End of Presidential Debates (Atlantic)

  25. Florida judge voids US mask mandate for planes, other travel (AP)

  26. Childhood vaccinations are lagging all around amid Covid (Politico)

  27. COVID-19 lockdown tensions are exposing divisions among Shanghai residents as the city tries to return to normal life. In some cases, people are turning on their neighbors and demanding the immediate expulsion of positive cases from their compounds. Some people were refused entry into their homes after being released from quarantine, and ordered to stay in hotels. (Reuters)

  28. China tries to cover lockdown strains on Shanghai’s front-line workers (WP)

  29. Inside the S.F. startup trying to detect airborne coronavirus in offices (SFC)

  30. BA.2 cases on the rise amid concerns about mental health (Politico)

  31. Gaza militants fire rocket into Israel as tensions soar (AP)

  32. Israel’s Government Faces Possible Collapse (WSJ)

  33. Egypt female TikTok star jailed for three years for human trafficking (BBC)

  34. 4 major shootings in the U.S. over Easter weekend (NBC)

  35. Mass shooting wave rattles communities large and small in US (AP)

  36. Crime is rising on public transportation across the country. (WP)

  37. Police body camera footage shows a close-up view of Patrick Lyoya's pitched struggle with a cop in Michigan, but the video goes dark 42 seconds before the officer shoots the Black man in the head. Many other questions linger in the fatal shooting, which has stirred anti-police rage in Grand Rapids. [AP]

  38. Alex Jones' Infowars files for bankruptcy in wake of defamation suits over his assertions that the Sandy Hook massacre was a hoax (CBS)

  39. Donald Trump's effort to overthrow democracy and the resulting criminal investigations encircling him have done nothing to dim the ardor of Republicans falling all over themselves to win his endorsement. Candidates for Congress, governor and even state offices are pouring hundreds of thousands of dollars into Trump's cash registers as they seek his endorsement — notwithstanding his own defeat and failed attempt to remain in power. [HuffPost]

  40. Cutting-Edge Crypto Coins Tout Stability. Critics Call Them Dangerous. (WSJ)

  41. Florida rejects 41% of new math textbooks, citing critical race theory among its reasons (CNN)

  42. Text messages from GOP Sen. Mike Lee and Rep. Chip Roy to former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows showed they plotted with other high-ranking Republicans to overturn Trump's 2020 election defeat, right up until the Capitol riot. That's when they started fretting that things could "backfire badly," as Lee wrote. [HuffPost]

  43. Abortion training under threat for med students, residents (AP)

  44. FAS: The ‘Forever Chemicals’ You Couldn’t Escape if You Tried (NYT)

  45. One fan’s search for seeds of greatness in Bob Dylan’s hometown (WP)

  46. MLB Power Rankings: The Giants and Dodgers look like the two best teams in baseball (again) (CBS)

  47. While spiders are indeed scary creatures, any links between them and critical race theory remain tenuous at best. (The Onion)
















 David Weir and Howard Kohn return to the Rolling Stone office at 625 Third Street where we wrote the Patty Heart stories 47 years ago...



The two reporters 47 years ago being interviewed by NBC for "The Today Show."

Our former colleague, Ben Fong-Torres, wrote a song about that story and performed it at least once in a nightclub when we were in attendance. 

Here is his memory:

"I wrote the songs for amusement; this was decades before radio shows concocted and aired parody songs every morning. But at Rolling Stone magazine in the Seventies, I continued my little hobby, and at least two songs were performed. One, to the tune of Bob Dylan's Hurricane (The Ballad of Reuben Carter), celebrated the magazine's big scoop in 1975 on the Patricia Hearst/SLA kidnap and aftermath. I vaguely recall doing the song, with real musicians behind me, on a couple of occasions, including a nightclub, the Boarding House:

Doorbell rang out in the Berkeley night
Into the apartment house they burst
Knocked down Steven Weed with hardly a fight
And made their getaway with Patty Hearst!

Here comes the story of the Rolling Stone
Of David Weir and of Howard Kohn
They found the trail of Patty Hearst
And they wrote about it first."

***

These many years later, Howard and I recognize that it was one of the biggest moments in both of our careers. Although we have remained close friends and colleagues, we never actually co-authored any other stories after the three Hearst articles 47 years ago.

Rainy Nights

Rainy Nights

You don't need a weatherman...

Walking through the city’s financial district in a rainstorm Thursday night on the way to dinner with old friends in at a family-owned Italian restaurant in North Beach, I knew in advance what topics we would probably be discussing.

As Baby Boomers, all six of us veterans of the social and political movements that our generation is known for, we’re naturally concerned about the state of the world right now.

With the war in Ukraine bringing us ever closer to the unthinkable — the use of nuclear weapons — plus impending global disaster due to climate change, the prospect of unending pandemics, the rise of authoritarianism all over the world and a slew of other severe local problems, including the senseless recall effort against a progressive young DA, any thinking person can be forgiven for feeling things are out of balance.

It also happened that this was a rare weekend when three major religious holidays — Passover, Easter and Ramadan — all converged, and though none of us is religious, spiritual angels and demons may be in the air.

Indeed, the six of us did end up talking about the weighty issues of the world. But we also talked about the food, which was delicious, our families, sports, movies, music, books and the weather. While it’s true that the existential threats are severe, such threats have come and gone throughout human history.

And as it turns out, the little things, the personal matters, come and go as well. Maybe that is worth remembering at times like this.

Plus it’s things like that that bring us comfort. And that’s what friends are for.

Today’s News (54):

  1. Keeping a Diary at the End of the World — The urge to document our lives during crisis is widely shared among writers. (Atlantic)

  2. Ukrainian governor says Mariupol ‘has been wiped off the face of the earth’(WP)

  3. Ukraine says fighting rages around Mariupol steel plant, port (Reuters)

  4. Kyiv Rocked by Explosions as Russia Steps Up Attacks (WSJ)

  5. Police: More than 900 civilian bodies found in Kyiv region (AP)

  6. Russia warns U.S. to stop arming Ukraine (WP)

  7. Powerful explosions were heard in Kyiv and fighting raged in the east after Ukraine claimed responsibility for sinking the Russian navy’s Black Sea flagshipin what would be one of the heaviest blows of the war. Ukraine said it sank the Soviet-era Moskva warship with a Neptune anti-ship missile. Russia said it evacuated more than 500 crew members, and did not acknowledge the attack. (Reuters)

  8. Hiding in Plain Sight, a Soviet-Era Air Defense System Arrives in Ukraine(NYT)

  9. Ukraine’s port of Mariupol holding out against all odds (AP)

  10. Russia would deploy nuclear weapons and hypersonic missiles in the Baltic region if Sweden and Finland join NATO, said Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia’s Security Council and an ally of President Vladimir Putin. (Reuters)

  11. Zelensky weighs in on whether Putin could use nuclear weapons (CNN)

  12. U.S. to train Ukrainian troops (WP)

  13. War Crimes Watch: The woman who would make Putin pay (AP)

  14. War Brings New Iron Curtain Down on Russia’s Storied Ballet Stages (NYT)

  15. US assesses two Ukrainian missiles struck Russian warship (CNN)

  16. How big a loss to Russia is the sinking of the Moskva missile cruiser? (Reuters)

  17. With war next door, Moldova faces a dilemma as Eastern Europe's most vulnerable state (NPR)

  18. Tensions Over the Ukraine War Deepen the Chill Near the North Pole (NYT)

  19. China's Xi Jinping is 'a silent partner' in Putin's 'aggression' in Ukraine, CIA Director Burns warns (Fox)

  20. Russia Hits Setbacks, as Flagship Sinks and E.U. Mulls Oil Ban (NYT)

  21. Ukrainians celebrate Russian setbacks with stamps, memes and an NFT (WP)

  22. What the ruthless new commander of Russia's military in Ukraine signals for the war (NPR)

  23. Shanghai residents clash with police over homes being used to isolate Covid patients (NBC)

  24. Anger Over Covid Lockdowns Mounts in Shanghai (WSJ)

  25. Shanghai lockdown: How angry netizens test China's 'Great Firewall' (BBC)

  26. China’s economy pays a price as lockdowns restrict nearly a third of its population. (NYT)

  27. Apple, Dell and Lenovo products may face shipment delays if China’s COVID-19 lockdowns persist, as curbs force assemblers to shut down. China’s efforts to stop the spread of the virus have jammed highways and ports, stranded workers and left countless factories awaiting government approval to reopen. They also have brought on a wave of arrests as people defy the curbs. (Reuters)

  28. Death of Shanghai health official sparks rumors of suicide (NHK)

  29. It’s not over: COVID-19 cases are on the rise again in US (AP)

  30. China cuts banks’ reserve rules in effort to combat economic impact of Covid (Financial Times)

  31. FDA authorizes breath test to detect COVID-19 (CBS)

  32. Pfizer to soon pursue Covid boosters for kids (Politico)

  33. Twitter adopts ‘poison pill’ defense in Musk takeover bid (AP)

  34. Musk Contends Censorship, Not Abuse, Is Twitter’s Problem (WSJ)

  35. Two more states passed sweeping abortion restrictions. — Both Florida’s and Kentucky’s new laws ban the procedure after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Neither makes an exception for rape or incest. (WP)

  36. Emboldened by their Supreme Court supermajority, Republicans are moving to cut off remaining legal avenues to challenge racist and partisan gerrymandering, Paul Blumenthal explains. "No argument is too crazy to try" before this hard-right high court, one attorney said. [HuffPost]

  37. Lee worked hard to overturn election, keep Trump in power, texts show (WP)

  38. Amid false 2020 claims, GOP states eye voting system upgrade (AP)

  39. More than 150 Palestinians were injured by Israeli riot police at Jerusalem’s Al-Aqsa mosque compound, the Palestine Red Crescent said, two weeks into Ramadan. Israeli police said hundreds of Palestinians hurled firecrackers and stones at their forces and toward the nearby Jewish prayer area of the Western Wall in Jerusalem’s Old City after morning prayers. (Reuters)

  40. Modest-income buyers being priced out of new-vehicle market (AP)

  41. California Considers the Four-Day Workweek (WSJ)

  42. ‘That was my beloved son’: family of Patrick Lyoya say police killed their son in an ‘execution’ (Guardian)

  43. Cities Try to Turn the Tide on Police Traffic Stops (NYT)

  44. ‘This Is American History’: The Hall of Fame Reconsiders Race (NYT)

  45. Billionaires eye parallel media universe (Axios)

  46. Feinstein pushes back on lawmakers’ accounts that she is mentally unfit (WP)

  47. Bombshell on Feinstein’s health rocks California (Politico)

  48. A new study estimates that, by midcentury, global warming could put 60 percent of cactus species at greater risk of extinction. (Cal Today)

  49. Wildflower believed to be extinct for 40 years spotted in Ecuador (Guardian)

  50. These Scientists Want to Send Space Aliens Cosmic Road Map to Earth (WSJ)

  51. Waffle Is the New Wordle (Lifehacker)

  52. Star Wars toy bought for 99p 'could fetch £1,000' at auction (BBC)

  53. Japan media watchdog cautions TV variety shows using pain for laughs (NHK)

  54. Dianne Feinstein Argues She Still Perfectly Mentally Fit To Continue Captaining Submarine (The Onion)

TODAY’s EXCERPT:

"Subterranean Homesick Blues"

Bob Dylan

Look out, kid
Don't matter what you did
Walk on your tip toes
Don't tie no bows
Better stay away from those
That carry around a fire hose
Keep a clean nose
Watch the plainclothes
You don't need a weather man
To know which way the wind blows.