Category Archives: Storytelling

PHOTOGRAPHY: My photos at Kaldi in South Pasadena

For those in the L.A. area, I’m exhibiting a selection of photos at Kaldi, a cafe in South Pasadena, through mid-December.

The photos are from stories I’ve done in Mexico, Los Angeles, as well as a brief trip to Bogota I took at the behest of Oprah Winfrey’s O Magazine, to do a story on the girl soldiers in the guerrilla militias.

Above are four of the shots: from a story on the emergence of tubas as the region’s emblematic musical instrument; a group of Mennonite kids at a school in northern Mexico, where I went to do a story on Mennonites’ involvement in drug trafficking.

There’s also Grace, a legendary drag queen in the 1980s who is now homeless, and another of a Oaxacan farmworker in the agricultural valley of San Quintin, which is south of Ensenada, Baja California.

Many more are up at Kaldi — hope you like them….They make great Christmas gifts!….:)

 

 

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Filed under Global Economy, Los Angeles, Mexico, Photography, Southern California, Storytelling

TELL YOUR TRUE TALE: The Stockton Stories

Two new stories up this week on Tell Your True Tale. Both grew from a writing workshop I did with students this month at San Joaquin Delta College in Stockton, CA — a town where I was once a crime reporter for several years.

The stories were terrific and I’ll be posting several of them in coming weeks.

Perhaps reflecting some of the town’s grit, the tales themselves are rough, but really great, reads — confirming my faith in community colleges as story goldmines.

These are the first two:

–Christian Lockwood, a former cop, writes of the final day of his drunken homelessness, in The Last Day.

–Darshay Smith, a nursing student, writes of the night her mother was shot and the lingering effects of the incident in The Light That Night.

Check them out. Please share them on social media. I’m always interested in looking at new submissions, so take computer in hand and get writing.


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Filed under Storytelling, Tell Your True Tale

LOS ANGELES: Cerritos College Thursday night

Very happy to be speaking to writers, students and storytellers at Cerritos College in Norwalk Thursday night.

I’ll be talking about storytelling and writing.

I’ll be telling some stories that I love and discussing students’ stories from their own lives — a little bit of my Tell Your True Tale workshops.

Hope to see you all there…

Thanks Library Club of Cerritos College!

 

 

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Filed under California, Los Angeles, Southern California, Storytelling, Tell Your True Tale

TELL YOUR TRUE TALE: Wasn’t About the Money

A new story up this week on my storytelling page, Tell Your True Tale, is by convicted bank robber Jeffrey Scott Hunter.

Check out Wasn’t About the Money — Jeff’s story of the time he knew his bank robbing was getting out of hand.

Happy to read any story you might want to submit.

And please share it on any social media you might use….

Many thanks,

Sam

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Filed under Culture, Storytelling, Tell Your True Tale, Writing

CALIFORNIA: Stockton and writing

Last week, I was lucky enough to spend some time in Stockton, California, one of my favorite towns.

I was the crime reporter there for the Stockton Record from 1988-92.

This time, I met with students at San Joaquin Delta College, the area community college, in a class taught by poet/instructor Pedro Ramirez. We were talking about writing and how they could tell their own stories — part of my Tell Your True writing workshops.

I’ll be posting some of them soon on my TYTT storytelling page.

The town has taken a lot of hits, entering bankruptcy in the wake of the housing collapse — which seemed reflected in the tales the students wrote, most of which were pretty grim.

Cops have left for departments elsewhere — Oceanside is one, I understand — when they lose their houses due to their salaries being reduced. Crime is again on a track to break records. I did notice a lot of the parolee/addict/hooker kind of folks downtown.

One of Stockton’s problems is that, by design or not, it is within a hundred miles of something like half the prisons in the state: this includes Folsom, San Quentin, Deuel, and the new prisons down by Corcoran/Delano, as well as a women’s prison and a youth-authority prison. That’s a lot.

But there’s a backbone to the town that I always liked, and a down-to-earth quality to folks that I did not feel, for example, when I moved to Seattle for my next job. (Civil folks, those Seattlites, but not at all friendly. And then there’s the rain, or should I say the constant drizzle.)

In Stockton, I note still a lack of graffiti, which is good. When I was there, it was the graffiti that most seemed to drag down the town and give it a defeated/defeatist feel.

These photos suggest the town’s stiff upper lip remains.

 

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Filed under California, Prison, Storytelling, Tell Your True Tale

TELL YOUR TRUE TALE: Emri’s Chest

A great and touching piece is up this week on Tell Your True Tale, my storytelling page.

Check out “Emri’s Chest” by Rachel Kimbrough, a great young writer from Kansas, about the death of her toddler son.

http://www.samquinones.com/category/true-tales/

Please share it on FB, Twitter, etc….

Above all, write one of your own and send it in……Sam

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LOS ANGELES: A Bank Robbery, a Car Salesman and the Eternal Traveler

I was covering the dramatic bank robbery at the BofA in East L.A. this morning. Appears a couple guys kidnapped the manager last night, apparently as she was on her way home, then brought her to the bank this morning with a bomb strapped to her body.

She went in and told employees that she had the device on her and the kidnappers were telling her to take money out, which she did, then put the cash in a bag and threw it out to them, waiting in a car. They made their getaway.

She was unhurt, though shaken, and a Sheriff’s bomb squad disarmed the device.

Stories like this can involve a lot of waiting around, talking with bystanders who might have seen something. One of them was Octavio Medrano, a salesman at a used car lot, who’s been in the area “like all my life,” he says, selling used SUVs and Nissans and the like. He’s from Chihuahua.

He arrived at work too late for the commotion. But as we talked he began telling me about his other line of work.

In his part time, he writes about eternity. Just finished his second book, as it turns out — Viajero Eterno (Eternal Traveler). His card urges people to read the books if they are want to learn”the secrets of the seven doors of knowledge” or “the secret of reincarnation” or “the road to internal peace” or “our relation with the moon and planets,” and more.

All in all, that’s a lot more than I’ expect to learn at any used car lot.

Btw, you can pick up Mr. Medrano’s book at Amazon.com or www.palibrio.com.

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Filed under Culture, Los Angeles, Storytelling

CULTURE: `The Wire’ — Which character would you be?

The Wire, the HBO show about the Baltimore heroin trade, was one of the best pieces of film-making I’ve ever seen.

At the link above, they ask, which character would you like to be?

I’d choose the captain who chose to legalize drugs in a chunk of ghetto Baltimore. Great character, inventive idea, fantastic actor, whose name I don’t know.

Either him, or Omar…..quite a dude.

 

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Filed under Culture, Drugs, Storytelling

STORYTELLING: Perceptions — Mars and the economy

A couple of links related only insofar as they deal with our perceptions.

The first — the view of Earth from Mars, courtesy of Curiosity.

The second — a column about how Americans of different classes view economic growth over the last half century.

 

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LOS ANGELES: `Onion Field’ killer dead

Gregory Powell, the last of the two `Onion Field’ killers, has died, to the regret of no one, apparently.

Powell and his accomplice, Jimmy Smith, killed LAPD Officer Ian Campbell in a Central Valley onion field. Campbell’s partner, Karl Hettinger, never truly recovered from the event.

Joseph Wambaugh was then an officer in LAPD and took a leave to write one of the all-time great true crime books about the case. The book was memorable for many things, but mostly, I thought, for its portrayal of Hettinger, who died of cirrhosis of the liver in 1994. The book launched Wambaugh’s career as a true-crime writer.

The movie about the case, with James Woods as Powell, was also powerful stuff.

I wrote an obit of Jimmy Smith when he died in 2007, for which I interviewed Wambaugh.

 

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Filed under Los Angeles, Prison, Storytelling

TELL YOUR TRUE TALE: Being Saved

This week on my storytelling website, Tell Your True Tale, a new story by Angelino writer Julian Segura Camacho.

Check out Being Saved – the story of how a young man from Inglewood was asked to convert to evangelical Christianity.

I’m very eager to read more submissions, so if you’ve got an inner writer, write a story of your own and send it in.

 

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Filed under California, Los Angeles, Southern California, Storytelling, Tell Your True Tale, Writing

TELL YOUR TRUE TALE: Climbing the Mesa

Hey folks —

There’s a new story up on Tell Your True Tale, my storytelling page.

Southern California writer David Chittenden contributes “Climbing the Mesa.” Cool piece.

You can also read the story Huffington Post recently used,which I posted to TYTT a few months ago.

My First Bank Robbery is by federal prison inmate Jeffrey Scott Hunter about his, you guessed it, first bank robbery.

Again, I’m always interested in submissions to the site. I do edit, don’t pay, and love good true stories. So get writing and send one in….

 

 

 

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TELL YOUR TRUE TALE: Huffington Post

The Huffington Post has re-posted one of the stories that I put up earlier this year on my storytelling site, Tell Your True Tale.

It’s by convicted bank robber, Jeffrey Scott Hunter. My First Bank Robbery is the title of the tale.

You can see more cool stories at Tell Your True Tale.

Read ’em, share ’em, send in one of your own. I’m always looking for good stories.

 

 

 

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Filed under Prison, Storytelling, Tell Your True Tale, Writing

WRITING: Ray Bradbury, an appreciation

There’s a great appreciation of Ray Bradbury, who died yesterday at 91, by Scott Timberg in Zocalo.

In it, among other things, Timberg wonders why it was California where science fiction writers flourished. He concludes that it was because there was no literary elite or hierarchy to disapprove of the genre.

Reminds me of Tijuana in the 1950s through the 1980s, where lots of poor people could join the middle class because there was no wealthy class controlling opportunity as there was in the long-established cities of Mexico’s interior.

Timberg sees a California vibe in Bradbury’s stories about Martians, and notes the author was a young autograph hound, with no college education, who wrote his first stuff on butcher paper, and Fahrenheit 451 on a UCLA library typewriter into which he had to keep pumping dimes.

“Libraries raised me,” Bradbury is quoted as saying. “I don’t believe in colleges and universities. I believe in libraries.”

Timberg writes the MisreadCity blog.

 

 

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Filed under California, Los Angeles, Storytelling, Writing

STORYTELLING: C.M. Mayo’s blog

One thing I’ve learned is that you can always count on something hip at the blog written by C.M. Mayo.

Here, she talks about writing an essay on the legends surrounding Maximilian, the Austrian emperor that Mexico imported to rule it for a few years in the 1800s — which has to be itself one of the weirdest chapters in the history of any country.

Then they set him before a firing squad and that was that. Except that his body was embalmed and put on display for a while. His wife, Carlotta, died many decades later.

I’m hoping C.M. writes that essay, since in the duel between legend and fact, legend is usually more interesting. In another life, she was an economist who wrote a lot about informal methods of savings/finance. Now she does other stuff.

Meanwhile, check out the C.M. Mayo blog.

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