A little more information

The two main activities in my life: Helping the hungry in the late hours of the night and helping guitar players sound better one amp at a time.

I always try to remember that in order to do good one has to take action and actually do something.

I was born and raised in Los Angeles. I have watched the city and Southern California change for well over half a century.

I can be found on facebook at www.facebook.com/mylesr or on twitter at www.twitter.com/myles111us

As of late 2019 the music related links and prints noted on this page which had their links to by GAB (Guitar Amplifier Blueprinting) website are no longer accessible. I grew weary of updating my GAB website and let it go away. You can contact me on Facebook. Saunders Stewart Models continues full operation but we are not accepting new clients without a referral.

Los Angeles Architectural History

Los Angeles Architectural History
1935 Art Deco at some of its finest: No. 168 - Griffith Observatory- (click on the photo for information)

Saturday, March 6, 2010

Is to have lived and lost is better or worse than to have never lived at all?

Today I am sitting for a while after spending the first part of the day with my two boys. We went out to lunch and just hung out a little. I came back home to get a bit of healing time under my belt as I have an injury or two that are on the mend.

Lunch today was downtown at Phillipe’s and on the way back to the boys house we drove through a bit of Skid Row as it is very close to where we had our lunch.

The more I interact with the homeless the more complex my thoughts on the subject become. Which group has things more difficult? What do I mean by group? I put people into my own groups of traits. There are the long term residents of the street. The people with mental problems. The new residents of the street. Those that never had anything. Those who were abused or tossed away. Those who had a life and lost everything. You can create a lot of groups in your mind. There is overlap in traits at times and sometimes no overlap of traits at all.

Today I thought of the group I call the "new" homeless. These folks all share a few traits such as they now have no stability in their life. In many cases it is a matter of economics of the day. They had a home and lost it. With no money for storage, many have lost most everything that brought them comfort and security. No house means no place to store all those memories such as their child’s first art projects, things they built themselves and countless memories that were taken for granted but gave them comfort. No more music while sitting in a comfortable old chair as they listen to their children play or even argue. No paintings on their walls … they no longer have walls.

Life is now more animalistic. Day to day survival is the order of the day … and night as well. All that was procured during a life is either gone or has no place to be stored or has been sold. Basic food and shelter are the first orders of business. This is not a set of insurmountable problems. There is food at the missions and shelters and when one is tired enough you can collapse and sleep anywhere. Old timers on the streets understand these things. New street residents will learn these things fast enough themselves.

Many long term residents do not have the sense of loss that most new time residents have. Some long term folks have lost the thoughts of the past. Some never had anything to loose. Some have mental issues and this may or may not be thoughts in their head. Some have turned to drugs and alcohol to forget.

New time residents have the daily survival issues and perhaps even more on their mind. New time street people were recently productive, recently had a home and stable life. In their own mind many now consider themselves a disappointment to themselves even though their circumstances are not their fault. They are under the pressure looking into the eyes of their family. You can think of one example after another. I wonder; to have lived and lost is better or worse than to have never lived at all? A twist of words on an old saying.

Higher education on the street has less value as there are too many competent and educated people competing for too few jobs. Formal education cannot help one survive on the streets. Formal education cannot bring peace, serenity, comfort or security as these things come from having a home … a stable environment, a place where you have some of the things that your family, friends and others you have been involved with in your life have placed around you or you have placed in your home. Having most if not all the things that made a home for you taken away is more stressful than many can possibly imagine. The situation is more akin to being an animal trying to survive day to day than it is to being a human being with friends, family and home in their life.

The more time I spend on the streets the more I feel I have been able to empathize with those I meet on a regular basis. I don’t know if this is a good thing or a bad thing. Sometimes I feel I am making a difference. Sometimes I feel as if I am helping. At other times I feel that I am doing little more than feeding the residents of some sort of cosmic zoo where the animals are in cages and I am able to fool myself into not looking too closely at my own cage. Some have the small cage of an alley, some have a shelter or bed for the night as their cage but some of us are in the same zoo and look the other way when they close the main entrance of the zoo for the evening … with some of us locked on the inside which we try to block out from our vision. The zoo and these cages are things we build in our own mind even though in many cases other people have put us there. These other people seem to have no conscience. They seem not to be able to reflect on their own actions. They have developed the ability to rationalize things in a way to allow them to sleep at night.

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In case you were wondering where I may have come up with the zoo reference see the photos above.

As we move into March the winter shelters are closing. One more layer of problems for many of the homeless, new and old hands on the street. 12.5% unemployment rate reported yesterday in California. Talk to ten organizations and you get ten different figures. The report yesterday said they “found” 300,000 people out of work who were previously uncounted. Some say the rate of unemployment is dropping. If you believe that nonsense hit the streets for a few days each month and observe reality.

In closing my thoughts for now I would like to thank Union Rescue Mission once again. They are trying to address the closing issues of the winter shelters and from where I sit it looks like they have an uphill battle. Still, they are effective folks and might be able to pull off a hat trick. If you want to try to help you can go to their website at http://www.urm.org/ as they have some places on their website to write to the proper people to voice your thoughts on the winter shelter problem as well as other issues.

Please excuse all my typing errors, spelling errors, grammar and phrasing errors. It has been a long and hard week. I post a lot of my daytime activities on facebook with fun videos, photos and dialogue but at night I have a more serious side to my life, helping folks out there one granola bar at a time.

I will end this bit of writing by repeating what I wrote above earlier. Is to have lived and lost is better or worse than to have never lived at all?

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Winter Shelters - an update from Andy Bales of Union Rescue Mission

I have not posted much in the last week or so.  It has been a busy week for me as I had friends in from Nashville and had a show in Hollywood at Jimmy Kimmel Live last Wednesday and last Friday had a show at The Staples Center.  Lots of photos on flicker at http://www.flickr.com/photos/myles111us/sets/72157623457744430/ and I still have a lot more to upload.

Although there was activity on the music side of my life I still made a number of trips to skid row with my evening snacks.  Union Rescue Mission provides over 100,000 meals per month which is always impressive.  On my side of things so far in February I have given out 109 oatmeal bars, bananas, raisins and thanks to folks at the Central Market in Los Angeles was able to take 44 people to dinner for Chinese food at various times during the month.  I continue to receive contributions from many folks in the music industry and thank all of you.

If you click on the Winter Shelters title above you will be re-directed to Andy Bales URM info which I find interesting.  I find most of what the folks at URM do quite interesting, find their organizational skills second to none and when it comes to stretching a dollar, well ... there are not a lot of folks that can pull off what they do in any industry.






One shot below - no photo edit here ... the green lines are the laser testing at The Staples Center for the Brad Paisley concert last Friday night.


And ... that link again for the winter shelter writeup is - http://www.urmblog.org/2010/02/23/winter-shelters/

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Overpaid teachers? Another view on the story

For years I have taken what many would feel the politically correct route in regard to the compensation for teachers. I would support their cry for being overworked and underpaid. I was married to a teacher. I would hear voice recordings each month when I came home on our answer machine from A.J. Duffy, the head of UTLA (the teachers union) asking people to strike or walk out from their jobs. The major of Los Angeles, Mr. Villaraigosa is talking about cutting 2,000 teaching jobs and from my point of view, go right ahead. Little will be lost other than a salary that may be better spent elsewhere.

Don’t get me wrong. The current economy stinks. Our government has a lot of problems and the situation is complex to say the least. I am looking at nothing more than the educational system here in Los Angeles and only one aspect of the educational system – the teachers that complain about their compensation, those that strike and raise their voices and the vast majority who are overpaid to do a very substandard job.

I bet a few folks are now a little hot under the collar at my last words above. I will point out a few things which changed my mind. I used to be a strong supporter of teachers. Heck, I was married to one.

I don’t know if it is more a factor that the system breaks down good people, takes away their honor and integrity or whether the system is so broken that good people get lazy and become lazy and develop a very poor attitude and work ethic. It is probably a combination of both and other things as well.

Here is how I see things.

When I was in school my teacher was always there. If they were not in the classroom we generally knew why via the rumor mill or because we were told why by the substitute teacher. They were sick, they had an emergency in the own family of some sort or at times in the case of women teachers they were having a baby.

We have teachers making in excess of $50,000 per year which may not seem like a huge salary to some but this is very high compensation for many folks especially when you factor in the job they do (substandard as many reports show) and their true hourly rate. These people work ¾ of the year or less? Summer vacation. spring break, winter break school holidays and something I never saw when I was in school – pupil free days and half days. Yes, out here in Los Angeles they let students stay home or go home early so teachers can get caught up on their work. Makes my head spin.

I spend half my nights on skid row feeding the homeless and half my days watching people at the missions and shelters when I am not in the street observing their level of commitment which was something that teacher had when I was in school.

Last night I was talking to a teacher who was going to take off for a few days to hop on an airplane to jet across the country for nothing more than a bit of fun and vacation. I was confused because the schools just went back into session after the holidays and winter break. I was also a bit surprised as this woman used to have pride, honor and integrity in her chosen profession. I was informed that she had some sort of accrued time off as she did not take time off in the past. Time off? You work 70% of the year and need more time off? The educational system is continually in the news for doing a substandard job, the head of UTLA is seen in the news complaining about their compensation being cut and I used to see most of the teachers run out of the buildings faster than the students when I went to pick up one of my kids from school. The system may break down good people and turn them into people who are now something different or perhaps people just change. I do not know but I have seen examples that are too numerous to be counted where most of these folks don’t deserve half their compensation if any at all. They may be the biggest part of the problem with education today as they pray on the hearts of people that just want their kids to be able to read and write but have also changed themselves. Many parents look at schools at a place to dump their kids for the day. They send their kids to school unprepared or kids that are even very sick who should stay home. These folks are not teachers. They are nothing more than grossly overpaid babysitters with a bad attitude who have a voice, the UTLA who organize strikes and generates public support that may not be warranted from my own point of view.

So … I hope most of the teachers in Los Angeles today have a nice day. You should find that easy to do as you are not held accountable for your performance, you are overpaid to work a short year with lots of time off and holidays, are difficult to get rid of once you have tenure no matter how substandard your performance, have lost your integrity and honor. You want to talk about this or debate this? Write me an email so we can set up an appointment to meet. Just take off one day during school using one of those extra days off that you seem to feel you are entitled to receiving. We will take the subway to Pershing Square and walk down 5th Street to the heart of skid row where I will take you into the Union Rescue Mission and introduce you to folks that will be happy to find you some work sitting with a few homeless kids that have a desire to learn something.

To you Mr. Villaraigosa, feel free to remove most of these so called teachers and take 25% of what they were being paid and redirect that money to the homeless shelters in Los Angeles such as Union Rescue Mission, the Los Angeles Mission, The Midnight Mission and others. From my own personal point of view, sit down with Andy Bales who runs Union Rescue Mission with some of your staff and ask him for some suggestions as he has a proven track record of commitment and can stretch a dollar farther than anybody.

An bit of additional information sent to me:

I'm with you Myles! Especially on the tenured part -- it's REALLY HARD to get rid of a bad teacher....



Want to read some scary stuff? Read this! (New York) Feel free to add to your blog.

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2009/08/31/090831fa_fact_brill

AND, when LAUSD teachers retire -- MEDICAL BENEFITS for LIFE (for them AND SPOUSE) and 75% of their (most recent annual salary, which is always highest) for LIFE. Whenever a teacher bitched to me about how much I made (which they didn't know but were only guessing) I reminded them I had NO pension, no medical after my non profit was closed down, nothing so not to complain to me!


Now, that said, spending even 6 straight hours with 32-50 kids is worth some 'combat pay' and time off...and many many teachers work much longer hours than "school hours".

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Tuesday, February 9, 2010

January 2010 Statistics Update

January 2010 Statistics Update

This report is quite impressive as was the December 2009 wrap up last month.  As was the case last month, there was an increase in services by the URM folks across the board.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Nathaniel Ayers of Soloist fame enjoying his birthday

Many of you may have seen the movie The Soloist. Here is a recent shot of Nathaniel Ayres at a birthday party hosted by Steve Lopez (the man who wrote the story) where a new guitar was presented from the folks at Union Rescue Mission. Yes, he also now plays guitar.




You have seen Mr. Ayres as depicted in the movie by Jamie Foxx.  Here is the actual Nathaniel Ayres.

Below is a 60 Minutes segment that shows a little more about both Nathaniel Ayres and Steve Lopez. The movie was an accurate depiction from my own personal point of view in many ways. The majority of the movie was shot in Los Angeles in the heart of skid row. There were many aspects of the movie that are missed by people that do not know the area. One of these is a scene in the movie where Nathaniel Ayres and Steve Lopez run with a filled shopping cart from the LAMP center to Disney Hall. Most people may think that this is a simple film edit cut from one scene location to another. In reality the run between these two places with a shopping cart is well within reason as these two diverse places are less than a ten minute walk from each other.


Watch CBS Videos Online

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I took this photo sometime last month of LAMP. This spot is featured in the movie "The Soloist". Here is a typical shot during the day when there are no movie crews or reporters in the area.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Yesterday on the street the envelope of life was a bit wider than usual

Last night was a bit more intense than usual.  Perhaps it was the President's address on television, perhaps it was a hard week on Wall Street (not to be confused with the Los Angeles Wall Street where the most active police station in the city is located) or perhaps it was just a mix of many things.  Bottom line, it was a bit more interesting than typical which is saying quite a bit.

As I start this blog entry for today I see the market is down 149 points.   I did not take time to try to figure the reason as I have things scheduled today that I can do something about rather than put time toward something I can do nothing about.

Before I headed downtown last night I watched the State of the Union address by our President.  It was interesting but while I was watching I had my PC on and the debates on facebook on some of the pages of my friends was them most interesting aspect.  Perhaps the speech had something to do with the market being down this morning?  Then again, it has been down very sharply this month.

I am posting some links to audio files from the last few days.  Sort of a "person in the street" take on things.  One of them has very rough audio quality as there was a lot of background noise as the two of us walked together.  The  fellow had just been released from prison.  Another of the audio clips is two clips of a series from a girl that had been released from jail hours before the audio clip was recorded.  The last audio clip was done on the Metro Red Line last night as two homeless people were trying to raise a few dollars to pay for a place to stay for the night.  Music is somwhat against the posted rules on subway trains but these folks were well received and were able to raise a few bucks.

http://guitaramplifierblueprinting.com/audio/WS400028.WMA  
http://guitaramplifierblueprinting.com/audio/WS400029.WMA
http://guitaramplifierblueprinting.com/audio/13years.WMA
http://guitaramplifierblueprinting.com/audio/subway-song.wma  

I also want to post a video here done by a friend of mine Brad Kauffman.  Brad has his own blog at http://www.bradkauffman.com but I do not know if this latest video of his is on his own blog page yet.  Brad posted this and made a comment on facebook about "world class education" that was mentioned in the State of the Union Address last night.  Great work Brad!



Los Angeles is a city of extreme contrast.  I have made that comment many times before.  In keeping with the theme of that comment I am going to post a few photos from last night.   One can stand in a given location downtown and by facing one direction or another see either extreme wealth or extreme poverity.

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- The End -