‘No Thanks to Uber for My 13-mile, $500 Ride’
By Paul Krueger
I’m a serial loser and misplacer.
I’ve lost my car keys and misplaced my wallet more times that I can remember. If I had a dollar for every time a server ran after me with the sunglasses, books, or credit card I’d left behind, I could buy us a wagyu steak dinner at Cowboy Star.
Still, forgetting things has its advantages. I’ve met many courteous people who’ve helped find and return my belongings. Among them a local political activist who flagged me down three blocks from my home.
I thought she wanted to talk about the upcoming election — which she did — but not before alerting me that my coffee cup was balanced precariously on the roof of my car.
After repeatedly misplacing my wallet, a friend suggested I keep just my driver’s license and a credit card in a sleeve on my iPhone.
That worked, until it didn’t, on a recent trip to the Bay Area.



Nearly 200 San Diego residents — mostly from Pacific Beach — gathered Saturday morning, Nov. 23, to protest the 22-story “pencil tower” being planned for 970 Turquoise Street in north PB.
By David Helvarg /
By Steve Anderson /
Editordude: The following is but the beginning of a more longer piece by Peter Bohmer, a good friend of the Rag and former OBcean who now lives in Olympia, Washington.
Washington D.C. is building miles of bike lanes, though fewer people are biking to work.
The following letter to the editor in today’s Los Angeles Times (Nov. 21) caught our attention. The editors put a headline on it of “The reality of single-family blocks” and magnified the letter itself.
By Kate Callen

By Sydney Brammer / 




Recent Comments