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  • Top prize for utter stupidity: to drink and drive over this of allwe

    The Times, UK
    May 31 2005

    Top prize for utter stupidity: to drink and drive over this of all weekends
    LA Notebook by Chris Ayres

    I LEARNT something very important about Los Angeles on Memorial Day
    last year. As with many cultural revelations, it came at about 1am,
    when I was standing on the patio of the Saddle Ranch Saloon on Sunset
    Strip, looking at the Ferarris and SUVs rolling by. In my hand was a
    pitcher of Long Island Iced Tea. Somewhere behind me, a miniskirted
    18-year-old was riding a mechanical bull.

    "Hey," I said, turning to my friend Jeff, who seemed to be swaying
    in the desert breeze. "Do you think everyone here is going to
    drive home?" Before he could answer, a white Hummer H2 filled with
    high-school students rumbled past us, swerved and shunted into the
    back of a LADP squad car, which was parked on the central reservation.

    The police car bounced forward with an indignant squawk, causing it
    to smash into another LAPD vehicle, which was parked in front of it.

    For about half a second, the patio of the Saddle Ranch fell silent.

    Then, as four whiplashed, angry and heavily armed patrol officers
    stumbled out of their cars, the Hummer reversed, corrected its path,
    and continued westward, with rather more urgency than before. The
    patio burst into spontaneous applause.

    "Oh dear," said Jeff, a celebrity photographer who knows a thing or
    two about the traffic laws of Los Angeles. "Hitting a squad car while
    driving under the influence is a federal offence. Leaving the scene
    of a federal offence? That's, oh, 15 years. Easy."

    Within seconds, four highway patrol motorbikes had flanked the Hummer
    and brought it to a halt at the roadside. The driver, I assume,
    is still in jail.

    So my lesson was this: nearly everyone who drinks and drives in Los
    Angeles ends up drinking and driving. Not that Angelinos will ever
    admit it. During my first few months in California, I kept being
    invited to restaurants or bars that were halfway up mountains, on
    remote beaches, or out in the desert suburbs. No one took taxis.

    There was no public transport. The car parks were full. Yet everyone
    seemed to drink. It didn't make sense.

    Then an American friend gave me a lift to one of these bars, where
    he quickly sank four rum and Cokes. As he climbed back into his BMW,
    he said: "One day, when I'm not driving, we should go out and have
    a drink." From then it all started to make sense.

    I mention all of this, of course, because of Oliver Stone's arrest this
    Memorial Day weekend for drink-driving and drugs. Consuming alcohol
    before operating a vehicle is more than usually stupid in Los Angeles,
    where you stand as much chance of hitting a Beverly Hills lawyer as
    you do the kerb. It is prize-winningly stupid during the Memorial Day
    holiday - the official start of summer - when LADP officers set-up
    "mobile command centres" along Sunset Strip, complete with random
    alcohol-testing facilities and flatbed lorries on to which they will
    roll your car after giving you a fine, a ban and a date with a judge.

    But the Oscar-winning film director's behaviour doesn't surprise me.

    Angelinos are some of the laziest, most selfish people on earth. I
    know this because I'm one of them. I will get in my car to cross
    the road, then valet-park when I get there. The very thought of
    Angelinos taking taxis to restaurants or bars is laughable. This is
    a city where every second car is a Bentley Continental. Turning up
    for dinner at Morton's in a Checker Cab, while trying to convince
    the Armenian driver to wait for you, would be social suicide.

    Fortunately, I'm such a bad driver when sober that I would never risk
    limiting my concentration further with booze. Alas, I cannot say the
    same thing for my friends.

    "The safest way to drink and drive is to avoid Sunset Strip and
    take Mulholland Drive," a friend told me, with a straight face, at
    a barbecue on Sunday. Mulholland, I should add, is one of the most
    treacherous stretches of road anywhere in California, traversing
    the crest of the Santa Monica mountains from east to west. The LAPD
    doesn't patrol it, because it assumes no one would be stupid enough
    to drive along it drunk.

    "As long as you don't fall into a canyon, or get lost, you're fine,"
    continued my friend.

    It was then, of course, that she offered me a ride home in her
    Porsche. I politely declined.

    Next Memorial Day, I plan to drink at home.

    War Reporting for Cowards, by Chris Ayres, will be published by John
    Murray on June 6.
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