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Slow Burn S6 Ep. 7: Into Ashes

Slate Daily Feed

Slate

Society & Culture, News, Business

3.91.1K Ratings

🗓️ 22 December 2021

⏱️ 38 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

On April 29, 1992, Los Angeles had erupted into chaos. Over the following days, thousands of people took to the streets. Some were unleashing their anger at the police and the justice system. Some were driven by frustration at living in poverty in one of the world’s richest cities. And some just saw a chance to plunder while law enforcement was scrambling. This is what happened next. Season 6 of Slow Burn is produced by Joel Anderson, Jayson De Leon, Ethan Brooks, Sophie Summergrad, and Jasmine Ellis. Mixing by Merritt Jacob. To listen to these interviews in full, learn more about the making of this season, skip all the ads, and support Slow Burn, sign up for Slate Plus now. It's only $1 for your first month. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

A quick warning, this episode has some explicit language.

0:06.0

Hector Tobar watched the chaos of April 29th, 1992, from the Los Angeles Times' third

0:11.8

floor newsroom.

0:13.7

That night, a large crowd of people gathered outside the building and started pelting

0:18.1

it with rocks.

0:19.5

And then a little bit later on, I said, hey, am I the only one who smells fire?

0:24.3

You know, there's smoke, there's smoke, something's burning.

0:28.0

And unbeknownst to me, down on the first floor, a few members of this particular mob had

0:34.2

managed to break through the windows, the offices down there, and had said a couple of small

0:39.6

fires in the first floor.

0:41.6

Tobar kept on working.

0:43.4

That first day, he collected notes from reporters into field and wrote a story about the LAPD's

0:48.7

response to the acquittal of the officers who beat Rodney King.

0:52.8

He left the newsroom around 11 p.m.

0:55.3

Eventually, the mob went on and dispersed, and we went home, and everybody thought it was

1:00.8

over.

1:01.8

It was like, wow, that was a horrible night that the city went through.

1:06.6

It's all over, and we all went to bed thinking that the next morning, the city would start

1:12.0

sweeping up the glass and taking stock of what had happened.

1:16.6

The politicians would make their speeches, and everything would go back to normal.

1:23.4

The next morning's newspaper laid out the toll that April 29th had taken on Los Angeles.

1:29.0

At least four deaths, 106 people injured, and more than 150 fires burning across the city.

...

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