Shadows of Murders Past

The Brentwood murders have taken their inevitable turn. Nick Reiner, the troubled son of filmmaker Rob Reiner and actress Michele Singer Reiner, now sits in custody, charged in connection with the deaths of his parents. Bail has been set at four million dollars, a figure less about freedom than about certainty: he will not be going home.

The scene itself remains shrouded. Detectives have not disclosed how entry was gained, nor whether alarms or cameras were silenced. What is known is that suspicion has hardened into accusation. Addiction, whispered for years in Hollywood circles, now shadows the narrative, though police have yet to confirm motive or method.

Brentwood, once again, is the stage. From Monroe’s tragic spotlight to Simpson’s bloody hedges, the neighborhood has long been a theater of privilege undone. And now, the Reiners — beloved, respected, woven into Hollywood’s lineage — are inscribed into that archive.

The Robbery‑Homicide Division continues its work. A statement is expected after detectives finish their questioning. Until then, the story remains suspended between rumor and revelation, custody and collapse.


Scored by Copilot, conducted by Leslie Lanagan

Oh, the Places I’ll Go

When I think about travel, I don’t think in terms of itineraries or checklists. I think in terms of anchors. Each city I imagine visiting becomes an entry in my living archive, a place where resonance and paradox meet. Some of these journeys are shared with my dad, some are solo, some are comfort returns, and some are playful pilgrimages. Together they form a constellation of cities I’d like to visit, each one carrying its own rhythm, its own meaning, its own inscription in the ledger of my life.

Dublin is the first city that comes to mind. For me, Dublin is a writer’s pilgrimage. Joyce, Yeats, Wilde—their shadows still linger in the streets and pubs, and I want to walk where they walked, hear the cadence of Irish voices, and inscribe Dublin into my archive as a city of words. For my dad, Dublin is also a pilgrimage, but his angle is genealogy. He sees Dublin through parish records and family names, tracing lineage and ancestry. I don’t call myself Irish, even though I carry Irish heritage. I don’t call myself English either, though that heritage is there too. I love both countries, but I don’t wear their identities as labels. Instead, I treat Dublin as a place where literature and lineage overlap, where my dad and I can share a journey even as we approach it from different angles. Dublin becomes both archive and family tree, a city where words and lineage intertwine.

Key West is the counterpoint to Dublin. Where Dublin offers gray skies and literary labyrinths, Key West offers sunlight, ocean breeze, and Hemingway’s myth. Hemingway’s house, the six-toed cats, the ocean light that shaped his prose—all of it feels like a pilgrimage to the blurred line between writing and living. My dad is drawn to Hemingway too, so Key West becomes another shared journey. For me, it’s about inscribing Hemingway’s paradox into my archive. For my dad, it’s about feeling the myth of the man. Together, Key West becomes a sunlit echo of Dublin, two cities bound by literature, one steeped in history and the other drenched in ocean light.

But not all my pilgrimages are shared. Some are solo sabbaticals, places I imagine visiting on my own, inscribing rhythm and paradox without companionship. Finland holds three such cities: Helsinki, Tampere, and Rovaniemi. Helsinki is a sabbatical city, a place of libraries, winter markets, and architectural rhythm. Oodi Library, Rock Church, the cadence of winter—all of it feels like a place where I could inscribe solitude into my archive. Yet I also imagine Bryn joining me in Helsinki for a few days. With Bryn there, Helsinki shifts from solitude to companionship. The library becomes a duet, the markets a shared ritual, the Rock Church a space where companionship deepens the echo. Helsinki holds both independence and melody, showing how a city can contain solitude and shared presence at once. Tampere, by contrast, is a solo pilgrimage. Its industrial history turned cultural hub, its paradox of machinery and art side by side—this is a city I want to walk through alone, inscribing paradox into my archive without distraction. Rovaniemi, too, is a solo pilgrimage. The Arctic circle, Santa Claus Village, northern lights—myth and landscape converging in a way that feels like a ritual of winter, a place where I can inscribe myth into my archive without companionship.

Ensenada is different. It’s not a new pilgrimage but a comfort return. I’ve been there before, and I want to go back. The people are wonderful, the food is fresh, and it’s affordable. Ensenada is less about literature or genealogy and more about resonance—kindness, warmth, and the joy of being welcomed back. It’s a comfort anchor, a city I return to not for novelty but for continuity, inscribing generosity into my archive.

The Outer Banks in North Carolina add another layer to my constellation. This trip isn’t about literature, genealogy, or even companionship. It’s about refreshment. I want to walk on the beach, feel the Atlantic wind, and buy Cheerwine. Simple pleasures, sand and waves, cherry cola. The Outer Banks become a pilgrimage of taste and tide, a continuity stop in my constellation, balancing the literary pilgrimages with a ritual of refreshment.

Atlanta adds a corporate-cultural pilgrimage to the mix. I want to visit the World of Coca-Cola, to experience the story of how a single drink became a global icon. Tasting sodas from around the world, seeing the vault that holds the secret formula, walking through exhibits about Coca-Cola’s history—Atlanta becomes a pilgrimage of pop culture and taste, less about literature or genealogy, more about how a brand became an archive. It balances Dublin’s literary archive and Key West’s Hemingway myth with a corporate-cultural anchor, inscribing pop culture into my constellation.

Houston is a rooted city for me, a place I go often, but even rooted cities can hold new pilgrimages. I’ve never visited Space Center Houston or the Kemah Boardwalk, and I want to. Space Center Houston is a pilgrimage to exploration—NASA’s history, rockets, the dream of space travel. Kemah Boardwalk is its counterpoint: rides, seafood, Gulf breeze. Together they add new dimensions to a city I already know well, transforming Houston from rooted comfort into rooted renewal. Houston becomes both familiar and fresh, a place of family comfort and new adventures waiting to be inscribed.

Mexico City and Cabo San Lucas expand my constellation further. Mexico City is a pilgrimage of culture—history museums, ancient ruins, colonial architecture, modern art. The National Museum of Anthropology, the Frida Kahlo Museum, the layered history of the city—all of it feels like a place where history and creativity converge. Cabo San Lucas, by contrast, is a coastal pilgrimage. Beaches, Pacific horizon, ocean air. Cabo balances Mexico City’s density with simplicity, offering rest alongside resonance. Together, Mexico City and Cabo inscribe both culture and comfort into my archive, urban history and coastal respite side by side.

Tokyo adds a playful pilgrimage to the constellation. Specifically, Coffee Elementary School—a café founded by a former teacher who treats coffee, bread, and sweets as “textbooks.” For me, it’s a writer’s pilgrimage wrapped in play, a place where stories and rituals converge. For Chason and me, it’s a companionship anchor, a place to inscribe stories together in a city that thrives on paradox. Tokyo becomes a playful archive, a city where literature and companionship meet in the ritual of coffee.

When I step back and look at this constellation, I see categories emerging. Literary pilgrimages: Dublin, Key West, Tokyo. Genealogical echoes: Dublin with my dad. Companion pilgrimages: Helsinki with Bryn. Solo sabbaticals: Tampere, Rovaniemi. Comfort returns: Ensenada. Refreshment rituals: Outer Banks. Corporate-cultural pilgrimages: Atlanta, Houston. Cultural and coastal Mexico: Mexico City, Cabo. Each city is an entry in my ledger, inscribed with its own resonance, its own paradox, its own meaning.

What strikes me is how these cities balance each other. Dublin and Key West are opposites—gray skies and sunlight, lineage and myth—but both are bound by literature. Helsinki, Tampere, and Rovaniemi are winter cities, sabbatical pilgrimages of rhythm and myth, but Helsinki shifts into companionship when Bryn joins me. Ensenada and the Outer Banks are comfort and refreshment, returns and rituals that balance the intensity of literary and sabbatical pilgrimages. Atlanta and Houston are corporate-cultural anchors, inscribing pop culture and exploration into my archive. Mexico City and Cabo balance urban density with coastal simplicity. Tokyo adds play, a café that treats coffee as a textbook, companionship inscribed into ritual.

Together, these cities form a constellation that reflects the paradoxes I love. Shared journeys and solo ones. Literature and lineage. Comfort and refreshment. Corporate culture and coastal respite. Play and pilgrimage. Each city is an anchor, inscribed into my archive not as a checklist but as a resonance. Travel, for me, is not about claiming identity or ticking boxes. It’s about inscribing meaning, honoring paradox, and building a ledger of pilgrimages that reflect both companionship and independence, both heritage and ambiguity, both comfort and play.

I don’t know exactly what my English and Irish heritage means to me, but I know it means something. I love both countries, but I don’t call myself English or Irish. Instead, I treat Dublin as a pilgrimage site, a place where literature and lineage overlap. I don’t know exactly what Ensenada means to me, but I know it means something. The people are wonderful, the food is fresh, and it’s affordable. I don’t know exactly what Tokyo means to me, but I know it means something. Coffee Elementary School is playful, paradoxical, and resonant. Each city carries meaning even if I can’t name it fully. Each city becomes an entry in my archive, inscribed with resonance and ambiguity.

Travel, for me, is not about closure. It’s about inscription. Each city I imagine visiting becomes a pilgrimage, a comfort return, a refreshment ritual, a corporate-cultural anchor, a companionship duet, or a solo sabbatical. Together they form a constellation, a ledger of cities I’d like to visit, each one carrying its own rhythm, its own meaning, its own inscription in the archive of my life.


Scored by Copilot, conducted by Leslie Lanagan

Oh, The Places I Would Go…

What cities do you want to visit?

I don’t have one top favorite, so I’ll give a few of them. I’m not a huge traveler, so I would rather get an AirBnB for several weeks than try to flip body clocks twice in three or four days. Just not my style anymore. “I’m older and I have more insurance.” But if money were no object, I would love to see:

  • Paris
    • I have been to Paris once, but only for a few days. I definitely hit all the highlights with my dad, but I don’t know what it is to sit at a cafe and people watch. I don’t know what it’s like to go to Paris and do nothing, and that’s why it’s valuable. You don’t go there to find things to do. You go there to walk around in its culture and see what sticks. Then, you either commit yourself to finding out what coffee shop David Sedaris frequents- or perhaps going to Pere Lachaisse for inspiration. Oscar Wilde and I had a marvelous time. Just because I am living and he is not doesn’t mean we weren’t both entertained. I told him that Stephen Fry played him in a movie once. He said it was perfect casting.
  • New York
    • I have never spent more than 24 hours in New York, so it’s the same idea there as in Paris. I’d like to go there for a little bit and then get back out. There’s a rhythm, and it’s intimidating to me. It’s sort of like Las Vegas in that the culture is different but the level of sensory input you receive when you get there is just as heightened. In 2003, I wanted to retire in New York, and I have absolutely no idea what I meant by that. I do remember past trips there to be fun, but not in a way I’d like to live there- except maybe someone I liked wanted to live there, so I did, too. Now, I just want to find hidden treasures on out of the way side streets.
  • Ho Chi Minh City
    • I have to do a lot of research on the Vietnam War, rightfully called “The American War” there. I’m writing a novel about it, and I don’t think I could do setting justice if I just made it up. I mean, I can and I will,if I have to, but there’s a lot to be said about putting effort into understanding something fully. I have studied political science since I got to college- the news junkie in me drove me to poli sci and it hasn’t given up. With political science comes lots and lots on international relations as well. So, I know the story from the American side fairly well, but I don’t like to write from the perspective of only trumpeting American interests. The military and C/DIA had many faults and failures during this time, and since most things more recent than Vietnam are still classified, I don’t know that either organization has really wrestled with our actions in that theater in a way that processes out institutional pain. Vietnam was the first war in which it was clear that we might not lose, but we don’t have enough money or resources to outright win, either. The Vietnamese have the right to call us out on that, because American soldiers were responsible for a lot of atrocities. We have the reputation of being feared, and not in a healthy way. It’s why we’ll never win a land war in Asia……. and death is on the line.
  • Seoul
    • Before I started watching both Josh & Olly, I’d never wanted to visit Korea before. They’re responsible for making a lot of people feel that way on their YouTube channel, Jolly. Josh met Olly in college (I think- British system), then went to university in Seoul. I think. I haven’t done all the math. Anyway, when Josh and Olly were both done with uni, they decided to start making videos about what Koreans think of English people. Hilarity ensues. I’m not sure how often Josh and Olly get back to Korea, but one of the fun things they do is “red carpet” style interviews while they entice celebrities to talk using Korean food. It worked very well on Ryan Reynolds. 🙂
  • Enseñada, Mexico
    • I have been to Enseñada once. It’s a small enough city that I could picture myself living there. I don’t speak much Spanish, but I took two years in school and have spent time in both Texas and Mexico speaking Spanish. My language skills aren’t as good now as they were in high school, because I was going to Mexico regularly (Reynosa and Progreso, both on mission trips). I could not land in San Diego and drive across the border without incident, but within a month or so I’d be all right. Within three or four years, I’d be fluent. It’s amazing what you can do when you have no choice. The water is gorgeous. La Buffadora (Buffalo Snort) is magnificent, a geyser that makes me feel the power of nature unlike anything else. I’m sure Papas & Beer is still there, it’s an institution. I don’t know about Habana Banana, which used to be my favorite Mexican clothing brand. I bought a ton while I was there, and at the time, they didn’t offer online ordering or international shipping. So, part of it is to find another clothing brand I like just as much…….. the rest of it is to sit outside with a Coke (we’re in Mexico, after all) and see what nature is saying around me. I live my life like the sound track is 4’33. I think it would kick things up a notch to perform it outside. My past performances have all gone very well. No one even knew I was “conducting it all while I sleep…. to light up my yard.”
  • Vancouver
    • I didn’t live in DC very long before I went to visit Meagan in Ottawa. However, I lived in Portland for 12 years and never made it to British Columbia. I have heard I would love it, now I need to go see it for myself. I will admit, though, that there is some truth to only the Canadian provinces with her in them being interesting. It wasn’t a draw while I lived there, but now I’m just curious. I sort of know what life is like on the East Coast of Canada because Meag has lived in Alberta, Ontario, and New Brunswick….. maybe more, but I’ve slept since then. But West Coast Canada is completely different, it seems. They don’t have bagged milk there. 🙄 Now that I’ve had time to reflect, I regret not going when it was only a five hour car ride. It would be a much bigger deal now.
  • Washington, DC
    • I live in Silver Spring, Maryland. It’s a suburb that has everything I could possibly want within walking distance. As a result, I can go as long as a year without needing anything from downtown…… and most of it is that the bands I like don’t play in Silver Spring- some of them do, though. If I want to see something relatively big, it’s at The Kennedy Center, not The Fillmore. I also haven’t been to Wolf Trap in 20-odd years, mostly because it’s such a hassle that I think about going to Wolf Trap and back out. I feel about Wolf Trap the same way people feel about Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion. It’s going to be a long concert, there’s no easy way in or out, and there’s a thousand people all screaming at once. I much prefer smaller venues, and wish Indigo Girls would play The Fillmore once in a while. 😛
  • Helsinki
    • My love of Finnish Independence Day led me to believe that one day I’d make it to watch the celebrations live- I watch them every year on YouTube from here. It’s not just that, though. I’ve said before and I’ll say it again that the palate for that part of the world is completely different- they don’t even have the same flora. Learning to cook there would be a whole new experience, and Anthony Bourdain introduced them to me through the magic of television. Why yes, I do want a large reindeer pizza. I also want to fly into HEL and drive up to Kilpisjaarvi so I can sleep under the aurora borealis in a clear-top tent. I also want to dress up really warm and sleep outside, just to see if I could do it. 😛