A two-cab call.
Looking through some kind of lens on the sidewalk in the Gaslamp Quarter.
The back of a Ford Expedition. This is an Oakland Raiders fan. They're all criminals.
Stories from a night shift cabbie in San Diego, California
A two-cab call.
Looking through some kind of lens on the sidewalk in the Gaslamp Quarter.
The back of a Ford Expedition. This is an Oakland Raiders fan. They're all criminals.
Trapped on the 163 on-ramp, as usual.
The 163 is a convenient connector from downtown San Diego to Mission Valley, and it runs all the way to its end at the I-15 freeway. Getting on is a nightmare. There are two lanes coming from 11th street in downtown, plus two lanes from I-5 northbound, plus a fifth lane of traffic coming from the Park Blvd area. It's whacked. City planners should be ashamed of themselves.

Today was the first day of Comic-Con, the international comic convention. It's for comic book fans, plus science fiction books and films, and the like. It's our largest convention, at 125,000.



Battling taxi driver Alex McIlveen faced down the Glasgow Airport terror suspects ... and his courage cost him his favourite pair of trainers and a £30 parking fine.
Dad-of-two Alex punched and kicked the two men after they crashed a Jeep Cherokee loaded with gas canisters into the door of Terminal One.
The 45-year-old booted one of the suspects, whose body was covered in flames, as hard as he could between the legs.
But the man didn't appear to feel the blow, and a police doctor told Alex later that he'd damaged a tendon in his foot.
After the drama, police confiscated Alex's trainers for forensic tests.
"Then I kicked him with full force right in the balls but he didn't go down. He just kept on babbling his rubbish.
"I couldn't believe that he was still standing. I know I would have been floored by that kind of kick."





