Newport Marine Claims Veterans Day Yellow Ribbon on Hollywood Sign Tied Up in Red Tape
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David Weiss, who was a jarhead from 1981-86, wanted to put a yellow ribbon on the legendary Hollywood sign to honor U.S. veterans today.
Cost of the mission: $11,000.
Weiss, 48, reportedly says he had a handshake agreement with Los Angeles City Councilman Tom LaBonge to get the ribbon up by today.
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"I can't give that approval," LeBonge tells the Los Angeles Times. "I think he misunderstood. He was a very enthusiastic individual."
The politico also confides to the paper something he apparently did not confide to Weiss: that he figured the request was being made too late to get approved by today--Veterans Day--and that it might violate city sign ordinances anyway.
He also claimed to make an offer the onetime Marine did not like: mounting a yellow ribbon on LA City Hall.
Enter Los Feliz apartment owner Tomas O'Grady, who also happens to be one of five candidates seeking LaBonge's council seat. O'Grady joined Weiss and a small group of demonstrators carrying signs that read, "Yellow Ribbon vs. Red Tape" outside City Hall Wednesday.
Saying he took up the issue because it reflects a need to change the sign-request process in La-La Land, O'Grady told the Times, "This might look like me jumping on a political bandwagon, but it's anything but."
Meanwhile, Weiss explained why he was anything but excited by LaBonge's offer to tie a yellow ribbon 'round the old City Hall.
"I appreciated that there was some gesture made, but it was a difficult gesture to maneuver," he tells LA's paper of record. "I'm talking about putting a fabric on a hunk of tin in the middle of the mountains. That is infinitely easier."






























