Patt Morrison is a writer and columnist for the Los Angeles Times, where her work has spanned national politics and stories from the Los Angeles riots and earthquakes and the Space Shuttle to the Super Bowl – which she covered from inside a women’s bathroom – and the death of the Princess of Wales. As a member of two Los Angeles Times’ reporting teams, she has a share of two Pulitzer Prizes.
For her work hosting programs on public television and radio, she has received six Emmy awards and a dozen Golden Mikes. Patt is also a regular commentator on the Emmy-winning “L.A. Times Today” show on Spectrum 1.
Patt was featured on the cover of “Talkers” Magazine as one of its “Heavy 100” top radio hosts in the nation – a first for any local radio host. She created and hosted “Comedy Congress,” a political satire on her radio show, which twice earned Golden Mike awards as best public affairs show.
Her nonfiction books, “Rio L.A., Tales from the Los Angeles River” and “Don’t Stop the Presses! Truth, Justice, and the American Newspaper,” were both bestsellers.
A few among her myriad interview subjects: Salman Rushdie, Jimmy Carter, both James Watson and Francis Crick, Al Gore, Frank Gehry, four past and present Supreme Court justices (Sonia Sotomayor, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer and Sandra Day O’Connor), Norman Mailer, Carl Sagan, Gore Vidal, Kenneth Branagh, Jodie Foster, Jack Lemmon, Steve Martin, Edward Albee, Timothy Leary, Jane Goodall, Stephen Hawking, Eldridge Cleaver, Ray Bradbury, Leonard Cohen, Oprah Winfrey and five of the seven original Mercury astronauts.
She was an early regular panelist on the radio comedy show “Wait, Wait – Don’t Tell Me!” She has been a crossword puzzle clue, the central figure in a diptych called “The Triumph of Civility,” by Los Angeles painter John Martin. Pink’s, the renowned Hollywood hot dog stand, named its vegetarian dog, the “Patt Morrison Baja Dog,” after her.
Latest From This Author
As President Trump launches an offensive against ‘woke’ art, the Picasso Museum shows the kind of works that the Nazis singled out decades ago for mockery or destruction.
U.S.-French relations are strained under Donald Trump’s second term. Columnist Patt Morrison recounts our shared history with France, from Marquis de Lafayette during the American Revolutionary War to Pete Hegseth and the U.S. strikes on Yemen.
- Voices
Commentary: Another painful crisis has us asking: Can Los Angeles accomplish big things again?
The January fires that scorched homes in Altadena and Pacific Palisades have columnist Patt Morrison asking why we can’t accomplish big things.
The historic buildings and land that the January fires spared and destroyed. The Southern California properties come with tales that go back more than a century.
The deal to sell California to Denmark means the Golden State would get “the rule of law, universal healthcare, and fact-based politics.” In exchange, Denmark would get Yosemite, Hollywood, redwood forests, and Venice Beach.
Palm trees are recognized as the symbol for Los Angeles. Many have reached the edges of their lifespan.
Eighty years ago, Japanese Americans held in prison camps were allowed to return home. But much of what they’d left behind was gone: homes, businesses, personal property.
Los Angeles took over as California’s top city after San Francisco’s 1906 earthquake and fires. What lessons can L.A. learn from this latest disaster?
A gold rush changed California’s history. That precious metal is back, striking the same reaction.
Despite California’s kumbaya vibe, a deep lode of hate and racist one-upmanship undergirds Southern California.