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  • Phillip Frankland Lee Brings NADC’s Viral Wagyu Burgers Home to Los Angeles

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    Phillip Frankland Lee and Neen Williams. Jake Ostrowski

    Chef Phillip Frankland Lee moved from Los Angeles to Austin during the Covid-19 pandemic, but there was not a damn chance that he was abandoning California. 

    Lee, who grew up in Los Angeles, has continued to operate Sushi by Scratch Restaurants. The Montecito outpost earned a 2021 Michelin star, and Sushi by Scratch is also going strong at its locations in Encino and the SLS Beverly Hills. Lee keeps pushing harder at Encino’s Pasta | Bar, which has had a Michelin Star for five consecutive years and was featured in Apple TV’s Knife Edge series last year. (In 2025, Lee and his brother, Lennon, made history by becoming the first siblings to earn a Michelin star at different U.S. restaurants in the same year.)

    And now he’s back in L.A. to remind his hometown that he’s also an ace at creating casual food. On Friday, Feb. 27, Lee and pro skateboarder Neen Williams will open NADC Burger’s first Los Angeles location in Westwood, near the UCLA campus. 

    NADC, which is short for Not a Damn Chance, is a wagyu burger spot that Lee and Williams already operate in Austin, New York, Chicago, Dallas, Fort Worth, Denver, Charlotte and Nashville. The menu is straightforward and habit-forming, with double wagyu cheeseburgers and beef tallow fries. 

    The menu is composed of double wagyu cheeseburgers and beef tallow fries. Jake Ostrowski

    NADC has become a viral, celebrity-friendly sensation, with clientele including David Beckham and Zedd. Jelly Roll, who has declared that NADC’s burger is the best he’s ever had, loves it so much that he serves the burger at his Goodnight Nashville honky-tonk. Matt Damon and Ben Affleck recently popped by NADC in Austin and also headed next door to Lee’s new Shokunin sushi restaurant.

    “I think what sets us apart at NADC is that I run it like I run the line at Pasta or Sushi,” Lee tells Observer. “I put as much attention into every spec when we’re building the burger.”

    There’s American cheese, secret sauce (a ketchup and mayonnaise base enhanced with Tabasco and some “little secret notes to make it extra umami”), onions, a generous amount of pickles and “slightly tamed” jalapeños that are boiled before they’re pickled. The beef is American wagyu with Japanese genetics. And when each 3-ounce patty comes off the griddle, it goes onto a resting rack with a 90-second timer so that the juices settle and excess grease drips off. This is precision-focused cooking that grew out of Lee’s backyard hangs with Williams. 

    Lee applied the same principles from his other restaurants to making the burgers at NADC. Jake Ostrowski

    Like Jelly Roll, Zedd and Joe Rogan (who collaborated with NADC on a limited-edition burger in Austin last year), Williams was a guest at the counter of Sushi by Scratch when he met Lee.

    “I was already a fan of his because I grew up skateboarding,” Lee says. “He was solo, and I always talk to everybody. He’s like, ‘Yeah, I like to cook.’ I’m like, ‘OK, cute.’ And then he shows me a picture of his backyard where he has a 12-foot masonry hearth that he built himself. I’m like, ‘Oh, you really cook.’”

    Lee and Williams started hanging out a lot, skateboarding together, getting their wives together and cooking together.

    “We did whole pigs and a lot of steaks over the fire,” Lee says. “And one thing we were doing often was burgers.”

    Lee had recently returned from Bangkok, where he had been working on a sushi restaurant and a burger spot that never opened due to the pandemic. So he was in the mood to make burgers, and he and Williams started giving away burgers at Austin skateparks and comedy shows. That led to a 2022 pop-up and then, in 2023, NADC’s first brick-and-mortar location.

    Jelly Roll, a huge fan of the NADC burger, was a guest on Lee and Williams’ ‘Not A Damn Chance!’ podcast. YMH Studios

    The success of NADC has spawned the Not A Damn Chance! podcast, with Lee and Williams talking to guests like Jelly Roll, Zedd, Bert Kreischer, Tom Segura, Mel Robbins, Aaron Franklin and poker pro Doug Polk. Lee is an avid poker player who’s done well in tournaments. And to use a gambling term, he’s been on some kind of rush, opening restaurant after restaurant.

    Lee didn’t have any intention of moving to Austin when he went there in 2020 for a sushi pop-up. But after he saw that pop-up sell out with a 25,000-person waiting list, he kept it going month to month. After five months in Austin, Lee looked at his wife, pastry chef Margarita Kallas-Lee, and said, “I think we live in Austin now.”

    Lee has built a new life in Texas, where he’s now working to create his most over-the-top project yet. He’s found four acres in Hill Country, about half an hour from Austin, where he plans to have a farm, inn and restaurant with aspirations at three-Michelin-star status and World’s 50 Best recognition.

    “We will grow or harvest most of the menu and hunt the rest of the menu,” Lee says. “We’ll milk cows in the morning to get the cream to make butter. We’ll get dairy cows from a local farm and finish them on the grain of the local brewery and the mash of the local olive oil mill.” 

    Lee is nothing if not ambitious. In 2017, when he was 30 years old, he told me he wanted to have “100 world-class restaurants” by the time he was 50. The pandemic slowed him down a bit, but the L.A. location of NADC Burger puts him at 30 restaurants, and he still thinks he’ll hit his lofty goal.

    “I’m the same age Thomas Keller was when he took over The French Laundry, and you could argue that was the beginning of his career,” Lee says. “I’m going to be 39 on March 9, so I’m still young. I think I’ll probably surpass 100 restaurants by the time I’m 50. But I don’t think I’m doing it for the same reasons that made me want to do it before.” 

    All the success he’s had has motivated him in a more meaningful way. 

    “I’ve now gotten the stars and the TV and the accolades and the personal freedom to feel like I’ve ‘done it,’” Lee says. “But I think I now get off on different things. It used to be more ego-driven. Now I look around and see someone who comes on as a prep cook, moves all the way into executive chef in our company, has a child and gets a fully paid paternity or maternity leave. They’re getting a 401(k). I have cooks and bartenders buying houses. The more I grow, the more we grow.”


    NADC Burger, located at 1091 Broxton Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90024, will be open seven days a week from 11:30 a.m. to midnight.

    Phillip Frankland Lee Brings NADC’s Viral Wagyu Burgers Home to Los Angeles

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    Andy Wang

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  • Troubled Moreno Valley Mall closed for safety violations

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    The Moreno Valley Mall in Riverside County remained closed Wednesday as owners faced fire safety violations that led the city to shut down most of the vast retail center.

    The sprawling indoor regional mall is a centerpiece of Moreno Valley serving customers from Riverside and San Bernardino counties. It was built in 1992 on the former site of Riverside International Raceway, once considered one of the finest automotive racing tracks in the country and a regular draw across Southern California for decades before it closed in 1989.

    On Feb. 19, city officials “red-tagged” the mall for the owners’ failure to resolve a multitude of unresolved issues related to its fire protection systems.

    The owners said they are “working hard to end this interruption.”

    Portions of the two-level, 1.1-million-square-foot mall were deemed unsafe by county and state fire inspectors who recommended the city shut them down “until all live-saving measures are addressed,” the city said in a statement.

    Department stores Macy’s and JCPenney are independently owned buildings at the mall with appropriately maintained fire protection systems that are separate from the mall’s systems, allowing them to stay open, the city said.

    The16-screen Harkins Theatres movie cineplex is also open.

    City Councilwoman Elena Baca-Santa Cruz told the Riverside Press-Enterprise that the mall has “hundreds of violations,” though nine of them are preventing it from reopening.

    “For example, there’s no backup generator. If there was a power failure, the whole place will go dark, and that’s a safety violation,” Baca-Santa Cruz said last week.

    The owners of the mall, IGP Business Group, did not immediately respond to requests for comment, but owner Matt Ilbak said in a recent Instagram post that a new generator has been installed. The company has upgraded the fire sprinkler system and is working on resolving “all of the city’s issues.”

    Other city complaints about IGP’s operation of the mall were outlined in a January letter to Ilbak that cited fire code violations and also complained about “property maintenance violations” that included severely cracked pavement and curbing, as well as dead plants outside. The mall had insufficient exterior lighting, the city said, and graffiti resulting from deferred or neglected maintenance.

    In Orange County, Westminster Mall, a once-popular shopping center that has been tarnished by graffiti and vandalism since it closed last year, is on track for demolition soon.

    It will be replaced with housing, a hotel and some shops and stores, part of a nationwide trend that is seeing outdated, failed malls in high-traffic locations swapped for mixed-use development that typically includes apartments. The process is often lengthy, leaving empty malls in danger of abuse.

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    Roger Vincent

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  • L.A.’s Most Anticipated Restaurant Openings of February

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    Less than two months into 2026, the Los Angeles dining scene has already set an exemplary tone for the year ahead. At the end of January, highly anticipated Lapaba launched its soft opening in Koreatown, while Mexico City’s iconic churrería El Moro landed in Echo Park. The recently rebranded Cameo Beverly Hills debuted a new Peruvian-Japanese fusion restaurant, Zampo, and the 90210 welcomed a brand-new omakase experience called Miura. 

    As the city continues to ride its culinary high, amplified by Bad Bunny’s Villas Tacos feature at the Super Bowl, let’s take a look at what’s to come this February. Sushi Samba and Lucky’s DTLA, which were both set to open this month, have pushed back their launch dates, but locals still have plenty to look forward to. 

    Two luxury hotels are redefining their dining options: the Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills is introducing Tuscan steakhouse Baldi, and the historic Hotel Figueroa is debuting Florence by the Water. Chef Marcus Jernmark is also revealing the fine-dining concept Lielle in Beverlywood, while iconic music venue, Hollywood Palladium, is getting a hi-fi-inspired lounge for hungry concert-goers. Keep reading for the most L.A.’s most exciting restaurant openings of February. 

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    Allie Lebos

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  • What winter? Groundhog Day in SoCal is sizzling with no end in sight

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    While a groundhog in Pennsylvania has predicted six more weeks of winter and cold-stunned iguanas fall from trees in Florida, Southern California is working up a sweat.

    A midwinter heat wave has descended on much of the state and is expected to spike temperatures as much as 20 degrees above normal in the coming week.

    The summer-like heat is thanks to a ridge of high pressure lingering high in the atmosphere that extends through the San Francisco Bay Area and into the Pacific Northwest. Meteorologists with the National Weather Service expect it to last through the end of the week and potentially through Super Bowl Sunday.

    After a cooler Monday for the L.A. area, another push of warm weather may bring near-record temperatures by Wednesday — potentially reaching 90 degrees across the inland coast and valley areas of L.A. and Ventura counties, according to the weather service.

    The thermometer is expected to tip above 85 degrees in much of Southern California on Wednesday, according to forecasters.

    (National Weather Service)

    The high-pressure ridge this week is expected to go “all the way up through Canada into southern Alaska,” said Carol Ciliberti, a meteorologist with the weather service. “It’s pretty impressive.”

    Moderate Santa Ana winds, which may bring gusts up to 50 mph in the mountains, could add some additional heat to the region.

    While downtown Los Angeles and Los Angeles International Airport tied daily record-high temperatures Friday, other parts of the United States set new daily record lows.

    Nearly half of Americans were under cold weather advisories and extreme cold warnings Sunday. Frigid Arctic air, winter storms and a “bomb cyclone” dumped heavy snow on New England, triggered flight cancellations in North Carolina and tested the limits of power systems in the South.

    Bomb cyclones typically occur when Arctic air creeps south and clashes with warm air, creating a storm that rapidly intensifies as its pressure suddenly drops — or “bombs out.”

    It’s a common occurrence for the Northeastern U.S. This one is unique in how far south it reached.

    Along the West Coast, air from the high-pressure shelf gets hotter as it sinks toward the ground. A similar phenomenon heats up Santa Ana winds as air from high above the Great Basin descends and races out to sea.

    In the coming week, it’ll result in temperatures reaching roughly 15 degrees higher than normal in the Bay Area, and around 20 degrees higher than normal in Southern California. The trend in the Bay Area is expected to hold through Super Bowl Sunday, which will be held in Santa Clara.

    “We’re going to see that high pressure really sticking around,” said Rachel Kennedy, a meteorologist with the weather service.

    On game day, temperatures are still expected to be in the mid- to upper 60s for the Bay Area, but residents (and fans) might see some fog that morning, Kennedy said.

    Despite the hot and windy weather in Southern California, vegetation is still holding enough moisture from the last rain that there is little risk of a major wildfire, said David Gomberg, a weather service meteorologist.

    “You can still get small fires,” Gomberg said. “But the chances of it spreading into a major fire are minimal because of that moisture. It doesn’t spread easily.”

    The weather service coordinates with fire agencies to rate fire risk, Gomberg said. The fire agencies take measurements of vegetation moisture in the field and forward the results to the weather service every two to four weeks.

    The weather service’s models indicate that some light rain is in store for the region next week, with temperatures dropping to a more reasonable 5 to 10 degrees above average — although Ciliberti noted that without a crystal ball it was tough to say exactly when the moisture and cooler temperatures might arrive.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Noah Haggerty, Queenie Wong, Doug Smith

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  • The Best Red Carpet Fashion Moments at the 2026 Grammy Awards

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    Tonight, the Grammy Awards return to the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, as the music industry’s biggest stars gather to celebrate the best records and performances of the year. Comedian Trevor Noah is taking on hosting duties for the sixth year in a row.

    The 68th annual Grammy Awards are sure to be a star-studded evening, with performances from Sabrina Carpenter, Post Malone, Reba McEntire, Justin Bieber, Lauryn Hill, Duff McKagan, Brandy Clark, Andrew Wyatt, Lukas Nelson, Slash, Clipse and Pharrell Williams, as well as a Best New Artist production with all of the category’s eight nominees: Addison Rae, Alex Warren, Katseye, Leon Thomas, Lola Young, Olivia Dean, Sombr and The Marías.

    Carole King, Chappell Roan, Charli XCX, Doechii, Harry Styles, Jeff Goldblum, Karol G, Lainey Wilson, Marcello Hernández, Nikki Glaser, Q-Tip, Queen Latifah and Teyana Taylor are among the presenters announced thus far.

    Aside from a bevy of musical talent, the night also always includes a very exciting red carpet. At the Grammys, attendees aren’t scared to try something new when it comes to fashion—or something so fantastically outrageous that style commentators are sure to discuss for years to come. Below, see all the best and most thrilling fashion moments from the 2026 Grammy Awards show in Los Angeles.

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    Justin Bieber and Hailey Bieber. Getty Images

    Justin Bieber and Hailey Bieber

    Justin Bieber in Balenciaga, Hailey Bieber in Alaïa

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    Tate McRae. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Tate McRae

    in Balenciaga

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    Jon Batiste. Getty Images

    Jon Batiste

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    Kesha. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Kesha

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    Don Lemon. Getty Images

    Don Lemon

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    Paris Hilton. WireImage

    Paris Hilton

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    Halle Bailey. Getty Images

    Halle Bailey

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    Pharrell Williams and Angélique Kidjo. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Pharrell Williams and Angélique Kidjo

    in Louis Vuitton 

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    Chrissy Teigen and John Legend. Getty Images

    Chrissy Teigen and John Legend

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    Lady Gaga. Getty Images

    Lady Gaga

    in Matières Fécales

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    Grace Potter. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Grace Potter

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    Carole King. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Carole King

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    Noah Kahan. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Noah Kahan

    in Armani 

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    Bad Bunny. Billboard via Getty Images

    Bad Bunny

    in Schiaparelli

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    Karol G. Getty Images

    Karol G

    in Paolo Sebastian 

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    Miley Cyrus. Getty Images

    Miley Cyrus

    in Celine

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    Billie Eilish. Getty Images

    Billie Eilish

    in Hodakova

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    Claudia Sulewski and Finneas O’Connell. Getty Images

    Claudia Sulewski and Finneas O’Connell

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    Jelly Roll and Bunnie Xo. WireImage

    Jelly Roll and Bunnie Xo

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    Laufey. Getty Images

    Laufey

    in Miu Miu 

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    Doechii. WireImage

    Doechii

    in Robert Cavalli 

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    Madison Beer. WireImage

    Madison Beer

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    Lainey Wilson. Getty Images

    Lainey Wilson

    in Gaurav Gupta

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    Addison Rae. Getty Images

    Addison Rae

    in Alaïa

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    Este Haim, Danielle Haim and Alana Haim. WireImage

    Este Haim, Danielle Haim and Alana Haim

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Nikki Glaser. Getty Images

    Nikki Glaser

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    Trevor Noah. WireImage

    Trevor Noah

    in Ralph Lauren 

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    Kelsea Ballerini. Getty Images

    Kelsea Ballerini

    in Etro 

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    Chappell Roan. Getty Images

    Chappell Roan

    in Mugler

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    Sombr. Getty Images

    Sombr

    in Valentino 

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    Olivia Dean. Getty Images

    Olivia Dean

    in Chanel 

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    Heidi Klum. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Heidi Klum

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    Ejae. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The

    Ejae

    in Dior 

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    Queen Latifah. Getty Images

    Queen Latifah

    in Stéphane Rolland

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    Coco Jones. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Coco Jones

    in Kristina K

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    Madeleine White. AFP via Getty Images

    Madeleine White

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    Rosé. Getty Images

    Rosé

    in Giambattista Valli

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    Sabrina Carpenter. Getty Images

    Sabrina Carpenter

    in Valentino 

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    Kelsey Merritt. Getty Images

    Kelsey Merritt

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    Tyla. Getty Images

    Tyla

    in Dsquared2

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    Michelle Williams. Getty Images

    Michelle Williams

    in Jean-Louis Sabaji Couture

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    Reba McEntire. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for The

    Reba McEntire

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    Samara Joy. Billboard via Getty Images

    Samara Joy

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    Zara Larsson. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Zara Larsson

    in Germanier

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    Rita Wilson. Getty Images

    Rita Wilson

    in Jenny Packham 

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    Leah Kateb. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Leah Kateb

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    Ali Wong Getty Images for The Recording A

    Ali Wong

    in Vivienne Westwood 

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    Anna Shumate. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Anna Shumate

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    Shaboozey. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Shaboozey

    in Bode 

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    Margo Price. WireImage

    Margo Price

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    Lola Clark. WireImage

    Lola Clark

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    Ciara Miller. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Ciara Miller

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    PinkPantheress. Billboard via Getty Images

    PinkPantheress

    in Vivienne Westwood 

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    Kehlani. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Kehlani

    in Valdrin Sahiti

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    FKA Twigs. Getty Images

    FKA Twigs

    in Paolo Carzana

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    Lola Young. FilmMagic

    Lola Young

    in Vivienne Westwood 

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    Jesse Jo Stark and Yungblud. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Jesse Jo Stark and Yungblud

    in Chrome Hearts

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    Chris Redding and Serena Redding. AFP via Getty Images

    Chris Redding and Serena Redding

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    Joni Mitchell. Billboard via Getty Images

    Joni Mitchell

    The Best Red Carpet Fashion Moments at the 2026 Grammy Awards

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • Ray Kappe’s Modernist masterpiece asks $11.5 million in Pacific Palisades

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    An iconic property that has been described as possibly “the greatest house in Southern California” just hit the market for the first time ever in Pacific Palisades. Asking price: $11.5 million.

    A Midcentury masterpiece, the home served as the primary residence of Ray Kappe, the late architect who co-founded the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc). He designed the place himself in 1967.

    Kappe died in 2019, and his wife Shelly, who also co-founded SCI-Arc, died last year. Now, the property is being sold by their family trust.

    Tucked on a hillside in the Rustic Canyon neighborhood, the house floats above a natural spring that flows through the property, resting on six concrete columns sunk 30 feet into the ground. The 4,157-square-foot floor plan is split across seven levels, featuring five bedrooms, five bathrooms and free-flowing living spaces wrapped in redwood and glass.

    One critic called it “a controlled explosion of space.” An architect called it “the quintessential treehouse.” In 2008, when the L.A. Times Home section created a list of the 10 best houses in L.A., which featured creations from Richard Neutra, Frank Lloyd Wright and Pierre Koenig, former American Institute of Architects’ L.A. chapter president Stephen Kanner said Kappe’s “may be the greatest house in Southern California.”

    The 1960s home floats on a hillside lot in Rustic Canyon.

    (Cameron Carothers)

    It’s not a house that could be built today — for a handful of reasons. First, the hovering stairs and footbridges that navigate the property have no handrails, which are now required under current construction code.

    Also, the house features a ton of glass. Too much glass, according to modern California building code. The home’s skylights, clerestories and towering windows that take in the wooded scene surrounding it make up roughly 50% of the floor plan — much higher than modern limits allow.

    Outside, cantilevered decks and platforms overlook a lap pool, spa, sauna and cabana shrouded in eucalyptus, sycamore, oak and bamboo.

    The 4,157-square-foot house is wrapped in concrete, redwood and glass.

    The 4,157-square-foot house is wrapped in concrete, redwood and glass.

    (Cameron Carothers)

    The end result is a striking space that feels entirely unique, even in a region as architecturally eclectic as Southern California. In 1996, it was deemed an L.A. Historic-Cultural Monument.

    Ian Brooks of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties holds the listing. He said calls asking to tour the property have been coming nonstop since it surfaced for sale.

    “The Kappe residence will resonate with discerning buyers who value architectural provenance, impeccable design and cultural importance — a rare opportunity to own an enduring piece of architectural history,” he said.

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    Jack Flemming

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  • Independent studios scramble to stay afloat as film and TV production lags

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    Shep Wainright sure would like to rent you a fancy new soundstage.

    Last week, he opened a $230-million movie and television studio on the edge of the Arts District in downtown Los Angeles nestled alongside the dramatic new Sixth Street Bridge.

    The state-of-the-art complex has five sound stages, offices and other proper movie studio features such as a mill, commissary and base camp.

    “We just had all the major networks, all the major streaming platforms walk through this facility and they can’t believe how nice it is,” said Wainright, managing partner of East End Studios.

    But so far, no one has signed up to make a project at East End Studios’ newest property, even as state and local leaders tout new tax incentives to boost the film industry.

    “Everyone is doing their best to try to bring productions back to Los Angeles,” said Wainright, “but it’s pretty dire.”

    The $230-million East End Studios – Mission Campus opened last week in Boyle Heights. It has five sound stages, offices and other production facilities.

    (East End Studios)

    The challenges facing owners of local sound stages came into sharp relief last week when one of the largest landlords in Hollywood — Hackman Capital Partners — said it was turning over the historic Radford Studio Center in Studio City to Goldman Sachs.

    After years of aggressive sound stage development across Southern California — fueled by a surge in TV production and low interest rates — the writing was on the wall as filming activity dropped to historic lows.

    The average annual sound stage occupancy rate dropped to 63% in 2024, the most recent year data are available, according to FilmLA, a nonprofit that tracks filming in the L.A. area.

    The 2024 rate is down from 69% the prior year and is well below the average occupancy rate of 90% seen between 2016 and 2022, according to FilmLA data.

    An upcoming report for 2025 is expected to reveal little change in occupancy levels, said spokesman Philip Sokoloski. The group recently reported a16% drop in film and TV shoot days last year compared with 2024.

    Those busy days were heady, but they weren’t built to last, said real estate broker Carl Muhlstein, who helps arrange sales and leases of studios and other large entertainment facilities.

    The dawn of the streaming era set off a scramble to grab market share among newcomers like Netflix and old-timers like Paramount and Disney, who created hundreds of original scripted televisions shows. By 2022, during the height of so-called peak TV, nearly 200 shows were in production industry-wide.

    “It was all about speeding to market and capturing eyeballs by throwing billions of dollars” at creating new shows and movies, Muhlstein said. “They were all building platforms.”

    Landlords raced to build or buy sound stages to accommodate all the production, and they may have overshot the mark.

    In 2021, independent studio giant Hackman Capital Partners and Square Mile Capital Management paid $1.85 billion for Radford Studio Center, a popular lot dating to silent film days that gave Studio City its name.

    Now the owners have defaulted on their $1.1-billion mortgage after production slowdowns made servicing its debt unsustainable and lender Goldman Sachs is expected to take control of the lot.

    For Culver City-based Hackman, the timing couldn’t have been worse. Shortly after it bought Radford Studio Center, the industry began to see theatrical slowdowns from the pandemic, the 2023 dual writers’ and actors’ strikes and the cutback in spending at the studios.

    California also lost market share to rivals as producers continued to migrate to other states and countries offering lower costs — and bigger tax breaks.

    “Los Angeles has the best infrastructure, the best crews, and the deepest creative talent in the world for film production, but California has failed to keep the industry competitive with tax credits offered by other states and countries,” Chief Executive Michael Hackman said in a statement. “We are now witnessing the cumulative impact of years of policy neglect compounded by the effects of COVID, strikes, and changes in industry trends.

    ‘We’re going to have fewer studios’

    — Real estate broker Carl Muhlstein

    “The flight of production from Los Angeles has caused extraordinary economic damage, job losses and declines in our tax base,” Hackman said. “If policymakers level the playing field, Los Angeles can recover and remain at the center of the entertainment industry where it belongs.”

    The problem for Hackman was that it bought Radford during “peak demand,” said Kevin Klowden, a Milken Institute fellow, focused on entertainment and technology. “Expect that whoever buys it is clearly going to look at the economics of it differently.”

    Other studios face similar challenges to Radford’s, Muhlstein said.

    “Unfortunately, this could be the first of several foreclosures,” he said. “We’re going to have fewer studios.”

    He didn’t identify other studios in distress, but said some have less filming business than Radford does and are facing more painful cost increases when refinancing short-term loans they took out to buy the properties.

    “More content is being produced in more places at lower costs by increasingly widespread teams,” Muhlstein said. “You can go to London, you can go to Hungary, you can go to Vancouver. “

    There is hope in the industry that local production — and with it, soundstage usage — will get a boost from California’s revamped film and TV tax credit program, which was overhauled last year.

    In addition to boosting the annual amount allocated to the production incentive program, state lawmakers expanded eligibility criteria to include new kinds of shows, including large-scale competition shows and 20-minute-per-episode shows.

    With that boost, FilmLA expects to see an increase to the current soundstage usage, but below the 90% occupancy of the peak TV period.

    “Our hope is that we can reach that sustainable place with a space for anyone who needs it as well as work opportunities for the crew here,” Sokoloski said.

    But the dynamics of streaming series, with shorter episode orders, doesn’t create the same economies of scale and consistent occupancy rates that network shows once did, Klowden said.

    “Under the new incentives and with the city actively trying to court productions back and make things easier, will things move back?” Klowden said. “That’s the real issue.”

    A representative of L.A. Center Studios in downtown L.A., where “Mad Men,” “The Rookie,” “Top Gun: Maverick” and many other movies and TV shows were filmed, declined to comment.

    The head of tiny but historic Occidental Studios is looking to bail out — for the right price. Craig Darian put the Los Angeles studio that was once used by silent film stars Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks on the market for $45 million last year.

    “Business has slowed but what little debt the studio has is at a low rate and not coming due any time soon, he said. “We’re looking for the correct exit. We’re not eager to sell.”

    Occidental is among the oldest continually operating studios in Hollywood, used by pioneering filmmakers Cecil B. DeMille, D.W. Griffith and Pickford, who worked there as an actor and filmmaker in its early years.

    More recently the three-acre lot has been used for television production for shows including “Tales of the City,” “New Girl” and HBO’s thriller “Sharp Objects.”

    “We mourn what everybody’s going through,” Darian said. “We’re in the land of ‘I don’t know.’ I think that’s a truism for everyone trying to figure things out.”

    With independent studios facing challenges finding tenants to rent their sound stages and services, old-line studio titans such as Warner Bros., Fox and NBCUniversal may gain an edge, analysts said.

    “The large corporate studios are going to gain market share because we’re going to go back to the old system,” Muhlstein said, “where they finance your film or television show and then distribute it.”

    Despite the dramatic pullback in production, Fox Corp. continues to inch forward with its massive $1.5-billion expansion on the Fox lot, which is adjacent to Century City, according to people familiar with the matter but not authorized to comment. The long-term project was unveiled two months before the L.A. production economy collapsed when the Writers Guild of America went on strike.

    Production on Rupert Murdoch’s lot has slowly been increasing after Walt Disney Co. relinquished its space to consolidate operations in Burbank.

    The reboot of the iconic television show “Baywatch” will largely film on the lot as well as Venice Beach, to stay true to the original, Fox said. The lot is home to a major chunk of Fox Sports productions, including “Fox NFL Sunday,” and “Fox NFL Kickoff.”

    The lot also hosts in-studio production across all of Fox Sports for linear and digital channels.

    Some are optimistic the state’s expanded film tax credits will stimulate more local film activity.

    Wainright says the incentives are starting to produce some “green shoots” for the industry.

    “I would like to think that 2024 and 2025 are kind of the bottom and that we’re going to be pulling ourselves up.”

    Times staff writer Meg James contributed to this report.

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  • The Best Fashion Moments From the 2026 Golden Globes Red Carpet

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    Amanda Seyfried. WireImage

    You might still be easing into 2026, but awards season is already out in full force. In a twist from the usual schedule, the calendar kicked off with the Critics’ Choice Awards, and just a week later, it’s time for arguably one of the most fun ceremonies of the season: the Golden Globe Awards.

    The Golden Globes celebrate the best in the film and television industry; this year, Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another garnered the most nominations for a film with nine, closely followed by Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value, which netted eight noms. The White Lotus leads the pack with six television nods, tailed by Adolescence with five.

    Tonight, the Golden Globes return to the Beverly Hilton in Los Angeles, with Nikki Glaser once again taking on hosting duties in a repeat from last year. The 83rd Golden Globe Awards also mark the first time that podcasts will be honored, as this year the show is introducing a Best Podcast category. So far, announced presenters include Amanda Seyfried, Ana de Armas, Ayo Edebiri, Charli XCX, Chris Pine, Colman Domingo, Connor Storrie, Dakota Fanning, Dave Franco, Diane Lane, George Clooney, Hailee Steinfeld, Hudson Williams, Jason Bateman, Jennifer Garner, Joe Keery, Judd Apatow, Julia Roberts, Justin Hartley, Kathryn Hahn, Keegan-Michael Key, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Hart, Kyra Sedgwick, Lalisa Manobal, Luke Grimes, Macaulay Culkin, Marlon Wayans, Melissa McCarthy, Mila Kunis, Miley Cyrus, Minnie Driver, Orlando Bloom, Pamela Anderson, Priyanka Chopra Jonas, Queen Latifah, Regina Hall, Sean Hayes, Snoop Dogg, Wanda Sykes, Will Arnett and Zoë Kravitz.

    The evening always begins with a dazzling red carpet, when A-list guests arrive in their finest fashions. The Golden Globes tend to offer a more exciting spectacle in terms of style; it’s still a black tie event, but it’s not as buttoned-up as, say, the Academy Awards, which is why it’s one of our favorite red carpets of the entire year. Take a look at all the best, most fashionable moments from the 2026 Golden Globes red carpet.

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    Amal Clooney and George Clooney. Getty Images

    Amal Clooney and George Clooney

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    Emma Stone. Getty Images

    Emma Stone

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    Miley Cyrus. Getty Images

    Miley Cyrus

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    Claire Danes. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Claire Danes

    in Zac Posen for GapStudio

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    Leslie Mann and Judd Apatow. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Leslie Mann and Judd Apatow

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    Maya Rudolph. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    in Chanel

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    Amy Poehler. Getty Images

    Amy Poehler

    in Ami Paris 

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    Rashida Jones. WireImage

    Rashida Jones

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    Timothée Chalamet. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Timothée Chalamet

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    Bella Ramsey. WireImage

    Bella Ramsey

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    Jessie Buckley. Getty Images

    Jessie Buckley

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    Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons

    Dunst in Tom Ford 

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    Ana de Armas. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Ana de Armas

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    Leonardo DiCaprio. WireImage

    Leonardo DiCaprio

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    Chloe Zhao. AFP via Getty Images

    Chloe Zhao

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    Brenda Song and Macaulay Culkin. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Brenda Song and Macaulay Culkin

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    Damson Idris. Penske Media via Getty Images

    Damson Idris

    in Prada

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    Jennifer Lawrence. Getty Images

    Jennifer Lawrence

    in Givenchy

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    Zoë Kravitz. WireImage

    Zoë Kravitz

    in Saint Laurent 

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    Jennifer Lopez. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Jennifer Lopez

    in Jean-Louis Scherrer by Stéphane Rolland

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    Jeremy Allen White. Getty Images

    Jeremy Allen White

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    Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell. WireImage

    Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell

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    Parker Posey. Getty Images

    Parker Posey

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    Britt Lower. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Britt Lower

    in Loewe 

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    Rhea Seehorn. Getty Images

    Rhea Seehorn

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    Charli xcx. WireImage

    Charli xcx

    in Saint Laurent 

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    Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis

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    Hailee Steinfeld. Getty Images

    Hailee Steinfeld

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Renate Reinsve. Getty Images

    Renate Reinsve

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Hannah Einbinder. Getty Images

    Hannah Einbinder

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Chase Infiniti. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Chase Infiniti

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Sarah Snook. Getty Images

    Sarah Snook

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Pamela Anderson. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Pamela Anderson

    in Ferragamo 

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    Michael B. Jordan. Getty Images

    Michael B. Jordan

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    Alex Cooper. Getty Images

    Alex Cooper

    in Gucci

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    Diane Lane. WireImage

    Diane Lane

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    Ariana Grande. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Ariana Grande

    in Vivienne Westwood 

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    Julia Roberts. The Hollywood Reporter via Getty

    Julia Roberts

    in Armani Privé

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    Jacob Elordi. Getty Images

    Jacob Elordi

    in Bottega Veneta

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    Jenna Ortega. Getty Images

    Jenna Ortega

    in Dilara Findikoglu

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    Natasha Lyonne. WireImage

    Natasha Lyonne

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    Rose Byrne. Getty Images

    Rose Byrne

    in Chanel 

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    Ryan Michelle Bathe and Sterling K. Brown. Getty Images

    Ryan Michelle Bathe and Sterling K. Brown

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Emma Hewitt and Jason Isaacs. WireImage

    Emma Hewitt and Jason Isaacs

    in Dolce & Gabbana 

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    Odessa A’zion. WireImage

    Odessa A’zion

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    Paul Mescal. WireImage

    Paul Mescal

    in Gucci

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    Mia Goth. Getty Images

    Mia Goth

    in Christian Dior 

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    Patrick Schwarzenegger. Getty Images

    Patrick Schwarzenegger

    in Dolce & Gabbana 

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    Molly Sims. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Molly Sims

    in Sophie Couture 

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    Amanda Seyfried. Getty Images

    Amanda Seyfried

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    Stacy Martin. Getty Images

    Stacy Martin

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    Jean Smart. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Jean Smart

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    Emily Blunt. Getty Images

    Emily Blunt

    in Louis Vuitton 

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    Dakota Fanning. WireImage

    Dakota Fanning

    in Vivienne Westwood 

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    Joe Keery. Getty Images

    Joe Keery

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell. Getty Images

    Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell

    in Armani 

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    Michelle Rodriguez. The Hollywood Reporter via Getty

    Michelle Rodriguez

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Erin Doherty. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Erin Doherty

    in Louis Vuitton

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    Alison Brie and Dave Franco. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Alison Brie and Dave Franco

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    Owen Cooper. Getty Images

    Owen Cooper

    in Bottega Veneta

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    Tessa Thompson. The Hollywood Reporter via Getty

    Tessa Thompson

    in Balenciaga

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    Kate Hudson. WireImage

    Kate Hudson

    in Armani Privé

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    Amanda Anka and Jason Bateman. Getty Images

    Amanda Anka and Jason Bateman

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Carolyn Murphy and Will Arnett. Getty Images

    Carolyn Murphy and Will Arnett

    Murphy in Zuhair Murad

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    Zoey Deutch. Getty Images

    Zoey Deutch

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    Lori Harvey. Getty Images

    Lori Harvey

    in Roberto Cavalli 

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    Walton Goggins. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Walton Goggins

    in Saint Laurent 

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    Teyana Taylor. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Teyana Taylor

    in Schiaparelli

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    Nikki Glaser. Getty Images

    Nikki Glaser

    in Zuhair Murad

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    Adam Scott and Naomi Scott. Getty Images

    Adam Scott and Naomi Scott

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    Eva Victor. AFP via Getty Images

    Eva Victor

    in Loewe 

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    Aimee Lou Wood. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Aimee Lou Wood

    in Vivienne Westwood 

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    Elle Fanning. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Elle Fanning

    in Gucci

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    Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco. Getty Images

    Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco

    Gomez in Chanel

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    Colman Domingo. Getty Images

    Colman Domingo

    in Valentino

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    Minnie Driver. Getty Images

    Minnie Driver

    in Sabina Bilenko

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    Joe Alwyn. Getty Images

    Joe Alwyn

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    Sara Wells and Noah Wyle. Getty Images

    Sara Wells and Noah Wyle

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    Adam Brody and Leighton Meester. Getty Images

    Adam Brody and Leighton Meester

    Meester in Miu Miu 

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    Jennifer Garner. Getty Images

    Jennifer Garner

    in Cong Tri

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    Glen Powell. WireImage

    Glen Powell

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Connor Storrie. Getty Images

    Connor Storrie

    in Saint Laurent 

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    Sabrina Dhowre Elba. Penske Media via Getty Images

    Sabrina Dhowre Elba

    in Guy Laroche

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    Snoop Dogg. FilmMagic

    Snoop Dogg

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    Ayo Edebiri. Getty Images

    Ayo Edebiri

    in Chanel

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    Luke Grimes. Penske Media via Getty Images

    Luke Grimes

    in Giorgio Armani

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    Ginnifer Goodwin. Getty Images

    Ginnifer Goodwin

    in Armani Privé

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Nick Jonas. Getty Images

    Priyanka Chopra Jonas and Nick Jonas

    Chopra Jonas in Christian Dior 

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    Hudson Williams. Getty Images

    Hudson Williams

    in Giorgio Armani

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    Jackie Tohn. Getty Images

    Jackie Tohn

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Abby Elliott. Getty Images

    Abby Elliott

    83rd Annual Golden Globes - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globes - Arrivals
    Sara Foster. Penske Media via Getty Images

    Sara Foster

    83rd Annual Golden Globes - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globes - Arrivals
    Erin Foster. Penske Media via Getty Images

    Erin Foster

    in Galvan 

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    Robin Wright. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Robin Wright

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Lisa. Getty Images

    Lisa

    in Jacquemus

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    Chase Sui Wonders. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Chase Sui Wonders

    in Balenciaga

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    Natasha Rothwell. WireImage

    Natasha Rothwell

    in Rhea Costa 

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    Ejae. Getty Images

    Ejae

    in Dior 

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    Alicia Silverstone. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Alicia Silverstone

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    Sheryl Lee Ralph. Getty Images

    Sheryl Lee Ralph

    in Harbison Studio

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    Justine Lupe. WireImage

    Justine Lupe

    in Armani Privé 

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    Brittany Snow. The Hollywood Reporter via Getty

    Brittany Snow

    in Danielle Frankel

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    Laufey. Getty Images

    Laufey

    in Balenciaga

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    Maura Higgins. Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Maura Higgins

    in Marmar Halim

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    Amanda Kloots. Penske Media via Getty Images

    Amanda Kloots

    83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals83rd Annual Golden Globe Awards - Arrivals
    Dylan Efron. WireImage

    Dylan Efron

    in Valentino

    The Best Fashion Moments From the 2026 Golden Globes Red Carpet

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • The Best Red Carpet Looks at the 2026 Critics’ Choice Awards

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    Ariana Grande. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    A mere four days into the new year, and the first awards show of 2026 is upon us. Tonight, the Critics’ Choice Awards celebrate the best in film and television, recognizing the finest actors, directors, writers, costume designers, editors and more in the industry.

    Along with the usual categories, the 31st Critics’ Choice Awards will include four new honors, for Best Variety Series, Best Sound, Best Stunt Design and Best Casting and Ensemble. Chelsea Handler is hosting the awards show for the fourth year in a row, and the ceremony will once again take place at the Barker Hangar at the Santa Monica Airport in Santa Monica, California.

    It’s always an A-list guest list; this evening’s presenters include Ali Larter, Alicia Silverstone, Allison Janney, Arden Cho, Ava DuVernay, Bradley Whitford, Billy Bob Thornton, Colman Domingo, Diego Luna, Ejae, Hannah Einbinder, Jeff Goldblum, Jessica Williams, Justin Hartley, Justin Sylvester, Kaley Cuoco, Keltie Knight, Marcello Hernández, Mckenna Grace, Michelle Randolph, Noah Schnapp, Owen Cooper, Quinta Brunson, Regina Hall, Rhea Seehorn, Sebastian Maniscalco and William H. Macy.

    Sinners leads the film pack with a staggering 17 nods, followed by One Battle After Another‘s still-impressive 14, while Netflix’s limited series, Adolescence, scored the most for television with six, followed by another Netflix show, Nobody Wants This, with five.

    Before the awards are handed out, however, the stars will walk the red carpet in the first major fashion moment of 2026. Last year’s show brought us standout looks like Margaret Qualley in ethereal Chanel, Colman Domingo in a brown leather Hugo Boss ensemble, Cynthia Erivo in black peplum Armani Privé and Mikey Madison in vintage Giorgio Armani, so we’re just going to have to wait with bated breath to see what this season’s nominees bring to the table. Below, see the best red carpet fashion moments from the 2026 Critics’ Choice Awards.

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Arrivals
    Leighton Meester and Adam Brody. Getty Images

    Leighton Meester and Adam Brody

    31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet31st Annual Critics Choice Awards - Red Carpet
    Jessica Biel. Getty Images for Critics Choice

    Jessica Biel

    in Lanvin 

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    Jacob Elordi. Getty Images

    Jacob Elordi

    in Bottega Veneta 

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    Morgan Halberg

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  • Rain is coming back to Southern California: A timeline of what to expect

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    Southern California should be prepared for rain and blustery conditions this week.

    Residents can also expect to have a rainy New Year’s Eve and Day, with rainfall rates from a quarter to half an inch an hour predicted on Wednesday night into Thursday morning.

    “The chances of a wet New Years Parade, and including the night before when people camp out before the parade, are extremely high, 80-90% at this point,” the weather service said in a Monday evening statement. “The last wet New Year’s parade was in 2006.”

    Timeline

    Tuesday: Windy conditions; chance of rain at night.

    Wednesday: Rain chances intensify during day and into the night.

    Thursday: Height of storm is Wednesday night through Thursday night.

    Friday: 10-12% chance of rain.

    Saturday: More rain possible.

    Basics

    • This storm will not be intense as the one last week, which set records.
    • 1-3 inches is expected in basin; 3-5 inches in the foothills and mountains.
    • Wind gusts could top 30-50 mph.

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    Clara Harter, Salvador Hernandez

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  • The Most Noteworthy L.A. Bar Openings of 2025

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    If 2025 proved anything for L.A.’s hospitality scene, it’s that a hip bar can always attract a crowd. Los Angeles nightlife has been struggling to regain its footing since the Covid-19 pandemic, and though traditional clubs might be a thing of Hollywood’s storied past, craft cocktail bars are still all the craze. 

    Although old-school dive bars certainly serve an important purpose in the local drinking culture, swanky speakeasies, elegant lounges and neighborhood wine bars seem to be the most successful in getting Angelenos out of their house. In 2025, we saw exciting bar openings all across the city, from Melrose Hill to Venice. 

    The Benjamin on Melrose opened a separate bar concept upstairs, emphasizing the art and intricacies of mixology. Max Reis of Mírate opened a margarita-focused joint in Sherman Oaks, and Bar Jubilee took over the former Rock and Reilly’s space on the Sunset Strip. Downtown L.A. also welcomed another scenic rooftop restaurant, while CDMX-inspired Café Tondo took Chinatown by storm. 

    Whether you’re looking to sip a refreshing spritz in an upscale speakeasy by chef Evan Funke or dance the night away during a vinyl night in Virgil Village, these are the best L.A. bar openings of 2025. 

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    Allie Lebos

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  • Church services, help for homeless, poor planned for Christmas

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    Christmas Day in Los Angeles and Orange counties Thursday will include the customary Masses and church services celebrating the birth of Jesus along with annual events providing meals to the homeless and poor.

    An English-language Christmas Day Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m. at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels while Archbishop José Gomez will celebrate the 12:30 p.m. Mass in Spanish.

    The 10 a.m. Mass will be streamed on the cathedral’s YouTube page, youtube.com/olacathedral, and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles’ Facebook page, facebook.com/lacatholics and broadcast on digital Channel 7.2 and SiriusXM satellite radio.

    English-language Christmas Masses will be celebrated at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. at Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, a Chinese-language Mass at 10:30 a.m., a Spanish-language Mass at noon and Vietnamese-language Masses at 2:15 p.m. and 4 p.m.

    The Masses at 10 a.m., noon and 2:15 p.m. will be streamed on The Diocese of Orange’s YouTube channel, youtube.com/@DioceseOrange, and the cathedral’s Facebook page, facebook.com/ChristCathedralCA.

    “This Christmas let us once again open our hearts to remember that we are wonderfully created and still more wonderfully restored,” Gomez said in a statement.

    “We have a great worth and dignity in God’s eyes. Each one of us. Let us allow Christmas to give our lives a new sense of our purpose. Everything we do now, let us do for love, and out of thanksgiving for this beautiful gift of his love.”

    The Laugh Factory is planning to serve more than 2,000 free dinners to those in need at its 45th annual free Christmas dinner and show. Seatings will be at 1 p.m., 3 p.m. 5 p.m. and 7 p.m.

    Tim Allen, Tiffany Haddish, Craig Robinson, Paul Rodriguez and Dane Cook will be among the comedians serving food and performing.   

    Every child in attendance will receive a free toy.   

    Laugh Factory President David Fuhrer encouraged the public to spread the word about the event.   

    “We can all show our holiday spirit by doing something to help people in need,” Fuhrer said in a statement. “Please tell anyone who is alone this holiday season about this event, or even give them a ride to the Laugh Factory.

    “If there’s someone in need in your neighborhood who needs a Christmas meal, please stop by, pick up some food and give it to them.”

    For the 39th year, a free Christmas Day dinner will be served at Hollywood United Methodist Church from noon-3 p.m.    

    All in attendance will receive personal care items, while children will receive toys.

    The dinner is co-hosted by Temple Israel of Hollywood.    

    The Midnight Mission will host a traditional holiday meal and hygiene kit and winter essentials giveaway from 12:30 p.m. to 1:45 p.m. for individuals and families in need.

    In his Christmas message, President Donald Trump said, “The first lady and I send our warmest wishes to all Americans as we share in the joy of Christmas Day and celebrate the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.    

    “… This Christmas, we also give thanks for the many blessings that God has bestowed upon our great nation. For nearly 250 years, the principles of faith, family, and freedom have remained at the center of our way of life,” Trump added.

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    City News Service

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  • California’s winter storm threatens homes and holiday travel with heavy rain, flooding

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    California officials and weather forecasters urged holiday travelers to avoid the roads and reconsider Christmas travel as a series of powerful winter storms brought relentless rains, heavy winds and mountain snow.

    Storms began to move in late Tuesday evening and were expected to intensify into Christmas Eve. Authorities said the millions of people expected to travel across the state will likely meet hazardous, if not impossible, conditions as several atmospheric rivers were forecast to make their way through the state, the National Weather Service warned.

    An atmospheric river is a long, narrow band of water vapor that typically forms over an ocean in the tropics. Strong winds create a funnel for the vapor that transports it north or southward, often targeting the California coast, where it is released as rain or snow on land, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

    “If you’re planning to be on the roads for the Christmas holidays, please reconsider your plans,” said Ariel Cohen, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Los Angeles, during a Tuesday news conference.

    Wind gusts exceeded 60 mph in Los Angeles County, knocking down trees and power lines, Cohen said, according to CBS Los Angeles. She added that the recent “storm is evolving exactly as we have been talking about” and urged “everyone to take these warnings and messages seriously as the accumulative effects of the rain will result in increasingly dangerous and life-threatening conditions as we head through the holiday time period.”

    Forecasters said Southern California could see its wettest Christmas in years and warned about flash flooding, mudslides and debris flows in areas scorched by last January’s wildfires. Los Angeles County officials said they were knocking on the doors of some 380 particularly vulnerable households to order them to leave.

    Drivers make their way in the rain on East Palm Canyon Drive, Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025, in Palm Springs, Calif.

    Pamela Hassell / AP


    Malibu resident Claire Hamano told CBS Los Angeles on Monday that she was concerned the storm could potentially cause landslides near her home. She was filling her car with sandbags at one of the county’s distribution sites in preparation.

    “If there are landslides, let’s say on the PCH, we won’t be able to get out … that’s kind of my biggest fear,” said Hamano. “I’m trying to prevent mud from flowing onto the street on my property.”  

    Southern California typically gets half an inch to 1 inch of rain this time of year, but this week many areas could see between 4 and 8 inches, National Weather Service meteorologist Mike Wofford said. It could be even more in the mountains. Gusts could reach 60 to 80 mph in parts of the central coast.

    In addition to power outages and downed trees, officials also said the storms are expected to cause multiple road closures and airport delays. 

    Evacuation orders across Southern California

    Parts of Los Angeles are under evacuation warnings this week, with an emphasis on protecting burn scar areas affected by recent wildfires, according to CBS Los Angeles.  Many people in burn scar areas decided not to leave after receiving an evacuation notice, Los Angeles Police Department Chief Jim McDonnell said. He urged them to reconsider.

    “The threat posed by this storm is real and imminent,” McDonnell said.

    Los Angeles County put up K-rails, a type of barrier, around a burn scar to help catch sliding debris during rainstorms. Residents could also pick up free sandbags to protect their homes, said Kathryn Barger, a Los Angeles County supervisor representing Altadena.

    Local and state officials are gearing up to respond to emergencies through the week. The state has deployed resources and first responders to a number of counties along the coast and in Southern California. The California National Guard is also on standby to assist.

    Northern flood watch

    In Northern California, much of the Sacramento Valley and the San Francisco Bay Area were under a flood watch and a high wind warning through Friday. Forecasters warned of heavy snow and said gusts were expected to create “near white-out conditions” Wednesday in parts of the Sierra Nevada and make it “nearly impossible” to travel through the mountain passes.

    Extreme Weather California

    A pedestrian carries an umbrella while walking on a path at Alamo Square Park, in San Francisco, Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025.

    Jeff Chiu / AP


    There’s also a risk of severe thunderstorms and a small chance of tornadoes along the northern coast.

    Heavy rain and flash flooding already led to water rescues and at least one death in Northern California, local officials said. Shasta County Sheriff Michael L. Johnson on Monday declared a state of emergency to prepare for more rain and allow the state to help with hazard mitigation and search and rescue operations.

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  • Commentary: Shea Serrano’s ‘Expensive Basketball’ headlines remarkable year for Latino sports books

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    When Fernando Mendoza won the Heisman Trophy this weekend with another Latino finalist looking on from the crowd, the Cuban-American quarterback did more than just become the first Indiana Hoosier to win college football’s top prize, and only the third Latino to do so. He also subtly offered a radical statement: Latinos don’t just belong in this country, they’re essential.

    At a time when questions swirl around this country‘s largest minority group that cast us in a demeaning, tokenized light — how could so many of us vote for Trump in 2024? Why don’t we assimilate faster? Why does Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh think it’s OK for immigration agents to racially profile us? — the fact that two of the best college football players in the country this year were Latino quarterbacks didn’t draw the headlines they would’ve a generation ago. That’s because we now live in an era where Latinos are part of the fabric of sports in the United States like never before.

    That’s the untold thesis of four great books I read this year. Each is anchored in Latino pride but treat their subjects not just as sport curios and pioneers but great athletes who were and are fundamental not just to their professions and community but society at large.

    Shea Serrano writing about anything is like a really great big burrito — you know it’s going to be great and it exceeds your expectations when you finally bite into it, you swear you’re not going to gorge the thing all at once but don’t regret anything when you inevitably do. He could write about concrete and this would be true, but his latest New York Times bestseller (four in total, which probably makes him the only Mexican American author with that distinction) thankfully is instead about his favorite sport.

    “Expensive Basketball” finds Serrano at his best, a mix of humblebrag, rambles and hilarity (of Rasheed Wallace, the lifelong San Antonio Spurs fan wrote the all-star forward “would collect technical fouls with the same enthusiasm and determination little kids collect Pokémon cards with.”) The proud Tejano’s mix of styles — straight essays, listicles, repeated phrases or words trotted out like incantations, copious footnotes — ensures he always keeps the reader guessing.

    But his genius is in noting things no one else possibly can. Who else would’ve crowned journeyman power forward Gordon Hayward the fall guy in Kobe Bryant’s final game, the one where he scored 60 points and led the Lakers to a thrilling fourth-quarter comeback? Tied a Carlos Williams poem that a friend mistakenly texted to him to WNBA Hall of Famer Sue Bird? Reminded us that the hapless Charlotte Hornets — who haven’t made it into the playoffs in nearly a decade — were once considered so cool that two of their stars were featured in the original “Space Jam?” “Essential Basketball” is so good that you’ll swear you’ll only read a couple of Serrano’s essays and not regret the afternoon that will pass as quickly as a Nikola Jokic assist.

    The cover of the book "Mexican American Baseball in the South Bay" features a young Latino baseball player in a yard.

    “Mexican American Baseball in the South Bay”

    (Gustavo Arellano/Los Angeles Times)

    I recommended “Mexican American Baseball in the South Bay” in my regular columna three years ago, so why am I plugging its second edition? For one, the audacity of its existence — how on earth can anyone justify turning a 450-page book on an unheralded section of Southern California into an 800-page one? But in an age when telling your story because no one else will or will do a terrible job at it is more important than ever, the contributors to this tome prove how true that is.

    “Mexican American Baseball in the South Bay” is part of a long-running series about the history of Mexican American baseball in Southern California Latino communities. What’s so brilliant about this one is that it boldly asserts the history and stories of a community that too often get overlooked in Southern California Latino literature in favor of the Eastsides and Santa Anas of the region.

    As series editor Richard A. Santillan noted, the reaction to the original South Bay book was so overwhelmingly positive that he and others in the Latino History Baseball Project decided to expand it. Well-written essays introduce each chapter; long captions for family and team photos function as yearbook entries. Especially valuable are newspaper clippings from La Opinión that showed the vibrancy of Southern Californians that never made it into the pages of the English-language press.

    Maybe only people with ties to the South Bay will read this book cover to cover, and that’s understandable. But it’s also a challenge to all other Latino communities: if folks from Wilmington to Hermosa Beach to Compton can cover their sports history so thoroughly, why can’t the rest of us?

    A picture of "The Sanchez Family" book cover features two people competing in high school wrestling.

    (University of Colorado Press)

    One of the most surprising books I read this year was Jorge Iber’s “The Sanchez Family: Mexican American High School and Collegiate Wrestlers from Cheyenne, Wyoming,” a short read that addresses two topics rarely written about: Mexican American freestyle wrestlers and Mexican Americans in the Equality State. Despite its novelty, it’s the most imperfect of my four recommendations. Since it’s ostensibly an academic book, Iber loads the pages with citations and references to other academics to the point where it sometimes reads like a bibliography and one wonders why the author doesn’t focus more on his own work. And in one chapter, Iber refers to his own work in the first person — profe, you’re cool but you’re not Rickey Henderson.

    “The Sanchez Family” overcomes these limitations by the force of its subject, whose protagonists descend from Guanajuato-born ancestors that arrived to Wyoming a century ago and established a multi-generational wrestling dynasty worthy of the far-more famous Guerrero clan. Iber documents how the success of multiple Sanchez men on the wrestling mat led to success in civic life and urges other scholars to examine how prep sports have long served as a springboard for Latinos to enter mainstream society — because nothing creates acceptance like winning.

    “In our family, we have educators, engineers and other professions,” Iber quotes Gil Sanchez Sr. a member of the first generation of grapplers. “All because a 15-year-old boy [him]…decided to become a wrestler.”

    Heard that boxing is a dying sport? The editors of “Rings of Dissent: Boxing and Performances of Rebellion” won’t have it. Rudy Mondragón, Gaye Theresa Johnson and David J. Leonard not only refuse to entertain that idea, they call such critiques “rooted in racist and classist mythology.”

    The cover of the book "Rings of Dissent" features newspaper articles behind a red boxing glove.

    (University of Illinois Press)

    They then go on to offer an electric, eclectic collection of essays on the sweet science that showcases the sport as a metaphor for the struggles and triumphs of those that have practiced it for over 150 years in the United States. Unsurprisingly, California Latinos earn a starring role. Cal State Channel Islands professor José M. Alamillo digs up the case of two Mexican boxers denied entry in the United States during the 1930s, because of the racism of the times, digging up a letter to the Department of Labor that reads like a Stephen Miller rant: “California right now has a surplus of cheap boxers from Mexico, and something should be done to prevent the entry of others.”

    Roberto José Andrade Franco retells the saga of Oscar De La Hoya versus Julio Cesar Chávez, landing less on the side of the former than pointing out the assimilationist façade of the Golden Boy. Mondragón talks about the political activism of Central Valley light welterweight José Carlos Ramírez both inside and outside the ring. Despite the verve and love each “Rings of Dissent” contributors have in their essays, they don’t romanticize it. No one is more clear-eyed about its beauty and sadness than Mondragón’s fellow Loyola Marymount Latino studies profe, Priscilla Leiva. She examines the role of boxing gyms in Los Angeles, focusing on three — Broadway Boxing Gym and City of Angels Boxing in South L.A, and the since-shuttered Barrio Boxing in El Sereno.

    “Efforts to envision a different future for oneself, for one’s community, and for the city are not guaranteed unequivocal success,” she writes. “Rather, like the sport of boxing, dissent requires struggle.”

    If those aren’t the wisest words for Latinos to embrace for the coming year, I’m not sure what is.

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    Gustavo Arellano

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  • Feds say they foiled New Year’s Eve terror plot in L.A., Southern California

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    A plan to attack several Los Angeles-area businesses on New Year’s Eve was detailed, dangerous and already in motion, authorities said.

    But as four people allegedly tied to an anti-government group gathered last week in the Mojave Desert to make and test several test bombs, FBI officials foiled the terror plot.

    They had everything they needed to make an operational bomb at that location,” First Assistant U.S. Atty. Bill Essayli said at a news conference Monday morning. “We disrupted this terror plot before buildings were demolished or innocent people were killed.”

    The four people were arrested on suspicion of plotting an attack that Essayli called “organized, sophisticated and extremely violent.” They were all tied to a radical faction of the Turtle Island Liberation Front called Order of the Black Lotus, which FBI Assistant Director in Charge Akil Davis called “a violent homegrown anti-government group.”

    Officials wouldn’t say what buildings or businesses were planned to be targeted but Essayli said they were different “logistics centers” similar to ones that Amazon might have.

    Officials said they believe that everyone involved in the planned attack has been arrested, though the investigation into the plot remains ongoing.

    The four alleged conspirators, Audrey Carroll, Zachary Page, Dante Gaffield and Tina Lai, have been charged with conspiracy and possession of an unregistered destructive device, Essayli said.

    “The subjects arrested envisioned planting backpacks with improvised explosive devices to be detonated at multiple locations in Southern California, targeting U.S. companies,” Davis said.

    The plans the FBI uncovered also included follow-up attacks after the bombings, which included plans to target ICE agents and vehicles with pipe bombs, Essayli said.

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    Grace Toohey

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  • Snow-starved California ski resorts delay openings despite powerful recent storms

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    It may have felt like the recent rain would never end in Los Angeles, but the record-breaking precipitation in Southern California has failed to translate into a much-desired dumping of snow at ski resorts across the state.

    While Friday was originally set as the opening date of the Heavenly and Northstar ski resorts in the Lake Tahoe area, officials said mild weather and stubbornly insufficient flurries have delayed those plans.

    Vail Resorts, which owns both resorts, has yet to announce an updated opening date. But the forecast ahead does not look promising.

    “A dry forecast is in store for the next week through Thanksgiving and Black Friday,” Open Snow wrote in its Tahoe area forecast Friday. “We could see a change in the pattern the weekend of the 29th with colder air moving in and maybe some snow. Overall, through the long-range, there are no big storms showing up, but hopefully that changes as we go deeper into December.”

    Mammoth Mountain, California’s highest-elevation ski resort, was also recently forced to delay the start of its season.

    The Sierra Nevada resort had initially announced a Nov. 14 opening date, but pushed it off as an atmospheric river storm swept across the state. While forecasters hoped the low-pressure system would blanket the slopes in Mammoth, mountainside temperatures remained too warm for serious snow.

    Disappointed skiers and snowboarders took to social media to share videos of the muddy slopes.

    Fortunately, thanks to a moderate storm earlier this week and robust use of snow machines, Mammoth was able to open for the season Thursday with around one-third of its lifts running. Nevertheless, season snowfall totals remain below average.

    Other major Golden State ski resorts are eyeing late November and early December openings. Palisades Tahoe is scheduled to open on Wednesday, just in time for Thanksgiving. Kirkwood resort, located south of Lake Tahoe, is hoping to open on Dec. 5.

    Those seeking to hit the slopes closer to Los Angeles will have to have patience. Big Bear Mountain Resort in San Bernardino County has yet to set an opening date and currently has just 1 to 2 inches of snow on the ground.

    Climate change has made the art of predicting and managing snowfall at California’s ski resorts much more challenging.

    Recent years have been characterized by extreme boom and bust cycles, going from alarmingly low-snow winters in 2020 and 2021 to extreme accumulations in the 2022-23 season, when Mammoth Mountain received a record-breaking snowfall of more than 700 inches at its main lodge.

    “We’re going through this climate whiplash of extreme drought years to extreme wet years — there are just no average years anymore,” Doug Obegi, a senior attorney at the National Resources Defense Council, said in a statement on 2023’s record-breaking season. “And we’re seeing that we are not prepared for either of those extremes.”

    Overall, snow seasons are expected to trend warmer and drier. Researchers predict that from the 2050s to 2100, rising temperatures could push average snowlines 1,300 feet to 1,600 feet higher across the Sierra Nevada compared to a century earlier.

    And extreme snow years, while welcomed by snowsport enthusiasts, come with their own challenges.

    When snow falls in extreme storms as opposed to steadily over the course of the season, it increases the risk of avalanches and can force resorts to stop running lifts due to safety concerns. Then in the spring, deep snowpacks melt faster than normal, which can lead to dangerous flooding and even worsen the upcoming fire season.

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    Clara Harter

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  • Border Patrol agent died of cocaine overdose a month after Long Beach arrest, autopsy says

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    A U.S. Border Patrol agent who was found dead in a Riverside County home earlier this year following an arrest in Long Beach overdosed on cocaine and was dealing with depression, according to an autopsy report made public Tuesday.

    Isaiah Hodgson, 29, was found dead in his bedroom in Hemet in late August with white “powder-like residue” near him, according to investigative documents released by the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office in response to a public records request from The Times.

    Authorities ruled Hodgson’s death to be accidental and found three plastic bindles, which are normally used to hold drugs, in his stomach, according to the coroner’s report. Riverside County sheriff’s officials previously said there were no signs of foul play at the scene, and the report confirmed Hodgson had not sustained any injuries or defensive wounds. His official cause of death was described as “cocaine toxicity.”

    In early July, Hodgson was arrested in Long Beach for fighting with city police. Prosecutors charged Hodgson with three counts of resisting arrest, one count of battery causing injury to a police officer and several misdemeanor weapons offenses after he scuffled with officers responding to a restaurant in Shoreline Village. Staff had kicked Hodgson out, reporting he drunkenly wandered into the women’s restroom while armed with a handgun.

    In dramatic body cam video reviewed by The Times, Long Beach police officers approached Hodgson on July 7 after a 911 call made by a security guard who reported Hodgson had shown him a gun.

    “He showed me a freaking clip,” the caller said in the 911 audio recording obtained by The Times.

    When officers approached Hodgson, they yelled, “Get on the ground” and “Put your hands up.”

    Hodgson put his hands up but would not get on the ground. He suggested to officers that he worked for a police department: “Are you stupid, I’m PD,” he said.

    It took several officers to get Hodgson to kneel on the ground. One officer repeatedly used a Taser on him.

    Charges against Hodgson are expected to be dismissed at a court hearing next month, according to a spokesman for the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office.

    Hodgson became a visible face of the Trump administration’s sweeping immigration enforcement efforts in Southern California in June, as an unmasked agent involved in the controversial detention of Walmart employee Adrian Martinez, a U.S. citizen. Martinez was accused of interfering with Border Patrol agents’ attempts to detain one of his co-workers. Martinez was indicted and is awaiting trial.

    Hodgson was part of a group of officers who rushed Martinez and shoved him to the ground. Although video from the scene did not show Hodgson physically contact Martinez, his name quickly became public as he appeared to be the lone agent involved in the controversial arrest who was not wearing a mask.

    Hodgson was supposed to meet his parents at the beach the day he died but never showed up, according to the coroner’s report. His cousin went to Hodgson’s home to conduct a welfare check and found his body.

    Hodgson’s parents told police their son “had been depressed since being on administrative leave, but they stated he was not suicidal and did not have any suicidal ideations,” according to the report. Hodgson previously struggled with cocaine and alcohol abuse, his family said, according to the documents. But, they said, Hodgson had been attending Alcoholics Anonymous for about two months, according to the coroner’s report.

    A handwritten note found in Hodgson’s car was originally thought to be a suicide note but later was determined to be “a character witness statement for Hodgson dated back from June of 2025,” according to the coroner’s report. Hodgson had been “receiving death threats” after his personal information was posted online, the report states.

    As Hodgson was being processed by police officers after his arrest, body cam video showed he said he was dealing with stress and the consequences of being identified publicly on the internet.

    Bodycam footage provided by the Long Beach Police Department.

    “Have you ever had your personal information put up online and on the f— news,” he said. “Have you ever had f— people stand up at your parents’ house because you’re over here in Los Angeles doing everything, dude, that’s the f— guy I am.”

    The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has repeatedly claimed its officers are facing a surge in death threats as protests against the Trump administration’s sprawling immigration raids in major cities including Los Angeles and Chicago have ramped up. Recently, the government sued California over a law that seeks to bar all local and federal law enforcement officers from wearing masks when performing official duties in public.

    Representatives for the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Border Patrol did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Times staff writer Brittny Mejia contributed to this report.

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    James Queally, Karen Garcia

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  • Southern California braces for potentially dangerous floods

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    Southern California braces for potentially dangerous floods – CBS News










































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    Southern California is preparing for potentially dangerous flooding as storms slam the region.

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  • Southern California is in for a weekend of severe weather, forecasters say: What we know

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    Southern California will be under a severe weather threat Saturday, with the most powerful wave of an incoming atmospheric river storm peaking over the weekend in Los Angeles County and bringing a risk of mudflows, debris flows and, possibly, a tornado.

    If rain falls as forecast, this storm could result in downtown Los Angeles seeing its wettest November since 1985. Heavy rain brings the possibility of damaging flooding and landslides, with fire-scarred hillsides from the Eaton and Palisades fires at risk of fast-moving flows of mud and debris.

    The severe weather threat is expected for much of Saturday, from midnight through 9 p.m. A flood watch will be in effect for a wide swath of Southern California from 4 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday. Evacuation warnings are in effect through 11 a.m. Sunday in areas near recent burn scars due to the risk of mud and debris flows. The warnings encompass areas near the Palisades, Eaton, Kenneth, Sunset and Hurst fires that burned in January.

    But it remained unclear as of late Thursday which areas would be hit hardest by the storm. Peak rainfall rates Saturday of 0.75 to 1.25 inches per hour are expected along a relatively narrow band of land — about the width of a Southern California county. That’s enough rain to trigger a landslide, which can occur when rain falls at a rate of half an inch or more per hour.

    Forecasters don’t yet know where that peak rain will be focused.

    “The problem is, we just don’t know exactly which county” will be most affected, said Ryan Kittell, meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in Oxnard. “If you look at all of our projections, some of them favor L.A., some of them favor Ventura, some of them favor Santa Barbara County. And so at this point, unfortunately, for that Saturday time period, we just can’t tell with certainty which county is kind of in the bull’s-eye.”

    If the band of most intense rain lines up over L.A. County, it can expect rainfall rates of about 1 inch per hour, Kittell said. If the band is concentrated elsewhere, L.A. could still see a rate of half an inch per hour, and landslides would still remain a possibility.

    The area with the most severe weather could see spinning thunderstorms that could produce damaging wind or a tornado or two, Kittell said.

    “While 99% of the area will not see such conditions, any portion of our area, especially in the coastal and valley areas, could see it,” Kittell said. “Consider changing any plans that you might have for Saturday. Stay home and indoors.”

    In case of lightning, he noted that it’s best to stay inside and away from windows. Those who must go out should never attempt to drive through a flooded roadway.

    There’s still a chance that Saturday’s storm could be less impressive than expected. It is being powered by a “cut-off low,” which is so notoriously difficult to forecast that it’s referred to as “weatherman’s woe.” Because the low-pressure system powering the storm is not pushed along by the jet stream, “it will just spin around like a top and go where it pleases — very difficult to predict,” Kittell said.

    Still, Kittell said, most of the more than 100 different computer forecast projections suggest moderate to heavy rain. In the most likely scenario, downtown L.A. will receive 2.62 inches of rain between late Thursday and Sunday, which would cause flooding on roadways and minor, shallow debris flows.

    (National Weather Service)

    Getting that 2.62 inches of rain through the weekend would vault this month into the category of wettest November since 1985, Kittell said. Downtown L.A. would need to exceed 2.43 inches of rain in November to break that 40-year-old record.

    There’s a 30% chance of a worst-case scenario where downtown L.A. receives 4.81 inches of rain, producing mudflows and debris flows. With debris flows, the fast-moving landslides pour down hillsides and pick up not just mud but other debris that can move cars and crash into homes with deadly force. A total of 4.81 inches of rain would be one-third of downtown’s annual rainfall.

    Both mudflows and debris flows can be triggered with rain falling at a rate as low as half an inch per hour. But it depends on the burn scar, Kittell said. It would take rain falling at twice that rate — an inch per hour — to trigger flows in some burn scars, he said.

    The National Weather Service office in Oxnard said that on Saturday there’s about a 70% chance that the Eaton and Palisades fire burn scars will see rain fall at a rate of 0.5 inches or more per hour. There’s a 38% chance of a rainfall rate of 1 inch or more per hour in those areas.

    Rain is expected to start falling by Friday morning in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties. Precipitation was forecast to begin Thursday in Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties.

    The heaviest rain for Southern California is expected late Friday into Saturday.

    Document shows precipitation chances and timing

    (National Weather Service)

    Although tornadoes aren’t usually associated with California, they do happen. For the most part, “they’re weak, they’re brief, and usually don’t cause a whole lot of issues,” Kittell said. “But we do get quite a few of them.” Sometimes they form on land, or they begin as waterspouts — a tornado over the ocean — and move onto land.

    “They are not like the kind that you typically hear about in the Midwest that last for 15, 30 minutes, or even an hour or two, and are a mile or two wide and cause destructive damage,” Kittell said. “We just don’t have the environment for that,” yet they still pose a threat.

    A tornado lasting for five minutes touched down in Santa Cruz County last December, injuring three people, downing trees and power poles, stripping trees of branches, overturning vehicles and damaging street signs.

    This weekend’s atmospheric-river-powered storm created a long band of rainfall that on Thursday was stretching across the Pacific Ocean to San Francisco. It was set to move south and east as it headed to Southern California.

    The storm downed trees in the San Francisco Bay Area on Thursday and flooded low-lying streets. A tree split and fell in San Francisco’s Western Addition neighborhood, crashing onto a vehicle, local news outlets reported. A tree also fell on a fence in Santa Rosa. Rising waters inundated a section of roadway just west of the Charles M. Schulz-Sonoma County Airport, firefighters said.

    Solo vehicle crashes were reported on Highway 1 in Santa Cruz County, the California Highway Patrol said. A pickup truck overturned along Highway 152 between Watsonville and Gilroy, and all lanes of Highway 17 connecting Santa Cruz and San Jose were shut down for some time Thursday night following a crash involving a CHP cruiser; a CHP officer sustained minor injuries.

    Rainfall totals were impressive for the region, with San Francisco seeing 1.28 inches — that’s more than half the average monthly rainfall for November for the city. Napa received 1.45 inches; San Francisco International Airport, 1.5; and San Rafael, 2.3 inches.

    Through Sunday, Long Beach is expected to receive 2.38 inches of rain; Redondo Beach, 2.48; Oxnard, 2.49; Thousand Oaks, 2.63; Santa Clarita, 2.77; Covina, 2.89; and Santa Barbara, 4.21.

    San Diego could get 2 to 2.5 inches of rain; Riverside, San Bernardino, Escondido, and San Clemente, 2.5 to 3 inches; and Anaheim and Irvine, 3 to 4 inches, according to the weather service.

    Even the deserts could tally impressive rainfall. Palm Springs may get 1 to 1.5 inches of rain, and Joshua Tree National Park could receive 1.5 to 2 inches.

    This storm will not be much of a snow maker for Southern California’s mountains. Snow levels are expected to remain at around 10,000 feet for most of the storm’s duration, said Dave Munyan, a forecaster with the National Weather Service’s San Diego office. By Sunday morning, snow levels will fall to about 7,000 to 7,500 feet, but by then, there won’t be much more moisture left in the storm. Big Bear is forecast to receive around an inch of snow, and Idyllwild is expected to remain snow-free, Munyan said.

    “You’re going to get your accumulating snowfall — hefty accumulating snowfall — on the highest peaks of the mountains,” Munyan said.

    Winds from the southeast and east are expected to trigger delays at Los Angeles International Airport on Friday and Saturday.

    Looking to next week, a storm could return to Southern California on Monday and Tuesday, with another rolling in Thursday and Friday. Both storms are likely to have minor effects. But forecasters are closely watching the second of the two storms, which could develop into something more significant, Kittell said.

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    Rong-Gong Lin II

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  • The federal SNAP-funding mess has made L.A.’s food-insecurity crisis clearer than ever

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    A strange scene unfolded at the Adams/Vermont farmers market near USC last week.

    The pomegranates, squash and apples were in season, pink guavas were so ripe you could smell their heady scent from a distance, and nutrient-packed yams were ready for the holidays.

    But with federal funding in limbo for the 1.5 million people in Los Angeles County who depend on food aid from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — or SNAP — the church parking lot hosting the market was largely devoid of customers.

    Even though the market accepts payments through CalFresh, the state’s SNAP program, hardly anyone was lined up when gates opened. Vendors mostly idled alone at their produce stands.

    A line of cars stretches more than a mile as people wait to receive a box of free food provided by the L.A. Food Bank in the City of Industry on Wednesday.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    As thousands across Southern California lined up at food banks to collect free food, and the fight over delivering the federal allotments sowing uncertainty, fewer people receiving aid seemed to be spending money at outdoor markets like this one.

    “So far we’re doing 50% of what we’d normally do — or less,” said Michael Bach, who works with Hunger Action, a food-relief nonprofit that partners with farmers markets across the greater L.A. area, offering “Market Match” deals to customers paying with CalFresh debit cards.

    The deal allows shoppers to buy up to $30 worth of fruit produce for only $15. Skimming a ledger on her table, Bach’s colleague Estrellita Echor noted that only a handful of shoppers had taken advantage of the offer.

    All week at farmers markets where workers were stationed, the absence was just as glaring, she said. “I was at Pomona on Saturday — we only had six transactions the whole day,” she said. “Zero at La Mirada.”

    CalFresh customers looking to double their money on purchases were largely missing at the downtown L.A. market the next day, Echor said.

    A volunteer loads up a box of free food for a family at a drive-through food distribution site in the City of Industry.

    A volunteer loads up a box of free food for a family at a drive-through food distribution site in the City of Industry.

    (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times)

    “This program usually pulls in lots of people, but they are either holding on to what little they have left or they just don’t have anything on their cards,” she said.

    The disruption in aid comes as a result of the Trump administration’s decision to deliver only partial SNAP payments to states during the ongoing federal government shutdown, skirting court order to restart funds for November. On Friday night, Supreme Court Associate Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson temporarily blocked the order pending a ruling on the matter by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

    But by then, CalFresh had already started loading 100% of November’s allotments onto users’ debit cards. Even with that reprieve for food-aid recipients in California, lack of access to food is a persistent problem in L.A., said Kayla de la Haye, director of the Institute for Food System Equity at USC.

    A study published by her team last year found that 25% of residents in L.A. County — or about 832,000 people — experienced food insecurity, and that among low-income residents, the rate was even higher, 41%. The researchers also found that 29% of county residents experienced nutrition insecurity, meaning they lacked options for getting healthy, nutritious food.

    Those figures marked a slight improvement compared to data from 2023, when the end of pandemic-era boosts to state, county and nonprofit aid programs — combined with rising inflation — caused hunger rates to spike just as they did at the start of the pandemic in 2020, de la Haye said.

    “That was a big wake-up call — we had 1 in 3 folks in 2020 be food insecure,” de la Haye said. “We had huge lines at food pantries.”

    But while the USC study shows the immediate delivery of food assistance through government programs and nonprofits quickly can cut food insecurity rates in an emergency, the researchers discovered many vulnerable Angelenos are not participating in food assistance programs.

    Despite the county making strides to enroll more eligible families over the last decade, de la Haye said, only 29% of food insecure households in L.A. County were enrolled in CalFresh, and just 9% in WIC, the federal nutrition program for women, infants and children.

    De la Haye said participants in her focus groups shared a mix of reasons why they didn’t enroll: Many didn’t know they qualified, while others said they felt too ashamed to apply for aid, were intimidated by the paperwork involved or feared disclosing their immigration status. Some said they didn’t apply because they earned slightly more than the cutoff amounts for eligibility.

    Even many of those those receiving aid struggled: 39% of CalFresh recipients were found to lack an affordable source for food and 45% faced nutrition insecurity.

    De la Haye said hunger and problems accessing healthy food have serious short- and long-term health effects — contributing to higher rates of heart disease, diabetes and obesity, as well greater levels of stress, anxiety and depression in adults and children. What’s more, she said, when people feel unsure about their finances, highly perishable items such as fresh, healthy food are often the first things sacrificed because they can be more expensive.

    The USC study also revealed stark racial disparities: 31% of Black residents and 32% of Latinos experienced food insecurity, compared to 11% of white residents and 14% of Asians.

    De la Haye said her team is analyzing data from this year they will publish in December. That analysis will look at investments L.A. County has made in food system over the last two years, including the allocation of $20 million of federal funding to 80 community organizations working on everything from urban farming to food pantries, and the recent creation of the county’s Office of Food Systems to address challenges to food availability and increase the consumption of healthy foods.

    “These things that disrupt people’s ability to get food, including and especially cuts to this key program that is so essential to 1.5 million people in the county — we don’t weather those storms very well,” de la Haye said. “People are just living on the precipice.”

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    Tyrone Beason

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