A Freshman At USC Got a New Camera For Christmas, Then Lost His Eye To a ‘Less-Lethal’ At a Protest
It’s small things, like noticing his nose in his vision, or misjudging the distance of objects, that serve as reminders that he’s not getting his vision back.
Weekend Eats: A New Chinatown Cocktail Bar From A Member of Mumford & Sons
Elsewhere, we've got new banh mi, hot pots with a 10% discount this week, Korean barbecue, and a massive night market of local BIPOC vendors.
Daily Memo: At Least 15 Latinos Have Been Deported to the Congo As ICE Escalates In Southern California
We have received several reports of agents targeting parents early in the morning as they drop off their children at school. We also have some incidents involving ICE and local police.
The L.A. Locations Behind 10 Infamous Movie Death Scenes
Take us back to simpler times. From "Rebel Without a Cause" to "There Will Be Blood," here's 10 L.A. landmarks where key characters met their maker. Warning: Spoilers ahead.
Update: ICE Re-Detains Plaintiff Out On Bond in Landmark Case Challenging L.A. ICE Raids, Sends Him Back To Adelanto
After the Supreme Court refused his challenge to ICE, Isaac Antonio Villegas Molina, a construction worker filing a lawsuit against ICE with the help of the ACLU, was detained once again during his ISAP check-in.
Stay in touch
Sign up for our free newsletter
Four Shops Turning the San Fernando Valley Into America’s Trading Card Capital
Since the pandemic, no hobby has seemingly been hotter than trading cards. Values have soared across all brands, with sealed Pokémon products outperforming the S&P 500.
Semi-Final Round of TACO MADNESS Voting Is Now Open! Meet the ‘Final Cuatro’
Here are this year’s contenders.
Controversial Israeli Chef Expands Miznon Across L.A.
The Israel-founded group behind Miznon is expanding its L.A. footprint with a new Culver City location, despite protests accusing the restaurant of rebranding Palestinian cuisine, and highlighting its founders’ ties to massacres in Gaza.
Five L.A. Menus to Stretch Your Recession-Era Dollar
Recession menus are the new happy hours. Here's how restaurants in L.A. are coping with today's economy, from Long Beach to West Covina.
From the Kitchen to the Octagon: One L.A. Chef’s Journey Into the World of Mixed Martial Arts
Chef Walther Adrianzen survived a diabetic coma. He then lost more than 30 lbs. and fought in his first mixed martial arts match.
You Think L.A. Smog is Bad Now? Let’s Set the Record Straight
“I remember my eyes stinging and my lungs burning [from smog]," UCLA environmental law professor Ann Carlson writes in ‘Smog and Sunshine.'























