In Brief
The ongoing protests on college campuses are just the latest example of student activism in America. What can past protests tell us about how effectively the current ones are sending their message?
Listen
• 19:19
Today on AirTalk, a look into the role online sleuthing and digital vigilantism is playing within the protests against the war on Gaza on college campuses. Also on the show, chef Jordan Kahn drops by to discuss reopening his famed Culver City restaurant Vespertine; our film critics review the latest releases; Larry talks with director Jane Schoenbrun and actor Justice Smith on their new film ‘I Saw The TV Glow;’ and more.
Listen
• 1:39:11
Larry Mantle and LAist film critics Lael Loewenstein and Peter Rainer review this weekend’s new movie releases on streaming and on demand platforms— in three minutes or less!
Listen
• 30:32
-
L.A. Mayor Karen Bass’s signature low-income housing program faces new efforts by residents hoping to exempt their neighborhoods.
-
The University of California has refused to extend employment benefits to undocumented students, setting up a clash with state lawmakers. They have had tensions before.
-
Miyamoto's the subject of a new documentary premiering Saturday at the VC Film Fest.
-
The museum has vowed to continue fighting for its possession of the ancient Greek statue.
-
Coyotes are in the middle of raising their babies, which should last until September.
-
Encampments have been set up in Los Angeles, Irvine and Riverside.
-
Beachlife Festival, Star Wars celebrations, and Cinco de Mayo.
-
For the second year, the L.A. County Fair will host an exhibit of fine art. Featured this year are works by famed Mexican modernist Rufino Tamayo.
-
For Tacos 5 y 10 co-owner Daniel Martinez, serving food and community is about more than just money — it connects him back home.
-
Don’t let May Gray skies stop you from going out and celebrating National Bike Month.
Support your source for local and NPR news today!
2024 will be an important year for reliable local and national reporting. Help us continue to highlight LA stories, hold the powerful accountable, and amplify community voices. Your support keeps local journalism strong. Stand with LAist today.
Featured Events
-
Event
This series is curated and hosted by AirTalk host Larry Mantle and puts the spotlight on films set in Southern California.
-
Event
Host Traci Thomas welcomes guests author Amanda Montell and actor Vella Lovell for book talk, trivia, and hot takes.
Best Of LAist
-
We’re two years into a state law that requires us to keep food waste out of the trash. It’s anything but straightforward, but here is how to do it right.
-
Documents obtained by LAist reveal FBI scrutiny of the testing operation, which was managed by former Anaheim Chamber of Commerce president Todd Ament.
-
Empty nesters own more L.A. homes than millennials with kids. Here’s how some older homeowners are finding ways to spread their wealth.
Education
-
Education Department says issues are fixed, begs remaining students to submit.
-
Even if your old grades are not stellar, you can still move forward with your academic goals.
-
One incumbent, Tanya Ortiz Franklin, already held on to her District 7 seat. Three other school board races are headed to runoffs.
LA History
-
We talk to historian Elsa Devienne about how beaches developed and her new book Sand Rush: The Revival of the Beach in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles.
-
Erskine had two career no-hitters and won a World Series with the Dodgers in 1955. But many remember his friendship with Jackie Robinson at a time when segregation was legal.
-
Los Angeles has the most diversity in street light design of any American city.
More Stories
-
More morning fog before we see afternoon sun.
-
As tensions grew to violence against a UCLA student encampment erected in protest over the war in Gaza, many are criticizing law enforcement’s lack of intervention.
-
Six people across the state have become ill from an outbreak in recalled organic walnuts.
-
From the Academy Museum to Vidiots, there's a great mix of classic and art house films every weekend.
-
The homegrown O.C. comic left her corporate job to pursue comedy full time. Now she’s performing at the Netflix is A Joke Festival in L.A.
-
If a consumer product is successful, it can generate an eight- or nine-figure payday.
-
“Most everyone I know, at every level, is looking for work.”
-
President Biden expands the mountain range’s national monument status, creating more green space access to vulnerable communities.
-
A longtime Boyle Heights homeless shelter says about 90% of its occupants these days are new asylum seekers who’ve wound up unsheltered. As new migrants land on the street and in shelters, city homeless services and NGOs say it’s hard to get a sense of how many are falling through the cracks.
-
The maternal mortality rate in the U.S. in 2022 — while still high — went back to where it was before deaths surged during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the latest CDC report.
-
The sinkhole, a product of powerful winter storms, posed a serious safety risk.
-
Little Tokyo made the list created annually by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
Latest From Our Reporters