In Brief
The action by authorities began about nine hours after the initial order to disperse was issued around 6:15 p.m. Wednesday. Shortly after 5 a.m. the area was cleared, with just a small amount of protesters remaining.
Today on AirTalk, the latest on this morning's UCLA encampment dispersal led by hundreds of police in riot gear. Also on the show, a new survey by the Employee Benefit Research Institute shows shifting expectations for those heading into retirement; our critics review the latest shows on TV and streaming; and more.
Listen
• 1:41:30
Larry Mantle and LAist film critics Tim Cogshell and Andy Klein review the latest releases on FilmWeek.
Listen
• 30:34
-
A facility in Vernon has reached a $400,000 settlement with air quality regulators.
-
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.
-
The maritime fire killed 34 people near Santa Cruz Island in 2019.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
Netflix Is a Joke fest kicks off, Michael Pollan on psychedelics, Accidentally Wes Anderson, and more.
Entertainment Thursday
-
“Most everyone I know, at every level, is looking for work.”
-
If a consumer product is successful, it can generate an eight- or nine-figure payday.
-
Bob Bakish has been replaced by a troika of division leaders inside Paramount.
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
-
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.
-
Valverde’s death comes after the city of L.A. honored her last year with a dedicated square.
More Stories
-
JB Hamby is California’s lead negotiator in the historic negotiation over one of the state’s most vital sources of water.
-
Anthony Sperl says he wasn’t planning to replace Suehiro Cafe with a marijuana dispensary, as feared by neighborhood leaders.
-
The city council wants greater transparency in how millions of taxpayer dollars are being spent to address L.A.'s unhoused crisis.
-
Thunderstorms can arrive in the Sierra year round, but tend to peak during monsoon season in July and August.
-
The Justice Department is expected to propose a new, lower classification for marijuana that would lessen restrictions on the drug. But there's another review process to come.
-
Los Angeles received a failing grade in air quality from the American Lung Association.
-
Under a government-run pharmaceutical program called CalRx, California will purchase naloxone from New Jersey-based Amneal Pharmaceuticals at a discounted price of $24 for a two-pack of nasal sprays.
-
After another wet winter, the velella velella are back.
-
More communities are turning to their local governments to demand change in Gaza
-
A rise in breast cancer among younger women prompted the U.S. Preventive Task Force to issue new screening guidelines. They recommend mammograms every other year, starting at age 40.
-
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration unveiled the final version of the new regulation on Monday and called it the most significant safety rule in the past two decades.
-
Many authors are concerned about the use of their copyrighted material in generative AI models. At the same time, some are actively experimenting with the technology.
Latest From Our Reporters