Episodios

  • Big tech v. government, film reviews, comeback of metal braces
    Apr 18 2025

    Google and Meta are under fire in court. Officials claim they crushed rivals to stay on top. The outcome could upend how Big Tech works.

    The University of South Florida surveyed more than 1,500 kids, and found that 11 to 13-year-olds who had their own smartphones fared better psychologically than their peers who didn’t have phones.

    Critics review the latest film releases: “Sinners, “The Wedding Banquet,” “The Shrouds,” and “The President's Wife.”

    “Metal mouths” are back. Old-school metal braces are becoming the teeth-straightener of choice among kids and adults.

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    53 m
  • Bay Area politics, DTLA jewelry heist, ‘Rebel Queen’ memoir
    Apr 16 2025

    The Oakland mayoral race is a close call between progressive Barbara Lee and moderate challenger Loren Taylor. In SF, Mayor Daniel Lurie rounds out his first 100 days.

    A cinematic heist in Downtown Los Angeles: Thieves recently tunneled from a historic theater through “castle-like” walls into a store packed with bling.

    Hungarian Susan Polgar earned chess’ highest honor at age 15. She and her family faced antisemitism and harassment from the ruling Communist Party, and sexism from opponents and officials in chess. Her new memoir is “Rebel Queen.”

    What’s the relationship between art and democracy? After his firing from the Kennedy Center, poet Marc Bamuthi Joseph has some thoughts.

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    54 m
  • Harvard v. Trump, Netflix’s ‘Adolescence’
    Apr 16 2025

    Harvard will not comply with sweeping demands from the Trump administration targeting pro-Palestinian organizing. Can other universities afford to join them?

    Mohsen Mahdawi’s detention exposes the rising risks faced by pro-Palestinian students during the Trump administration’s crackdown on campuses.

    Netflix’s “Adolescence” explores the issue of growing up online and what social media pressures can do to lonely, angry young men. It also looks at generational male violence.

    The Titanic hit an iceberg and sank more than 100 years ago, but the disaster has captured the imagination of Generation Alpha.

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    52 m
  • LAUSD’s noncooperation with ICE, music by Jeff Bridges
    Apr 14 2025

    The Supreme Court ordered the Trump administration to facilitate Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s return to the U.S. The White House is asserting its power to say “no.”

    Immigration agents visited two South LA schools recently, looking for five students they said were undocumented. School officials turned them away in a test of LAUSD’s policy of noncooperation with ICE.

    An autocracy journalist discusses the rise of authoritarianism in Hungary and sees parallels in some recent actions by the Trump administration.

    In the 1970s and 80s, Jeff Bridges recorded songs with his childhood buddies in his West LA neighborhood. Now those songs are in the new album “Slow Magic, 1977-1978.”

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    53 m
  • IRS in turmoil, US-China trade war, ‘The Great Gatsby’ turns 100
    Apr 10 2025

    Several top IRS officials resigned as the Trump administration revealed its plans to use tax data to target undocumented immigrants.

    Despite vowing to fight a trade war to “the end,” Chinese officials are dealing with economic dilemmas at home.

    Critics review the latest film releases: “The Amateur,” “Drop,” “Warfare,” and “One to One: John & Yoko.”

    “The Great Gatsby” was published 100 years ago today. Its enduring message about the empty and corrupting power of wealth may be even more relevant now.

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    54 m
  • The fight over Beverly Hills abortion clinic, expansion comes to The Broad
    Apr 10 2025

    President Trump’s pause on tariffs against most nations sent the stock market soaring. Meanwhile, tariffs against China, and from China, are going up.

    DuPont Clinic was supposed to open in Beverly Hills to provide late-term abortions. However, after abortion rights activists got involved with city officials, the lease for the clinic’s office got rescinded.

    PAPER Magazine Co-founder Kim Hastreiter talks about her new book, “STUFF: A New York Life of Cultural Chaos.” It’s a memoir and a 50-year cultural history of NYC.

    The Broad is breaking ground today on an expansion that will add 55,000 square feet — offering more galleries, programming space, and open-air patios.

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    52 m
  • Dire AI future, ‘Deli Boys,’ Canadian tourism in Palm Springs
    Apr 9 2025

    President Trump is not backing down from imposing tariffs on all countries doing business with the U.S., including 100% or more on China. China has threatened tariffs against U.S. exports too, which could begin Thursday.

    Dire predictions about the future of artificial intelligence are in a recent report by a Berkeley-based group called the AI Futures Project.

    “Deli Boys” creator Abdullah Saeed and actor Saagar Shaikh discuss the personal stories that shaped Hulu's dark comedy about family, crime, and identity.

    Palm Springs’ economy has heavily relied on Canadian tourists, and now officials are worried about losing that revenue due to increasing political tensions between the U.S. and Canada.

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    52 m
  • Fighting to keep an Altadena pub alive, mapping LA’s lost record stores
    Apr 9 2025

    California’s nearly $4 trillion economy is heavily dependent on international trade. A tariff war could impact that significantly.

    The Altadena Ale and Wine House survived the Eaton Fire. Owner Gail Casburn also lost her house — and won’t give up her beloved pub.

    Dyanne Cano put together an archival map of 84 independent record stores that closed in LA between 1956 and 2020. They highlight Dolphin’s of Hollywood Records, Record Store Discos Exitos No. 2, and Vinyl Fetish.

    “White Lotus,” about ultra-rich people’s antics, wrapped its third season. How does the series continue to grab our imagination?

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    53 m
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