• History and odds on Authentic’s side at Haskell Stakes

    History and odds on Authentic’s side at Haskell Stakes
    When Authentic enters the starting gate for Saturday’s $1 million Haskell Stakes at Monmouth Park, the son of Into Mischief will be looking to give trainer Bob Baffert his record ninth victory in the Grade I race.
    Baffert hasn’t won the Haskell since Triple Crown champ American Pharoah turned the trick in 2015, but he’s got the 4-5 morning-line favorite this year and, on paper, there doesn’t appear to be a lot standing in his way.
    If all goes well in the Haskell, the next
  • Carl’s Jr. partners with Postmates on freebies beginning Friday, July 17

    Carl’s Jr. partners with Postmates on freebies beginning Friday, July 17
    Carl’s Jr. is partnering with third-party delivery service Postmates for a weekend giveaway.
    Friday, July 17, through Sunday, July 19, customers get a “free surprise menu item” added to their Carl’s Jr. orders of $15 or more, according to a press release.
    Items include Famous Star with Cheese, fan-favorite Western Bacon Cheeseburger and waffle fries
    The promotion marks the chain’s 79th anniversary. It began in 1941 when Anaheim resident Carl Karcher opened a hot dog
  • Peter Chhun, founder of organization that helps Cambodian children with heart ailments, dies at 71

    Peter Chhun, founder of organization that helps Cambodian children with heart ailments, dies at 71
    LOS ANGELES – Peter Chhun, left, Chantha Bob, center, and Sin Chhon say goodbye to Chhon’s daughter, Davik Teng, before surgery at Childrens Hospital Los Angeles on March 24, 2008. Chhun, founder of Hearts Without Boundaries, which helped save about a hundred destitute Cambodian children with heart ailments, died this week. He was 71.
    (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Long Beach Press-Telegram/SCNG)
    LONG BEACH, CALIF. — Peter Chhun, center, the founder of Hearts Without Boundaries, alon
  • Disneyland attendance flat in 2019 before COVID-19 closure despite Galaxy’s Edge debut

    Disneyland attendance flat in 2019 before COVID-19 closure despite Galaxy’s Edge debut
    Disneyland attendance remained flat in 2019 ahead of the coronavirus closure of Disney’s Anaheim theme parks and despite the debut of the $1 billion Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge, according to a new industry report.
    Global theme park attendance rose 4% in 2019 to 521 million visitors, according to a new report from the Themed Entertainment Association. The 2019 attendance numbers will likely serve as a high-water mark for several years as theme parks attempt to rebound following the globa
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  • Virtual tours of the world’s best museum exhibits

    Virtual tours of the world’s best museum exhibits
    While we’re all adjusting to life spent (much) closer to home, we still hold the wonder of some of the world’s greatest museums at our fingertips. Museums around the world are offering virtual tours of their exhibits and online experiences for adults and children. Take advantage of the front-row–and free!–seat you’ll have to explore these renowned exhibits virtually.
    Louvre Museum — Paris, France
    Perhaps the most famous museum in the world, The Louvre is offer
  • 6 ways to support your local businesses

    6 ways to support your local businesses
    As social distancing measures continue to change the pace of daily life, community members are increasingly looking to one another to figure out how they can help. Charitable donations and looking out for the welfare of neighbors are excellent starting points, but even something as simple as how and where you spend your money can make a world of difference in your community. Money spent at small businesses is more likely to stay in the community and help business owners in a time of need. Here a
  • 7 Celebrity Reading Lists That Will Keep You Engaged While Social Distancing

    7 Celebrity Reading Lists That Will Keep You Engaged While Social Distancing
    If you’re a fellow bookworm, we’ve held the same fantasy for years…one day our schedule will open up and grant us the time to curl up with a good book, lost in a world for hours on end, that belongs solely to us and the characters we share it with.
    Well, that day has finally arrived. Now is a better time than ever to immerse yourself in a universe of cherished stories that you’ve longed to discover. But where should you start? With so many brilliant authors, we’re
  • 720 mortgage companies took PPP money, claiming jobs saved

    720 mortgage companies took PPP money, claiming jobs saved
    Maybe they thought it was easy money, ripe for the taking.
    Maybe they thought their company’s name would never be revealed.
    Maybe they were in cahoots with their bankers to disguise their industry classification code on the SBA applications (bankers were earning commissions by making the loans, after all).
    Or, maybe the mortgage industry companies really needed the Paycheck Protection Program money to save jobs.
    Whatever the motivation, a bombshell hit the mortgage industry on July 8 when
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  • High school coaches believe golf, tennis, cross country can compete safely this fall

    High school coaches believe golf, tennis, cross country can compete safely this fall
    Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now.The CIF State office plans to announce a sports calendar for 2020-21 on Monday that could postpone the start of the high school season to January 2021 due to growing cases of the coronavirus.
    It’s possible football and basketball will not be played in 2020, but local golf, tennis and cross country coaches believe their teams can still compete safely this fall with physical distancing rules applied.
    Ten
  • 10 fitness apps with free content for a great home workout

    10 fitness apps with free content for a great home workout
    As we practice social distancing, many Americans are wondering how they’re going to commit to a daily workout routine.
    But fear not. A plethora of resources exist to help get you back on your feet, many of which you can download for free straight onto your phone. Are you a yoga junkie who’s committed to perfecting that headstand you started four weeks ago? Do you rely on the daily endorphin boost of a cycling class whose feigning for your daily cardio fix?
    We’ve got you covered
  • Lakers, out of their comfort zone, try to connect in unique NBA environment

    Lakers, out of their comfort zone, try to connect in unique NBA environment
    LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — This time last year, Rob Pelinka was introducing Anthony Davis, one of the biggest prizes of the offseason, at a celebratory press conference and putting finishing touches on what figured to be a championship-contending team.
    Fast forward to now, where the Lakers’ general manager is one of just 36 people in the team travel party, meaning everyone has to wear the odd hat here and there.
    One of Pelinka’s jobs? Dribble cone. During a recent practice,
  • ‘Slice of normalcy’ as Junior Lifeguards kicks off at two O.C. beaches

    ‘Slice of normalcy’ as Junior Lifeguards kicks off at two O.C. beaches
    It’s back to the beach for Junior Lifeguards adorn in their traditional summer uniforms: red swimsuits, hats, sunglasses and a slather of sunscreen.
    New this year to their beach guard gear: face masks and sanitizer.
    Participants in the Huntington Beach Junior Lifeguard program run into the water at the start of a pier swim just north of the Huntington Beach Pier on Wednesday, July 14, 2020, in Huntington Beach. (Photo by Mark Rightmire, Orange County Register/SCNG)
    Participants in the Hunt
  • HOA Homefront: But I disagree with the board. What next?

    HOA Homefront: But I disagree with the board. What next?
    In our culture today, disagreement is mishandled more than ever before. However, disagreement is to be expected between directors of common interest developments (aka HOAs), and the way it is understood and handled can either enhance or harm the association community and its governance.
    Voting “no” is not disloyal. Volunteer directors are expected to think independently and use their best judgment on board decisions and not just rubber-stamp their colleague’s opinions. With var
  • Man who fled hospital in Laguna Hills takes patrol car, leads deputies on freeway pursuit

    Man who fled hospital in Laguna Hills takes patrol car, leads deputies on freeway pursuit
    A man who fled from a Laguna Hills hospital while on a mental health hold was arrested by deputies after he led them on a pursuit in a patrol vehicle that came to a crash ending, authorities said.
    It was about 3:45 a.m. when deputies were called by hospital staff saying a man had fled the hospital, said Orange County Sheriff’s spokeswoman Carrie Braun.
    Deputies found the man, in his 20s, on foot near the on-ramp off El Toro Road about to enter the 5 freeway, Braun said.
    While deputies trie
  • Anaheim Hills briefs: Church hosts picnic to bring congregation together — at a social distance

    Anaheim Hills briefs: Church hosts picnic to bring congregation together — at a social distance
    Canyon Hills Presbyterian Church has recently began a Picnic, Praise and Prayers program scheduled for the last Sunday evening of the month from 5 to 7 p.m. as an outdoor gathering on the church campus.
    The next event is scheduled for July 26.
    Picnic, Praise and Prayers is an opportunity to gather on the church’s grassy knoll areas – in compliance with wearing masks and self-distancing guidelines. It is a BYO chairs or blanket, snacks and beverage event that offers a chance to enjoy
  • Desperate parents pay whatever they can to escape online schools

    Desperate parents pay whatever they can to escape online schools
    By Marin Wolf and Leslie Patton, Bloomberg
    Parents, fearing their kids won’t see the inside of a classroom this fall, are ginning up an alternative familiar to the Home Depot crowd: Do-it-yourself.
    Amid the pandemic, enterprising families, especially those with means, are hiring tutors on their own or in groups or joining the already growing movement of homeschooling. Their efforts include preschoolers, as well as elementary and beyond.
    For five Los Angeles families, that has meant spendin
  • Review: Sushi Ii in Newport Beach feels like a private sanctum

    Review: Sushi Ii in Newport Beach feels like a private sanctum
    “I need to take your temperature if you don’t mind. It’s touchless,” says the manager at the entrance to Sushi Ii as she gingerly points a handheld device at my forehead. 
    “And if you would please…” she says, not finishing her sentence but instead motioning toward the sanitizer station adjacent to the door. In this Saturday, Dec. 5, 2015, photo, Yazidi refugee Salma Bakir, 9, from Iraq, waits with her family to be permitted by Macedonian polic
  • California jobless claims jump ahead of new business shutdowns

    California jobless claims jump ahead of new business shutdowns
    Unemployment claims jumped in California to their highest levels in more than two months just ahead of state and local government decisions to reimpose coronavirus-linked business shutdowns after they had been briefly opened.
    An estimated 287,700 California workers filed initial claims for unemployment during the week that ended on July 11, which was 22,900 more than the 264,800 who filed initial jobless claims during the week ending on July 4, federal labor officials reported Thursday.
    In contr
  • Recipes: Make these 3 delicious desserts while summer fruit is in season

    Recipes: Make these 3 delicious desserts while summer fruit is in season
    Some like it hot. I do, at least when it comes to the fruit that warm summer weather produces. Stone fruit is my favorite; just the thought of cherries, peaches and nectarines, as well as apricots and plums makes me grin. And summertime’s berries are a close second; their versatility is a delicious gift, their beauty reminiscent of a Cezanne still life painting.
    I look forward all year to making desserts that showcase stone fruit teamed with berries. Their sweet-tart flavor profiles are de
  • Elon Musk would be a better governor than Newsom: John Phillips

    Elon Musk would be a better governor than Newsom: John Phillips
    As if 2020 couldn’t get any worse, California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently announced that he’s again forcing millions of Californians to stay inside their homes due to a spike in COVID-19 cases.
    For 80 percent of the Golden State, including all of Southern California, indoor theaters, bars, family entertainment centers, wineries, tasting rooms, zoos, museums, card rooms, fitness centers, places of worship, offices for non-critical sectors, personal care services, hair salons and barber
  • Some improvement, but not much, on nursing home visitors

    Some improvement, but not much, on nursing home visitors
    The good news in California nursing homes this summer is that some are allowing their residents to see visitors at long last, but almost exclusively outdoors and in very controlled circumstances where the guests have little chance to see what’s happening inside the homes.
    This small, far-from-universal change is largely the result of a slight improvement in a key state guideline governing nursing homes.
    The change: The state Department of Public Health (DPH) no longer merely recommends tha
  • Three California crises spawn a fourth

    Three California crises spawn a fourth
    The year is scarcely half over and California is experiencing an unprecedented wave of traumatic events, to wit:
    —A pandemic that has infected hundreds of thousands of Californians and already has claimed more than 7,000 lives;
    —A very severe recession, spawned by the pandemic, that has erased millions of jobs and has hammered state and local government budgets; and
    —Civil and political unrest over how people of color, 60%-plus of the residents of this politically blue state, a
  • Rite Aid opens 38 coronavirus testing sites in LA, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties

    Rite Aid opens 38 coronavirus testing sites in LA, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties
    LOS ANGELES — Rite Aid is expanding its COVID-19 testing capacity with nearly 100 sites opening Thursday across California, including 38 locations in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties.
    The no-cost testing will be available by appointment for people 18 years of age or older, regardless of whether the person is experiencing symptoms, according to Rite Aid. Results are expected in three to five days, a company spokesperson said.
    LA, Orange County, Riverside and San Be
  • 30-year mortgage rates fall below 3% for first time in a half century

    30-year mortgage rates fall below 3% for first time in a half century
    The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 2.98% over the past week, falling below 3% for the first time since the mortgage giant began tracking the popular home-loan instrument in April 1971.
    The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage fell to a record low of 2.48%.
    Rates have dropped almost 2 percentage points over the past 1 1/2 years, helping to drive up homebuying demand and keeping home prices from dropping during the coronavirus-inspired recession. That decrease amounts to a savings of $563 a month in
  • Cooking with Judy: A beloved Orange County seafood spot was also a BBQ must

    Cooking with Judy: A beloved Orange County seafood spot was also a BBQ must
    By now we’re all wondering, will restaurant dining ever get back to normal? The restaurant industry, depending as it does on social mingling, has been especially hit hard by the fallout of COVID-19, many hanging on by offering take-out and delivery as well as patio dining, which is permitted as of this writing.
    If we want these eateries to still be here, we need to patronize them now.
    An early casualty was one of our favorites, Walt’s Wharf in Seal Beach. Owners Mona and Brenda Babco
  • Comic-Con canceled: Here’s how creators and fans will experience the con ‘At Home’

    Comic-Con canceled: Here’s how creators and fans will experience the con ‘At Home’
    The end of July usually means more than 130,000 fans, creators, collectors, merchants, nerds and geeks of all manner head to San Diego Comic-Con.
    But since the event was canceled in April due to concerns over the novel coronavirus pandemic, no one is going to San Diego Comic-Con this year, and it’s going to be weird.
    Actually, it’s going to be Comic-Con@Home, which will allow fans unable to come to experience at least some of the fun they’d normally have at the event — an
  • U.K., U.S., Canada accuse Russia of hacking virus vaccine trials

    U.K., U.S., Canada accuse Russia of hacking virus vaccine trials
    By JILL LAWLESS and DANICA KIRKA
    LONDO — Britain, the United States and Canada accused Russia on Thursday of trying to steal information from researchers seeking a COVID-19 vaccine.
    The three nations alleged that hacking group APT29, also known as Cozy Bear and said to be part of the Russian intelligence service, is attacking academic and pharmaceutical research institutions involved in coronavirus vaccine development.
    Britain’s National Cybersecurity Centre made the announcement, wh
  • Gardening: The healthiest plant that you never have to water

    Gardening: The healthiest plant that you never have to water
    The healthiest hibiscus plant I have ever seen is never watered. It flowers heavily nearly all the time and its leaves are always a lush deep green. I know you’re wondering how this can be, so I won’t keep you in suspense.
    This hibiscus is growing on the edge of an asphalt driveway. Rainwater is no doubt trapped beneath the asphalt and the hibiscus’ roots luxuriate in the constantly moist soil throughout the year. Even during a drought, the plant barely shows any signs of disco
  • Rapidly spreading virus killing rabbits in Southern California

    Rapidly spreading virus killing rabbits in Southern California
    A deadly and highly contagious rabbit virus, first identified in the U.S. last summer, has begun infecting Southern California’s wild rabbits, with deaths confirmed in Orange, San Bernardino, Riverside and San Diego counties since early May. At least one domestic rabbit, in San Bernardino County, also has been killed by the disease.
    The disease, known as Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease Virus Type 2 or RHDV2, is unrelated to the coronavirus and doesn’t infect humans.
    But for rabbits it cou
  • How to improve your summer corn harvest

    How to improve your summer corn harvest
    1. Feed roses within the next few weeks for abundant fall flowering. Use a balanced plant food formula that has all three main ingredients – nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium – indicated in a number formula such as 8-12-4. This tells the percentage of each ingredient in order. For roses, use any brand of plant food that has all three numbers, with the middle number highest. Also – but only if you did not get around to applying it in spring – scatter a quarter cup of Eps
  • Number of laid-off workers seeking jobless aid stuck at 1.3 million

    Number of laid-off workers seeking jobless aid stuck at 1.3 million
    By CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
    WASHINGTON — The number of laid-off workers seeking unemployment benefits remained stuck at 1.3 million last week, an historically high level that indicates many companies are still cutting jobs as the viral outbreak intensifies.
    The elevated level of applications for jobless aid is occurring as new confirmed cases of coronavirus are spiking across much of the Sunbelt, threatening to weaken the economic recovery. Case counts are rising in 40 states and 22 states have
  • U.S. executes 2nd man in a week; lawyers said he had dementia

    U.S. executes 2nd man in a week; lawyers said he had dementia
    By MICHAEL BALSAMO and JESSICA GRESKO
    TERRE HAUTE, Ind. — The United States on Thursday carried out its second federal execution this week, killing by lethal injection a Kansas man whose lawyers contended he had dementia and was unfit to be executed.
    Wesley Ira Purkey was put to death at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana. Purkey was convicted of kidnapping and killing a 16-year-old girl before dismembering, burning and dumping her body in a septic pond. He also was c
  • Jaime Barria has solid outing against Angels regulars in intrasquad game

    Jaime Barria has solid outing against Angels regulars in intrasquad game
    ANAHEIM — Jaime Barria, who is in the running for opportunities as the Angels’ sixth starter, worked parts of four strong innings against the team’s regular hitters in an intrasquad game on Wednesday night.
    Barria gave up just one run, although the fourth inning was ended with two outs and the bases loaded to control his pitch count.
    The Angels are expected to start the season with Andrew Heaney, Dylan Bundy, Shohei Ohtani, Griffin Canning and Matt Andriese as their top five st
  • Wagner, Chau back away from controversial School Board recommendation

    Wagner, Chau back away from controversial School Board recommendation
    Supervisor Don Wagner and acting county health officer Clayton Chau issued a statement Wednesday that put some distance between themselves and a controversial recommendation from the Orange County Board of Education that students should return to school, in class, without masks, during the pandemic.
    While Wagner and Chau wrote that they “applaud the efforts” of the Board of Education to “bring children back to school,” they also pointedly noted that they did not “wr
  • Wagner, Chau back away from controversial Orange County School Board recommendation

    Wagner, Chau back away from controversial Orange County School Board recommendation
    Supervisor Don Wagner and acting county health officer Clayton Chau issued a statement Wednesday that put some distance between themselves and a controversial recommendation from the Orange County Board of Education that students should return to school, in class, without masks, during the pandemic.
    While Wagner and Chau wrote that they “applaud the efforts” of the Board of Education to “bring children back to school,” they also pointedly noted that they did not “wr
  • The politics of trying to keep foreign students out

    The politics of trying to keep foreign students out
    It wasn’t just elite East Coast universities such as Harvard and MIT, which sued to block the federal government from penalizing their foreign students during the pandemic, that would have been affected by the Trump administration’s proposed radical changes in immigration rules.
    It was very much Southern California colleges as well.
    USC, for instance, ranks second among institutes of higher learning in the nation for the percentage of its students who are international — fully
  • Navy commissions new amphibious assault ship for “leaner and meaner” Marine Corp

    Navy commissions new amphibious assault ship for “leaner and meaner” Marine Corp
    The Navy commissioned its newest amphibious assault ship on Wednesday, July 15, one designed to better deploy Marines and their aircraft from the ocean.
    While the USS Tripoli, still at its shipyard in Pascagoula, Miss., was celebrated, fire-fighting crews at the Naval Base San Diego continued to work to extinguish a blaze on the amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard, which was undergoing a conversion to also make it better suited to for transporting the Marine’s F-35 Lighting II fig
  • MLB teams like Dodgers plan to bring in da noise this season

    MLB teams like Dodgers plan to bring in da noise this season
    LOS ANGELES — Baseball without fans in the stands could be an ear-opening experience.
    A lack of crowd noise could make the real sounds of the game — vulgar and otherwise — much more audible. For pitchers like Walker Buehler (whose intensity has spilled over on live microphones both in the stadium and on broadcasts), that could mean a new level of exposure.
    “I’m not going to do it intentionally. But I still feel the same way about this game and I always have —
  • Joe Maddon cautions against expecting Jo Adell to join the Angels too quickly

    Joe Maddon cautions against expecting Jo Adell to join the Angels too quickly
    ANAHEIM >> Joe Maddon has frequently gushed about Jo Adell during his first two camps — one in the spring and one in the summer — getting a look at the Angels’ top prospect.
    On Wednesday, though, Maddon pumped the brakes just a bit for anyone expecting Adell to be on the Angels Opening Day roster.
    “The guy’s high-ceiling all the way around,” the Angels manager said. “But he has things to work on, quite frankly. Don’t be deceived by a couple w
  • D.A.’s Office: Sex offender and former Costa Mesa resident has been released from mental hospital

    D.A.’s Office: Sex offender and former Costa Mesa resident has been released from mental hospital
    The District Attorney’s Office confirmed Wednesday the release of a sex offender and former Costa Mesa resident after being held at mental health hospitals for more than two decades.
    Cary Smith, 59, an admitted pedophile, was held against his will at Coalinga State Hospital, and before that, Patton State Hospital in San Bernardino County since a 1999 incident in Costa Mesa involving a 7-year-old child
    His location Wednesday was not immediately clear to officials.
    News of Smith’s
  • Away from the comforts of family, Lakers find new pursuits in NBA ‘Bubble’

    Away from the comforts of family, Lakers find new pursuits in NBA ‘Bubble’
    LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. >> On most mornings, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope awakens to find a missed call.
    It might be from his wife, or one of his sons. Whoever it is, he tries to call them back within a reasonable time frame — a little trickier to do these days three time zones apart.
    “Every day we try to talk on FaceTime, try to talk after practice and stuff like that throughout the day,” Caldwell-Pope said. “Try to stay in contact as much as possible.”
    Of the man
  • Irvine schools will offer menu of online, in-person and hybrid options this fall

    Irvine schools will offer menu of online, in-person and hybrid options this fall
    With the new school year set to start in about a month, Irvine students are expected to be able to decide whether they want to spent at least part of their time in the classroom or do all their learning virtually.
    With the coronavirus outbreak expected to last into the fall, the district is offering several options so families can pick what will suit their kids best: all online or in-person instruction, or a mix of both, for students in transitional kindergarten through sixth grade; and for midd
  • W. Kamau Bell’s ‘United Shades of America’ returns — when we need it most

    W. Kamau Bell’s ‘United Shades of America’ returns — when we need it most
    Oakland-based socio-political comedian W. Kamau Bell says his cable TV series, “The United Shades of America,” is a place for “difficult conversations.” So it’s no wonder he believes the program is more vital than ever.
    As the Emmy-winning series prepares to launch a fifth season on CNN July 19, protests and debates over racial injustices and defects in American democracy are happening all over a polarized nation. In his role as “United Shades” host, Bel
  • OC agrees not to collect $18.5 million from families whose children were locked in juvenile hall

    OC agrees not to collect $18.5 million from families whose children were locked in juvenile hall
    Parents of children in Orange County juvenile hall before 2018 will no longer be billed for their child’s housing under a unanimous vote this week by the Board of Supervisors.
    Board members forgave $18.5 million in fees owed by the families — mostly poor and minorities — joining other counties throughout California in ceasing collection of the old fees. In this fiscal year, the projected revenue from these fees added up to $925,000 for Orange County.
    Los Angeles County recently
  • Photos: Rose Parade grand marshals through the years

    Photos: Rose Parade grand marshals through the years
    Tournament of Roses Parade Grand MarshalGina Torres during the 131st Rose Parade in Pasadena, CA., on Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2020. (Photo by Trevor Stamp, Contributing Photographer)
    2020 Tournament of Roses Parade Grand Marshal Grand Marshal Rita Moreno, waves to the crowd during the parade in Pasadena, CA., on Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2020. (Photo by Trevor Stamp, Contributing Photographer)SoundThe gallery will resume insecondsRose Parade Co-Grand Marshal Laurie Hernandez and her sister, Jelysa Deserio,
  • Clippers’ Doc Rivers jokes reporting LeBron James on the NBA ‘snitch hotline’

    Clippers’ Doc Rivers jokes reporting LeBron James on the NBA ‘snitch hotline’
    Inside the NBA’s beefy, 100-page safety plan for policing the bubble in Orlando, Florida, is an option for anonymously reporting social-distancing violations, or as Brooklyn Nets guard Spencer Dinwiddie termed it in an interview with Bleacher Report’s Taylor Rooks: “The snitch hotline.”
    Montrezl Harrell said he’s definitely gonna pass on that option.
    “C’mon now,” he said on a Zoom video conference with reporters Wednesday. “Do I look like a p
  • Rams QB Jared Goff has history on his side in 2020

    Rams QB Jared Goff has history on his side in 2020
    Editor’s note: This is one in a series of stories looking at the upcoming Rams season in the context of the team’s rich history. As the franchise starts a new era with the move to SoFi Stadium, we’re considering how current stars compare to all-time Rams greats, the ways this year’s squad is like and unlike past Rams teams, and what history says about the Rams’ chances in 2020.
    When Jared Goff takes his next regular-season snap for the Rams, he’ll begin his fi
  • Rose Parade cancellation means millions in lost revenue

    Rose Parade cancellation means millions in lost revenue
    Pasadena’s iconic Rose Parade is the latest large event to fall victim to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the region will feel a noticeable void when Jan. 1 rolls around.
    People from throughout Southern California and well beyond will miss the floats, the music and the grandeur that draws hundreds of thousands to the streets of Pasadena while attracting millions of TV viewers worldwide.
    Beyond that, the region is in for a major economic hit.
    Few businesses will feel as heavy an impact as Sharp
  • Federal hearing delayed for man whose arrest last month led to commotion in a Santa Ana neighborhood

    Federal hearing delayed for man whose arrest last month led to commotion in a Santa Ana neighborhood
    A hearing was delayed this week for a 52-year-old man whose arrest by federal agents last month for alleged smuggling and other crimes caused commotion in a Santa Ana neighborhood and led to claims of heavy-handed law enforcement tactics and concern from a local congressman.
    Luis Memije, also known as Luis Memije-Guzman, 52, of Santa Ana, remains behind bars following his arrest by federal agents June 24 on suspicion of crimes including smuggling, the receipt of an unregistered silencer, and ill
  • Bruno Serato serves 1 millionth meal during the coronavirus pandemic

    Bruno Serato serves 1 millionth meal during the coronavirus pandemic
    Anaheim White House owner Chef Bruno Serato stood on the hot pavement outside the Boys & Girls Club of Anaheim at Manzanita Park as nearly 200 cars lined up along Rivera Street for a weekly drive-thru offering food assistance.
    “Each car in line represents on the average of five to eight people in need,” he said.
    Volunteers load a vehicle with boxes of food during a food distribution at the Boys & Girls Club of Anaheim by the Anaheim White House restaurant’s Bruno Serato

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