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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Here's what not to miss in L.A. and SoCal.
    A puppet with no head sits on a bed. In the background an image of a puppet girl with dark hair and large eyes projects on a screen.
    Head to Hollywood Forever Cemetery for Lauren Tsai's haunting 'The Dying World.'

    In this edition:

    Macaulay Culkin himself will share memories of Home Alone. Plus, bike or blade for L.A. on Wheels Day and more of the best things to do this weekend.

    Highlights:

    • The sixth annual Corita Day will be celebrated at Marciano Arts Foundation this Saturday, with some help from KCRW and other community organizations, including a performance from Bob Baker’s marionettes. You can explore the new Corita Kent: Sorcery of Images exhibit at the all-ages, free event. 
    • Ahoy! It’s already time for the annual reading of Herman Melville’s Moby Dick on the beach. It’s one of the events that mark the start of the California gray whale migration.
    • No matter what wheels you prefer — roller skates, skateboard, car, bike or even unicycle — L.A. on Wheels Day celebrates all forms of zippy transport at the Natural History Museum. The event includes live skate demos from pro skaters as well as — wait for it — Rowdy the Skate Dog, plus the LA Derby Dolls and LA Skate Hunnies.
    • Calling all horse people: The Split Rock Jumping Tour culminates after two weeks of horse show jumping at Santa Anita Park, which was recently named the official equestrian venue for the LA28 Olympic Games. Check out elite riders and horses, then head down to the racecourse for the big event — the Longines FEI Jumping World Cup — happening on Saturday.
    • Halloween may be long over, but you still have a last chance to take an evening wander through Lauren Tsai’s haunting installation in Hollywood Forever Cemetery. Tsai uses drawing, painting, sculpture, stop-motion animation and puppets (created in collaboration with Andy Gent) to take visitors through a character — Astrid’s — world.

    Happy Wicked: For Good opening weekend to all who celebrate. You know where I’ll be. If you have been singing along since the trailer came out, head to Licorice Pizza for a Wicked: For Good soundtrack listening party on Saturday at 5 p.m. — there will even be giveaways!

    Licorice Pizza also has music picks around town for the weekend, including Lucius at the Wiltern on Friday, Robert Plant at the United on Saturday, Goapele at the Blue Note and Brian Jonestown Massacre at the Teragram. Cerritos Center has a killer lineup of Todd Rundgren on Saturday and Al Jardine from the Beach Boys on Sunday, and the Dreamstate SoCal trance festival is happening in Long Beach all weekend long.

    Elsewhere on LAist.com, you can check out our latest gift guides for local good fans, Larry Mantle superfans and plant parents.

    Events

    Saturday, November 22, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
    Corita Day 
    Marciano Art Foundation 
    4357 Wilshire Blvd., Koreatown 
    COST: FREE, RESERVATION REQUIRED; MORE INFO

    Three trays of oranges, apples, pears and bananas sit on green astroturf. in front of them lies a pink banner with blue circles on it.
    (
    Corita Kent
    /
    Third Eye
    )

    Pop artist and photographer Corita Kent died in 1986, but her powerful messages of social justice have perhaps never been clearer in Los Angeles history. An artist, nun and educator who later left the Catholic Church, Kent’s colorful prints gained attention during challenging moments in our past, from the 1960s civil rights movement to apartheid. This year marks the sixth annual Corita Day, which will be celebrated at Marciano Arts Foundation this Saturday, with some help from KCRW and other community organizations, including a performance from Bob Baker’s marionettes. You can explore the new Corita Kent: Sorcery of Images exhibit at the all-ages, free event, and also bring along your creativity for button making, screen printing and more ways to make inspiring, colorful art like Kent’s.

    Saturday, November 22, 6:30 a.m. to Sunday, November 23, 5 p.m.
    Annual Moby Dick Reading 
    Venice Beach 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    Moby Dick book cover with a sperm whale jumping out of the water carrying a small wooden boat with men falling out of it. In front of the whale is another boat with four men in it.
    (
    Museon, CC BY 4.0
    /
    Wikimedia Commons
    )

    Ahoy! It’s already time for the annual reading of Herman Melville’s Moby Dick on the beach. I know I put this in every year, but it’s one of my favorite — and so uniquely Venice — events that mark the start of the California gray whale migration. After the rain this week, it should be brisk but sunny on the beach, so bring a blanket and sign up for your favorite chapter to read aloud.

    Saturday, November 22, 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. 
    L.A. On Wheels Day 
    Natural History Museum 
    900 Exposition Blvd., Expo Park 
    COST: FREE WITH MUSEUM ADMISSION; MORE INFO

    A stylized collage of many different people on wheeled objects, like bicycles, skateboards, roller blades and more.
    (
    Courtesy of NHMLAC
    )

    No matter what wheels you prefer — roller skates, skateboard, car, bike or even unicycle, L.A. on Wheels Day celebrates all forms of zippy transport at the Natural History Museum. The event includes live skate demos from pro skaters as well as — wait for it — Rowdy the Skate Dog, plus the LA Derby Dolls and LA Skate Hunnies. There’s also a chance to make art, listen to stories from the Drag Arts Lab and check out wheel-themed museum presentations. 

    Through Sunday, November 23
    Split Rock Jumping Tour
    Santa Anita Park 
    285 W Huntington Drive, Arcadia
    COST: FROM $30; MORE INFO

    Calling all horse people: The Split Rock Jumping Tour culminates after two weeks of horse show jumping at Santa Anita Park, which was recently named the official equestrian venue for the LA28 Olympic Games. Check out elite riders and horses, then head down to the racecourse for the big event — the Longines FEI Jumping World Cup — happening on Saturday.

    Saturday, November 22, 10 a.m.
    Venice Winter Fest 
    Venice Blvd., Mar Vista 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    An illustrated poster for Venice Winterfest featuring a woman in a red bathing suit on skies on the beach.
    (
    Courtesy Gal Media Group
    )

    Get your holiday shopping on the fun (and local!) way with 300+ local creators, designers and artists selling their wares You can also listen to live music curated by Breaking Sound, refuel with restaurants and food trucks, then work it all off at free classes from The Gym Venice. Take a stroll up Venice Blvd. and soak up the beachy holiday vibes.

    Through November 22, 6 p.m. 10 p.m.
    Lauren Tsai: The Dying World
    Hollywood Forever 
    6000 Santa Monica Blvd., Hollywood
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    The head of a light-skinned woman character sits on a stool in front of a window. In front of the head is a broken bedframe on a landscape of ruins.
    (
    Joshua White
    )

    Halloween may be long over, but you still have a last chance to take an evening wander through Lauren Tsai’s haunting installation in Hollywood Forever Cemetery. Tsai uses drawing, painting, sculpture, stop-motion animation and puppets (created in collaboration with Andy Gent) to take visitors through a character — Astrid’s — world.

    Through Sunday, November 23
    Perspectives
    Zena and Pauline Gatov Gallery
    Alpert Jewish Community Center
    3801 E. Willow Street, Long Beach
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    The Long Beach Modern Quilting Guild is putting on this exhibit at the Alpert JCC, featuring 32 modern quilts and fiber arts from members of the community. Quilting is an old tradition, but this group is committed to modern patterns from minimalist to intricate, and is preserving quilting as an art form. These aren’t your grandma’s quilts!


    Viewing Pick

    Saturday, November 22, 7:30 p.m. 
    Home Alone: A Nostalgic Night with Macaulay Culkin
    Terrace Theater
    300 E. Ocean Blvd #300, Long Beach
    COST: FROM $68.35, MORE INFO

    Home Alone DVD cover with a light-skinned boy holding his hands to his cheeks, screaming. Behind him are two light-skinned men glaring at the boy.
    (
    Twentieth Century Studios
    )

    Kevin McCallister himself will be on hand for this special screening of holiday favorite Home Alone. The John Hughes classic is celebrating 35 years of being a fixture on our holiday screens big and small (which makes me want to do the classic scream). Following the film screening, Macaulay Culkin will share stories and memories from the making of the film.


    Dine & Drink Deals

    Sunday, November 23, 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. 
    Jikoni at Offhand
    3008 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica
    COST: VARIES; MORE INFO 

    “Afri-Cali” dining concept Jikoni L.A. is popping up at Westside favorite Offhand Wine Bar for a special one-night-only event. The menu features previous bestsellers like short rib biryani, shrimp jollof arancini and karakara pie.

    Saturday, November 22, 1 p.m. 
    Di Mart Grand Opening 
    21355 Sherman Way, Canoga Park 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    Caribbean grocer Di Mart is opening a new location in Canoga Park. Their first day will be celebrated with discounts for shoppers, a raffle and a ribbon-cutting with the Woodland Hills Chamber of Commerce.

  • 10M SoCal residents are traveling through Jan. 1
    A packed freeway full of traffic in the evening hours on an overcast day. Trucks and cars are lined closely together in the four lanes of traffic, the red brake lights illuminating the wet pavement behind them. A green traffic sign with white text reads "Griffith Park Drive" with an arrow pointing towards another two lanes of packed traffic moving in the same general direction.
    Evening traffic moves slowly on Interstate 5 in Los Angeles on Feb. 6, 2024.

    Topline:

    Some 10 million Southern California residents will travel out of the region through Jan. 1, according to AAA. This Saturday and Sunday are expected to be the busiest for driving for this year-end travel season.

    How are people travelling? “The vast majority are gonna go by automobile, about 8.9 million Southern Californians taking road trips,” said Doug Shupe of the Automobile Club of Southern California.

    About 945,000 people are travelling by air with another 332,000 people taking alternative forms of transportation like buses, trains, and cruises.

    Where are people going? SoCal residents are mostly driving to places like San Diego, Las Vegas, the Central Coast and local national parks.

    Meanwhile, Anaheim and the Los Angeles area are No. 4 in the top five domestic travel destinations for year-end holidays.

    “Disneyland plays a huge role in that, but a lot of people nationwide will come to Southern California to celebrate,” Shupe said.

    Is travel up? Holiday travel has seen continued growth all year. Compared to last year, auto travel has increased 2.7%, air travel is up 1.7% and alternative methods like trains, buses and cruises are up a whopping 7.4%.

    Overall, travel this year is 10.3% higher compared to just before the pandemic began in 2019.

    Any travel advice? Leave early! And that goes for those traveling by car and plane, Shupe said.

    If you’re driving, inspect your vehicle before hitting the road. “Check your tire tread and inflation, inspect your battery, your headlights and turn signals,” said Shupe.

    A winter storm is expected to hit Southern California beginning Tuesday, so make sure your windshield wipers are in good shape or get them replaced.

    Flying? Get to the airport two hours early for domestic flights and at least three hours before international ones.

  • Sponsored message
  • LACMA shows its first Van Gogh
    A painting of a four-wheeled stagecoach at rest, with a ladder leading up to the roof of the coach.
    "Tarascon Stagecoach" by Vincent van Gogh, 1888.

    Topline:

    LACMA’s newly acquired Van Gogh will go on display starting Sunday, making L.A. a rising place to see his work.

    Why it matters: Van Gogh was part of the Impressionist movement that revolutionized Western art and continues to influence art and artists.

    Why now: LACMA’s exhibit includes 100 other Impressionist works, giving the audience a chance to see Van Gogh in context with his contemporaries.

    The backstory: In L.A. County, you also can see Van Gogh paintings at the Hammer Museum, the Getty and the Norton Simon Museum.

    Read on ... for more on the newly acquired Van Gogh and Monet works.

    LACMA’s first Van Gogh isn’t a painting of blue flowers, golden wheat fields or aged faces. It’s of a parked stagecoach, and it’s considered a good example of what made the Dutch painter, and the Impressionist movement he was a part of, so revolutionary.

    The painting is called “Tarascon Stagecoach.” It was painted in 1888 and was donated to LACMA earlier this year by the Henry and Rose Pearlman Foundation.

    It’s LACMA’s first Van Gogh painting, and the encyclopedic museum will be showing it off starting Sunday in a show called “Collecting Impressionism at LACMA” that focuses on 100 works from LACMA’s collection. The works are arranged chronologically to show the evolving tastes that have shaped the museum's collection of Impressionist art.

    The museum’s acquisition isn’t just a win for the museum. The museum-going public and the region’s teenage and college-age students also will benefit.

    “I very much remember seeing Van Gogh in a rotunda space in the [Philadelphia Museum of Art] and finding it to be just so striking because of these luscious, bright colors,” said Summer Sloane-Britt, who saw her first Van Goh during a middle school visit to the museum.

    Sloane-Britt now is a professor of art and art history at Occidental College.

    “Visual analysis and seeing objects in person is always so core to historical learning and for studio artists as well,” Sloane-Britt said.

    I very much remember seeing Van Gogh in a rotunda space in the [Philadelphia Museum of Art] and finding it to be just so striking because of these luscious, bright colors.
    — Summer Sloane-Britt, professor of art and art history, Occidental College

    And seeing a Van Gogh in person, Sloane-Britt said, and saying you don’t like it is also OK because that signals the work has led you to identify and assert your own aesthetic tastes in art.

    Van Gogh road trip in LA. Shotgun!

    The LACMA exhibit presents a good opportunity to get on the road for a four-stop Van Gogh road trip without leaving L.A. County.

    An oil painting featuring a dense cluster of purple, blue and orange irises with long green leaves, set against a brown and green background. The flowers are depicted with thick, expressive brushstrokes and dark outlines.
    Van Gogh's "Irises"
    (
    Courtesy Getty Museum
    )

    You can start at LACMA and see “Tarascon Stagecoach,” benefiting from the context of seeing other impressionist works by Van Gogh’s contemporaries.

    Hop over to the Hammer Museum in Westwood, where you’ll see “Hospital at Saint-Rémy,” one of three paintings by Van Gogh in the collection.

    Then head west on Wilshire Boulevard to the Getty to see “Irises,” one of the paintings that’s made Van Gogh an art star.

    A tree painted in bright yellows and browns
    "The Mulberry Tree," a painting by Vincent Van Gogh, on display at the Norton Simon Museum
    (
    Courtesy Norton Simon Museum
    )

    End your Van Gogh road trip by heading east to Pasadena to the Norton Simon Museum. The museum’s smaller, more intimate setting is a good place to see the museum’s six, yes six, Van Gogh paintings.

    The exhibit also will feature the newly acquired work "The Artist’s Garden, Vétheuil" by Claude Monet.

  • What OC officials say you need to know
    Three medium to large dogs are chasing each other around a fenced-in patch of green grass.
    Dogs playing at the Laguna Beach Dog Park. Orange County officials are warning of recent scam calls targeting pet owners.

    Topline:

    Orange County officials are warning Friday of a scam targeting owners of lost pets that claim their animal was injured and they need payment for their release.

    How it works: A pet owner may get a call from a person claiming to be from the Orange County Sheriff’s Department or a similar agency, warning that their animal has been hit by a car or suffered a medical emergency.

    The caller claims the animal has been treated by a vet and is recovering, according to officials, but the owner needs to pay the medical costs before the pet can go home. The scam typically pushes for payment through Zelle or Venmo.

    What to do: Do not send any money if you get a suspicious call like this.

    When in doubt, contact the agency the caller was claiming to be from by using the official website.

    You can report scams to the Orange County Sheriff's Department non-emergency line at (949) 770-6011. But the best way to avoid scam calls is by not answering unknown numbers, according to county officials.

    What officials say: Lisa Lebron Flores, a Mission Viejo Police Services crime prevention specialist, said this scam, like many others, is designed to stir up people’s emotions and prompt a quick response.

    “We want residents to remember that payments not made on an official website that are made with gift cards, via apps or other means, which are not recognized, are red flags,” she said in a statement.

    Go deeper: How to perform for adoptable pets at the Mission Viejo animal shelter

  • The new laws LA renters and landlords need to know
     A “for lease” sign hangs from the railing of an exterior stairway on an apartment building with two small balconies.
    A “For lease” sign advertises an available apartment in the city of Los Angeles.

    Topline:

    The new year doesn’t just bring new gifts and new resolutions. It also brings new laws. State and local lawmakers have a lot on tap for 2026 when it comes to housing laws that will affect Southern California renters and landlords.

    New crop of laws: From refrigerators to fire damage, from development streamlining to rent control caps, LAist has rounded up the legal changes coming next year that you need to know.

    Read on… to learn how lawmakers are tightening limits on annual rent hikes, allowing taller apartment buildings next to transit and protecting Social Security recipients during future government shutdowns.

    The new year doesn’t just bring new gifts and new resolutions. It also brings new laws.

    State and local lawmakers have a lot on tap for 2026 when it comes to housing laws that will affect Southern California renters and landlords.

    From refrigerators to fire damage, from development streamlining to rent control caps, LAist has rounded up the legal changes coming next year that you need to know.

    AB 628: No more ‘no fridge’ apartment listings

    Starting Jan. 1, landlords must provide tenants with a working refrigerator and stove. Many landlords already offer these appliances, but the L.A. area stands out nationwide for having an unusually high proportion of fridge-less apartments.

    Next year, L.A. newcomers will no longer be taking to social media to express incredulity at all the city’s bring-your-own-fridge apartments. If landlords fail to provide refrigerators or stoves in good working condition, apartments will be considered uninhabitable under the new law.

    SB 610: Landlords must clean smoke damage

    In the weeks and months after the January fires, many renters struggled to get their landlords to address toxic ash that blew into apartments and rental homes that remained standing. Some landlords said cleaning up the smoke damage was not their responsibility. Initial communication from local public officials was confusing on what tenants were supposed to do.

    This new law, which partially was driven by LAist’s reporting, clarifies that in the wake of a natural disaster, “it shall be the duty of a landlord” to remove “hazards arising from the disaster, including, but not limited to, the presence of mold, smoke, smoke residue, smoke odor, ash, asbestos or water damage.”

    SB 79: Upzoning LA neighborhoods near transit

    L.A.’s City Council voted to oppose it. Mayor Karen Bass asked the governor to veto it. But California’s big new upzoning law passed anyway. Its changes are set to take effect July 1, 2026.

    Under the law, new apartment buildings up to nine stories tall will be allowed next to rail stations, and buildings up to five stories tall will be allowed within a half-mile of rapid bus stops. This upzoning applies to neighborhoods within those transit zones, even if they’re currently zoned only for single-family homes.

    Next comes the implementation. The law could give renters more options once new housing is constructed. But L.A. could choose to delay the law’s effects in some areas for years. Ahead of the law’s passage, City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto sent legislators a letter opposing the bill, signaling what could turn into a legal showdown over the bill.

    AB 246: Protecting Social Security recipients during government shutdowns

    Tenants can face eviction three days after missing their rent. During this year’s federal government shutdown — the longest on record — that swift timeline was a cause for anxiety among tenants who count on federal benefits to cover their rent.

    Though this year’s shutdown did not affect regular Social Security payments, this law will give Social Security recipients a defense in eviction court if they ever stop receiving benefits because of any future shutdowns. Under the law, renters will be required to repay their missed rent, or enter a repayment plan, within two weeks of their Social Security payments being restored.

    Lower rent control caps in the city of LA

    After years of debate, the L.A. City Council passed a new cap on annual rent hikes in the roughly three-quarters of city apartments covered by local rent control rules.

    The City Council enacted a new 4% limit, replacing a 40-year-old formula that allowed increases as high as 10% in some units during periods of high inflation. Councilmembers also ended a 2% additional increase for landlords who cover tenants’ gas and electricity costs.

    The city had a nearly four-year rent freeze in place during the COVID-19 pandemic that ended in February 2024. That means many L.A. tenants are scheduled to receive their next rent hike Feb. 1, 2026. They should be getting a 30-day notice soon. Each year’s limit is determined by recent inflation data. The current cap of 3% is set to last until June 30.