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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • A poetry "spa," and stars celebrate Mavis Staples
    Mavis Staples holds a mic out to the crowd while performing. Behind her on stage are backup singers, all bathed in blue, red, and purple light.
    NEW YORK, NEW YORK - OCTOBER 13: Mavis Staples performs onstage at the Hudson River Park Friends 2022 Gala at Pier Sixty at Chelsea Piers on October 13, 2022 in New York City. (Photo by Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Hudson River Park Friends)

    This week:

    Learn more about the "wild things," a poetry "spa" in West Hollywood, and the stars come out for gospel legend Mavis Staples.

    Some of our picks:

    • Wild Things are Happening: The Art of Maurice Sendak; Brentwood - Where the Wild Things Are author Maurice Sendak is the focus of a new family-friendly exhibit at the Skirball, comprising over 150 artifacts.
    • Mavis Staples 85: All-Star Birthday Concert; Inglewood - Mavis Staples, activist and soul music legend, turns 85 this year and is celebrating with a star-studded concert.
    • TCM Classic Film Festival: Crime and Justice in Film; Hollywood - This year's festival curates the best of the best, from lighthearted capers like Clue to serious political dramas like All the King’s Me.

    Wild things are happening in L.A. this week and we mean that quite literally as a Maurice Sendak show opens at the Skirball, a shark talk swims its way to the Broad Stage and a quartet of comedians share their boldest tales at the Lyric Hyperion.

    There’s also Passover prep, a coffee nerd event inside a Gelson’s wine bar (yes, the West L.A. Gelson’s has a wine bar), and college students can hit the Getty for free Monday night.

    Visit LAist.com for more, including the latest relationship drama between Big Bear’s bald eagle Jackie and her partner and the newest James Beard nominees (spoiler alert: three are in Southern California!).

    Events

    Viewing Pick

    Dine & Drink Deals

    • Tue, Apr 16

      Mom World

      • Little Ripper
        4155 Verdugo Rd., Glassell Park

      Join Little Ripper owner Lorena Juardo and learn about her favorite wines while snacking on cheese and charcuterie.

    • Thu, Apr 18

      Coffee Pour-Over Event

      • Gelson’s West L.A. at West Edge
        12121 W. Olympic Blvd., West L.A.

      Learn how to make a proper pour-over from the experts at local chain Go Get Em Tiger.

    • Tue, Apr 30

      Superba's Passover Pre-orders

      • Superba - Hollywood
        6530 Sunset Blvd,, Hollywood
      • Superba - NoHo
        5203 Lankershim Blvd, North Hollywood
      • Superba - Pasadena
        712 S Arroyo Pkwy, Pasadena
      • Superba - Venice
        1900 S Lincoln Blvd., Venice

      If cooking all week isn’t on your agenda, get your order in for Passover necessities this week.

  • A native turtle gets a boost.
    A small brown and greenish turtle swims in water.
    A recently released juvenile southwestern pond turtle swims in the San Gabriel River in the Angeles National Forest.

    Topline:

    There’s a day for everything, and Saturday is World Turtle Day. This is the story of how humans helped a vulnerable native California turtle.

    The backstory: Southwestern pond turtles in the San Gabriel mountains were almost wiped out by the Bobcat Fire in 2020. But biologists rescued 11 adults that were held at the San Diego Zoo until 2024, when they were released.

    The baby boom: But then something happened that scientists didn't expect: "One baby, two baby, three baby, four baby. Fifteen babies later," is how a wildlife care manager at the zoo described it. Yes, the rescued turtles had laid eggs in their temporary home, and the hatchlings were emerging.

    A new generation: Once they'd grown a bit, the zoo released the young turtles into San Gabriel River where they belong in April.

    Read on ... for more about this conservation success story.

    After fires and floods, Southern California’s only remaining native freshwater turtle recently got a boost.

    Just last month, 15 southwestern pond turtle hatchlings were released into the San Gabriel River — a major milestone in an effort to restore the vulnerable turtle population.

    But this wasn’t a typical raise-and-release scenario.

    These turtles’ parents went on a harrowing journey before they were born.

    A daring rescue

    In early September 2020, amid a heat wave and dry weather, a tree branch hit a Southern California Edison power line, igniting the Bobcat Fire.

    The fire eventually scorched more than 180 square miles — mostly forest in the San Gabriel Mountains. For comparison, the 2025 Eaton Fire burned about 22 square miles.

    A firefighter directs his hose toward flames amid smoke and trees.
    Lights from a fire truck illuminate firefighters working the Bobcat Fire in September 2021.
    (
    Frederic J. Brown
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    As the Bobcat Fire spread, biologists grew worried. The fire was burning in the West Fork of the San Gabriel River, a biodiversity hotspot and refuge for bears and mountain lions, the federally protected Santa Ana sucker fish and the mountain yellow-legged frog.

    It’s also home to the largest remaining — and possibly only — population of southwestern pond turtles in the entire watershed. Their exact numbers aren’t known, but it’s likely less than 200.

    What is a southwestern pond turtle?

    The small, shy turtles grow to about 8 inches and range from Baja California to just south of the San Francisco Bay. They spend most of their lives in streams, rivers, lakes and other watery environments. They primarily eat small insects and plant matter.

    The California Department of Fish and Wildlife lists them as a Species of Special Concern, and they're being considered for federal protections under the Endangered Species Act.

    “Because this hadn’t burned in decades and decades and decades, there was big concern about debris flows,” said Robert Fisher, a biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey.

    Scientists hoped the turtles would be able to ride out the fire itself by staying in the water, but any rain after would likely lead to a deluge of mud, trees and other burned materials. That would be akin to an avalanche for the turtles in the river, and it had the potential to wipe out the entire population.

    Once the flames died down, Fisher and a team of biologists, in partnership with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife and U.S. Forest Service, trekked to the home of the pond turtles.

    “It was a moonscape,” Fisher said.

    They waded through ashy, murky waters, eventually collecting 11 adult turtles.

    World Turtle Day’s SoCal cred

    There’s a day for everything these days, but World Turtle Day (May 23) has surprisingly local roots.

    Susan Tellem and her late husband, Marshall Thompson, coined the day in 2000 after founding a turtle and tortoise rescue 10 years earlier at their home in Malibu.

    “When I first started helping turtles, there were hardly people helping the needs of turtles,” Tellem told LAist. “We decided to help educate people internationally so that turtles can live a longer and happier life.”

    A temporary home and 15 surprises

    The turtles were taken to the San Diego Zoo, where the plan was to hold them until their mountain habitat recovered enough for them to return.

    By 2024, the San Gabriel Mountains were looking far better — biologists even found some pond turtles that survived major debris flows.

    But right before the turtles were set to go back home, scientists got a surprise.

    “Just before we were getting to release, we found a baby turtle, which is amazing,” said Brandon Scott, wildlife care manager of herpetology and ichthyology at San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “You don't know how long it's going to take to restart that process of them actually being able to breed, with the stress and it's a new habitat.”

    A hand in a blue glove places a small turtle on a scale to be weighed.
    A juvenile southwestern pond turtle is weighed before being released to the wild.
    (
    Ken Bohn
    /
    Courtesy San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance
    )

    The turtles and the new baby were all returned to their home in the San Gabriels. But then came another surprise. And another.

    “We just continually, every day, started finding a baby in that habitat,” said Scott.

    Female southwestern pond turtles lay and bury their eggs in late spring or early summer. Juveniles emerge months later, only about the size of a quarter.

    Fifteen babies later, conservation staff were shocked and pleased.

    Their goal for the 11 rescued turtles was to make sure they could thrive before being released back into their habitat. “But in the process,” Scott said, “yes, we made it comfortable enough for them to breed.”

    A hopeful release

    The new generation of southwestern pond turtles was released in April near the spot their parents were rescued from in the San Gabriel River.

    Such rescues of vulnerable wildlife are becoming increasingly common in the face of more catastrophic fires. All but two of the biggest fires in recorded history have been in the last 20 years.

    Fisher said a similar rescue of pond turtles had occurred only once before, after the 2009 Station Fire in the San Gabriels. That time, the turtles were quickly returned to their habitat.

    A man wearing a brown baseball cap and khaki long sleeved shirt holds a small turtle at the edge of a pond.
    A staff member of the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance releases a juvenile southwestern pond turtle into the San Gabriel River.
    (
    Ken Bohn
    /
    Courtesy San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance
    )

    That rescue, in part, inspired the U.S. Geological Survey to work with the San Diego Zoo to build a conservation habitat for southwestern pond turtles nearly two decades ago. And the Bobcat Fire became the first time it was used for wild rescues, Fisher said.

    Ironically, the Bobcat Fire could eventually help the local population, Fisher said.

    “We’ve known about [the population] for decades, but it’s not really thriving,” he said. “So this helped give it a head start. And because the fire was so intense, it opened up a lot of habitat.”

    With less tree canopy and more sunlight, the cold-blooded reptiles could thrive in warmer waters and on sunnier rocks.

    Threats to southwestern pond turtles

    Southwestern pond turtles have lived here for millennia, but invasive species and habitat destruction have nearly wiped them out. They’re currently being considered for protection under the federal Endangered Species Act.

    Nonnative turtles — such as red-eared sliders, many of which are abandoned pets — are outcompeting them in their habitats. And native pond turtle hatchlings are easy prey for invasive animals such as bullfrogs and crayfish. 

    On top of that, pollution in our atmosphere is driving longer, hotter droughts, which dries out the streams and rivers where they live. Worsening “weather whiplash” means more dangerous mudflows after fires, which can wipe out entire aquatic animal populations.

    But the new generation is key.

    “Because the site was so forested and hadn’t burned in so long, we don’t think they were having good success at breeding,” Fisher said. “Now we think we’ve really enhanced the population by putting more animals out there, especially young animals.”

    Scott and Fisher said the saga has inspired preliminary conversations about formalizing breeding efforts to support the population. The little turtles' myriad threats have yet to let up, so they’ll likely need more help in the future.

    But at the moment, there’s a little more hope — at least 16 hatchlings and 11 adults' worth of hope, to be exact — for California’s only native freshwater turtle.

  • Sponsored message
  • What you need to know for your health and safety
    Crews clean the scene along Cesar E. Chavez and Eastern avenues
    Crews clean the scene along Cesar E. Chavez and Eastern avenues, where gallons of crude oil spilled onto the street.

    Topline:

    Health officials are advising residents to take precautions after a ruptured pipeline released more than 2,000 gallons of crude oil in East Los Angeles on Friday, with oil entering nearby storm drains and the Los Angeles River. The pipeline burst near East Cesar E. Chavez and North Eastern avenues as crews were installing a fiber optic line.

    Avoid contact: Do not touch or walk through spilled oil or contaminated debris. Keep children and pets away from affected areas. If your skin comes into contact with oil, wash the affected area immediately with soap and water. Remove contaminated clothing.

    Indoor air precautions: Local residents should do their best to prevent odors inside their homes by closing windows and doors and turning off HVAC units until the odor outside has dissipated. After the odor outside is gone, ventilate the home by opening windows and doors and keep the HVAC system blowing air to vent the home. Limit exposure to odors as much as possible.

    Health officials are advising residents to take precautions after a ruptured pipeline released more than 2,000 gallons of crude oil in East Los Angeles on Friday, with oil entering nearby storm drains and the Los Angeles River.

    The pipeline burst near East Cesar E. Chavez and North Eastern avenues as crews were installing a fiber optic line, according to the LA County Fire Department. 

    The leak has been controlled and is no longer releasing crude oil in the streets, health officials said.

    The Los Angeles County Department of Public Health issued guidance for residents as agencies continue with cleanup efforts.

    Avoid contact: Do not touch or walk through spilled oil or contaminated debris. Keep children and pets away from affected areas.

    Skin exposure: If your skin comes into contact with oil, wash the affected area immediately with soap and water. Remove contaminated clothing.

    Odor exposure: If you smell odors outdoors, close windows and doors, turn off HVAC systems and air conditioners that pull in outside air and stay indoors until the odor has passed. After the odor outside is gone, open the windows and doors to air out your home and turn on fans or HVAC system to help ventilate indoor air.

    Try to limit exposure to strong odors as much as possible. Odors may cause or worsen:

    • Headaches
    • Nausea
    • Eye, nose, throat irritation
    • Dizziness
    • Breathing problems (asthma)

    Brief exposures usually do not cause long-term health effects, but if you experience severe or persistent symptoms, talk to your medical provider. If you don’t have a medical provider, call the Public Health – Community Health Complaint Line at (626) 430-9821.

    Indoor air precautions: Local residents should do their best to prevent odors inside their homes by closing windows and doors and turning off HVAC units until the odor outside has dissipated. After the odor outside is gone, ventilate the home by opening windows and doors, and keep the HVAC system blowing air to vent the home. Limit exposure to odors as much as possible.

    At-risk individuals: Monitor those most at risk of developing symptoms, such as older adults, children, pregnant persons and those who are immunocompromised.

    Report odors: Complaints of odor can be reported to the South Coast Air Quality Management District (AQMD): (800) 288-7664

  • What makes the fish 'n' chips pop?
    In the forefront, sits a basket holding steak fries, a lemon, fried fish, and tartar sauce. In the background, there are other food items, as well as a cup.
    Lucky Baldwin's most popular dish is their fish n chips.

    Top line:

    With the early history of soccer first documented in England, that's where you'll find the roots of the sport. Not always easy to get there from Los Angeles — but Lucky Baldwins Pub — with locations in Pasadena and Sierra Madre — brings you close.

    What makes their fish and chips special? Using a British favorite — cod — and dipping it into their special beer batter.

    Their ultimate experience: Sit on their patio with a Belgian beer in hand on a sunny day.

    "Listen to the music and enjoy the California weather," says owner-operator Peggy Simonian.

    Read more ... for more of their food and details on the events they host.

    With the early history of soccer first documented in England, that's where you'll find the roots of the sport. Not always easy to get there from Los Angeles — but a local British pub with a few locations to choose from brings you close.

    The operators of Lucky Baldwins Pub joined AirTalk Friday host Austin Cross to explain what makes their atmosphere special — it's all about the sports and traditional British bites, pints and pasties.

    About the owner

    Owner-operator Peggy Simonian was working for the British Tourist Authority when they decided to bring a pub to Pasadena. Three years after opening, they got their following after hosting their first Belgian Beer Festival.

    Listen 13:39
    World Cup pub crawl: Lucky Baldwins Pub

    What sets their food apart? The beer batter

    "I think there's this stigma around British food that it's a little bland," said general manager Patsy Sutton.

    She says the fish and chips knock people's socks off — and it all comes down to the beer batter.

    They use locally sourced Pacific cod instead of its Atlantic relative and an undisclosed pale ale. This combo drives the taste.

    In the forefront, sits a basket holding steak fries, a lemon, fried fish, and tartar sauce. In the background, there are other food items, as well as a cup.
    Lucky Baldwins' most popular dish is the fish 'n' chips.
    (
    Courtesy Peggy Simonian
    )

    The ultimate experience in the eyes of the owner

     "I like it when it's a nice sunny day outside our patio in Old Towne ... enjoy a nice Belgian beer ... listen to the music and enjoy the California weather," Simonian said.

    She added that her go-to beers currently include a Belgian lager, blonde or tripel. It's all about the mood.

    Restaurant details

    • Lucky Baldwins Pub first opened in 1996 and now has two Pasadena locations and one in Sierra Madre.
    • They're an official bar partner with LAFC.
    • They host: Pasadena Reds, a local Liverpool FC support group; Los Angeles Hammers, a West Ham FC support group; and Eastside Gooners, a local support group for Arsenal FC.
    • They also have special events tied to the Belgian Beer Festival and Oktoberfest.

    Menu items we tried

    • Fish 'n' Chips — cod dipped in ale batter with a side of steak fries and tartar sauce
    • Bangers and Mash — two pork sausages with peas and mashed potatoes (also available with fries).
    • Cornish Pastie — a handheld pie with minced meat
    • Chicken Curry Pastie — a handheld pie with traditional British chicken curry

    How to visit

    • Address (Old Town Pasadena): 17 S. Raymond Ave, Pasadena
    • Hours: Monday–Sunday: 9 a.m.-1:30 a.m.
    • Cost: Fish 'n' chips cost $18; bangers and mash cost $19; and the pasties (with a choice of crisps or fries) cost $14.

    You can find the times for their Delirium Pub by clicking here, and their Trappiste Pub by clicking here.

    What should we try next?

    Have a question or comment about a segment? Want to pitch us a story?

    Fill out the form below, and please include an email address so we're able to follow up if necessary! We're not able to respond to every inquiry, but all submissions are read and reviewed by our production team.

  • A 2-acre slice of parkland to get facelift
    A digital rendering of people sitting in an area near various trees and plants with benches on gravel.
    The city of Long Beach provided this rendering of plans for the revamped 10th Street Greenbelt.

    Topline:

    A two-acre slice of parkland that runs diagonally between 8th Street and 10th Street near Wilson High School is slated to get new trees, landscaping and seating — a project that will complete its transformation from an old railway right-of-way into a welcoming greenspace.

    The backstory: The land was once used by Pacific Electric, whose Red Car trains used to slash diagonally across the area from Wrigley to the Colorado Lagoon. For years, Long Beach has been slowly converting a 9.2-acre stretch of the former railway into parkland between 4th Street and Park Avenue to 11th Street and Loma.

    What's next: This portion, called the 10th Street Greenbelt, runs between Termino and Grand avenues. It was outfitted with a 900-foot concrete path in 2022. This next phase will add 48 Redbud, Oak, and Sycamore trees, native shrubs, solar lighting, boulder and bench seating, and several granite auxiliary trails that connect the surrounding neighborhoods to the path. There are no plans for restrooms or tables, officials said.

    Read on... for more on the changes to the parkland.

    A 2-acre slice of parkland that runs diagonally between 8th Street and 10th Street near Wilson High School is slated to get new trees, landscaping and seating — a project that will complete its transformation from an old railway right-of-way into a welcoming greenspace.

    The land was once used by Pacific Electric, whose Red Car trains used to slash diagonally across the area from Wrigley to the Colorado Lagoon. For years, Long Beach has been slowly converting a 9.2-acre stretch of the former railway into parkland between 4th Street and Park Avenue to 11th Street and Loma.

    This portion, called the 10th Street Greenbelt, runs between Termino and Grand avenues. It was outfitted with a 900-foot concrete path in 2022. This next phase will add 48 Redbud, Oak, and Sycamore trees, native shrubs, solar lighting, boulder and bench seating, and several granite auxiliary trails that connect the surrounding neighborhoods to the path. There are no plans for restrooms or tables, officials said.

    A digital rendering showing a park with various trees and plants from an arial view. People walk along a path that crosses down the park. White blocks representing buildings surround the park.
    The city of Long Beach provided this rendering of plans for the revamped 10th Street Greenbelt.
    (
    Courtesy the city of Long Beach
    )

    Plans were informed largely by a survey and feedback gathered over the last four years by the Greenbelt Heights Neighborhood Association. Officials say surveys consistently pointed out a need for more seating, native plants and improved drainage in the nearby neighborhoods.

    Sharon Turner, the association’s president, said it’s been a 15-year effort that originally inspired the creation of the neighborhood group. For years, the path was “a dumping area of tall grass,” she said. Now, the association is planning to hold meetings at the park.

    “It’s been a long haul,” Turner said. “We’ve been really happy with the support, but it definitely started as a local resident push, and we got some support once it got legs.”

    Planned for construction in early 2027, it is hoped to be finished by that fall. The project has a $2.58 million budget, mostly funded by a $1.5 million county grant.

    Public Works staff are planning to unveil detailed plans at a meeting on May 28, starting at 6:30 p.m. at the Recreation Park Community Center (4900 E. 7th St.) Members of the public are encouraged to ask questions and share their thoughts. Interpretation services in Spanish, Khmer and Tagalog are available upon prior request.

    Click here for more updates on the project.