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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Moorpark man faces manslaughter, battery charges
    Two people in white shirts place bundles of flowers in front of a gas station sign. Other boutiques of flowers are already piled near the sign.
    A person places flowers at a makeshift memorial at the site of an altercation between 69-year-old Paul Kessler, who was Jewish, and pro-Palestinian protestor on Nov. 7, 2023 in Thousand Oaks.

    Topline:

    Ventura County's district attorney said investigators obtained nine search warrants, all of which were approved within 24-hours of protester Paul Kessler’s death the morning of Nov. 6.

    Why it matters: Loay Alnaji of Moorpark faces involuntary manslaughter and battery charges stemming from the death of Kessler during a confrontation in Thousand Oaks during protests prompted by the Israel-Hamas war.

    Why now: The Ventura County Sheriff's Office arrested Alnaji filed charges against him on Thursday. Alnaji is expected to be arraigned in court Friday afternoon.

    Investigators said Friday that they reviewed statements from more than 60 witnesses and other evidence before charging a Moorpark man in the death of Paul Kessler, a Jewish man who was fatally injured last week during a confrontation between pro-Israel and pro-Palestine demonstrators in Thousand Oaks.

    Loay Alnaji, a 50-year-old college professor, was charged with two felony counts: involuntary manslaughter and battery causing serious bodily injury. The charges come with special allegations that Alnaji personally inflicted great bodily injury on Kessler.

    Alnaji pleaded not guilty in Superior Court Friday afternoon. If convicted, he could face time in prison. A judge reduced Alnaji's bail to $50,000 from $1 million, and ordered him to turn over any passports.

    Defense lawyer Ron Bamieh objected, arguing that Alnaji isn't a flight risk and has no criminal record.

    “He’s an American citizen [and] he deserves to be treated like an American citizen. And to act like he’s some kind of flight threat... is ludicrous,” Bamieh said outside the courthouse.

    Bamieh indicated he has seen video on social media that may shed more light on both Kessler's and Alnaji's behavior.

    “At the most this is a push, somebody fell, and something tragic happened,” Bamieh said. 

    On Friday morning, Ventura County's sheriff and district attorney held a joint news conference where they explained the progress of the ongoing investigation.

    District Attorney Erik Nasarenko said investigators obtained nine search warrants, all of which were approved within 24 hours of Kessler’s death the morning of Nov. 6. He said prosecutors in his office began reviewing the witness statements and more than 600 pieces of evidence.

    He did not identify the evidence or specify what any of the witnesses said.

    Collectively, the Sheriff's Department and the DA’s Office spent more than 2,000 hours on the case before it was filed, according the county authorities.

    “We took this case seriously, and we investigated it and charged it thoroughly,” Nasarenko said, adding that authorities approached the case “with an open mind” and did not proceed as though criminal charges would be “a forgone conclusion.”

    “Our charge and task as prosecutors is to follow the facts, follow the evidence and adhere to the rule of law,” he said.

    According to the sheriff’s office, the incident was reported about 3:20 p.m. on Nov. 5 at the intersection of Westlake Boulevard and Thousand Oaks Boulevard, where demonstrators had gathered in rival protests over the Israel-Hamas war.

    Kessler, a 69-year-old Thousand Oaks resident, was injured and fell to the ground, hitting his head. He was bleeding, but conscious and responsive when sheriff’s deputies arrived. He died at a hospital hours later.

    A man in a dark suit and tie stands behind wooden podium and speaks into a microphone as two sheriff's officials stand to the side and look on.
    Ventura County Dist. Atty Erik Nasarenko addresses the media on Nov. 17, 2023.
    (
    Robert Garrova
    /
    LAist
    )

    Ventura County Chief Medical Examiner Christopher Young has said Kessler’s injuries caused swelling and bleeding around his brain.

    During the news conference, the district attorney noted that his office did not file a murder charge against Alnaji because there is no evidence that he arrived at the intersection “with the intent to kill, harm or injure anyone.” So far, Nasarenko added, no hate crime allegations have been filed, but they have not been ruled out.

    Nasarenko explained that in addition to the battery charge, Alnaji faces a count of involuntary manslaughter, meaning he is accused of killing a person with criminal negligence, “specifically reckless conduct that carried with it a high risk of death or great bodily injury.“

    When considering the charges, he said, prosecutors relied on physical and forensic evidence, as well as “findings regarding the injuries to the left side of Paul Kessler’s face.” Nasarenko said investigators were able to put together video and digital footage to recreate the sequence of events leading to the confrontation.

    Detectives and prosecutors are still seeking information from witnesses and asking anyone with video of the incident to come forward.

    During the Friday news conference, Nasarenko said Kessler worked for decades in medical sales and was a pilot. He said Kessler was married for 43 years and leaves behind a son. 

  • No more SBA loans for non-citizens
    A woman stirs ingredients in a pot in a restaurant kitchen with purple walls. The kitchen is shown through the server window.
    The change to SBA loans could have a huge impact on California, which has the most small businesses and the largest immigrant population in the nation.

    Topline:

    Non-U.S. citizens lose access to SBA funding for small businesses, which provide the bulk of new jobs in California.

    Why now: Green-card holders no longer qualify for loans from the Small Business Administration, eliminating a longtime source of financing for immigrants that advocates say will discourage job creation and harm the economy. The SBA limited access to its loans to U.S. citizens and nationals only starting in March, and expanded that policy to SBA-backed loans beginning in April. On top of that, any business that’s even partly owned by a permanent legal resident with a green card is no longer eligible for the loans.

    Why it matters: California — which has the most small businesses and the largest immigrant population in the nation — could be most affected. SBA loans have been important to immigrant entrepreneurs because they typically are low-interest and available to those without an established credit history. The agency has also backed loans by private funders, providing a government guarantee for people banks may deem riskier. Now, all those loans are off the table for owners and would-be owners of restaurants, bake shops, law practices, medical clinics, taxi medallions, nail salons and more who hold green cards.

    Read on... for more on what this means for California.

    Green-card holders no longer qualify for loans from the Small Business Administration, eliminating a longtime source of financing for immigrants that advocates say will discourage job creation and harm the economy.

    The SBA limited access to its loans to U.S. citizens and nationals only starting in March, and expanded that policy to SBA-backed loans beginning in April. On top of that, any business that’s even partly owned by a permanent legal resident with a green card is no longer eligible for the loans.

    California — which has the most small businesses and the largest immigrant population in the nation — could be most affected. SBA loans have been important to immigrant entrepreneurs because they typically are low-interest and available to those without an established credit history. The agency has also backed loans by private funders, providing a government guarantee for people banks may deem riskier. Now, all those loans are off the table for owners and would-be owners of restaurants, bake shops, law practices, medical clinics, taxi medallions, nail salons and more who hold green cards.

    Small business owners are responsible for 99% of net new jobs in the state, according to the California Office of the Small Business Advocate. Immigrant entrepreneurs make up 40% of the state’s business community and generated $28.4 billion in income in 2023, according to GO-Biz, the governor’s office of business and economic development.

    Small Business Majority, a national business advocacy group, wrote to the SBA in mid-March, urging the federal agency to reconsider the changes. The letter, signed by dozens of state and national groups and chambers of commerce, called the new policies "a misguided approach that ignores critical economic data underscoring the job creating power of the immigrant community."

    The SBA has a limited lending capacity, said Maggie Clemmons, a spokesperson for the agency. “The agency’s rule change will help ensure more American citizens have access to funding previously granted to noncitizens,” she said in an email.

    The SBA approved 3,358 loans for small businesses owned partly by a lawful permanent resident in fiscal year 2025, largely during the Biden administration, Clemmons said. That represented 4% of the 85,000 loans approved by the agency.

    In California, the changes could affect about 220,000 small business owners who hold green cards, said Carolina Martinez, chief executive of CAMEO Network, a national association of organizations that support small businesses.

    “The most important thing for us is to really understand that this SBA decision… is really bad for the American economy,” Martinez said.

    Pursuing the American Dream

    Cristina Foanene, a Romanian immigrant who arrived in the United States 20 years ago, was a green-card holder when she obtained an SBA loan in 2018 that allowed her and her husband to buy a building and expand their glass company, MCS Glass, in Fresno. They now have 30 employees.

    “The loan gave us an opportunity to create more jobs, to have an even greater impact in our community,” Foanene said. Their goal is to manufacture more products and create more positions, she added.

    She said she doesn’t know where the business would be today without the SBA loans they received over the years. They just signed their third loan last month, Foanene said, their first as American citizens.

    She called herself loyal to this country and said she’s sad that others like her may not have the same opportunities to pursue the American Dream by securing SBA loans while “respecting the laws.”

    “It literally breaks my heart,” Foanene said. “There are so many good people with good intentions. I feel it’s unfair.”

    Other entrepreneurs or independent contractors also lose a possible safety net that SBA loans once provided.

    “During the pandemic, these loans were crucial to people’s survival,” said Dung Nguyen, program and organizing director for California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborative, an organization that advocates for Vietnamese immigrants, many of whom work in the nail-salon industry. The group signed the Small Business Majority’s letter to the SBA.

    Nguyen said the nail-salon workers and owners who took out those loans during the pandemic are still paying them back.

    ‘A new kind of status’

    Kenia Zamarripa, spokesperson for the San Diego Regional Chamber of Commerce, which also signed the letter to the SBA, said this latest policy change is another example of how immigrants are more vulnerable as federal funds for other programs have been taken away. Her group and others are pushing for immigration reform that includes a standardized path to citizenship, she said.

    “This is a community that’s doing things the right way, looking for a legal path,” she said. “It’s like you’re punishing them for doing the right thing.”

    The SBA changes push green-card holders to “informality,” Zamarripa said. “What’s next? What other resources will be taken away? How else will immigrants continue to be targeted?”

    Others echo that concern.

    “This dialog is really challenging our concept of what undocumented means,” said Gabriela Alemán, a spokesperson for Mission Asset Fund, a San Francisco organization that supports and lends to small business owners. “These are community members that are now being pushed into a new kind of status.”

    Mission Asset Fund’s lending circles — modeled after the Mexican community-based lending practice called tandas — can provide up to $2,500 in loans to small business owners. The group just got its California lenders’ license and will eventually be able to provide larger loans, Alemán said.

    But it will be tough for groups like it to fill the gap left by the SBA’s new policies for permanent legal residents who may want to start or grow their businesses.

    “There are not any other options at this scale (that the SBA provides),” said Brian Kennedy Jr., entrepreneur ecosystem director at AmPac Business Capital, a Los Angeles-area community development financial institution and SBA partner. “We’re talking about $35,000 up to $30 million.”

    What’s next

    Many small business owners already use — and may increasingly rely on — community development financial institutions and other lenders whose mission is to help people with limited options, credit histories and savings.

    They could also turn to the state for help. State-funded options include a small business loan guarantee program through its IBank, and programs through the treasurer’s office that reduces risks to lenders by pledging state funds as collateral, or contributing to loan-loss reserves.

    Microenterprise Collaborative of Inland Southern California works with lenders, technical assistance providers and community partners to help small business owners in Inland Southern California.

    Pamela Deans, the group’s executive director, said the SBA’s policy change will alter how the organization refers entrepreneurs to sources of capital. Rather than pointing them to “a relatively straightforward” SBA process, she said the group will have to inform them of a more fragmented set of options and warn them about predatory lending.

    “Many of these would‑be owners will have a much harder time piecing together enough safe, affordable capital to lease a space, buy equipment or cover early working capital — so the taquería, the child care business, the trucking startup may never open in the first place,” Deans said.

    Bianca Blomquist, California director for Small Business Majority, also is concerned about small business owners turning to unscrupulous lenders. She said her group found out recently that an owner of a child care business in downtown L.A. took out a $10,000 loan at what she thought was 13% interest. It was actually closer to 250%.

    Other advocates are hoping philanthropy and impact investors will step up and make more capital available to small lenders.

    “Women, entrepreneurs, immigrants and communities of color always have had to think outside the typical paths,” said Leticia Landa, executive director of La Cocina, a small business incubator in San Francisco. “I do hope, especially in California, that we’re going to come up with something.”

    This article was originally published on CalMatters and was republished under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license.

  • Sponsored message
  • Could remain at airports after TSA workers paid

    Topline:

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents could remain at U.S. airports even after Transportation Security Administration workers receive their paychecks, according to White House border czar Tom Homan.

    TSA worker payments: NPR reached out to DHS for additional comment on the timing of when workers would get paid but the department has not responded. A DHS social media post on Friday indicated TSA had begun the process of paying its workforce and that paychecks could arrive as early as Monday. That announcement came after President Donald Trump signed a memo ordering that workers get paid from existing funds, even though Congress has not allocated the money amid an impasse over passing legislation to fund DHS. It remains unclear where the money would come from to fund the paychecks as NPR previously reported.

    The backstory: About 50,000 transportation security workers have been forced to continue working without pay, missing multiple paychecks since disagreements in Congress led to a DHS shutdown. More than 480 TSA workers have quit, according to TSA Acting Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill. She told lawmakers at a hearing last Wednesday that worker absences were as high as 40% at some airports. That has led to long wait times for passengers at security checkpoints.

    Read on... for more on how ICE officers could remain at airports.

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents could remain at U.S. airports even after Transportation Security Administration workers receive their paychecks, according to White House border czar Tom Homan.

    Asked if ICE agents will leave airports once TSA workers begin receiving pay again, Homan said on Sunday "we'll see."

    "It depends on how many TSA agents come back to work [and] how many TSA agents have actually quit and have no plan [of] coming back to work," Homan told CNN State of the Union host Jake Tapper.

    Homan also said he spoke with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin, adding that there is a plan to get TSA workers paid "hopefully by tomorrow or Tuesday."

    "It's good news… because these TSA officers are struggling. They can't feed their families or pay their rent," Homan told Tapper.

    NPR reached out to DHS for additional comment on the timing of when workers would get paid but the department has not responded. A DHS social media post on Friday indicated TSA had begun the process of paying its workforce and that paychecks could arrive as early as Monday. That announcement came after President Donald Trump signed a memo ordering that workers get paid from existing funds, even though Congress has not allocated the money amid an impasse over passing legislation to fund DHS. It remains unclear where the money would come from to fund the paychecks as NPR previously reported.


    It's been a week since the president ordered ICE to send agents to airports around the country to help TSA with security as the DHS shutdown entered a sixth week.

    ICE officers have been assisting TSA agents by "checking identification" and "plugging other security holes," allowing remaining TSA workers to focus on tasks that require more training, such as monitoring machines that examine luggage, according to Homan.

    About 50,000 transportation security workers have been forced to continue working without pay, missing multiple paychecks since disagreements in Congress led to a DHS shutdown. More than 480 TSA workers have quit, according to TSA Acting Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill. She told lawmakers at a hearing last Wednesday that worker absences were as high as 40% at some airports. That has led to long wait times for passengers at security checkpoints.

    Homan says those lines have already become shorter.

    "I was in Houston — wait lines decreased in about half. We got additional agents going to Baltimore yesterday, to bring those lines down," Homan told CNN.

    A notice on Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport's web page Sunday afternoon said wait times had improved since Saturday but remained longer than normal. At George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston, security wait times were under two hours Sunday. But the airport warned travelers that "TSA lines could exceed four hours."

    As for when permanent funding for DHS can be reached, that remains unclear. Negotiations in Congress remain stalled as lawmakers left Washington for a planned recess. The Senate returns April 13. The House is back on April 14.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • It's going to Supreme Court — what Americans think

    Topline:

    The Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday on whether all children born in the United States can continue to automatically receive citizenship.

    Why it matters: The decision, not expected for months, could reshape what had been a longtime, constitutionally enshrined practice that has been challenged by the Trump administration.

    How Americans feel about it: Public opinion on the issue is complicated. Americans are heavily in favor of granting citizenship to children born to parents who were also born in the U.S. — or to those who immigrated to the U.S. legally. But they are split on — or much less in support of — automatic citizenship for children born to parents who immigrated illegally.

    Read on... for more on this case with the Supreme Court.

    The Supreme Court will hear arguments Wednesday on whether all children born in the United States can continue to automatically receive citizenship.

    The decision, not expected for months, could reshape what had been a longtime, constitutionally enshrined practice that has been challenged by the Trump administration.

    Public opinion on the issue is complicated. Americans are heavily in favor of granting citizenship to children born to parents who were also born in the U.S. — or to those who immigrated to the U.S. legally. But they are split on — or much less in support of — automatic citizenship for children born to parents who immigrated illegally.

    Is birthright citizenship a common policy?

    Only about three dozen countries around the world, mostly in the Western Hemisphere, offer automatic birthright citizenship.

    The legal term for the practice is jus solí, Latin for "right of soil." It has roots in colonialism, particularly in South America and Africa, when Western European countries needed more people for labor and to outnumber native populations in those places. Many African countries abandoned the practice after gaining independence.

    Other countries in recent decades have also abolished the practice. Ireland did so in 2005 after roughly 80% of voters rejected it. The United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, India and Pakistan all also have done away with it.


    Many countries offer citizenship instead via jus sanguinis, or "right of blood." In other words, through familial lineage. This month, though, Italy even further restricted who qualifies.

    Can't see the video above? Watch it here.

    What does the Constitution say?

    In the United States, birthright citizenship became part of the Constitution in 1868 as an effort to protect recently freed slaves.

    It was enacted with the passage of the 14th Amendment. Section 1 of the amendment says:

    "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside."

    But President Trump has taken aim at birthright citizenship, passing an executive order on Day 1 of his second term to ban it.

    Aimed at immigrants who cross the border illegally, the Trump administration argues that the Constitution's clause is outdated and has been abused.

    Where does the public stand?

    Public opinion is nuanced on birthright citizenship and can depend on how pollsters ask the question.

    When surveys ask about birthright citizenship in general, people largely say they are supportive. But that support begins to crumble when respondents are asked about the parents' legal status — with significant divisions by party, race, age and how they get their information.

    A Public Religion Research Institute survey from December found two-thirds are in favor of granting citizenship "regardless of their parents' citizenship status." A large-sample poll by Civic Health and Institutions Project, or CHIP50, a survey done in conjunction with multiple universities, found 59% in favor of keeping it.

    But both showed higher support than other surveys, and both mentioned in their questions that the right is found in the U.S. Constitution.

    Other surveys have found less support. For example:

    • An NPR/Ipsos poll last year found a slim majority (53%) against ending the practice with 28% in favor. (It asked if people supported or opposed ending the practice.)
    • The Pew Research Center showed that more than 9 in 10 support birthright citizenship for those born to parents who immigrated to the U.S. legally, but — by a 50%-49% margin — were divided on giving it to those born to parents who are in the country illegally. (Pew asked if certain groups should or should not be considered U.S. citizens.)
    • A YouGov poll had 51% in favor with 39% opposed. But that dropped considerably for those not in the country legally. Just 31% said they were in favor of granting citizenship to babies of people who are "undocumented," as the survey put it, and only 25% for tourists visiting the U.S. (YouGov also did not mention that birthright citizenship is in the Constitution in its questions.) 

    Divides by party, race and more

    Many polls fairly consistently show majorities of Democrats, Latinos, Black Americans and those who are younger are in favor of birthright citizenship, while majorities of Republicans, especially white Republicans, are against.

    For example, Pew found three-quarters of Democrats in support of granting citizenship to children of those who immigrated illegally, but only a quarter of Republicans supported it.

    There is a split among Republicans, though. Only 18% of white Republicans are in favor, but 55% of Republican Hispanics are in favor.

    By race regardless of political party, Pew found three-quarters of Latinos and 61% of Black Americans were in favor of birthright citizenship for those whose parents immigrated illegally, but only 48% of Asian Americans and 42% of whites were.

    CHIP50, similarly, found 8 in 10 Democrats support birthright citizenship "regardless of their parents' immigration status," but only 39% of Republicans in favor. (It also found a much higher percentage of Asian Americans — 63% — in favor. YouGov found only 53% of Democrats in favor when the parents are "undocumented immigrants," and an even lower 13% of Republicans supported that.)

    Those under 50 were in favor of birthright citizenship if the parents "immigrated illegally" by a 58%-41% margin, according to Pew. But almost 6 in 10 of those 50 or older were against it.

    There was also a divide depending on how long the respondent has been in the United States. Two-thirds of second-generation Americans in Pew's polling were in favor. But 55% of those who are third generation or higher were against it.

    PRRI found a big divide by how information is consumed, too. In that survey, 80% or more of those who most trust newspapers or mainstream TV news were in support of birthright citizenship, "regardless of their parents' citizenship status."

    But only 41% of those who trust Fox News support birthright citizenship, and an even lower number (29%) of those who prefer outlets that are considered even further to the right did, too.
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • A trans comedy fest, Passover treats and more
    A light-skinned woman plays acoustic guitar.
    Guitarist Mary Halvorson will perform this week with her band at the Getty Center.

    In this edition:

    A trans comedy fest, delish Passover treats, a TreePeople exhibit and more of the best things to do this week.

    Highlights:

    • Tuesday is International Trans Day of Visibility, and what better way to mark the occasion (particularly in these difficult times) than with some joy, namely L.A.’s trans theatre and comedy festival, “The Joy Who Lived.” Back for its second year with more than 30 shows, readings and workshops by trans and nonbinary artists, the festival opens with comedy-variety show Gentleman’s Club at Dynasty Typewriter.
    • Make sure to catch this first (but certainly not last) institutional show at LMU’s museum highlighting the work of L.A. muralist Noni Olabisi before it’s gone. The show features 40 pieces made from 1984 to 2022; Olabisi died unexpectedly in 2022, and her works were added to the Cultural Treasures of South Los Angeles database in 2023.
    • Whether you’re having a seder or not, pick up the two best Passover foods — matzo ball soup and chocolate-dipped macaroons — at all Superba locations. They are available for pre-order and pickup through April 9 at all locations.

    I went to a fantastic art talk with Cole Case and Shana Nys Dambrot last week, where Case talked about his paintings of the ongoing immigration protests in Los Angeles, which have deep art history references — and even some fun local news ones. Check out the powerful exhibit at Track 16 through April 18.

    On Monday, Licorice Pizza’s Lyndsey Parker recommends going back to school with indie star Mitski, who’s playing the Hollywood High auditorium. She’ll also be there Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Tuesday, K-pop star Jackson Wang plays the Forum, indie torch singer Goldie Boutilier is at the Belasco, rising pop singer Sarah Kinsley is at the Fonda, and veteran Welsh noise-rockers McLusky play the Regent. On Wednesday, singer-songwriter Ricky Montgomery plays the Wiltern, and on Thursday, Philly emo band Sweet Pill is at the El Rey.

    Elsewhere on LAist, you can lament the end of sawdust on the floor of Philippe, check out a queer Latin dance studio in O.C. and grab tickets to join LAist at Night of Ideas at the Wende Museum on April 4.

    Events

    Six Chick Flicks

    Tuesday, March 31, 7 p.m.
    UCB Franklin 
    5919 Franklin Ave., Hollywood
    COST: FROM $20; MORE INFO

    Two light-skinned women smile and sit in a movie theater with their legs up on the seats in front of them. The woman on the right has a box of popcorn.
    (
    Lauren Silberman
    )

    The alternative title for this comedy hit that sold out at the Edinburgh Fringe is Legally Blonde Pretty Woman Dirty Danced on the Beaches While Writing a Notebook on the Titanic, so I think you can see where this is going. Rom-com fans will get every nuanced joke in this feminist parody take on your favorite escapist movies with Kerry Ipema (One Woman Sex and the City) and KK Apple (UCB Theatre).


    History in Bloom

    Through April 8, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. 
    TreePeople 
    1201 Mulholland Drive, Coldwater Canyon 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    TreePeople is such a special group, and they're showcasing their history from their 1973 founding to today through a new exhibit on-site with creative installations and archival storytelling. The new exhibit highlights community-driven outdoor education and forestry initiatives, along with their work on climate resilience. Stop by to see the exhibit before or after a hike in the next couple of weeks (but beware of rattlesnake season!).


    Watches and Whiskey 

    Tuesday, March 31, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
    The Penmar 
    1233 Rose Ave., Venice 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    Some people are obsessed with watches — fancy watches, historic watches, hard-to-find watches — and in this era of using your phone as a watch, it’s refreshing to see an analog timepiece out there. Get to know the world of watches better at the Penmar, where SecondTime Watches has planned an evening built around talking watches and drinking whiskey.


    Noni Olabisi: When Lightning Strikes 

    Through April 4
    LMU Laband Art Gallery
    Burns Fine Arts Center
    1 LMU Drive, Westchester
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    A large black and white mural on a red wall shows various images of police misconduct.
    (
    Noni Olabisi
    /
    LMU Laband Art Gallery
    )

    Make sure to catch this first (but certainly not last) institutional show highlighting the work of L.A. muralist Noni Olabisi before it’s gone. Olabisi portrayed Black Americans with a truthful eye and examined the history of racism, particularly in her large-scale murals, including “Freedom Won’t Wait” (1992), painted following the L.A. uprising after the Rodney King trial, and “To Protect and Serve” (1995), which portrayed a history of the Black Panther Party and police brutality. The show features 40 pieces made from 1984 to 2022; Olabisi died unexpectedly in 2022, and her works were added to the Cultural Treasures of South Los Angeles database in 2023.


    Ever Present: Mary Halvorson CANIS MAJOR 

    Tuesday, March 31, 7 p.m.
    Getty Center
    1200 Getty Center Drive, Brentwood
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    Four people, three men and one woman, look at the camera. Two men and the woman are light-skinned, and on the far right is a Black man
    (
    Ernest Stuart
    /
    Getty Center
    )

    MacArthur “Genius” Mary Halvorson brings her new jazz quartet project, CANIS MAJOR, to the Getty for a free concert that explores sound in a unique way. She's known for “crystalline single-note lines that seem to ‘bend’ time, kaleidoscopic harmonic turns, and an innovative use of effects — especially subtle pitch-shifting and delay — that expands the guitar into something orchestral and uncanny.”


    Macaroons and Matzo Ball Soup

    Through April 9 
    All Superba locations
    COST: VARIES; MORE INFO 

    A tan matzo ball sits in a reddish broth in a white cup with a spoon next to it.
    Matzo ball soup comes in many versions.
    (
    Deb Lindsey
    /
    The Washington Post/Getty Images
    )

    Whether you’re having a seder or not, pick up the two best Passover foods — matzo ball soup and chocolate-dipped macaroons — at all Superba locations. They are available for pre-order and pickup through April 9 at all locations.


    Ravi Shankar Ensemble

    Tuesday, March 31, 8 p.m.
    Alex Theatre
    216 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale 
    COST: FROM $42; MORE INFO

    A collage-style poster for The Ravi Shankar Ensemble March 31 at the Alex Theatre.
    (
    Courtesy It's My Seat
    )

    The Ravi Shankar Ensemble’s tour launches at the Alex Theatre with the ethereal sounds of world-class musicians celebrating the legendary sitarist's legacy. The evening will blend traditional sitar and tabla rhythms with contemporary arrangements; it’s a great introduction to the sounds that inspired everyone from the Beatles to John Coltrane and many more.


    The Joy Who Lived trans theater and comedy festival 

    March 31 to April 12
    Various locations 
    COST: $1-$25, SLIDING SCALE; MORE INFO

    Tuesday is International Trans Day of Visibility, and what better way to mark the occasion (particularly in these difficult times) than with some joy, namely L.A.’s trans theater and comedy festival, The Joy Who Lived? Back for its second year with more than 30 shows, readings and workshops by trans and nonbinary artists, the festival opens with comedy-variety show Gentleman’s Club at Dynasty Typewriter.