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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Teaching kids about indigenous communities
    A photo on a table in the foreground reads "Relational Reciprocity" as three Native people in the background focus on an item.
    Citlali Arvizu and Lazaro Arvizu Jr. and their mother Virginia Carmelo demonstrate basket making traditions of the Gabrielino Tongva people. Lazaro Arvizu, an educator, says it’s important to root teaching children in empathy. “To approach settler colonialism – the preface is ‘how would you feel?"

    Topline:

    In recent years, many institutions have adopted land acknowledgements, but how do you best explain the underlying concepts to young children?

    Talk in the present: California is home to the largest Native American population in the country. There are more than 150 tribes in the state, some of which are not federally recognized. “I feel like a lot of times that Indigenous people, especially the ones with ancestral ties to Los Angeles, are really talked about in the mindset of historical versus a living history,” said Gabrielle Crowe, an outdoor educator and vice chair for the Gabrielino-Shoshone Tribal Council of Southern California.

    Don’t shy away: Terms like “settler colonialism” and “displacement” might not be in young kids’ vocabulary yet, but the concepts of fairness and exclusion become clear at a young age. When talking how Indigenous people who were forced from their land, you can say something like: “‘That doesn't sound fair, huh? That sounds hard. Would we want to treat someone that way now? No,’”says educator Erika McLemore.

    Cultivate relationships: Land acknowledgements are only the first step in an ongoing process of learning and cultivating relationships. One way for kids to take action is to learn how to be good stewards of their lands. “We can't go back and change what happened and the injustices, but we can move forward better in a more informed way,” said Kimberly Morales Johnson, who is Gabrielino Tongva, and serves as tribal secretary of the San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians.

    In recent years, you may have gone to events around the L.A. area, including ones here at LAist, that started with a land acknowledgement. Institutions have been using these statements to recognize they’re operating on the homelands of the Gabrielino Tongva people, and to acknowledge the painful history of erasure and settler colonialism of Indigenous people.

    Listen 1:52
    How to help children understand the Indigenous land they live on

    A land acknowledgement is great, but it's also just the first step into really building a relationship,” said Gabrielle Crowe, an outdoor educator and vice chair for the Gabrielino-Shoshone Tribal Council of Southern California.

    And if you’ve been attending an event with young kids, words like “settler colonialism” also might fly right over their head. How might they be able to understand these statements and learn about the original stewards of the land they live on?

    Land acknowledgements as a first step 

    Erika McLemore, who is Mvskoke-Seminole and a community manager at Tinkergarten, an outdoor educational program, incorporates kid-friendly land acknowledgments into her lessons.

    “So what kids can understand is like, ‘the land where we're playing and exploring, it's always been someone's home,’” she said. “We name the people, and we try to find a few facts or stories that kids could connect to.”

    Family friendly activities to learn about Native communities

    We've compiled a list of places to visit and children's books to read to learn more about Indigenous communities.

    View the list.

    For example, at her local park in Texas, there’s a big bush of beautyberry. She points to those native plants as having always been in the area, and how they were used by the Tonkawa tribe for medicine to treat stomach aches, and how the leaves were used for making bug repellant.

    “It’s about gratitude and knowing and appreciation that gives us a starting place, to layer on other stuff too,” she said.

    “Learn whose land you're on, find out where you live and find out who was on that land originally, but then maybe go into a deep dive of finding out what they ate, what they used in their homes, what they used for medicine,” said Cristin Spriggs of the Lumbee tribe in North Carolina and a former preschool teacher.

    Connecting the past and present 

    Native people have always called this place home and continue to make their home here.

    California is home to the largest Native American population in the country. There are more than 150 tribes in the state, some of which are not federally recognized.

    “I feel like a lot of times that Indigenous people, especially the ones with ancestral ties to Los Angeles, are really talked about in the mindset of historical versus a living history,” Crowe, the outdoor educator, said.

    Kids might feel frustrated about hearing about past injustices, but there are a number of ways for kids to learn about how to live in their present day lives.

    “We can't go back and change what happened and the injustices, but we can move forward better in a more informed way,” said Kimberly Morales Johnson, who is Gabrielino Tongva, and serves as tribal secretary of the San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians.

    “We can make sure that we speak up when we hear injustice,” she said.

    Getting outside into nature and cultivating good stewardship 

    When Morales Johnson’s kids were young, she complemented teaching about justice with getting them outside into their gardens to learn about being good stewards. Kids can learn about the native plants and animals that inhabit that land.

    “I'm a big proponent of going and getting a mortar and pestle and showing kids how you crack nuts,” she said. “Having a relationship with Mother Earth and talking about the importance of the gifts that Mother Earth [gives].”

    At Anawakalmekak, an Indigenous charter school in El Sereno, community members can participate in landtending events of 12 acres that were recently returned to the Gabrielino Shoshone Tribal Nation of Southern California. People come out to weed, help spread mulch, and plant native plants.

    “It gives us an opportunity to talk about the coyotes, and to talk about the ground squirrels, and to talk about the rabbits, and to share what our names are and our languages are for, for those children, and to have a different sense of relationship to understanding the sense of place that they can have here — as residents in this territory that's still occupied,” said Marcos Aguilar, head of school at Anawakalmekak.

    Kids can understand difficult subjects 

    Terms like “settler colonialism” and “displacement” might not be in young kids’ vocabulary yet, but the concepts of fairness and exclusion become clear at a young age.

    “Even preschoolers, they come home and you ask them how their day was and they're like, ‘Oh, so and so wasn't very kind to me or whatever, or they didn't let me come play,’” Spriggs, the former preschool teacher, said.

    Spriggs says you can explain these concepts using feelings they currently understand — about being left out of spaces when playing with others.

    McLemore, the outdoor educator, says young kids can understand hard truths.

    “You can say, ‘there have been times where our country has done some terrible things.’ And if [tribes] were relocated, you can say, ‘the tribe was forced to move somewhere else, even though this has always been their home,’” said McLemore. “It's OK to say, ‘That doesn't sound fair, huh? That sounds hard. Would we want to treat someone that way now? No.’”

    Aguilar, of the charter school, says that in many ways the youngest children are most open to deepening relationships with the places they live and the people they live among.

    “I think it’s important for parents to not shy away,” he said. “Dealing with questions of genocide and colonization and ongoing oppression is definitely not something easy for young children to understand, but what we can teach them to understand is how to love other people. And to not ignore that there are these Indigenous peoples that continue to live here that we ought to also love.”

    K-12 reporter Mariana Dale contributed to this article.

  • Photos from this weekend's protests across LA
    A large protest or demonstration taking place outdoors. The crowd is densely packed, and many individuals are holding signs with bold, black-and-white text. Many of the signs say: “JUSTICE FOR RENEE NICOLE GOOD”
    People hold signs as they protest in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 2026 against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis.

    Topline:

    Demonstrations against the deadly ICE shooting in Minneapolis are taking place all weekend across Los Angeles.

    Check out ... these photos from some of the protests.

    Downtown Los Angeles

    a lively protest scene with a prominent figure in the foreground wearing a large inflatable frog costume. The frog costume is green with black markings, big red eyes, and a blue scarf tied around its neck. The person in the costume is holding a cardboard sign that reads: “RENEE GOOD ICE BAD” in bold, black letters.
    A person in an inflatable frog suit holds a sign during a protest in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 2026 against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    a dramatic moment during a street protest. The scene is filled with smoke or incense, creating a hazy atmosphere that diffuses the sunlight streaming from the background. The lighting is warm and golden, suggesting late afternoon or early evening.
    A woman holds incense during a protest in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 2026 against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    A protest taking place on a city street lined with historic buildings. The street is filled with a dense crowd of demonstrators holding various signs and banners.
    A person holds up a sign during a protest in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 2026 against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis. (Photo by ETIENNE LAURENT / AFP via Getty Images)
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    A protest scene taking place outdoors on a city street during what appears to be late afternoon or early evening, as the sunlight is low and casts a warm golden glow across the crowd. A person is holding a prominent cardboard sign with bold, handwritten text that reads: “DISAPPEARED, MURDERED” in large orange and red letters at the top.
    A person holds up a sign during a protest in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 2026 against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )
    a street protest taking place near a bright red CitySightseeing Hollywood Los Angeles double-decker tour bus.
    A tourist bus drives past as people protest in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC), in Los Angeles, California on January 10, 2026 against US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) after the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis.
    (
    Etienne Laurent
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )

    Pasadena

    A group of people participating in a street protest or demonstration in an urban setting with modern buildings in the background. One person is wearing a wide-brimmed hat, a blue long-sleeve shirt, and a gray crossbody bag. This person is holding a large American flag on a wooden pole. Another person is wearing a denim jacket adorned with multiple pins and buttons, along with a white shirt that reads “DANCING FOR DEMOCRACY.”
    Alison Brett (far right) of La Crescenta at the Ice Out For Good protest in Pasadena on Jan. 10, 2026.
    (
    Josie Huan
    /
    LAist
    )

    A person holding a white sheet of paper with bold, handwritten and printed text. The paper reads:
At the top, in large handwritten letters: “NO MORE” Below that, in printed text:
“19 shootings 10 injuries 5 deaths”
    Casey Law of South Pasadena at Ice Out For Good protest in Pasadena on Jan. 10.
    (
    Josie Huang
    /
    LAist
    )

  • Sponsored message
  • People take to streets after Renee Good's death

    Topline:

    People have been taking to the streets nationwide this weekend to protest the Trump administration's immigration enforcement tactics following the death of Renee Good in Minneapolis, a 37-year-old woman who was shot and killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer this week.

    Where things stand: At least 1,000 events across the U.S. were planned for Saturday and Sunday, according to Indivisible, a progressive grassroots coalition of activists helping coordinate the movement it calls "ICE Out For Good Weekend of Action."

    In L.A.: Here's what we know about planned protests.

    People have been taking to the streets nationwide this weekend to protest the Trump administration's immigration enforcement tactics following the death of Renee Good in Minneapolis, a 37-year-old woman who was shot and killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer this week.

    At least 1,000 events across the U.S. were planned for Saturday and Sunday, according to Indivisible, a progressive grassroots coalition of activists helping coordinate the movement it calls "ICE Out For Good Weekend of Action."

    Leah Greenberg, a co-executive director of Indivisible, said people are coming together to "grieve, honor those we've lost, and demand accountability from a system that has operated with impunity for far too long."

    "Renee Nicole Good was a wife, a mother of three, and a member of her community. She, and the dozens of other sons, daughters, friends, siblings, parents, and community members who have been killed by ICE, should be alive today," Greenberg said in a statement on Friday. "ICE's violence is not a statistic, it has names, families, and futures attached to it, and we refuse to look away or stay silent."

    Large crowds of demonstrators carried signs and shouted "ICE out now!" as protests continued across Minneapolis on Saturday. One of those protestors, Cameron Kritikos, told NPR that he is worried that the presence of more ICE agents in the city could lead to more violence or another death.

    "If more ICE officers are deployed to the streets, especially a place here where there's very clear public opposition to the terrorizing of our neighborhoods, I'm nervous that there's going to be more violence," the 31-year grocery store worker said. "I'm nervous that there are going to be more clashes with law enforcement officials, and at the end of the day I think that's not what anyone wants."

    Demonstrators in Minneapolis on Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026.
    (
    Sergio Martínez-Beltrán
    /
    NPR
    )

    The night before, hundreds of city and state police officers responded to a "noise protest" in downtown Minneapolis. An estimated 1,000 people gathered Friday night, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara, and 29 people were arrested.

    People demonstrated outside of hotels where ICE agents were believed to be staying. They chanted, played drums and banged pots. O'Hara said that a group of people split from the main protest and began damaging hotel windows. One police officer was injured from a chunk of ice that was hurled at officers, he added.

    Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey condemned the acts of violence but praised what he said was the "vast majority" of protesters who remained peaceful, during a morning news conference.

    "To anyone who causes property damage or puts others in danger: you will be arrested. We are standing up to Donald Trump's chaos not with our own brand of chaos, but with care and unity," Frey wrote on social media.

    Commenting on the protests, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin told NPR in a statement, "the First Amendment protects speech and peaceful assembly — not rioting, assault and destruction," adding, "DHS is taking measures to uphold the rule of law and protect public safety and our officers."

    Good was fatally shot the day after DHS launched a large-scale immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota set to deploy 2,000 immigration officers to the state.

    In Philadelphia, police estimated about 500 demonstrators "were cooperative and peaceful" at a march that began Saturday morning at City Hall, Philadelphia Police Department spokesperson Tanya Little told NPR in a statement. And no arrests were made.

    In Portland, Ore., demonstrators rallied and lined the streets outside of a hospital on Saturday afternoon, where immigration enforcement agents bring detainees who are injured during an arrest, reported Oregon Public Broadcasting.

    A man and woman were shot and injured by U.S. Border Patrol agents on Thursday in the city. DHS said the shooting happened during a targeted vehicle stop and identified the driver as Luis David Nino-Moncada, and the passenger as Yorlenys Betzabeth Zambrano-Contreras, both from Venezuela. As was the case in their assertion about Good's fatal shooting, Homeland Security officials claimed the federal agent acted in self-defense after Nino-Moncada and Zambrano-Contreras "weaponized their vehicle."
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Grateful Dead great has died

    Topline:

    Bob Weir, the guitarist and songwriter who was a founding member of the popular and massively influential American rock band the Grateful Dead, has died.

    Details: According to a statement from his family posted on his website and social media pages, Weir died from underlying lung issues after recently beating cancer. He was 78.

    Read on... to revisit the life of Weir.

    Bob Weir, the guitarist and songwriter who was a founding member of the popular and massively influential American rock band the Grateful Dead, has died. According to a statement from his family posted on his website and social media pages, Weir died from underlying lung issues after recently beating cancer. He was 78.

    A member of the Dead for its first three decades, and a keeper of the flame of the band's legacy for three more, Weir helped to write a new chapter of American popular music that influenced countless other musicians and brought together an enormous and loyal audience. The Grateful Dead's touring, bootlegging and merchandising set an example that helped initiate the jam-band scene. Its concerts created a community that brought together generations of followers.

    Known to fans as "Bobby," he was born in San Francisco as Robert Hall Parber, but was given up for adoption and raised by Frederick and Eleanor Weir. In 1964, when he was still a teenager, Weir joined guitarist Jerry Garcia in a folk music band, Mother Mcree's Uptown Jug Band. In May of 1965 Weir and Garcia were joined by bassist Phil Lesh, keyboard player Ron "Pigpen" McKernan and drummer Bill Kreutzmann to form an electric, blues-based rock and roll band that was briefly named The Warlocks. After discovering that there was another band using that name, Jerry Garcia found a phrase that caught his eye in a dictionary and in December of that year they became the Grateful Dead, launching a 30-year run over which time they grew into a cultural institution.

    Weir was a singular rhythm guitarist who rarely played solos, choosing instead to create his own particular style of chording and strumming that gracefully supported Garcia's distinctive guitar explorations especially during the extended jams which were the heart of the band's popularity.

    Lyrics were largely a product of a communal effort between Weir and Garcia, as well as lyricists John Perry Barlow, Robert Hunter, that often blurred the lines between who wrote what. The opening lines to "Cassidy," which first appeared on Weir's 1972 solo album Ace and was played by the Dead on live recordings including the 1981 double album Reckoning, reflect the combination of metaphor, rhyme and storytelling set to memorable melodies that the band's audiences could memorize, analyze and sing along to:

    I have seen where the wolf has slept by the silver stream
    I can tell by the mark he left you were in his dream
    Ah, child of countless trees
    Ah, child of boundless seas
    What you are, what you're meant to be
    Speaks his name, though you were born to me
    Born to me, Cassidy

    Weir's emotive singing, on "Cassidy" and other songs like "Sugar Magnolia," "One More Saturday Night" and the band's unofficial theme, "Truckin', " often included whoops and yells, in contrast to Garcia's calm and steady approach. His occasional tendency to forget lyrics was usually greeted by thunderous applause from fans.

    After Garcia's death in 1995, at age 53, the surviving members of the band carried on in various forms and arrangements, the longest running of which was Weir's Dead & Company, which also featured Grateful Dead drummers Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart. Weir and the band concluded their "final tour" in July of 2023, but then returned to the stage for two extended residencies at the Sphere in Las Vegas, in 2024 and 2025.

    A self-described "compulsive music maker," in 2018 Weir formed yet another band to mine the depths of the Grateful Dead catalog. It was a stripped-down guitar, acoustic bass and drums outfit that he called Bobby Weir & Wolf Bros. Its members included renowned bassist and producer Don Was.In October of 2022, Weir & Wolf Bros worked with a classical music arranger to present yet another iteration of the Dead's catalog, notable for never being played the same way twice, with a group that largely only plays what's written on the paper in front of them, the 80-piece National Symphony Orchestra.

    In a 2022 interview with NPR, Weir explained the reason for that collaboration, and in doing so, seemed to offer a possible explanation for why the band's music stayed so popular for so long: "These songs are … living critters and they're visitors from another world — another dimension or whatever you want to call it — that come through the artists to visit this world, have a look around, tell their stories. I don't know exactly how that works, but I do know that it's real."

    After Jerry Garcia's death in 1995, Weir kept the legacy of the Grateful Dead alive, touring with bands that came to include generations of musicians influenced by the group. Here, Weir performs with The Dead at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 2009.
    (
    Scott Wintrow
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    Weir's work to shepherd and sustain the Dead's legacy was rewarded by ever younger generations of Deadheads, the band's loyal following, who attended tour after tour, often following the band from city to city as their parents and grandparents did during in the 1960's, '70s, '80s and '90s.

    In an interview with Rolling Stone in March 2025, Weir shared his thoughts on his legacy, as well as on death and dying, that had a hint of the Eastern philosophies that were popular when the Grateful Dead emerged from the peace and love hippie movement of San Francisco. "I'll say this: I look forward to dying. I tend to think of death as a reward for a life well-lived," he said.

    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • LBC used book haven needs new digs
    A man with a gray beard and a hat sit amidst tons of books scattered everywhere
    James Rappaport is looking for a new location for his store, Planet Books, which is being forced to vacate a warehouse in Signal Hill.

    Topline:

    Planet Books, a long-running outpost known for its boundless collection of used books, toys, posters and other antiquities, must move — once again — by March or risk closure.

    Why now: After 27 years in business, owner James Rappaport said the news came last fall from the proprietors of the neighboring Antique Mall II, which, since 2020, has sublet to him a 4,000-square-foot warehouse now cramped with rare tomes and second-hand memorabilia.

    Read on ... to learn more about the history of this Long Beach institution.

    Planet Books, a long-running outpost known for its boundless collection of used books, toys, posters and other antiquities, must move — once again — by March or risk closure.

    After 27 years in business, owner James Rappaport said the news came last fall from the proprietors of the neighboring Antique Mall II, which, since 2020, has sublet to him a 4,000-square-foot warehouse now cramped with rare tomes and second-hand memorabilia.

    Andrew Jurkiewicz, who owns Antique Mall II alongside his partner, Linda, confirmed the move in a phone call Monday. They’re selling their own store, a decision that ran simultaneously to their landlord’s decision to sell the property altogether.

    One person familiar with the sale said the listing — which opened in October — has drawn several interested buyers and is expected to enter escrow in the next week. A public record search found the properties, at 1851 to 1855 Freeman Ave., are owned by DPV Properties LLC, which recently moved its address from Seal Beach to out of state.

    When reached by phone, one of the owners declined to comment on their reason for the sale.

    After their leases end in March, the businesses are expected to vacate. The antique shop, Jurkiewicz said, will relocate to a space at 3588 Palo Verde Ave. — formerly a Joann Fabric and Crafts — under new ownership.

    “We’re both tired,” he said of running the 37-year business that he moved into a former plywood business on Freeman Avenue in 2010.

    The future of Planet Books, meanwhile, is far more uncertain. Rappaport has been quiet about his plight until now, insisting he didn’t want to “sound any alarms” that might disrupt the flow of business or scare his regulars.

    “I don’t want to panic anybody, especially myself. Not really sure what to do, actually,” Rappaport said.

    This marks the second time the bookstore has needed to vacate its location since it opened in 1998.

    Its first incarnation on East Anaheim Street was a combination of a couple of hundred book crates left behind by San Pedro bookseller Vinegar Hill Books and collectible toys acquired by the store’s former owner, Michael Munns.

    Monthly rent at that time was about $2,000 for 1,500-square feet. Today, Rappaport said, the building costs $5,200 a month to rent, with half of it currently vacant.

    His search for a new space has spanned the city, even traveling into neighboring Seal Beach, each time running into the same story.

    “Twice the money and one third the size,” he said.

    It’s also difficult to find something to fit their needs. The current store has a bookstock of easily more than 100,000 titles.

    There’s also the trove of toys, postcards, movie posters and other antiquities that line the walls, counters and shelves throughout. In the back area — the workers call it the “nether world” — towering stacks of books form trench lines leading to an aging work computer, limited-edition prints and a bathroom which hasn’t worked properly since they moved there.

    Any storefront they find will likely require a “major purge” of inventory, Rappaport said. Planet Books has two music sections and three sections for both science fiction and mystery. He plans to downsize through donations to nearby schools, shelters and prisons.

    If the store cannot find a new home, Rappaport said he’ll have to move his inventory into storage, likely at a facility in Stanton.

    There’s also the definite possibility the store closes, he said, though workers are more optimistic.

    For many, Planet Books has become the bookstore’s bookstore — the book hog’s mud puddle — where the clerks know the difference between Tom Wolfe and Thomas Wolfe and where patrons might lose themselves for the day among cheap out-of-print treasures on Zen and macrobiotics, Armenian dictionaries, Cantonese cookbooks and volumes on Lydia Maria Child, a 19th century abolitionist.

    Wherever the store lands, Rappaport said it will be his last move.

    “I’m 68, getting old, you know, I don’t need this,” he said. “I can’t retire because I don’t make anything in Social Security. I just want to have a little bit of fun.”