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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • It's year six of NPR's competition. How to sign up
    A multicolored poster that says 'The Student Podcast Challenge'

    Topline:

    NPR's 2024 national podcasting contest for middle and high school students is open for entries. It will close on May 3.

    A big change: The contest has been open for students in grades five through 12 since NPR started the contest six years ago. But each year, NPR has heard from elementary teachers asking, "what about my younger kids?" This year, in response to that popular demand, NPR is introducing its first-ever fourth grade contest.

    What are the other categories? NPR judges will choose winners in three categories: grade four, grades five through eight, and grades nine through 12.

    Read on ... to check out the rules and how to sign up.

    Microphone? Check. Headphones? Ready. A story you just can't stop talking about? Got it!

    Yup, it's time again for NPR's Student Podcast Challenge. And we're here to announce the opening bell of year six of this annual competition.

    In our first half-decade, we've listened to more than 15,000 podcasts, from more than 80,000 young people all over the country. You've explored serious issues, like the pandemic lockdown and how it affected learning and mental health; how our changing climate is impacting your lives.

    Other students, including a number of our winners, have poured into their microphones deeply personal stories, about their families, their hometowns, or their identities. Among the great podcasts that we remember years later are stories about race, gender, disabilities, and the struggle of being a young person in these troubled times. And along the way students have, of course, remembered to bring us the joy and fun and excitement they see in their lives and their communities.

    On our end, we've listened to your feedback each year – great suggestions that have brought our ongoing College Podcast Challenge, and a special prize last year for the best podcast about mental health.


    This year, we've got a big new change: Since the beginning, the contest has been open for students in grades five through 12. But each year, we've heard from elementary teachers asking, what about my younger kids?

    This year, in response to that popular demand, from elementary teachers, we are introducing our first-ever fourth grade contest! So if you teach or work with fourth graders – please consider podcasting with your students and entering our contest!

    The sixth annual Student Podcast Challenge is now open for entries starting Feb. 2, 2024 and will close on May 3, 2024. Our judges will choose winners in three categories: grade four, grades five through eight, and grades nine through 12.

    As in the past, entries must be submitted by a teacher, educator, or mentor who is 18 years or older. And don't forget all the tips, advice and lesson plans we've compiled over the years – more on that below. Especially the rules around the maximum length of eight minutes, and about the use of music. (You can find the contest rules here.) After years of listening to student podcasts, we've learned that shorter is better.

    And, for our college podcasters, we'll be announcing finalists and the winner of the 2023 College Podcast Challenge in the next month. So please keep an eye out! The college edition will return this fall with a $5,000 grand prize and $500 prizes for finalists.

    The contest rules remain pretty much the same: Students can create a podcast about any topic they wish to explore. To give you an idea, we've listened to stories on everything from social media, tattoos to even fictional tales. Some themes we've seen over and over include questions on race and identity and how young people do, or don't, fit in. Your podcast can also be in many different formats: an interview, narrative story or even investigative reporting. You can do it by yourself or with your entire class.

    To help you get started, we've got a slew of podcasting resources on how to tell a good story, how to warm up your voice and how to use music in your podcast, among other topics. Even, and we're serious about this: how making a pillow fort can make you sound better!

    You can find more tips and tricks on The Students' Podcast, our podcast on how to make a good podcast. We also encourage you to get a feel for what we're looking for by listening to last year's high school winner and middle school winners. And previous years' winners' here.

    For more tips, advice and the latest updates on this year's contest, make sure to sign up for our newsletter. Students, we can't wait to hear your stories. Good luck!

  • LA's best World Cup spot no one knows about yet
    A black and white photo of a man with light skin done and long dark hair pulled back into a ponytail and mustache leans over a custom-built open fire grill inside a loading dock, wearing a white Chuck E. Cheese polo shirt, tongs in hand.
    Chef Diego Argoti works the custom-built open fire rig at Skyduster Brewery Sports Bar inside City Market South in downtown L.A.

    Topline:

    Chef Diego Argoti of Estrano is pairing up with Skyduster Beer to turn a loading dock inside downtown L.A.'s City Market South into Estrano Verano — a 39-day World Cup pop-up running June 11 to July 19 with live fire cooking, freshly brewed beer for every single match.

    Why it matters: Estrano Verano isn't just a place to catch a game. It's a bet that L.A. is ready to have fun again — on its own terms, its organizers said.

    Read on ... to find all the details.

    For 39 straight days — the entire World Cup competition from start to finish — Chef Diego Argoti of Estrano, the viral street pasta pop-up, and formerly Poltergeist, will be cooking over a live, open fire in a loading dock. There's freshly brewed beer made just steps away. No reservation, no dress code. Just cold beer, good food, and every World Cup match on.

    Estrano Verano is the World Cup viewing destination you haven't heard of yet — but will.

    What is it?

    The gathering is a collaboration between Argoti and the founders of Skyduster Beer, Johnny Marler and Nick Smith.

    Running from this Thursday, June 11, to the World Cup final on Sunday, July 19, it will be open every day one hour before the first kickoff for the 104 matches. Located inside City Market South — a century-old former produce market near the Fashion District in Downtown L.A.— neighbors include Rossoblu, chef Steve Samson's Bologna-inspired Italian restaurant, and Dama, chef Antonia Lofaso's Latin-inspired restaurant and lounge.

    Estrano Verano
    Skyduster Brewery Sports Bar at City Market South
    1124 San Julian St., Los Angeles
    June 11–July 19
    Doors open one hour before kickoff.
    No reservations required.

    Who's behind it

    Argoti, who has cultivated a reputation as the enfant terrible of the L.A. food world, cut his teeth at Bestia and Bavel, later earning a James Beard semifinalist nod, StarChefs Rising Star 2024 and other accolades — all out of his barcade Poltergeist in Echo Park which closed the same year. Dishes there included a crispy Thai Caesar salad with a towering rice puff crouton that defied gravity, and a butterflied masa-fried dorade — head still on — bathed in Hachiya gazpacho, pink lady aguachile, and mussels escabeche, best enjoyed against the blue hue of classic '80s and '90s arcade games.

    A group of people clink beer cups and a wine glass together outdoors at golden hour, with Dancing Queen signage visible in the background.
    Guests toast at the Estrano Verano preview at Skyduster Brewery Sports Bar, City Market South, Downtown LA.
    (
    Phoebe Joaquin
    /
    Courtesy Skyduster Beer
    )

    Marler and Smith, two veterans of the beverage industry, founded Skyduster in 2021. The L.A.-only brewery has since landed its beer at the Greek Theatre and Dodger Stadium. The City Market location marks Skyduster's first physical space — with a Silver Lake beer garden already in the works for 2027.

    The two met in 2024 at the premiere of the PBS SoCal documentary series Rebel Kitchens Southern California, where Argoti spoke openly about losing his father. Afterward, Marler approached him and shared that he had just lost his own father as well. The two bonded over their shared grief, and their partnership soon took shape.

    "We're here because both our parents died within a month of each other," Marler said. "If it wasn't for that, none of this happens."

    The food and beer

    At first glance, the permanent bar menu reads like standard sports bar or pub fare — but with Argoti in the kitchen, there's always more to the story. Marler had two non-negotiables: a burger and a hot dog. Everything else was Argoti's call. That means a Pad Krapow Chicken Sandwich built on masa-fried chicken thighs, holy basil, Thai chilies, papaya salad, and lime leaf aioli — and a Yuba Cheesesteak that swaps the beef for marinated tofu skin on a seeded semolina roll with celery root cheez whiz and enoki shoestrings. Starters include Jidori party wings (Szechuan Buffalo or Tamarind Sticky) and a blue corn tostada with Hokkaido scallops. That menu is available every day the doors are open.

    An overhead shot of Jidori party wings with dipping sauce, herb salad in green checkered paper, and fire-cooked cheeseburger patties on a sheet tray against a dark surface.
    A spread of Jidori party wings, pub burger patties, and fresh herbs from the Estrano Verano menu at Skyduster Brewery Sports Bar.
    (
    Phoebe Joaquin
    /
    Courtesy Skyduster Beer
    )

    Friday through Sunday, Argoti, alongside chefs Alan Rudoy and Sebastian Salazar, takes it a step further: a separate live-fire menu is posted day-of and available from 4 p.m. until sold out. Think of it as the bar menu's wilder, more unpredictable cousin — subject to whims. The custom-built open fire rig is the heart of the operation. "I want to get some octopus — when there is Morocco against Japan," Argoti said. "That was one of my biggest things for this, to cook something that most people don't think about here in the U.S." A Morocco-Japan matchup is projected as a likely Round of 32 fixture, which means that octopus could be coming sooner than you think.

    All of it bears the fingerprints of Argoti's full body of work — from his time at Bestia and Bavel, to the street pasta chaos of Estrano and the barcade-on-acid menu of Poltergeist.

    Washing it all down is Skyduster's intentionally simple four-beer lineup — a Japanese rice lager, Italian Pilsner, West Coast IPA, and Citrus Wit — all brewed on site and built to pair with food, not fight it.

    Why this, why now

    When I asked Argoti and Marler why the city needs a spot like this right now, Marler was direct. "I think L.A. is missing a lot of fun right now," he said. "I just don't know what happened." Estrano Verano is betting that people are ready for a place with fewer rules and more community.

    The World Cup serves as the perfect unifier — every country represented in the tournament, every walk of life, welcome to catch a match or just hang. And with the historic City Market South complex as the backdrop, a century-old former produce market that's seen the city change around it, the setting feels less like a pop-up and more like exactly where you're supposed to be this summer.

    A glowing orange neon Skyduster Beer sign in a storefront window with the address 1124 San Julian St. visible below.
    Just show up: Skyduster Brewery Sports Bar, 1124 San Julian St., City Market South, downtown LA.
    (
    Phoebe Joaquin
    /
    Courtesy Skyduster Beer
    )

    "This reminds me of jumping out of an airplane and knowing everything is gonna be okay — and afterward it's just gonna be some of the most fun you've ever had in your life," Argoti said.

  • Sponsored message
  • Here are major cases left this term

    Topline:

    The U.S. Supreme Court is heading into its crunch time, the part of the year when the justices are racing to finish decisions and dissents in the cases that remain undecided.

    More details: There are 23 cases left, out of the 58 that have been argued. Two major cases have already been decided: One essentially gutted what remained of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act, prompting Republicans in a number of Southern states to redraw congressional maps to diminish or eliminate majority-Black districts that have elected Black members of Congress.

    Why it matters: Many of the most difficult and controversial cases, however, remain to be decided in the coming weeks, with the justices aiming to conclude their work by the end of June or early July. The Supreme Court is next expected to release decisions on Thursday, June 11.

    Read on... for more on the remaining cases.

    The U.S. Supreme Court is heading into its crunch time, the part of the year when the justices are racing to finish decisions and dissents in the cases that remain undecided.

    There are 23 cases left, out of the 58 that have been argued. Two major cases have already been decided: One essentially gutted what remained of the landmark 1965 Voting Rights Act, prompting Republicans in a number of Southern states to redraw congressional maps to diminish or eliminate majority-Black districts that have elected Black members of Congress.

    The second major case that has been decided struck down President Trump's tariff program because the court said Congress had not authorized it, and Trump exceeded his authority in doing it on his own.

    Many of the most difficult and controversial cases, however, remain to be decided in the coming weeks, with the justices aiming to conclude their work by the end of June or early July. The Supreme Court is next expected to release decisions on Thursday, June 11.

    So what's left?

    Birthright citizenship

    Trump v. Barbara 

    Trump has long maintained that the Constitution does not guarantee birthright citizenship for babies born on U.S. soil, and on the first day of his second term in office, he signed an executive order barring citizenship for children born in the U.S. if parents entered the country illegally or if the parents are living and working in the U.S. legally with temporary visas. The executive order never went into effect because every lower court judge to review it concluded, in the words of one, that the order was "blatantly unconstitutional." Specifically, the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, enacted after the Civil War, says that "All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States."


    While almost all scholars interpret that language broadly, and as applying to all babies born in the U.S., Trump himself maintains that it applies only to the children of former slaves, and definitely not to the children of those in the U.S. illegally or the children of noncitizens living here legally.

    Read more about the case:

    Trans bans in sports

    Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J.

    At issue are laws recently enacted in about half the states that ban trans girls and women from participating in women's sports at publicly funded schools. Before the court are two cases — one involving varsity competition at colleges and universities, and the other involving sports in high schools. Supporters of the bans say the laws are needed to prevent athletes whose assigned sex at birth was male from having an unfair advantage in women's sports. Opponents of the bans say they discriminate based on sex, in violation of both federal law and the Constitution's guarantee to equal protection of the law. And for athletes at every level, the issue is deeply personal, with tennis greats Billie Jean King and Martina Navratilova on opposing sides, along with hundreds of other athletes.

    Read more about the cases:

    Will independent government agencies remain independent?

    Trump v. Slaughter

    Donald Trump is not the first president to try to fire the heads of independent agencies. President Franklin D. Roosevelt tried to fire one of the five Federal Trade Commission commissioners then serving in office. But in 1935, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously against the president; the court declared that under the federal law, commissioners could only be fired "for cause," meaning "inefficiency in office, neglect of duty, or malfeasance."

    Every Supreme Court since then has reaffirmed that decision. If the conservative supermajority sides with Trump, he (as well as future presidents) will be able to fire, at will, agency leaders in all or almost all previously independent agencies.

    Ironically, the commissioner in the crosshairs this time was also a member of the Federal Trade Commission. Trump appointed Rebecca Slaughter to the FTC in his first term and fired her in his second. The Supreme Court allowed the firing to go through on a temporary basis, over staunch dissents from the court's three liberal justices.

    But the odds are that the court's six conservative justices will rule definitively in Trump's favor, the result being that independent agencies will no longer be independent.

    Read more about the cases:

    So does that mean he can fire members of the Federal Reserve Board?

    Trump v. Cook

    Trump threatened to fire the head of the Fed, Jerome Powell, and tried to fire Lisa Cook, the first Black woman to serve on the Fed board. But the Supreme Court so far has refused to allow her removal. Cook's case, now awaiting decision by the court, has prompted considerable anxiety among economists, business leaders and others. When the Slaughter case was argued in December, some of the conservative justices seemed to suggest that the Fed had more protections than other agencies. Just how the court will thread that needle remains to be seen.

    Read more about the case:

    Mail-in ballots

    Watson v. Republican National Committee

    By law, 29 states count at least some ballots that arrive after Election Day, including ballots from overseas and from members of the military, as long as they are postmarked on or before Election Day.

    In the case before the court, Mississippi defends late-arriving ballots, noting that the Constitution gives states the right to run their own elections. That said, the Trump administration and the Republican Party take the opposite position. They maintain that under federal law the election has to happen on Election Day, and anything that happens after that is not part of the election.

    Read more about the case:

    Temporary protected status for eligible migrants

    Mullin v. Doe and Trump v. Miot

    Congress enacted the Temporary Protected Status law in 1990 to allow fully vetted and eligible migrants to live and work legally in the U.S. if they cannot return safely to their countries because of natural disasters, armed conflicts and other extraordinary conditions. Since the law was enacted 36 years ago, every president, Republican and Democrat, has embraced it. Except Trump. In his first term, he tried and failed to kill off TPS. But in the 16 months since he returned to office, he may well be more successful. Currently, there are 17 countries whose migrants have been designated with TPS status, and so far Trump is seeking to eliminate 13 of those countries from the TPS list.

    The two test cases before the Supreme Court involve migrants from Haiti and Syria. The Haitians — more than 300,000 of them — have been living legally in the U.S. since a devastating earthquake in 2010, followed by a deadly cholera epidemic, domestic terrorism, including widespread kidnappings and killings by marauding gangs, and political assassinations that have continued to this day. The Syrians are a much smaller group of roughly 3,800

    The Trump administration argues that decisions about TPS are entirely up to the president and that the courts have no power to review those decisions. If the court agrees, that could well lead to mass deportations.

    Read more about the cases:

    Geofencing — a new tool for law enforcement

    Chatrie v. US

    Geofencing entails drawing a virtual geographical fence around an area where a crime was committed. In this case, the area within the geofence line included not just a bank where a robbery took place but also a church and a senior citizens home. The government sought a warrant that required Google to search its data and turn over any of the names of users who were within the geofence line at the time of the crime.

    Essentially, the question for the justices is whether this new technique is ingenious, Orwellian, or both? The government contends that because people are free NOT to give their location data to their tech provider, the data that the tech company does have must be turned over to police pursuant to a warrant. Countering that argument, opponents of geofencing contend that because the warrant directs the tech company to search millions of users' location history, millions of people were subjected to a search despite never having done anything suspicious.

    Read more about the case:

    Guns

    Wolford v. Lopez and US v. Hemani

    In most states, gun owners can bring firearms onto private property, unless the property owner tells them otherwise. But five states — Hawaii, California, Maryland, New York and New Jersey — have passed laws that require gun owners to get permission in advance. The question facing the justices is whether that requirement for advance permission violates the Second Amendment right to bear arms.

    In a second case, the question is whether a federal law that makes it a felony for drug users to possess a gun violates the Second Amendment. The law is akin to one that resulted in the prosecution and conviction of Hunter Biden. Biden was convicted of the gun law in this case, along with two other charges, in connection with his purchasing a firearm in 2018.

    In 2022 , the court issued a broad ruling declaring that gun regulations henceforth would be deemed unconstitutional if they had no analog to a similar gun regulation that existed at the founding. Lower courts have found the decision confusing and difficult to administer, and they have unsubtly complained about the lack of guidance on gun issues from the Supreme Court. The two gun cases this term may answer at least some of those questions.

    Read more about the cases:

    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Highs to reach upper 80s, around 100 for deserts
    An aerial view of buildings and homes next to a long sandy beach.
    Heads up beach goers -- SoCal beaches to see large breaking waves and dangerous rip currents today through Thursday.

    QUICK FACTS

    • Today’s weather: Morning clouds then partly cloudy
    • Beaches: 68 to 73 degrees
    • Mountains: Mid-70s to mid-80s
    • Inland: 81 to 89 degrees
    • Warnings and advisories: Beach Hazards

      What to expect: Warmer temperatures and some hazardous beach conditions with strong rip currents.

      Where it will be the warmest: The valleys and Inland Empire will see temperatures climb to the upper 80s.

      Read on...for more details.

      QUICK FACTS

      • Today’s weather: Morning clouds then partly cloudy
      • Beaches: 68 to 73 degrees
      • Mountains: Mid-70s to mid-80s
      • Inland: 81 to 89 degrees
      • Warnings and advisories: Beach Hazards

      The official start of summer is just around the corner, but temperatures are already beginning to heat up this week.

      If you're at the beach today, temperatures are going to stay on the cooler side, with highs from 68 to 73 degrees in L.A. County, and between 70 and 77 degrees along the Orange County coast.

      However, be careful in the water — forecasters say there's going to be dangerous rip currents and breaking waves from elevated surf up to 6 feet tall. Those conditions will last through Thursday.

      Elsewhere, we're looking at highs of between 78 and 86 degrees for the valleys and up to 89 degrees for the Inland Empire.

      Over in Coachella Valley, temperatures could climb up to 104 degrees. Stay hydrated!

    • That's the way the vote counting goes
      Rows of desks extend in a large room under bright lights. People at the desk are looking at paper ballots.
      Several days in to the vote-counting process, Nithya Raman overtook Spencer Pratt in the second position in the L.A. mayor's race.

      Topline:

      Californians have been here before: The polls close and one candidate appears to be out of the running — only to see their fortunes shift as more mail-in ballots are counted. It's happening in the races for L.A. mayor and California governor as the votes continue to be counted in the primary election.

      The backstory: More and more Californians are voting by mail, and people who turn their ballots in closer to the deadline tend to skew more progressive.

      The dramatic flip: In the mayor matchup, Spencer Pratt, a former reality TV star, had a significant runner-up lead over L.A. City Councilmember Nithya Raman when polls closed June 2. But Raman had been steadily picking up votes as results rolled in, taking over the second spot from Pratt as of Sunday. By Monday, the Associated Press called the race for Raman. She will face incumbent Karen Bass in the November general election.

      Read on ... for when to expect new numbers and how to stay on top of the count.

      Californians have been here before: The polls close and one candidate appears to be out of the running — only to see their fortunes shift as more mail-in ballots are counted.

      It's happening in the races for L.A. mayor and California governor as the votes continue to be counted in the primary election.

      More and more Californians are voting by mail, and people who turn their ballots in closer to the deadline tend to skew more progressive. There are an estimated 140,000 outstanding vote-by-mail ballots in L.A. County that still need to be counted, and about 92,000 in Orange County.

      A not-unusual flip

      In the mayor matchup, Spencer Pratt, a former reality TV star, had a significant runner-up lead over L.A. City Councilmember Nithya Raman when polls closed June 2. But Raman had been steadily picking up votes as results rolled in, taking over the second spot from Pratt as of Sunday. By Monday, the Associated Press called the race for Raman. She will face incumbent Karen Bass in the November general election.

      The race for L.A. mayor started to noticeably shift last week. More than 140,000 ballots were processed Friday, and once they were added to the total, Raman had inched closer to TV personality Spencer Pratt in the race for second place. Most if not all of the ballots were vote by mail, according to estimates based on results from the L.A. County Registrar-Recorder / County Clerk.

      Nearly 157,000 more ballots were processed by Saturday, about half of which were vote by mail.

      Raman was nearly 22,000 votes ahead of Pratt as of Monday.

      It’s been a similar story in the governor’s race. Republican Steve Hilton was in the top spot with a lead of a few percentage points over Democratic challenger Xavier Becerra last Tuesday. Becerra has now eclipsed Hilton by about 202,000 votes and is headed to the November runoff. It was unclear who would be joining Becerra in the general election as of Monday.

      Vote surges that flips races and advance lower-ranked candidates to the general election aren’t new (which is why you may hear some refer to Election Day as election week or election season).

      In 2024, for example, L.A. City Council District 14 incumbent Kevin de León wrapped up election night ahead of his challengers, but the lead eroded in the days following.

      Ysabel Jurado, a tenants rights attorney that was endorsed by the Democratic Socialists of America, picked up enough votes to overtake de León and eventually win the general election.

      Voting by mail is more popular with Democrats than Republicans, and California accepts those ballots up to a week after the election (as long as it was postmarked on or before last Tuesday).

      Changes in the results have started to slow down and should continue to drop off after Tuesday's deadline.

      When to expect new numbers

      Updated vote totals are being released as ballots continue to be verified and counted.

      The drops continue this week and are expected around 4 p.m. today through Friday, according to the registrar-recorder.

      The updates will become more infrequent starting next week as the number of outstanding ballots dwindle. Drops are expected around 4 p.m. June 16 and 18, as well as June 24 and 26.

      How to tell if your ballot has been counted

      You can track when your vote has been received and counted through the Where’s My Ballot? tool.

      You can sign up to get notifications through that tool, but some voters have been reporting delays, which the Registrar-Recorder’s Office said it’s aware of.

      County officials saw a “large volume” of vote-by-mail ballots around Election Day, which could lead to slight delays, a spokesperson told LAist in an email. Those ballots need to be processed and scanned before notifications can be sent.

      L.A. County also has its own vote-by-mail tracking tool that may update quicker. You can check the status of your ballot here.

      Orange County has a similar tool for tracking your ballot, which you can find here.

      How to stay up-to-date

      You can sign up to get the latest L.A. County ballot count updates sent straight to your email inbox here. You can sign up for Orange County updates here, and from the California Secretary of State here.

      You can also find them on our L.A. results and O.C. results pages.

      You can also sign up for Make it Make Sense here, LAist’s newsletter about the primary election results.