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The most important stories for you to know today
  • 9 places to have an affordable Turkey Day in LA
    A roasted turkey with all the trimmings is sitting at the center of a round table on a white tablecloth; next to it are different side dishes with salads and green vegetables, as well as cocktail glasses filled with an icy clear liquid
    Thanksgiving at the Culver Hotel

    Topline:

    Leave the work to the professionals this year and gobble up some good eats on Turkey Day with less stress and no mess. We've highlighted affordabe spots — everything on this list is $100 or less per person, with discounted rates for children (and some free meals for kids).

    The restaurants: We have options from across the region, from Hollywood to Long Beach to the Valley.

    The food: How about earl grey marshmallow fluff, andouille, thyme and brioche stuffing or a pumpkin spice caramel trifle? You won't go hungry.

    Leave the work to the professionals this year and gobble up some good eats on Turkey Day with less stress and no mess. We've highlighted affordable spots — everything on this list is $100 or less per person, with discounted rates for children (and some free meals for kids).

    Playa Provisions (Playa Del Rey)

    Playa Provisions in Playa del Rey from Celeb Chef Brooke Williamson has got a delish array of traditional favorites. Best of all, kids six and under eat free!

    Items I’m most excited about include an endive salad with pear, goat cheese and candied pistachios, corn bread with maple butter, roasted herb and citrus turkey with turkey sausage and butternut squash stuffing, maple roasted yams with earl grey marshmallow fluff, and pumpkin pie with whipped cream.

    There are also à la carte seafood items and their famed lobster roll or steak frites instead of the prix fixe.

    Reservations: Resy from 1:15 p.m. to 5:45 p.m.
    Cost: $90 per person above the age of 6. Kids under 6 eat free.

    Saint & Second (Long Beach, Manhattan Beach, Woodland Hills)

    A white plate contains a Thanksgiving meal, with pink slices of ham, mashed potatoes, stuffing, sweet potatoes and cranberry relish. It's next to a knife and fork and a beige table mat.
    Saint & Second's holiday fare
    (
    Courtesy Saint and Second
    )

    Long Beach original Saint & Second offers a classic Thanksgiving with a little something extra. Choose between a spice-rubbed oven-roasted turkey breast or a molasses and brown sugar ham. Accompaniments include andouille, thyme and brioche stuffing, maple mashed sweet potatoes, turkey gravy, and many more. Finish with a classic pumpkin pie.

    Reservations: Their website , 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
    Cost: $55 per person, $25 for children 12 and under.

    H&H Brazilian Steakhouse (DTLA/Beverly Hills)

    Possibly the best deal for Thanksgiving is this all-you-can-eat Churrasco that includes 16 cuts of meat served on swords PLUS everything you expect on the holiday, like turkey and sweet potato casserole.

    Reservations: here , noon to 10:00 p.m. Noon to 9 p.m., Friday from 5:00 p.m. to 10 p.m., Saturday and Sunday all day.
    Cost: $80 per person, kids between 7 and 12 are half-price, kids 6 and under FREE.

    The Culver Hotel (Culver City)

    The family-style meal in this historical gem begins with a bread board, accompanied by whipped ricotta and burnt honey, and a market salad dressed in a date vinaigrette. Each guest chooses their own main, ranging from the classic turkey with gravy to butternut squash rigatoni. It’s all served with sides of pomme purée, crispy brussels sprouts, and heirloom roasted carrots. For dessert, an assorted sweets tray offers a range of choices. Little mouths can munch on an appropriately sized turkey with mashed potatoes and carrots.

    Reservations: OpenTable noon to 8:00 p.m.
    Cost: $95 per person, $35 for children.

    ALK (Hollywood)

    A warm golden restaurant interior with blue velvet chairs and a glossy bar nearby
    ALK at the Godfrey Hotel in Hollywood
    (
    Credit ALK
    )

    It’s always a celebration at this centrally located Hollywood hotel. ALK at The Godfrey Hotel Hollywood is serving a three-course prix fixe that includes butternut squash soup, a slow-cooked free-range turkey with sage-brioche stuffing, and an array of desserts, including caramel cheesecake and seasonal ice cream.

    Reservations:  OpenTable 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
    Cost: $65 for adults and $32 for children under 12.

    Jamaica Bay Inn (Marina Del Rey)

    Enjoy your turkey by the sea at the Jamaica Bay Inn in Marina del Rey. Menu highlights from the 3-course prix fixe include harvest soup, traditional turkey, or a farro cornucopia, as well as desserts like classic pecan pie and a pumpkin spice caramel trifle.

    Reservations: OpenTable noon to 9:30 p.m.
    Cost: $59 per person.

    Eataly (Century City)

    It’s more than just Tacchino at rooftop restaurant Terra, with a 3-course prix fixe that will have you embracing a Roman holiday. Begin with a roasted cauliflower cavofiore antipasti before digging into a ravioli di zucca or cavatelli al ragu primi. The list of secondi courses includes the traditional turkey tacchino with trimmings or a braciola di maiale pork. Add on a sweet finish for just $10 more. It’s a torta noci pecan con gelato pecan cake.

    Reservations: OpenTable 11:30 a.m. for lunch and 5 p.m. for dinner.
    Cost: $75 per person plus $10 for dessert

    Sugar Palm (Santa Monica)

    Make your holiday easy breezy at Sugar Palm this Thanksgiving. The Viceroy restaurant is offering à la carte options like an Autumn salad with Tuscan kale and brandy-infused raisins ($18), turkey & fixings ($32), and a warm cranberry blossom dessert ($15).

    Reservations: Resy noon to 9:45 p.m.
    Cost: à la carte

    Fuego (Long Beach)

    Turn up the heat at Fuego , located at the Latin-inspired Hotel Maya in Long Beach. Get lost in the bayside views as you enjoy a three-course Thanksgiving from Executive Chef Luis Torres Begin with a honey roasted pumpkin soup with chile-spiced pepitas or a shaved apple and fennel salad. As your main, there is an herb-roasted Mary’s farm turkey or arbol-spiced wild mushroom and creamy polenta, among other dishes. Dessert is a pumpkin pie mousse or a warm apple pie.

    Reservations: OpenTable 3:00 p.m. to 9 p.m.
    Cost: $90 per person.

    You can read more of Caroline Gelabert-Noh's recommendations for food and drink in LA at EatDrinkLA

  • Long-term homeless housing on the chopping block

    Topline:

    The Trump administration is upending its homelessness policy, with deep cuts to funding for long-term housing. Instead, it will shift money toward transitional housing that requires work and addiction treatment.

    Why now: In a statement, the Department of Housing and Urban Development said the new policies will "restore accountability" and promote "self-sufficiency" by addressing the "root causes of homelessness, including illicit drugs and mental illness."

    What it means in L.A.: Last fiscal year, the L.A. region received more than $220 million in federal funds from the HUD for housing and other services for unhoused people. Most of that funding — about $150 million — went toward permanent supportive housing.

    Why it matters: Critics warn the major overhaul could put 170,000 people at risk of losing their housing again. And they say the timing of this major overhaul is terrible.

    The Trump administration is upending its homelessness policy, with deep cuts to funding for long-term housing. Instead, it will shift money toward transitional housing that requires work and addiction treatment.

    In a statement, the Department of Housing and Urban Development said the new policies will "restore accountability" and promote "self-sufficiency" by addressing the "root causes of homelessness, including illicit drugs and mental illness."

    Critics warn the major overhaul could put 170,000 people at risk of losing their housing again. And they say the timing of this major overhaul is terrible. Normally, funding notices go out in August, but now programs around the country will have little time to start applying for new funding in January. And in many places, it will leave a months-long gap after current funding runs out and before new money flows.

    In LA

    Last fiscal year, the L.A. region received more than $220 million in federal funds from the HUD for housing and other services for unhoused people. Most of that funding — about $150 million — went toward permanent supportive housing.

    In another change, HUD will no longer automatically renew existing programs — creating the possibility that formerly homeless people who've lived in subsidized housing for years will be forced out. The agency is also opening up more funding for faith-based groups.

    The National Alliance to End Homelessness says the new policies could upend life for many people who've found stability in permanent housing programs. "HUD's new funding priorities slam the door on them, their providers, and their communities. Make no mistake: homelessness will only increase because of this reckless and irresponsible decision," CEO Ann Oliva said in a statement.

    The funding shift reflects a conservative backlash to longstanding policies

    For two decades, federal funding has prioritized getting people into permanent housing and then offering them treatment. That policy is called Housing First and has long had bipartisan support. Backers say the approach has a proven track record of keeping people off the streets.

    But critics counter that it has failed to stem the steady rise of homelessness to what are now historic levels.

    Those critics include President Trump, who has long pushed cities to clear homeless encampments from streets and parks. The new funding shift reflects an executive order he signed in July , which also sought to make it easier to confine unhoused people in mental institutions against their will.

    "The influence of Housing First just became too powerful," says Stephen Eide, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think-tank. He calls it a top-down approach, and says for years it was hard to get funding unless a program followed that policy. Eide says that left out a large group of people who may not need permanent housing or who may want the enforced sobriety it does not offer.

    "I think what we're going to be looking for is a reinvestment in transitional housing," he says. That means places people can stay for 18 months or so to get sober or recover in other ways, and then — ideally — move out and succeed on their own.

    There's broad agreement that the U.S. needs more of every kind of support for homeless people: permanent housing, rehab and mental illness treatment. But critics of HUD's shift fear this may make it harder for some to get help.

    "It is moving away from trauma-informed care, and that's problematic," says Stephanie Klasky-Gamer, president and CEO of LA Family Housing in Los Angeles.

    For example, she thinks this will lead more shelters to bar people unless they're already sober or enrolled in recovery or mental health care. But that's a high bar for many people, she says, and it could backfire.
    Copyright 2025 NPR

  • Sponsored message
  • Why the cost of living is causing Trump problems

    Topline:

    Americans are feeling the strain of high prices, even as President Donald Trump tries to tout "record highs" in the stock market.

    Where things stand: "Consumer confidence is the lowest it's ever been," said Jason Furman, a professor of economics at Harvard. "People are really negative about inflation."

    Reality check: Inflation this year has been persistent but not dramatic, at about 3%. Eggs have gotten cheaper since Trump took office, but other staples like ground beef and coffee are up. According to Gas Buddy , the average price of gasoline in the U.S. is $3.09 per gallon, slightly higher than this time last year.

    Why it matters: Trump has pledged to "make America affordable again."Now polls show voters rank the economy and cost of living as their top concern and blame Trump's policies for making things worse. Cost-of-living was a key issue in sweeping wins by Democrats in last week's elections.

    What's next: A senior administration official tells NPR Trump will soon travel around the country with a message that while some things have improved, there is more work to do to help people feeling economic strain.

    President Donald Trump says he is going to "make America affordable again." It's a pledge he made frequently during the campaign. And now, after dropping it from his lexicon for more than eight months, he's saying it again as polls show voters rank the economy and cost of living as their top concern and blame Trump's policies for making things worse.

    A senior administration official tells NPR Trump will soon travel around the country with a message that while some things have improved, there is more work to do to help people feeling economic strain. The official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, added that when it comes to affordability, "there's no finish line."

    Thus far, Trump has spent far more time boasting about how great the economy and stock market are doing than acknowledging any economic anxiety.

    "Record high, record high, record high," Trump said of the stock market last week at a business event in Florida.

    "Costs are way down," Trump said at a late night signing ceremony in the Oval Office Wednesday. "My administration and our partners in Congress will continue our work to lower the cost of living, restore public safety, grow our economy and make America affordable again for all Americans."

    Trump's affordability challenge marks a dramatic reversal of fortune for a president who returned to office on a promise to bring costs down and whose greatest political strength was on the economy. Now his approval rating on the economy is severely underwater.

    After sweeping wins by Democrats in last week's elections where the cost-of-living was a key issue, Trump suddenly had a lot to say about "affordability." But he has frequently come across as dismissive and defensive.

    "The affordability is much better with the Republicans," Trump said last week. "The only problem is the Republicans don't talk about it, and Republicans should start talking about it and use their heads."

    But earlier this week when Fox News' Laura Ingraham pressed Trump on rising costs of things like coffee and ground beef, he called it a "con job by the Democrats."

    Asked why people are anxious about the economy, Trump responded by questioning whether people really are saying that.

    "I think polls are fake," Trump said. "We have the greatest economy we've ever had."

    To support his positive outlook, Trump points to the booming stock market, his tariff policy and pledges by companies and countries to invest in the U.S.

    Inflation this year has been persistent but not dramatic, at about 3%. Eggs have gotten cheaper since Trump took office, but other staples like ground beef and coffee are up. According to Gas Buddy , the average price of gasoline in the U.S. is $3.09 per gallon, slightly higher than this time last year.

    "Consumer confidence is the lowest it's ever been," said Jason Furman, a professor of economics at Harvard. "People are really negative about inflation."

    It's a political truth — and a pitfall for presidents — that people don't want to hear that everything is awesome if they are struggling.

    Furman, who served in the Obama administration, says the messaging team in that White House was very cautious not to brag about the economy, as the nation emerged from the Great Recession.

    "Because they thought anything we said positive about the economy risked people thinking President Obama was out of touch," said Furman. "I didn't see that type of reserve when Biden was president. He bragged about it quite a lot, and I think that [rang] hollow with a lot of people. And President Trump is even less reserved about his bragging."

    Trump's insistence that the economy is great earned him a rebuke from Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia. Appearing on the Sean Spicer Show on YouTube , Greene said she gives Trump credit for holding inflation steady.

    "But that doesn't bring prices down," said Greene. "And so gaslighting the people and trying to tell them that prices have come down is not helping. It's actually infuriating people because people know what they are paying at the grocery store, they know what they're paying for their kid's clothes and school supplies. They know what they're paying for their electricity bills."

    She called for compassion rather than lecturing.

    Former Trump economic adviser Stephen Moore says there are three major cost issues that have to be addressed: grocery prices, home prices and health care costs.

    "It is true factually that the average family has more purchasing power today than they did when Biden left office," said Moore. "And yet people don't feel it. You know, they're not feeling the love. And I can't explain why that is except that people tend to focus on things where their prices are rising."

    In fact, purchasing power also grew during the Biden administration, because wages rose faster than costs. But voters didn't want to hear it then, and they are in no mood to hear it now.

    "People are kind of in a crabby mood right now when it comes to the economy," said Moore.
    Copyright 2025 NPR

  • Emmy-nominated host to speak in Long Beach
    A man with dark skin wears a grey hoodie on a stage.
    Baratunde Thurston speaks onstage during The Future of Us session at AfroTech Conference 2025.

    Topline:

    Emmy-nominated host and writer Baratunde Thurston explores what it means to be human in the age of AI in his upcoming show at the Carpenter Center in Long Beach this weekend. Thurston spoke with "Morning Edition" host Austin Cross.

    About Baratunde Thurston: Thurston hosts the podcast “Life with Machines”. He was also the producer at The Daily Show with Trevor Noah and director of digital at The Onion.

    What does humanity have to do with it? “I think if we can remember this beautiful dance between our individuality and our community membership … our imperfection and our finiteness, that we can see those as gifts and as beautiful differentiators that make us more human,” Thurston said. “The machines may be here to help us remember that part of ourselves.”

    Want to go? Doors open for “An Evening with Baratunde Thurston” at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the the Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center at 6200 E. Atherton St. in Long Beach. Tickets start from $43.73 through the Carpenter Center website .

    Here’s his conversation with Austin Cross: 

    Listen 4:55
    Emmy-nominated host Baratunde Thurston explores what it means to be human in the age of AI

    ''

  • Urban Orchard is 1 of 3 parks to open recently
    A middle-aged man with light skin tone and white hair and short beard wearing a tan jacket and yellow collared shirt and black pants stands at a podium in a park on a sunny day.
    Steve Costley, Parks and Recreation director for South Gate, celebrates the opening of Urban Orchard Park.

    Topline:

    Urban Orchard Park officially opened this summer — a brand new green space for the city of South Gate and Southeast L.A. as a whole. Two other newly renovated parks also opened this year in South Gate.

    How did they do it? The Urban Orchard project cost more than $31 million and took more than 10 years to complete. The funding all came through state, county and federal grants, as well as private donors. The project came to fruition via multiple partnerships between the city and the private and nonprofit sectors.

    Parks are difficult to build: Limited space, expensive land, historic pollution, lack of funding, permitting, other red tape — there are many obstacles to building a new park in Southern California. “ South Gate is not a rich community. We don't generate that much revenue on our own, so we're very reliant on partnerships,” said Vice Mayor Joshua Barron.

    Read on ... to meet people who are already using the new park.

    Maria Mendez walks her little white dog, named Peluche, on a wide dirt path in the city of South Gate’s newest park.

    “Me gusta mucho el parque porque tenemos este sembradío de aguacates, limones y venimos a hacer ejercicio en las mañanas,” she said. She loves it for the avocado and citrus trees, and because she can exercise in the mornings, she said.

    The park has sycamores and oaks too, a small wetland, a playground and throughout, winding walking paths. Mendez said she and Peluche come here most days. It’s convenient because the park is right next door to the mobile home park for seniors where she lives.

    An older woman with medium brown skin tone wears jean capris, a sleeveless shirt and wide brimmed hat while walking her little white fluffy dog in a park.
    South Gate resident Maria Mendez and her dog, Peluche, walk the paths of the Urban Orchard every day.
    (
    Erin Stone
    /
    LAist
    )

    This park, though, is in a bit of an odd location.

    “If you look around, you'll see you are in between the 710 Freeway and the L.A. River,” said Steve Costley, the city of South Gate’s director of Parks and Recreation. “Not a natural space to think, ‘Hey, let's go plant a park.’”

    The park is called the Urban Orchard — 7 acres of renovated city-owned land sandwiched between the freeway and the river. To get there, you have to wind through industrial businesses. The din of the freeway is constant.

    But under the new trees and next to the engineered creek and wetland, there’s the sound of birds and water.

    Urban Orchard Park officially opened this summer — a brand new green space for the city and Southeast L.A. as a whole. Two other newly renovated parks also opened this year in South Gate.

    So how did the small city do it?

    A need for more green

    South Gate is home to about 100,000 people, 95% of whom identify as Latino, according to census data. The average household income is less than $75,000 a year. And city residents have some of the least access to nearby nature — just 3% of the city’s land is made up of parks, one-fifth the national average, according to data analyzed by the nonprofit Trust for Public Land .

    “We're one of the very high-needs cities in all of L.A. County that doesn't have enough park space,” Costley said. 

    Lower income communities of color across the region and the country have disproportionately less access to green space than wealthier, whiter communities.

    “Parks are what we love. Parks are what I think people need. I think parks make a city into a community,” Costley said.

    Parks can also boost life expectancy , improve air quality and cool neighborhoods as climate change makes heat waves worse . The Urban Orchard will go even further, helping to address food insecurity as well.

    Though the city is still working out the details, a grove of 200 citrus trees, along with vegetable beds and an avocado orchard, will be a source of fresh produce for seniors living in the mobile home park next door.

    A woman with medium dark skin tone wearing a black skirt and shirt smiles under sunny skies in a park.
    Dayana Molina, community organizer with the nonprofit Trust for Public Land, which helped fund and design the new Urban Orchard Park.
    (
    Erin Stone
    /
    LAist
    )

    “We were really trying to address and bring the vision of the community through this process,” said Dayana Molina, a community organizer with the Trust for Public Land, which helped design and fund the new park. “So we heard about food insecurity. We heard about not enough shade.”

    Not only is the Urban Orchard adding green space where it’s badly needed, but it will also recycle stormwater. The 1-acre constructed wetland cleans runoff from the L.A. River and stores water in a large reservoir the city built under the citrus orchard, providing 70% of the park’s irrigation.

    Any overflow will return to the river channel, cleaner than before. Eventually, the hope is that native fish can be introduced to the park’s wetland and streams.

    “This is not just a South Gate park, it's really a regional project that is bringing benefits to the whole region,” Molina said.

    Residents — and wildlife — are already benefiting.

    An older man with light skin tone wears a black T-shirt and tan hat in front of a pond and power lines above.
    Dale De Julio, a retired truck driver who lives next door to the Urban Orchard, now walks there every day and loves to observe the birds.
    (
    Erin Stone
    /
    LAist
    )

    Retired truck driver Dale De Julio lives in the mobile home park next door to the new Urban Orchard. He remembers when the land was an empty dirt lot. He never used to go for walks near his home. Now, De Julio walks the park every day.

    “ This has given me an incentive to get out and walk around,” De Julio said. “I need that now that I'm retired.

    He said after years of driving trucks all over the country, seeing countless sights but never having the time to stop and appreciate them, the park is a place he can finally do that.

    Just the other day, he said, he even saw a blue heron, a bird he’d never seen in the area before.

    How to build a new park

    Limited space, expensive land, historic pollution, lack of funding, permitting, other red tape — there are many obstacles to building a new park in Southern California.

    The Urban Orchard was no exception, and the process was not cheap or quick. The park ultimately cost more than $31 million and took more than 10 years to complete.

    The funding all came through state, county and federal grants, as well as private donors. The project came to fruition via multiple partnerships between the city and the private and nonprofit sectors.

    “ South Gate is not a rich community. We don't generate that much revenue on our own, so we're very reliant on partnerships,” said Vice Mayor Joshua Barron.

    UCLA research has found that public-private partnerships are essential to the success of greening projects such as the Urban Orchard.

    “This really requires, as the proverbial saying goes, a village,” said UCLA professor Jon Christensen, who led that research and studies equitable access to green space.

    The Urban Orchard, he added, “is a real testament to the dedication and persistence and creativity that is required to build new parks in Los Angeles.”

    That creativity included cobbling together funding from a variety of sources, including $3 million from the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund, nearly $8 million from the State Water Resources Control Board, more than $4 million from the state’s Rivers and Mountains Conservancy, nearly $7 million from local Measure W funds, $5 million from Caltrans, Proposition 68 funds, more than $700,000 from the Conservation Corps of Long Beach, and private donations.

    A young woman with dark skin tone plants lettuce in a vegetable bed wearing a hard hat, white gloves and royal blue long sleeved shirt.
    Joy Chancellor, 19, of South L.A. plants lettuce in one of the vegetable gardens at the Urban Orchard in South Gate. She's a corpsmember with the Long Beach Conservation Corps, which will maintain the park for its first three years while training young people in environmental jobs.
    (
    Erin Stone
    /
    LAist
    )

    The first three years of maintenance will be carried out by the Long Beach Conservation Corps, training young people from the area in environmental jobs. The city will have to find a way to pick up the maintenance tab after that.

    “It was not a smooth process. It never is when we have complicated pieces of land adjacent to the L.A. River,” said Nola Eaglin Talmage, the Trust for Public Land’s Parks for People program director. “We've got all kinds of different public funding streams, all with different timelines, all with different requirements.”

    Eaglin Talmage said a new county motion brought by Supervisor Lindsey Horvath could help streamline the process. And state efforts such as Proposition 4 are also essential to making these types of efforts possible, especially as federal funds for environmental projects dry up under the Trump administration.

    “The passing of Prop. 4 is one of the reasons why we'll be able to continue to build green space in Los Angeles,” Eaglin Talmage said.

    A bigger reform idea

    A dirt path and tree stump seating in a park.
    Places to sit and enjoy nature in the new Urban Orchard Park in South Gate.
    (
    Erin Stone
    /
    LAist
    )

    South Gate Vice Mayor Barron said there’s another way for small cities to have an easier time building projects that benefit the public — updating outdated tax revenue laws.

    “Last year, our residents and businesses paid over $80 million in property taxes, but yet the city of South Gate was only allocated about $5 million of that,” Barron said.

    Currently, South Gate receives just 6.14% of property tax revenue collected within the city — a percentage set in 1978 through Proposition 13. After Proposition 13, the state created a formula to divide that tax among counties, cities, schools and special districts, with each city’s share based on its pre-1978 property tax base – a formula that still governs allocations today and mostly benefits wealthier cities with higher property values. That hurts cities like his, Barron said.

    Only the state legislature can update that formula, something Barron is pushing for.

    “One of the things that I really wish that we could look at is helping cities like South Gate, like Bell, like Cudahy, Maywood — the Southeast L.A. region — be a little bit more self-sustainable,” Barron said.

    “All we're asking,” he added, “is to be able to be self-sustainable and not have to always rely on grant money to be able to get projects off the ground.”