Yusra Farzan
covers Orange County and its 34 cities, watching those long meetings — boards, councils and more — so you don’t have to.
Published September 5, 2023 1:02 PM
Narcan nasal spray for the treatment of opioid overdoses in a vending machine.
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Scott Olson
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Getty Images
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Topline:
The life-saving medication Narcan, also known as naloxone, will be available for purchase over the counter starting this week.
Why it matters: From 2019 to 2021, California’s opioid-related deaths spiked 121%, with the crisis disproportionately affecting males, Black and Native Americans and those aged between 30 and 34.
Why now: The FDA approved non-prescription, over the counter Narcan in the form of nasal spray in March of this year. The drug manufacturer Emergent BioSolutions announced last week that it has begun shipping out the medication to retail stores.
Where you can find it: Walgreens confirmed to LAist that Narcan should be available for purchase as soon as Sept. 5. The pharmaceutical chain along with CVS will sell the medication for $44.99. The medication can be purchased via the CVS app as well as through their website and will be in stores soon, CVS told LAist.
The life-saving medication Narcan, also known as naloxone, will be available for purchase over the counter starting this week.
From 2019 to 2021, California’s opioid-related deaths spiked 121%, with the crisis disproportionately affecting males, Black and Native Americans and those aged between 30 and 34.
Spider Davila, the harm reduction program coordinator at Los Angeles Community Health Project, called the opioid crisis “intense” and said that it was “getting worse.”
Narcan's impact
In the last year alone, the Los Angeles Community Health Project says the medication was able to reverse 8,277 overdoses in the greater L.A. area including Norwalk, Antelope Valley, Long Beach and Pacoima.
And this year to date, the organization has reversed 4,274 overdoses, including two at the Overdose Awareness Day event at MacArthur Park on Aug. 31. However, numbers, they said, are under-reported.
The FDA approved non-prescription, over-the-counter Narcan in the form of nasal spray in March of this year. The drug manufacturer Emergent BioSolutions announced last week that it has begun shipping out the medication to retail stores.
Having the medication widely available, Davila said, will normalize it, “which helps reduce stigma.”
Cost concerns
The high price point of $44.99 concerns Davila, who says the cost will limit who has access.
“The overdose crisis disproportionately affects people that are unhoused, it affects people in communities of color. It affects people with lower incomes,” they said. “And at $44, if you don't have insurance that can pay for that, it's still not getting it out to everybody that it needs to get to.”
Where you can find it
Walgreens confirmed to LAist that Narcan should be available for purchase as soon as Sept. 5. The pharmaceutical chain along with CVS will sell the medication for $44.99.
The medication can be purchased via the CVS app as well as through their website and will be in stores soon, CVS told LAist.
Gab Chabrán
covers what's happening in food and culture for LAist.
Published January 1, 2026 5:00 AM
Members of Kodama Taiko perform mochitsuki at Yama Seafood Market's San Gabriel location Dec. 20.
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Courtesy Yama Sushi Marketplace
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Topline:
Yama Sushi Marketplace is hosting a free mochitsuki demonstration Saturday, offering the public a chance to witness — and participate in — the traditional Japanese art of pounding fresh mochi for the new year.
Why now: The events coincide with the Japanese New Year period, the most important holiday in Japanese culture. The word mochi comes from the Japanese word motsu, which means "to hold"; the ritual symbolizes holding on to good fortune for the coming year.
Why it matters: While mochi has become a trendy dessert in L.A., these public demonstrations showcase the ceremonial traditions that have anchored Japanese celebrations for over a millennium. By making this sacred practice participatory, Yama hopes to bridge Japanese cultural heritage with L.A.'s diverse communities.
These days, mochi might bring to mind the ice cream selection at Trader Joe's or the cute, shaped donuts at Mochinut, which have made the chewy rice cake an L.A. favorite.
But for more than 1,000 years in Japan, at this time of year, fresh mochi has been celebrated through mochitsuki — a rhythmic New Year's ceremony in which steamed glutinous rice is pounded with wooden mallets into smooth, elastic cakes symbolizing good fortune.
Yama Sushi Marketplace is turning this tradition into a public celebration with a free mochitsuki event Saturday at its Koreatown location. (The marketplace also hosted two previous events, one Dec. 20 at the San Gabriel location and the other last Saturday in West L.A.).
The ceremony
Scott Kohno, CEO of Yama Sushi Marketplace, grew up eating mochi and attending mochitsuki festivals around Los Angeles. He describes the spectacle as "like a dance."
The two-part process requires pounders wielding mallets and turners flipping the rice between strikes, demanding rhythmic precision to avoid injury. Attendees at the Yama events can try their hand at pounding.
Cultural significance
The New Year marks the biggest holiday celebration in Japanese culture. In Japan, Oshogatsu is observed Jan. 1, with the main celebrations beginning on New Year's Eve and continuing through the first days of January.
Traditionally, Mochitsuki is celebrated chiefly through community events, but many families also rely on store-bought mochi rather than pounding their own.
Kodama Taiko performers demonstrate the rhythmic "dance" of mochitsuki, synchronizing the pounding and turning of steamed glutinous rice.
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Courtesy Yama Sushi Marketplace
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The word mochi comes from the Japanese word motsu, which means "to hold," Kohno said. "And so it's very symbolic: holding onto good fortune for the coming year.”
The ceremony holds personal meaning for Kohno, who recalls participating in mochitsuki throughout his childhood. For him, the pairing of mochi and the new year represents a time of reflection — acknowledging his staff and customers while looking ahead.
The demonstration held at Yama will be led by Kodama Taiko, a performance group that has brought mochitsuki to various Southern California communities for several years.
A partnership of legacy brands
This year, Yama is partnering with Fugetsu-Do, the historic Little Tokyo mochi shop founded in 1903 and now in its third generation of ownership under Brian Kito, whose grandfather, Seiichi Kito, started the business.
Kohno sees the partnership between the two businesses — Yama has operated for more than 40 years — as a continuation of Japanese community resilience in Los Angeles.
The partnership feels personal for Kohno, who grew up eating Fugetsu-Do mochi and now sells its products at Yama.
"These two legendary brands coming together, we think it's a natural fit," he said.
An attendee tries his hand at pounding mochi during Yama Seafood Market's Dec. 20 mochitsuki demonstration in San Gabriel.
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Courtesy Yama Sushi Marketplace
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The events pair taiko drumming with rhythmic mochi pounding, offering a celebratory experience most attendees will witness for the first time. For Kohno, these gatherings serve a larger purpose: bringing the community together while passing traditions to future generations.
"I hope that the customers really can understand that Japanese food is beyond just the tasty dishes, that there's a lot of symbolism tied to the culture behind it," he said.
More info:
Yama Sushi Marketplace will host a free mochitsuki demonstration Saturday: Yama Seafood Market, 3178 W. Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles (Koreatown), 11 a.m.-noon
Julia Barajas
explores how college students achieve their goals, whether they’re fresh out of high school, pursuing graduate work or looking to join the labor force through alternative pathways.
Published January 1, 2026 5:00 AM
Mice used for fetal tissue research are kept in the vivarium at UCLA's biomedical sciences research building.
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Philip Cheung
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The Washington Post via Getty Images
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Topline:
Researchers at UCLA had their federal funding restored in the fall, but things still aren’t back to normal. On top of dealing with the ramifications of the temporary freeze, students fear that budget reductions at the federal level could threaten their professional futures.
Why it matters: The National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation are the two largest federal funders of research at U.S. universities
The backstory: Over the summer,the U.S. Justice Department revealed the results of an investigation into UCLA, alleging it found “indifference” to “a hostile educational environment for Jewish and Israeli students.” To settle those and other claims, the Trump administration demanded $1 billion from UCLA. The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health then froze hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding that had been allocated to the university’s researchers.
What's next: The UC system is still in negotiations with the Trump administration. Most of UCLA’s frozen funding was restored by late September, following court orders. In an attempt to garner support for state-based research funding, some students will host a science fair for lawmakers in Sacramento in January 2026.
Disclosure: Julia Barajas is a part-time law student at UCLA.
Tyler Clites, an assistant professor in mechanical and aerospace engineering at UCLA, leads a team of researchers working on bionic technologies to prevent unnecessary amputations.
Earlier this year, after the Trump administration froze UCLA’s federal research funding, Clites held a meeting with his team where he delivered a dire warning.
“I think that we can weather this for three months,” he said. “But, after that, I might have to start letting people go."
At the time, Clites told LAist, his lab had 10 doctoral students, along with two post docs, “a few surgical residents” and 10 undergrads.
The worst-case scenario Clites feared did not come to pass. The Trump administration froze UCLA’s grants in July. By late September, the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation — the two largest federal funders of research at U.S. universities — were forced to restore some 800 grants at UCLA in response to federal court orders.
But the temporary freeze was long enough to cause permanent damage to some research teams. Plus, students and professors like Clites fear that budget reductions at the NIH and NSF may threaten their research capabilities and professional futures.
Dealing with the aftermath
At UCLA’s pediatrics department, Cole Peters is part of a team that’s engineering T-cells to target proteins expressed by sarcoma tumors. Sarcoma is a rare type of cancer that originates in the body's bones and soft tissues, including muscles, blood vessels and nerves.
Currently, Peters told LAist, the five-year survival rate for pediatric sarcoma is around 66%, “which means 44% of the kids that get these tumors are going to die.”
Peters’s team uses mice to develop treatment options. “We're trying to get the patient's own immune system to attack [their] cancer,” he said.
The team gives the mice a human immune system, Peters added, “so that we can study how a human immune system would attack a human cancer.”
During the funding freeze, those in charge of keeping the mice healthy had to stop their work, and “the colony pretty much died out,” he said.
As a result, an experiment that he and his colleagues planned to start in August is now slated for the middle of January. This unnecessary delay, Peters added, “slows down the potential to generate a medicine” for children.
Cole Peters, a cancer researcher in UCLA's pediatrics department.
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Courtesy
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Elle Rathbun, a sixth-year doctoral student in neuroscience who studies the brain's responses to potential stroke treatments, was also frustrated by the funding freeze.
To stem that loss, she applied for a predoctoral fellowship, which involved gathering a score of documents and letters of recommendation. All told, she said, that process took about a month.
During that time, Rathbun added, “I was doing sort of the bare minimum that my research required.”
“I just couldn't prioritize all the benchwork and the experiments [for my research] and mentoring undergraduates in the way that I was planning on,” she said. “I had to step back from all that.”
Ultimately, Rathbun did secure that fellowship. But then UCLA’s federal funding was restored, so she had to give it back. The rigmarole, she said, was a waste of time.
“I would have rather just been doing experiments and making discoveries,” she said.
Rathbun, Peters, Clites and other researchers at UCLA expressed relief at having their funding restored. But because the court decisions aren't final, they remain fearful.
“I think the biggest impact is [that] people are very reticent to hire,” Clites said. “I'm not really open to taking on a new graduate student . . . I'm much more risk-averse than I have been historically.”
For Peters, it feels like he and his colleagues are working with “a knife over [their] heads.”
Grappling with an uncertain future
In addition to concerns around UCLA’s grants, researchers also worry about the broader state of federal funding.
A recent New York Times investigation — which used public data to analyze over 300,000 grants dating back to 2015 — found that NIH and NSF money is going to fewer grants under the Trump administration. There are also fewer opportunities available for new scientists through graduate student, postdoctoral and early-career fellowships and grants.
In practice, this means that researchers will face more competition for federal funding. The change could also push students to consider other careers.
Elle Rathbun studies the brain's responses to potential stroke treatments.
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Courtesy
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Maya Weissman, a postdoc at UCLA’s Garud Lab, studies the evolution of the human gut microbiome.
The microbiome, she told LAist, helps us digest food, “but it's also connected to a wide range of health issues, including irritable bowel disease and Alzheimer's.”
Her lab is funded by NSF and NIH grants. Having that money restored means she and her colleagues can once again access high-performance computing resources and other critical equipment. And if the undergraduate she mentors wants to conduct research this summer, she’ll be able to pay him.
“We're also able to recruit new members to the lab, because a lot of current members are graduating soon,” she added.
This is all cause to celebrate, Weissman said. But when she looks toward the future, her career is less certain. This year, she intended to apply for the NSF’s postdoctoral research fellowship in biology. But funding for that opportunity was not renewed.
The fellowship “is very prestigious,” Weissman said. “It would have helped my career to have that line on my resume. It would have also funded my salary for several years, and that would take pressure off of my boss, allow her to recruit more people. And it would have allowed me to fund my own experiments and give me a certain amount of independence.”
Weissman visited the NSF’s webpage repeatedly throughout 2025. She kept refreshing it, hoping that a new call for proposals would be posted.
“This huge pool of money that funds a lot of the brightest and most promising researchers at my career stage — it's just gone,” she said.
Moving forward, Weissman will have to spend more time looking for funding.
“Instead of applying for one big fellowship, I have to apply for a dozen little ones to try to cobble together some support,” she said.
Rathbun likewise aims to become an assistant professor at a university, where she can continue doing research.
“I am really reassessing my career path,” Rathbun said. “As much as I want to develop stroke therapies and therapies for other neurodegenerative diseases, and as competitive as I think I am for those positions, if funding is going to be unstable — if, down the line, I'm going to have to constantly be firing people because the NIH suspends grants — that's not viable. It's no longer my dream career.”
Disclosure: Julia Barajas is a part-time law student at UCLA.
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Gab Chabrán
covers what's happening in food and culture for LAist.
Published January 1, 2026 5:00 AM
From personal cake slices to diasporic cuisines, here's what will shape the Los Angeles food scene in 2026.
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Logan Voss
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Courtesy Unsplash
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Topline:
LAist food and culture writer Gab Chabrán predicts 2026's biggest food and drink trends, from cappuccinos and personal cake slices to diasporic cuisines and walk-in-only restaurants.
Why now: Conversations with chefs, restaurateurs and frequent diners reveal what's bubbling up in L.A.'s food scene as we enter a new year.
Why it matters: These predictions offer insight into how Angelenos will eat, drink and gather in 2026 — from health-conscious choices driven by GLP-1 medications to the rise of all-day cafes that maximize their appeal across different dayparts.
One advantage of being someone who writes about food is getting to talk to people involved in L.A.'s food scene — from chefs to restaurateurs to frequent diners. That gives me insight into what trends are bubbling up and likely will come into full view this year.
Last year, I predicted the Manhattan cocktail and pavlova desserts would make a comeback and Orange County's dining scene would gain momentum. This year's forecast includes a range of predictions, from personal-sized treats to low-alcohol craft beers to diasporic cuisines ready to take center stage.
Desserts
Individual cake slices will be the hot new treat in 2026 — a perfect, commitment-free indulgence for one or two.
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Sam Lashbrooke
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Courtesy Unsplash
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Personal cake slices: Forget the whole cake. Expect individual slices to be the hot new treat — a perfect, commitment-free indulgence for one (or two).
Cinnamon rolls: The breakfast pastry, whether homemade or from your local bakery, will dominate social media feeds and the baked goods conversation.
While restaurant reservations aren't going away, a new crop of restaurants will be less dependent on online bookings or will host only a few seatings per meal. This helps combat revenue loss from no-shows, reduce third-party platform fees and enable more precise staffing and inventory management.
All-day cafes with restaurant and nightlife elements
Your favorite coffee shop will also serve lunch and dinner, staying open late for drinks, thereby maximizing its concept to appeal to a broader range of customers.
Drinks
The cappuccino is making a comeback in 2026, with its carefully crafted 1:1:1 ratio of espresso, steamed milk and froth.
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Taylor Franz
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Courtesy Unsplash
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The year of the cappuccino: Move over, latte. The sophisticated cappuccino is making a comeback. With its airier texture and perfect 1:1:1 ratio of espresso, steamed milk and froth, it's a balanced coffee choice that emphasizes traditional craft over the milk-heavy lattes that have dominated American coffee culture.
Low-ABV beers: We've seen low-alcohol wine and liquors in previous years, and now it's beer's turn to be in the spotlight. As more people prefer lighter-style beers, both independent brewers and larger brands will offer additional lower-alcohol options for consumers looking to avoid hangovers.
Kevin Lee at work behind the bar at Tokyo Noir, hand-carving the ice that defines his cocktails’ texture and clarity.
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Wonho Lee
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Courtesy Tokyo Noir
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Artisan ice: In cocktail bars, expect more attention to ice in various forms, including shaved ice in different types of drinks, plus imported ice from other countries featured in cocktail menus.
Health and wellness
High-fiber vegetables like broccoli, carrots and leafy greens will get new attention in 2026 as the fibermaxxing trend emphasizes gut health.
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Inigo De La Maza
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Courtesy Unsplash
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Fibermaxxing: Fiber is set for a big year. The trend emphasizes gut health and is popping up everywhere — in high-fiber foods like beans, lentils, artichokes and brussels sprouts that will get new attention, as well as an additive in pastas, drinks and snacks to boost fullness. It aids digestion, stabilizes blood sugar and helps lower cholesterol.
Smaller portions: Driven partly by the rise of GLP-1 medications, expect smaller meal sizes everywhere — from fine dining to fast food. Del Taco recently launched a $2.99 "Micro Meal" designed specifically for lighter-eating lifestyles, featuring deliberately small portions: a mini beef and cheddar burrito, seven to 10 fries and a single donut bite. It signals what's to come.
We'll see a bigger emphasis on diasporic communities — populations displaced from their homelands through conflict, colonization or forced migration, as opposed to voluntary immigrant communities. Southern California's restaurant scene and cookbooks will spotlight Cambodian, Haitian, Palestinian and Puerto Rican cuisines — all shaped by displacement, conflict and colonial histories.
Winterfest O.C., a dual piano show, Star Wars on the big screen and more of the best things to do the first weekend of 2026.
Highlights:
Musicians Stephanie Trick and Paolo Alderighi will take you on atour through the Roaring ‘20s(the 1920s, that is, I don’t know what we’re calling the current ‘20s just yet…) with music from jazz to Broadway on two pianos at the historic Old Town Music Hall in El Segundo.
Missed your chance to kick off last year with a taxidermy class? 2026 is your year. Head to theOddities and Curiosities Expo to connect with other folks who are fascinated by the obscure and creepy, delve into antique collections, meet horror enthusiasts and just be surrounded by the weird and wonderful for an afternoon.
Indie rock trio the Dirty Projectorskick off their short residency at the Blue Note Saturday, with an early and a late set each night. Founder David Longstreth has been delving into the world of orchestral music with his 2024 release Song of the Earth, as well as movie scores, with two feature film projects in the last two years alone. Expect a mix of the band’s hit early 2000s sound and new material.
If you’ve never seen the original Star Wars trilogy on the big screen (or maybe your kids haven’t), there’s no better opportunity to make a Star Wars nerd out of someone you love than taking them to the Egyptian for a triple feature.
Happy New Year! We’re kicking off 2026 with some new year’s resolutions of our own. Each week, we’ll share some of our LAist staff’s plans to see new things coming to L.A. this year — and spots we’ve had on our list for ages but just haven’t had a chance to check out yet.
If your resolution is to get out and see more local music, you can’t go wrong with Licorice Pizza’s pick for Saturday night, when Huntington Beach punk rockers T.S.O.L. play the Regent Theater.
Saturday, January 3, 2:30 p.m. Old Town Music Hall 140 Richmond St., El Segundo COST: $25; MORE INFO
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Courtesy Agile Ticketing Solutions
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Musicians Stephanie Trick and Paolo Alderighi will take you on a tour through the Roaring '20s (the 1920s, that is, I don’t know what we’re calling the current '20s just yet…) with music from jazz to Broadway on two pianos at the historic Old Town Music Hall in El Segundo.
Oddities and Curiosities Expo
Saturday and Sunday, January 3-4 L.A. Convention Center 1201 S. Figueroa St., Downtown L.A. COST: FROM $15; MORE INFO
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Big Event Media
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Missed the chance to kick off last year with a taxidermy class? 2026 is your year. Head to the Oddities and Curiosities Expo to connect with other folks who are fascinated by the obscure and creepy, delve into antique collections, meet horror enthusiasts and just be surrounded by the weird and wonderful for an afternoon.
Winter Fest O.C.
Through Sunday, January 4 O.C. Fair Center 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa COST: FROM $24.99; MORE INFO
It’s your last chance to pretend like we have snow in the winter here. The O.C. Fair Center hosts the annual Winter Fest, complete with snow tubing, a snow play area, fireside igloo drinks, carnival rides and more.
Dirty Projectors
Saturday and Sunday, January 3-4 Blue Note 6372 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood COST: FROM $37.54; MORE INFO
David Longstreth of Dirty Projectors performs at El Rey Theatre in 2018.
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Oliver Walker
/
Getty Images
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Indie rock trio the Dirty Projectors kick off their short residency at the Blue Note Saturday, with an early and a late set each night. Founder David Longstreth has been delving into the world of orchestral music with his 2024 release Song of the Earth, as well as movie scores, with two feature film projects in the last two years alone. Expect a mix of the band’s hit early 2000s sound and new material.
Star Wars (Episodes IV, V, VI)
Saturday, January 3 The Egyptian Theatre 6712 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood COST: FROM $12; MORE INFO
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20th Century Fox
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If you’ve never seen the original Star Wars trilogy on the big screen (or maybe your kids haven’t), there’s no better opportunity to make a Star Wars nerd out of someone you love than taking them to the Egyptian for a triple feature.
Santa Monica Airport Antique Market
Sunday, January 4, 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Santa Monica Airport, Interim Open Space 3233 Donald Douglas Loop S, Santa Monica COST: $5; MORE INFO
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Courtesy Santa Monica Airport Antique & Vintage Market
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Find whatever was missing from your holiday haul with a trip to the twice-monthly Santa Monica Airport Antique Market. Treasures abound — who knows what you’ll find that you definitely must have?
Dessert Hands-On: Pannetone at Eataly
Sunday, January 4, 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. Eataly at Westfield Century City 10250 Santa Monica Blvd., Century City COST: $60.29; MORE INFO
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Courtesy Eataly
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Christmas may be over, but winter baking has just begun. Learn how to make your own classic Italian panettone at Eataly.
Sunday, January 4, 2:30 p.m. Stoneview Nature Center 5950 Stoneview Drive, Culver City COST: $17.85; MORE INFO
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Hongbin
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Unsplash
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We all became amateur birdwatchers during the pandemic, but now you can make it less of a solo pastime by joining this queer community-building event at Stoneview Nature Center. You’ll get an intro to birdwatching from an experienced guide and make some new friends.
Freak Scene with DJ Jenny LSQ
Friday, January 2, 7 p.m. Sid the Cat Auditorium 1022 El Centro Street, South Pasadena COST: FREE; MORE INFO
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Courtesy Dice FM
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Step out to the new Sid the Cat Auditorium in South Pasadena for a dance DJ night at Freak Scene.