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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • L.A. church will partner to build affordable homes
    The exterior of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angeles appears against a deep blue sky. The walls are angular and boxy, in tan shades of concrete. A black structure juts from the side of the building with a cross cut into the face in the same tan shade as the rest of the walls. There are silhouettes of people lined up below at the base of stairs leading up to the building.
    A view of the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles, the headquarters for the Archdiocese of L.A. The archdiocese has announced plans to partner with a nonprofit to develop affordable housing on church property.

    Topline:

    The Catholic church has found a new charitable calling in Los Angeles — using its extensive land holdings to help address the region’s severe shortage of affordable housing.

    What’s new: The Archdiocese of L.A. today announced it will partner with a newly formed nonprofit called Our Lady Queen of Angels Housing Alliance to get more housing built in the L.A. area.

    Why it matters: Buying land in such an expensive part of the state is often a challenge for affordable housing developers. A new state law that clears the way to expedite building on property owned by faith-based groups could help close the severe shortage of affordable units.

    Read on… to find out what immediate plans are in motion and how recent changes in state law are catalyzing the church’s plans to fast-track new affordable housing — even in areas resistant to low-income apartments.

    Los Angeles faces a severe shortage of housing for low-income renters. But buying land in such an expensive part of the state is often a challenge for affordable housing developers.

    Listen 0:46
    Why the Archdiocese of LA is jumping into the affordable housing business

    California lawmakers offered one possible answer for where to build when they passed SB 4, a statewide law that took effect earlier this year. It allows religious groups to fast-track new housing on properties they already own.

    Now, the Catholic church in L.A. is laying out plans to do just that. The Archdiocese of L.A. announced Wednesday it will partner with a newly formed nonprofit called Our Lady Queen of Angels Housing Alliance to develop affordable housing in Southern California.

    The church, already known for its efforts to assist immigrants and feed unhoused people, is aiming to use its extensive land holdings to help address the region’s housing crisis. Their first project — located on Archdiocese land currently used by Catholic Charities — will construct affordable apartments next to L.A. City College for community college students and youth transitioning out of foster care.

    Amy Anderson, the executive director for Queen of Angels Housing, said the mission is to confront one of the region’s biggest moral dilemmas head-on.

    “We're losing a generation of people to housing insecurity,” said Anderson, who served as L.A.’s Chief Housing Officer under former Mayor Eric Garcetti. “It's very difficult for people to live in health — mental health, physical health — and for them to get ahead when there's no physical foundation, no home for which to do that.”

    How Catholic schools and convents could sprout new housing

    Anderson said this work will be catalyzed by SB 4, but the idea predates changes in state law. She said L.A. Catholics in the church, philanthropy and business communities have been planning to get more involved with housing development for years.

    The new nonprofit will explore opportunities to build apartments on underused parish parking lots, Anderson said.

    As school enrollment declines and membership in religious orders dwindles, Queen of Angels Housing could also develop former Catholic schools or convents.

    “The properties are in transition because our communities are constantly changing,” Anderson said. “It does create this opportunity to re-evaluate what can be done with that land.”

    Why it matters for other religious groups

    California housing policy experts said it’s encouraging to see the Catholic church taking action to fulfill the promise of the state’s new “Yes In God’s Backyard” law.

    “This is a big deal. It shows that religious organizations feel comfortable moving on to the next step,” said Muhammad Alameldin, a researcher with UC Berkeley’s Terner Center.

    “The Catholic Church is one of the biggest religious institutions in the country,” he added. “They could really help set the first step to developing more faith-based lands into affordable housing.”

    L.A. Archdiocese by the numbers

    According to figures provided by the church, the Archdiocese of L.A. has:

    • 288 parishes
    • 265 elementary and high schools
    • 4.35 million Catholics

    Last year, Alameldin and his colleagues published a study that found faith-based organizations and nonprofit colleges across California own enough land suitable for housing development to equal nearly five times the city of Oakland.

    But Alameldin said it’s one thing for churches to support the idea of new housing on their property — it’s another to actually construct it.

    “Building housing is one of the most complicated things you could do,” Alameldin said. “A lot of religious organizations were sort of left in limbo. Like, OK, this is legal. What's the next step?”

    What the alliance’s first project will look like

    So far, Queen of Angels Housing has only announced details for its maiden project. Called the Willow Brook development, it aims to erect a 74-unit apartment building just north of the L.A. City College campus in East Hollywood.

    A digital rendering shows the exterior of the Willow Brook housing development being proposed on a site owned by the L.A. Archdiocese.
    A rendering of the Willow Brook development being proposed on a site owned by the L.A. Archdiocese.
    (
    Our Lady Queen of Angels Housing Alliance
    )

    Twenty percent of the apartments will be reserved for youth transitioning out of foster care. Research carried out in California has shown that 1-in-4 transitional age youth experience homelessness in their late teens and early 20s. Rents at Willow Brook for this group will range between $400 and $500 per month, a fraction of what similar market-rate units cost.

    David Ambroz, a former L.A. Planning Commissioner and an advocate for foster youth who experienced homelessness when he was young, said the Catholic church is demonstrating that local institutions can step up to do more for these young adults.

    “Imagine every foster kid in Los Angeles with the hope at the end of their tenure in foster care for housing and an education, as opposed to hopelessness, violence and instability in housing,” Ambroz said. “I am so bullish that this is a major first step in that direction.”

    The rest of the Willow Brook apartments will be set aside for low to moderate-income community college students, who also face high risk of homelessness. About a quarter of California community college students experience homelessness at some point over the course of a year, according to a recent report from the state’s Legislative Analyst's Office.

    The Willow Brook site is currently home to the St. Mary’s Center, a Catholic Charities location that provides education to unaccompanied minors. The classes are set to continue for the next school year, but will later move to another location in order to make way for the housing project.

    What will the neighbors think? 

    Anderson said Queen of Angels Housing will likely submit the Willow Brook project for approval in late September through ED1, the city’s program to fast-track 100% affordable housing.

    She said future projects could rely on a key provision in SB 4: the ability for churches to get streamlined approvals for apartments in areas normally reserved for single-family homes.

    “We would look very closely at which sites we felt like it made the most sense to pursue something like that,” Anderson said. “Sometimes, single family-zoned property is directly adjacent to a commercial corridor, or directly adjacent to a multi-family neighborhood.”

    The prospect of building low-income apartments near pricey single-family houses in L.A. remains controversial. City planners are excluding single-family neighborhoods (which make up 72% of the city’s residential land) from efforts to plan for hundreds of thousands of new homes.

    Homeowners are already fighting proposals to let churches build on property acquired in the future. Maria Pavlou Kalban with the Sherman Oaks Homeowners Association wrote in a recent letter to the L.A. City Council, “We oppose these organizations being allowed to build multi-family housing on land they acquired after January 1, 2024 in single-family neighborhoods.”

    What’s next for housing by houses of worship

    At this early stage, it’s unclear how much land the Archdiocese intends to put toward housing development. But local Catholic leaders are signaling that housing will be a growing part of the church’s charitable mission.

    L.A. Archbishop José Gomez will serve as chair of the board for Queen of Angels Housing. In a statement, he said: “Through Catholic Charities and our ministries on Skid Row and elsewhere, we have been working for many years to provide shelter and services for our homeless brothers and sisters. With this new initiative we see exciting possibilities to make more affordable housing available, especially for families and young people.”

    The Catholic church isn’t the only religious organization in L.A. pursuing affordable housing development. The Jewish congregation Ikar is working on a 60-unit project on the site of its offices in L.A.’s Pico-Robertson neighborhood, and the multi-faith organization L.A. Voice has been helping local churches develop early plans for projects of their own.

  • Questions of accuracy around Washington Post plan
    The incoming editor of <em>The Washington Post</em>, Robert Winnett, has withdrawn from the job and will remain in the U.K.
    The Washington Post is experimenting with personalized news podcasts created by AI.

    Topline:

    The Washington Post's new offering, "Your Personal Podcast," uses artificial intelligence to customize podcasts for its users, blending the algorithm you might find in a news feed with the convenience of portable audio.

    What critics are saying: The AI podcast immediately made headlines — and drew criticisms from people questioning its accuracy, and the motives behind it.

    What the Post is saying: Bailey Kattleman, head of product and design at the Post, calls it "an AI-powered audio briefing experience" — and one that will soon let listeners talk back to it.

    Read on ... for more details and answers to the biggest questions about this new experiment.

    It's not your mother's podcast — or your father's, or anyone else's. The Washington Post's new offering, "Your Personal Podcast," uses artificial intelligence to customize podcasts for its users, blending the algorithm you might find in a news feed with the convenience of portable audio.

    The podcast is "personalized automatically based on your reading history" of Post articles, the newspaper says on its help page. Listeners also have some control: At the click of a button, they can alter their podcast's topic mix — or even swap its computer-generated "hosts."

    The AI podcast immediately made headlines — and drew criticisms from people questioning its accuracy, and the motives behind it.

    Nicholas Quah, a critic and staff writer for Vulture and New York magazine who writes a newsletter about podcasts, says the AI podcast is an example of the Post's wide-ranging digital experiments — but one that didn't go quite right.

    "This is one of many technologically, digitally oriented experiments that they're doing" that is aimed at "getting more audience, breaking into new demographics," he says. Those broader efforts range from a generative AI tool for readers to a digital publishing platform. But in this case, Quah adds, "It feels like it's compromising the core idea of what the news product is."

    On that help page, the newspaper stresses that the podcast is in its early beta phase and "is not a traditional editorial podcast."

    Bailey Kattleman, head of product and design at the Post, calls it "an AI-powered audio briefing experience" — and one that will soon let listeners talk back to it.

    "In an upcoming release, they'll be able to actually interact and ask follow up questions to dig in deeper to what they've just heard," Kattleman says in an interview with NPR.

    As technically sophisticated as that sounds, there are many questions about the new podcast's accuracy — even its ability to correctly pronounce the names of Post journalists it cites. Semafor reported that errors, cited by staffers at the Postincluded "misattributing or inventing quotes and inserting commentary, such as interpreting a source's quotes" as the paper's own stance.

    In the newspaper's app, a note advises listeners to "verify information" by checking the podcast against its source material.

    In a statement, the Washington Post Guild — which represents newsroom employees and other staff — tells NPR, "We are concerned about this new product and its rollout," alleging that it undermines the Post's mission and its journalists' work.

    Citing the paper's standing practice of issuing a correction if a story contains an error, the guild added, "why would we support any technology that is held to a different, lower standard?"

    So, why is the Post rolling out an AI podcast? And will other news and audio outlets follow its lead?

    Here are some questions, and answers:

    Isn't AI podcasting already a thing?

    "The Post has certainly gone out on a ledge here among U.S. legacy publishers," Andrew Deck tells NPR. But he adds that the newspaper isn't the first to experiment with AI-generated podcasts in the wider news industry.

    Deck, who writes about journalism and AI for Harvard University's Nieman Lab, points to examples such as the BBC's My Club Daily, an AI-generated soccer podcast that lets users hear content related to their favorite club. In 2023, he adds, "a Swiss public broadcaster used voice clones of real radio hosts on the air."

    News outlets have also long offered an automated feature that converts text articles into computer-generated voices.

    Even outside of the news industry, AI tools for creating podcasts and other audio are more accessible than ever. Some promise to streamline the editing process, while others can synthesize documents or websites into what sounds like a podcast conversation.

    Why do publishers want to experiment with AI podcasts?

    "It's cost-effective," says Gabriel Soto, senior director of research at Edison Research, which tracks the podcast industry. "You cut out many of the resources and people needed to produce a podcast (studios, writers, editors, and the host themselves)."

    And if a brand can create a successful AI virtual podcast in today's highly competitive podcasting market, Soto adds, it could become a valuable intellectual property in the future.

    Deck says that if the Post's experiment works, the newspaper "may be able to significantly scale up and expand its audio journalism offerings, without investing in the labor that would normally be required to expand."

    In an interview, Kattleman stresses the new product isn't meant to replace traditional podcasts: "We think they have a unique and enduring role, and that's not going away at the Post."

    What's unique about the Post AI podcast?

    For Deck, the level of customization it promises is an innovation. Being able to tailor a podcast specific to one person, he says, "is arguably beyond what any podcast team in journalism right now can produce manually."

    In an example the Post published, listeners can choose from voice options with names like "Charlie and Lucy" and "Bert and Ernie."

    Kattleman says her team was working from the idea that for an audience, there isn't a "one size fits all" when it comes to AI and journalism.

    "Some people want that really straight briefing style; some people prefer something more conversational and more voicey," she says.

    Quah says that adding an AI podcast is a bid to make stories accessible to a broader audience.

    He says that with the podcast, the Post seems to be trying to reach young people who "don't want to read anymore, they just want to listen to the news."

    A key goal, Kattleman says, is to make podcasts more flexible, to appeal to younger listeners who are on the go.

    Outlining the process behind the Post's AI podcast, Kattleman says, "Everything is based on Washington Post journalism."

    An LLM, or large language model, converts a story into a short audio script, she says. A second LLM then vets the script for accuracy. After the final script is stitched together, Kattleman adds, the voice narrates the episode.

    Will listeners embrace an AI news podcast?

    Soto, of Edison Research, says that 1 in 5 podcast consumers say they've listened to an AI-narrated podcast.

    But, he adds that for podcast listeners, "many prefer the human connection, accepting AI tools to assist in creating the content, but not in executing or hosting the podcast."

    The new AI podcast reminds Deck a bit of the hyper-personalized choices for users offered by TikTok and other social media.

    "There is a level of familiarity
    and, arguably, comfort with algorithmic curation among younger audiences," he says.

    But while younger audiences tend to be tech savvy, many of them are also thoughtful about authenticity and connection.

    "Community is at the core of why people listen to podcasts," Soto says.

    Then there's the idea of a host or creator's personality, which drives engagement on TikTok and other platforms.

    "These creators have built a relationship with their audience — and maybe even trust — even if they haven't spoken to sources themselves," Deck says. "This type of news content is a far cry from the disembodied banter of AI podcast hosts."

    What are the potential downsides of AI podcasts?

    One big potential consequence is the loss of jobs — and for companies, the loss of talent.

    "The automation of it kind of erases the entire sort of voice performance industry," Quah says. "There are people who do this for a living," he adds, who could "produce higher quality versions of these recordings."

    There are also concerns that, if AI chooses a story and controls how it's presented, it might create an echo chamber, omitting context or skepticism that a journalist would likely provide.

    "AI-based news personalization tends to land firmly in the camp of delivering audiences what they want to know," Deck says.

    Deck says he's willing to give the Post's AI podcast a bit of time to see how it plays out. But Deck does have a chief concern: "I can say point blank, generative AI models hallucinate."

    And when AI models are wrong, he says, they're often confidently so.

    Blurring boundaries between human and AI voices could also raise questions of trust — a critical factor for a news organization.

    As Soto puts it, "What happens when your audience expects content from the real you and ends up finding AI instead?"

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  • Legendary OC venue to close
    Four people -- three men and one women -- posing in the backstage of a concert venue.
    No Doubt, Tony Kanal, Gwen Stefani, Adrian Young and Tom Dumont, backstage at the Wadsworth Theater before a taping of ABC Family's "Front Row Center" in Los Angeles, Ca. Sunday, November 11, 2001. *Exclusive* Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images.

    Topline:

    Sad news for pretty much anyone who went out to see bands big and small over the past few decades. A storied Orange County indie venue is closing down after some 30 years.

    Why it matters: Over the years the venue has hosted budding local bands and big acts alike, including No Doubt and Turnstile.

    Last shows: Chain Reaction in Anaheim announced on their Instagram that their final shows will be on Dec. 18 and Dec. 19. The Rancho Santa Margarita band Movements will headline.

    No word on why the venue is shutting down.

    "This call wasn't made quickly. We wrestled with it and have ultimately made the decision to close our doors," said Chain Reaction management on Instagram.

    "We want to thank you for the friendships and memories made in our special club. Thank you for supporting us through the years and when we needed it most," the post continued.

  • Fewer characters went through with the procedure
    A teenage girl with brown hair and a jean jacket with a hospital bracelet on talks to a woman with a brownish-red sweater and short brown hair.
    Abby Ryder Fortson portrayed Kristi Wheeler, a teen who came into the hospital for a medication abortion, on The Pitt.

    Topline:

    Storylines about abortion and conversations about it showed up on television 65 times this year, on prestigious dramas like The Pitt and Call the Midwife, on reality shows such as W.A.G.s to Riches and Love is Blind and on lowbrow animated comedies like Family Guy and South Park. That's about the same as last year. In 2024, TV shows featured 66 such plotlines.

    Why it matters: "I think there still is a lot of stigma, even in allegedly liberal Hollywood," says researcher Steph Herold. She says the report, which has come out for about a decade, reflects a profound lack of accurate representation of abortion use in America.

    Read on ... for more details from the annual Abortion Onscreen report.

    Storylines about abortion and conversations about it showed up on television 65 times this year, on prestigious dramas like The Pitt and Call the Midwife, on reality shows such as W.A.G.s to Riches and Love is Blind and on lowbrow animated comedies like Family Guy and South Park. That's about the same as last year. In 2024, TV shows featured 66 such plotlines.

    But in the past few years, there's been a significant drop in the number of characters who actually went through with an abortion. 37% obtained an abortion in 2025, a 14% decline since 2023.

    That's according to the annual Abortion Onscreen report. It comes from Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health, a research program on abortion and reproductive health based at the University of California San Francisco.

    "I think there still is a lot of stigma, even in allegedly liberal Hollywood," says researcher Steph Herold. She says the report, which has come out for about a decade, reflects a profound lack of accurate representation of abortion use in America. For example, she points to research showing that about 60% of real life Americans who seek an abortion deal with some sort of barrier.

    "But only about a third of people who are characters on screen face any kind of barrier to abortion," Herold said. "Whether it was not being able to come up with the cost of the abortion, not having somebody to watch their kids or cover for them at work, having to deal with clinics that are miles away, or in other states having insurance that wouldn't cover the cost." Most TV shows in 2025 depicting women struggling to get abortions focused on legal obstacles in the past and present.

    On TV, 80% of characters seeking abortions are upper or middle class, but in real life, most abortion patients struggle to make ends meet. "This [disparity] obscures the role that poverty plays in obstructing access to abortion, and perhaps explains why we so rarely see plotlines in which characters wrestle with financial barriers to abortion access," the study says.

    This year, a teenager on The Pitt sought abortion pills to end her pregnancy — one of only three stories depicting medication abortion out of 65 plotlines about abortion this year. That's another disparity between representation on-screen and real-world numbers: research shows that abortion pills account for the majority of abortions in the U.S. Another difference: only 8% of people seeking abortion on TV are parents. In real life, most abortion patients have at least one child.

    It is unrealistic, says Herold, to expect TV to perfectly reflect current abortion use in the U.S., but she said she was disappointed by certain trends. Fewer characters this year received emotional support around their abortions, and more shows, she said, including Chicago Med, 1923, Breathless and Secrets We Keep featured plotlines that emphasized shame and stigma around abortions, especially because of religion. These storylines, the report says, "both obscure the diversity of religious observance among people having abortions, portraying religious patients as exclusively Christian, and also only associating religion with prohibiting abortion, instead of being a meaningful or supportive part of someone's abortion decision-making and experience."

    But even though abortion has long been a hot-button political issue, Herold says millions of Americans have had some sort of experience with abortions. "Whether it's having one themselves or helping a daughter or a friend," she said, adding that stories that reflect a diversity of abortion experiences will be familiar to many viewers.

    One bright spot, she added, was that television is doing a better job of reflecting the racial realities of abortion. A slight majority of characters in abortion plotlines are people of color — and although they are by far the majority of abortion seekers in real life, this marks a notable improvement from a decade ago, when TV shows more often portrayed women seeking abortions as wealthy and white.

  • Is the brightest meteor show of the year
    A meteor is seen burning in space over a desert. Various stars surround the meteor. A caravan of stargazers is seen in the bottom left.
    A meteor burns up in the sky over al-Abrak desert north of Kuwait City during the annual Geminid meteor shower.

    Topline:

    Geminids, the strongest meteor shower of the year hit their peak this weekend.

    Why it matters: Over 150 meteors per hour are expected to burn through the night sky tonight and Sunday.

    Read on ... to find the best places and learn the best time to watch the celestial phenomenon.

    Geminids, the strongest meteor shower of the year, hit a peak this weekend, sending over 150 meteors per hour through the night sky tonight and Sunday.

    Vanessa Alarcon, an astronomical observer at the Griffith Observatory, says despite being the best and brightest every year, these meteors don’t tend to get many fans.

    " It's usually not as heavily attended, I think because it's a lot colder in the winter. So it's definitely a deterrent, but technically, it's more meteors per hour than the Perseids are," Alarcon said.

    The Perseids are typically visible between July and August, but this summer, they were mostly drowned out because of light pollution from the full moon.

    Alarcon says it will be a different story this weekend.

    " The Geminids ... there's about a 25% crescent moon. So it's actually going be even better than the Perseids," Alarcon said.

    Where to go for the best view

    For the best viewing experience, you'll have to brave the cold of the deserts and mountains at night, but it should be worth the trip.

    "You should go to a darker sky," Alarcon said. "And basically, you just want to get away from the city lights — anything away from the city lights is going to be an improvement from trying to watch it at home."

    When to best see it

    The Geminids are notable for being exceptionally bright, burning like fireballs for several seconds. The meteors can be seen after 8 p.m. tonight, Alarcon said, peaking between 1:20 and 2:20 a.m. and visible until 5:20 a.m.