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The most important stories for you to know today
  • Designer was 'international arbiter of taste'

    Topline:

    Italian fashion designer Valentino died Monday at his Roman residence. He was 93.

    Valentino's legacy: In the world of haute couture, Valentino embraced sophistication, elegance and traditional femininity through his dresses. His work embodied romance, luxury and an aristocratic lifestyle. He dressed the likes of Audrey Hepburn and Jackie Onassis, as well as modern stars, including Anna Wintour to Gwyneth Paltrow and Zendaya.

    How he got his start: Valentino owed much of his success to his former lover and business partner, Giancarlo Giammetti. The two met in Rome in 1960, where Valentino had opened his first couture studio. They founded Valentino Company the same year. Together, the pair built a fashion empire over five decades.

    Retirement: They sold the Valentino company in 1998 for nearly $300 million. It made $1.36 billion in revenue in 2021, according to Reuters.

    Read on ... for more about Valentino's early life.

    Italian fashion designer Valentino died Monday at his Roman residence. He was 93. His foundation announced his death on Instagram.

    Dubbed an "international arbiter of taste" by Vogue, notable women wore his designs at funerals and weddings, as well as on the red carpet. He dressed the likes of Audrey Hepburn and Jackie Onassis, as well as modern stars, including Anna Wintour to Gwyneth Paltrow and Zendaya.

    The image of style and lavish living, Valentino's signature features included crisp suits and a "crème brûlée" complexion — due to his fervor for tanning. He was heavily inspired by the stars he saw on the silver screen and had a lifelong fixation with glamour.

    "I love a beautiful lady. I love a beautiful dog. I love a beautiful piece of furniture. I love beauty. It's not my fault," he said in The Last Emperor, a 2008 documentary about him.

    In the world of haute couture, Valentino embraced sophistication, elegance and traditional femininity through his dresses and trademarked a vibrant red hue. His work embodied romance, luxury and an aristocratic lifestyle.

    He was born Valentino Garavani and named after the silent movie star Rudolph Valentino. A self-described spoiled child, the designer acquired a taste for the expensive from a young age; his shoes were custom-made, and the stripe, color and buttons of his blazers were designed to his specifications.

    His father, a well-to-do electrical supplier, and his mother, who appreciated the value of a well-made garment, catered to their young son's refined palate and later supported his fashion endeavors, sending him to school and financing his early work.

    Growing up in the small town of Voghera, Italy, he learned sewing from his Aunt Rosa in Lombardy. After high school, he moved to Paris to study fashion and take on apprenticeships.

    Valentino owed much of his success to his former lover and business partner, Giancarlo Giammetti. The two met in a café on the famed Via Condotti in Rome in 1960, where Valentino had opened his first couture studio.

    They founded Valentino Company the same year, and its first ready-to-wear shop opened in Milan in 1969. Together, the pair built a fashion empire over five decades.

    They separated romantically when Valentino was 30 but remained business partners and close friends. Valentino knew little about business and accounting before meeting Giammetti; together, they formed two parts of a whole — Giammetti the business mind, and Valentino the creative force.

    "Valentino has a perfect vision of how a woman should dress," Giammetti told Charlie Rose in 2009. "He looks for beauty. Women should be more beautiful. His work is to make women more beautiful."

    They sold the Valentino company in 1998 for nearly $300 million. It made $1.36 billion in revenue in 2021, according to Reuters.

    Even after his retirement in 2008, he couldn't completely leave fashion behind and continued to design dresses for opera productions.

    Once the fashion world became more accessible to the public, millions of aspiring fashionistas bought jeans, handbags, shoes, umbrellas and even Lincoln Continentals with his gleaming "V" monogram. By the peak of his career, Valentino's popularity would rival that of the pope's in Rome.

    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • At Expo Park museum, a 1967 speech feels current
    People gather in the shade under the sign for CAAM, the California African American Museum.
    People gather outside the California African American Museum in Exposition Park on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

    Topline:

    At the California African American Museum’s annual King Day event, museumgoers listened to and reflected on a speech the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered less than a year before his assassination.

    “Three Evils of Society”: As part of its program celebrating the civil rights leader, the Exposition Park museum played King’s keynote address to the 1967 National Conference on New Politics in Chicago. Attendees participated in a group discussion after.

    Read on … for more about the Martin Luther King Jr. Day event.

    The words were spoken by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1967. But for those listening to a recording in 2026 at the California African American Museum, they still felt fresh.

    “When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, economic exploitation and militarism are incapable of being conquered,” King said in “The Three Evils of Society,” his keynote address at the 1967 National Conference on New Politics in Chicago.

    Cameron Shaw, executive director of the Exposition Park museum, told LAist on Monday that the speech has “incredible relevance to the political and social moment and what we’re going through as a people today.”

    The playing of the speech was part of the program the California African American Museum created for its annual “King Day” event, held on the federal holiday that honors the legacy of the Baptist preacher whose nonviolent protests and eloquent speeches helped shift American attitudes about race in the 1960s and beyond and lead to landmark Civil Rights legislation.

    In a brief discussion after the speech, museumgoers shared their thoughts on King’s words. One attendee spoke about the need to interrogate racism as a systematic ill, not just as one-off acts. Another commented on the importance of standing up to injustice.

    Shaw says the museum’s celebration on Martin Luther King Jr. Day has evolved over the last several years, but one of the main throughlines she sees is the continued message of “speaking truth to power.”

    “When we celebrate Dr. King today, we celebrate all of the folks past and present who have been brave enough to speak truth to power,” Shaw said. “That is something we truly need.”

    Monday’s event also featured a faux stained glass workshop inspired by an exhibition at the museum on architect Amaza Lee Meredith. The Inner City Youth Orchestra of Los Angeles will also perform a tribute concert.

    The museum’s King Day event was one of several celebrating the Civil Rights leader this weekend in L.A.

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  • Tickets got snapped up quick for SoFi event
    A man in a Rams football uniform jumps over the goal line into the End Zone on a snowy football field.
    Kyren Williams scores a touchdown against the Bears on Sunday at chilly Soldier Field in Chicago on Sunday.

    Topline:

    Rams fans are snapping up $10 tickets for Sunday's SoFi Stadium watch party of the NFC Championship game.

    Why it matters: There won't be any football on the field in Inglewood on Jan. 25. But thousands of Rams fans will get the chance to cheer together during the NFC Championship game.

    Why now: The SoFi event is happening because of the Rams' overtime heroics in Chicago on Sunday. They beat the favored Bears, 20-17, to advance to the NFC Championship game. One more win and they'll be back in the Super Bowl. The Rams' most recent appearance in the big game was Super Bowl LVI (56 for those of us who don't count in Roman), when they defeated the Cincinnati Bengals.

    About those tickets: A check at 11 a.m. Monday showed thousands of people in the Ticketmaster queue waiting to get access to the watch party tickets — but they were all gone once the purchase window opened. By noon, it appeared more tickets had become available. Your luck may vary. You can check this Rams website for more info.

    What's next: The Rams face the Seattle Seahawks at Lumen Stadium on Sunday, Jan. 25. Kickoff is at 3:30 p.m. The winner of that matchup will face the winner of the AFC Championship (New England Patriots vs. Denver Broncos, kickoff at noon Sunday) in Super Bowl LX (60) at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, home to the San Francisco 49ers.

  • We Buy Souls, a dog comedy night and more
    We Buy Souls gallery show with a picture of a red telephone and other displays.
    We Buy Souls gats a gallery show at Good Mother Gallery through February 14.

    In this edition:

    Patrick Page takes on Shakespeare’s villains, a rock & roll sleaze show, The Puffy Chair and more of the best things to do this week.

    Highlights:

    • Shakespeare’s villains are as timely as ever, brilliantly laid out and executed by actor and writer Patrick Page in this one-man show at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica. In this 90-minute show, Page blends his take on Shakespeare’s personal history with current pop culture references and expert quick-turn soliloquies that embody the Bard’s most vicious characters.
    • There’s art in the tools that make art. That’s the premise of the current show at Craft in America, Tools of the Trades: American Handmade Implements & Devices. Cleverly laid out on the walls and pedestals of the gallery space, everything from intricately engraved scissors to saws to compasses and carving tools is on display and organized by their utility.
    • Do you like fun? Night Scene has it all — they call it a “rock & roll sleaze show” but it’s a little bit of everything — DJ night, live performances, cool visuals, featured dancers and more. This week, check out sets from Frankie and The Studs, special guest Domenica Fossati (Brazilian Girls) and creator Ashley Hayward.
    • Laugh along with your furry friend (and meet some potential new ones!) at Wallis Annenberg PetSpace’s Stand Up For Pets comedy night. Can't Even Comedy presents an evening of stand-up headlined by Tacarra Williams (Bring the Funny, Totally Funny Kids) and hosted by Caitlin Benson.
    • You’ve seen them all over — those telephone pole signs proclaiming WE BUY SOULS! that look like ads, but really are an art installation and the brainchild of L.A.-based artist RABI (David Emanuel Mordechai Torres). This conceptual installation brings his long-running subservice public intervention into a gallery space for the first time ever. 

    LAist has a full list of all the events going on today in celebration of MLK Day — check those out here.

    I spent Wednesday night screaming my head off with Dave Grohl and the Foo Fighters as they spent two-and-a-half hours ripping through their hits at the Forum, with an audience that included friends and family of the band (I even spied legendary tennis star John McEnroe in the crowd). The show included a touching — and subdued — solo tribute to drummer Taylor Hawkins, who died in 2022. They are one of the best bands to see live (the screaming just isn’t as cathartic on Spotify!), and we’re lucky to call them Angelenos.

    There’s all kinds of music to lift your spirits and lighten your load this week, too. Licorice Pizza’s upcoming picks include indie-pop band Echosmith at the Mint on Monday, and Replacements legend Tommy Stinson at Alex’s Bar, also on Monday. Tuesday, U.K. singer-songwriter Jacob Banks is at the Troubadour, and on Wednesday there are a ton of options, including Robert Randolph at the Grammy Museum, hip-hop star Duckwrth at the Blue Note, Saving Abel at the Whisky and the Metal Hall of Fame ceremony at the Roxy. Also on Wednesday, Twice begin their residency at the Forum through Sunday. Plus, the Beachlife lineup for May was just announced, with sets from James Taylor and Duran Duran on tap — something to look forward to!

    Elsewhere on LAist, you can meet a landlord who uses astrological signs to choose renters, find out what chefs think about the new tortilla mandate and try a Taiwanese bagel in Pasadena.

    Events

    All The Devils Are Here

    Through January 26 
    Broad Stage
    1310 11th Street, Santa Monica
    COST: FROM $45; MORE INFO 

    Shakespeare’s villains are as timely as ever, brilliantly laid out and executed by actor and writer Patrick Page in this one-man show at the Broad Stage in Santa Monica. Page has a long history of playing the biggest roles in Shakespeare, from Brutus in Julius Caesar opposite Denzel Washington to Iago in Othello at the Washington Shakespeare Company. In this 90-minute show, Page blends his take on Shakespeare’s personal history with current pop culture references and expert quick-turn soliloquies that embody the Bard’s most vicious characters; I especially enjoyed the after-show talkback, where Page generously answers your most pressing Shakespeare questions.


    Tools of the Trades: American Handmade Implements & Devices

    Through February 28
    Craft in America
    8415 W. Third Street, Fairfax 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    An axe and three pairs of scissors, plus another small cutting tool arranged on a white background.
    (
    Courtesy Craft in America
    )

    There’s art in the tools that make art. That’s the premise of the current show at Craft in America, Tools of the Trades: American Handmade Implements & Devices. Cleverly laid out on the walls and pedestals of the gallery space, everything from intricately engraved scissors to saws to compasses and carving tools is on display and organized by their utility.


    The Puffy Chair

    Monday, January 19, 7:30 p.m. 
    Vidiots
    4884 Eagle Rock Blvd., Eagle Rock 
    COST: SOLD OUT, WAITLIST AVAILABLE; MORE INFO

    A light-skinned woman and light-skinned man take a selfie over a highway.
    (
    Courtesy Ink Films
    )

    Original mumblecore brothers Mark and Jay Duplass have gone on to numerous mainstream projects (Mindy Project, Industry and Transparent, just to name a few), but it all started with indie darling The Puffy Chair. The brothers, plus Katie Aselton, will join for a screening of the roadtrip/buddy comedy about an adventure to pick up, you guessed it, a puffy chair, on the film’s 20th anniversary.


    Night Scene 

    Wednesday, January 21, 8 p.m.
    Zebulon 
    2478 Fletcher Drive, Frogtown
    COST: $38.63; MORE INFO

    A poster for night scene featuring two legs wearing purple leather knee-high boots
    (
    Courtesy Dice
    )

    Do you like fun? Night Scene has it all — they call it a “rock & roll sleaze show” but it’s a little bit of everything — DJ night, live performances, cool visuals, featured dancers and more. This week, check out sets from Frankie and The Studs, special guest Domenica Fossati (Brazilian Girls) and creator Ashley Hayward.


    Stand Up for Pets

    Wednesday, January 21, 7 p.m.
    Wallis Annenberg PetSpace 
    12005 Bluff Creek Drive, Playa Vista 
    COST: $30; MORE INFO 

    A poster for Stand Up for Pets with a woman with dark skin tone surrounded by dogs.
    (
    Wallis Annenberg PetSpace
    /
    Eventbrite
    )

    Laugh along with your furry friend (and meet some potential new ones!) at Wallis Annenberg PetSpace’s Stand Up For Pets comedy night. Can't Even Comedy presents an evening of stand-up headlined by Tacarra Williams (Bring the Funny, Totally Funny Kids) and hosted by Caitlin Benson.


    Angel City FC at LA Works MLK Day Volunteer Festival 

    Monday, January 19, 12 p.m. to 4 p.m.
    LA Memorial Coliseum 
    3911 S. Figueroa Street, University Park 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    A group of people behind a sign that says"LA WORKS" outside the LA Memorial Coliseum
    (
    Angel City FC
    /
    Eventbrite
    )

    Use your day off to support youth in L.A. with Angel City FC and L.A. Works. You’ll help put together 1,500 sports kits for youth across Los Angeles, giving them the tools they need for learning and play. The opportunity brings volunteers like you together to honor King’s community vision.


    We Buy Souls

    Through February 14
    Good Mother Gallery
    5103 W. Adams Blvd., West Adams
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    A sign reading "We Buy Souls" on a telephone pole in front of a palm tree.
    (
    Courtesy Rabi
    )

    You’ve seen them all over — those telephone pole signs that look like ads, but really are an art installation and the brainchild of L.A.-based artist RABI (David Emanuel Mordechai Torres). This conceptual installation brings his long-running subservice public intervention into a gallery space for the first time ever. WE BUY SOULS! has attracted attention for its place as “artwork, equal parts installation, performance, marketing experiment and dark satire,” with the posters directing people to a hotline where they are prompted to leave a message dictating the value of their soul and why. Ponder that and other deep thoughts while exploring RABI’s work at the Good Mother Gallery in West Adams.


    Speaker Series

    Monday, January 19, 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. 
    Alana’s Coffee Venice
    2524 Pacific Ave., Venice 
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    Three inspiring speakers from across the worlds of Hollywood and literature will share stories and insights into their careers — for free! — at the new Alana’s Coffee speaker series. Inspired by Lectures on Tap and other “hang and learn” projects popping up, this first one features Patricia Rust (The King of Skittledeedoo), Kimberly O’Hara (author and storycoach) and Nancy Nyberg (former Fox exec).


    Descanso L.A. One-Year Celebration

    Thursday, January 22, 5 p.m. to close
    Descanso
    5773 Wilshire Blvd., Miracle Mile
    COST: $55; MORE INFO

    A taco bar setup with sauces, meat, tortillas and three cocktails.
    (
    Courtesy JS2 PR
    )

    Celebrate a year of new Mexican spot Descanso on Wilshire with an all-you-can-eat taco night for $55. Plus live painting, a DJ, margarita flights and more. The event benefits Food Access L.A.

  • Houses left standing by fires still hazardous
    a person in a white hazmat suit uses a shovel to move dirt and debris around behind red and yellow caution tape
    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers contractors clear the remains of a building destroyed in the Eaton Fire in Altadena.

    Topline:

    After the devastating Eaton and Palisades fires, federal officials and private companies led a patchwork of efforts to remove debris and contaminated material from areas that burned and others covered in toxic ash.

    The backstory: In Pasadena and Altadena, a group of fire survivors formed Eaton Fire Residents United to help each other navigate the various post-fire challenges, notably: making sure their homes were adequately cleaned of contaminants. After not getting clear answers from their insurance companies, members of the group hired experts who began testing their homes following the disaster. The insides of 50 homes were also tested after being remediated. Out of 45 where interior surfaces were wiped down to test for lead, 43 had at least some level of contamination with the toxic metal, which has no safe level of exposure and can cause learning disabilities, lower IQs and other permanent developmental problems.

    What officials are saying: They do not have any standards for testing inside homes after fires in the wildland urban interface, the transition zone between developed areas and unoccupied land.

    Read on ... for more on what residents and officials are doing to address the issue.

    After the devastating Eaton and Palisades fires, federal officials and private companies led a patchwork of efforts to remove debris and contaminated material from areas that burned and others covered in toxic ash.

    One year later, homeowners have had the inside of their houses tested after completing remediation and many found hazardous levels of chemicals including lead and asbestos. Community groups and scientists who have worked together on testing projects are now pushing for a more stringent certification system to ensure families don’t move into homes with dangerous levels of pollutants.

    In Pasadena and Altadena, a group of fire survivors formed Eaton Fire Residents United to help each other navigate the various post-fire challenges, notably: making sure their homes were adequately cleaned of contaminants. After not getting clear answers from their insurance companies, members of the group hired experts who began testing their homes following the disaster. The insides of 50 homes were also tested after being remediated. Out of 45 where interior surfaces were wiped down to test for lead, 43 had at least some level of contamination with the toxic metal, which has no safe level of exposure and can cause learning disabilities, lower IQs and other permanent developmental problems.

    Nicole Maccalla is a longtime Altadena resident and data scientist who co-founded Eaton Fire Residents United last January and leads its data work. She said her insurance company has not approved any testing for contaminants.

    “You’ve got a whole bunch of variability in testing approaches and practices, and it’s just left residents navigating through just a nightmare,” Maccalla said. “Basically, trying to figure out and educate their [insurance] adjuster at the same time while they’re displaced, and while they’re trying to navigate recovery and jobs and families.”

    The California Department of Public Health, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control, Los Angeles County and City of Pasadena health officials and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency said they do not have any standards for testing inside homes after fires in the wildland urban interface, the transition zone between developed areas and unoccupied land. Fires in those areas, including in Altadena and Pacific Palisades, raise increased health concerns because of the toxic materials they burn through.

    The Los Angeles County and Pasadena public health departments said they do not currently employ any wildland urban interface fire experts to provide recommendations for further remediation. Agency inspectors examining homes have not been trained in assessing wildfire or smoke damage. Without official guidance, residents are left to let the market present the best way forward.

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers were tasked with removing hazardous waste from the sites of homes that burned down. That two-phase process was completed about seven months after the fires after the fires killed 31 people and destroyed more than 16,000 structures. For several months, the Federal Emergency Management Agency refused to fund analyses of contaminated soil as part of the debris removal process, although the agency had funded testing in the past. In a remarkable about-face earlier this month, the agency announced it would conduct lead testing at the sites of 100 homes destroyed in the Eaton fire.

    Further hampering residents’ efforts to find answers was the Trump administration’s closure of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Office of Research and Development, which was responsible for analyzing threats posed by hazards like toxic chemicals, climate change, wildfires and water pollution.

    Many residents feared that the ash and soot left behind contained toxic chemicals that would expose their families to ongoing health risks. In the days following the fires, scientists from across Los Angeles and other parts of the country lent their expertise to help monitor contaminants in the communities surrounding the burn areas. The results show dangerous contaminants remain in homes, parks, schools and beaches in or near the Los Angeles County burn areas.

    While experts believe that the lead and asbestos being detected most likely came from building materials and lead paint in older homes that burned, there are concerns about wider health effects from the fires. A December study from Cedars-Sinai found a drastic increase in emergency room visits for heart attacks, pulmonary and general illness from January to April 2025. In another scientific study published in August, researchers estimated that 409 people were killed by health problems resulting from exposure to pollution from the smoke.

    Seth John, associate professor of earth sciences at the University of Southern California, is one of the researchers who sprang into action after the fires. In what began as a volunteer project, he and other faculty and students (as well as his daughters) drove through the area surrounding the Eaton burn, sweeping up ash and soot for analysis. They kept up the sampling throughout the year, and expanded their efforts under a project called Contaminant Level Evaluation and Analysis for Neighborhoods, or CLEAN, which has invited people across L.A. County to submit soil samples from their homes, parks and schools for lead testing. John and the rest of the team have continued to find elevated levels of lead in areas near the Eaton fire.

    “We expect those levels of lead to persist for some time until the remediation is really complete,” John said. “Until all of that material is removed, you’re going to see elevated lead there.”

    Eaton Fire Residents United is calling on local, state and federal officials to establish and enforce a “comprehensive clearance” requirement that homes be certified as free of toxic chemicals before people are allowed to move in. U.S. Rep. Judy Chu, whose district includes the Eaton Fire area, told Pasadena Now she found the group’s findings “deeply alarming,” and she has urged Gov. Gavin Newsom, state Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara and the L.A. County Board of Supervisors to support a pre-occupancy clearance standard.

    Lead is just one of dozens of toxic materials experts are concerned about residents being exposed to in the wake of the fires. Eaton Fire Residents United conducted a review of indoor contamination in homes post-remediation and found that asbestos was present in nine of 25 houses that were tested for the cancer-causing material.

    UCLA, Purdue University and Loyola Marymount University are leading another effort to monitor the soil and air for pollutants from the fires. Initial findings from dozens of samples submitted by residents to that program found that lead concentrations in soil were higher where the Eaton fire burned in Pasadena and Altadena than in areas burned in the Palisades fire. Soil samples were also tested for elements such as arsenic, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, lead, selenium and zinc. Researchers behind both that project and the USC-led effort plan to continue monitoring the soil and air in the areas surrounding the fires for the next several years.

    Residents and researchers have put so much effort into monitoring because they understand that only prolonged observation will allow them to determine whether remediation efforts were successful.

    “If we don’t handle these houses, then for the next 20, 30 years, people are exposed,” Maccalla said.

    Copyright 2026 Capital & Main