Robert Garrova
explores the weird and secret bits of SoCal that would excite even the most jaded Angelenos. He also covers mental health.
Published March 2, 2026 1:21 PM
The Getty collection of 19 manuscripts written on scrolls of papyrus and linen fragments are fragile
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Courtesy Getty Museum
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Topline:
This week the Getty Villa Museum will begin offering a rare look at scrolls from its ancient Egyptian “Book of the Dead” collection.
The backstory: The collection of 19 manuscripts written on scrolls of papyrus and linen fragments are fragile, with one of them dating back nearly 3,500 years. Because of that, the materials are not usually on display to the public and the gallery will be carefully lit, temperature and humidity-controlled.
The materials: The exhibition will feature four papyri belonging to women named Webennesre, Ankhesenaset, and Aset. “Book of the Dead” materials belonging to women are rare, because most were reserved for men.
This week the Getty Villa Museum will begin offering a rare look at scrolls from its ancient Egyptian “Book of the Dead” collection.
The collection of 19 manuscripts written on scrolls of papyrus and linen fragments are fragile, with one of them dating back nearly 3,500 years. Because of that, the materials are not usually on display to the public and the gallery will be carefully lit, temperature and humidity-controlled.
Sara Cole, associate curator of antiquities, told LAist that a lot of the language in the spells is written in first person speech for the deceased spirit to say while navigating the afterlife.
“One of my favorite phrases that I have on a wall of the gallery is ‘May I join with the stars that call out to me in the night boat,’” Cole said.
Cole explained that the manuscripts have been in the Getty’s collection since 1983, when they were donated by a bookseller in New York, who got them from the private collection of a British rare manuscript collector.
Egyptian mummy wrapping of Petosiris, Son of Tetosiris, from around 332–100 BCE.
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Courtesy Getty Museum
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A years-long project is underway to translate the spells and rituals immortalized in the Getty's “Book of the Dead” scrolls and fragments, with a “large publication” in the works, Cole said.
The exhibition will feature four papyri belonging to women named Webennesre, Ankhesenaset, and Aset. Cole said “Book of the Dead” materials belonging to women are rare, because most were reserved for men.
Twelve of the manuscripts in the exhibition are written on fragments of linen that were used to wrap the mummified remains of the people they belonged to. Cole said she hopes visitors will understand that the material was very intimately associated with peoples’ burials.
Cole said her goal is to foreground the identities of the people who owned the scrolls, including two women who were ritual singers for the god Amun in the ancient city of Thebes.
“We see in these manuscripts the ancient Egyptians really grappling with this question and thinking about what might happen when we die... And I think that’s something we can all connect with and understand,” she said.
Thousands gather outside the LAUSD headquarters in downtown Los Angeles in support of the SEIU99 and UTLA strike on Tuesday, March 21, 2023.
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Ashley Balderrama
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for LAist
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Topline:
Two L.A. Unified school unions voted to approve their new contracts Friday night.
Why now: Members of United Teachers Los Angeles, and AALA/TEAMSTER that represents principals and administrations, will get new 2-year contracts.
What's next: LAUSD board will not need to sign off.
One more union: The union representing staffers like janitors and bus drivers is starting their ratification vote Saturday through May.
Two L.A. Unified school unions voted to approve their new contracts Friday night.
Members of United Teachers Los Angeles, which represent 37,00 teachers and other personnel, will get a nearly 14%, plus paid parental leave for the first time ever.
According to the union, 92% of eligible members voted yes.
Average salary increase of 13.86%, with a minimum increase of 8%
More than 450 new PSAs, PSWs, School Psychologists, and Counselors positions
Special Education agreement with first-ever 20:1 ratio for RST and planning time at schools, with 80% of students in general ed setting for 80% of the day
Protections and right to bargain over subcontracting and AI
Healthcare for substitutes after 93 days of work
Separately, members of AALA/TEAMSTER also ratified their new 2-year contract Friday night, which includes a 12% wage increase. The union represents 3,000 L.A. Unified principals and administrators.
A defined eight-hour workday and a 40-hour workweek
Flex time with notice and no pre-approval
What's next
Next step is a vote by the LAUSD board.
One more to go
Meanwhile, members of SEIU Local 99 will start voting today through early May. That union represents bus drivers, cafeteria workers, classroom aides and other school support staff.
The tentative deal promises to bring their 30,000 members a 24% pay increase and expanded healthcare access.
Family and friends of Bryan Bostic hold a rally in Inglewood, CA on March 22, 2026 following his death in police custody.
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J.W. Hendricks
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The LA Local
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Topline:
The Inglewood City Council will vote Tuesday on a $6.3 million purchase from police tech company Axon to kit out the city’s police department with body cameras as well as drones, Tasers and 98 stationary Automated License Plate Recognition devices, known commonly as ALPRs.
The backstory: Activists have been calling for Inglewood police to wear body cameras since Bryan Bostic’s unexplained death in police custody March 10. Video of the incident captured by a bystander shows police pinning Bostic to the ground. Investigations by the offices of the L.A. County District Attorney into the police use of force and L.A. County Medical Examiner into Bostic’s cause of death are ongoing.
How to make your voice heard: The Inglewood City Council meets at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Inglewood City Hall, 1 W. Manchester Blvd. Members of the public will have an opportunity to comment on the proposed purchase ahead of the city council’s vote.
Inglewood police officers could soon be outfitted with body-worn cameras.
The Inglewood City Council will vote Tuesday on a $6.3 million purchase from police tech company Axon to kit out the city’s police department with body cameras as well as drones, Tasers and 98 stationary Automated License Plate Recognition devices, known commonly as ALPRs.
Activists have been calling for Inglewood police to wear body cameras since Bryan Bostic’s unexplained death in police custody March 10. Video of the incident captured by a bystander shows police pinning Bostic to the ground. Investigations by the offices of the L.A. County District Attorney into the police use of force and L.A. County Medical Examiner into Bostic’s cause of death are ongoing.
The city says it has been researching the tech additions, including the body cameras, since last August, and the police department began chasing grants for body-worn cameras and drones in January.
Activist Najee Ali, who has helped coordinate recent demonstrations calling for Inglewood officers to wear body cameras, said the devices would be a game-changer.
“We are optimistic this is going to happen,” Ali said. “Certainly this is long overdue.”
Ali said activists had been planning to put forward a city ballot initiative to mandate police body cameras. He remains concerned about how the city will set police body camera policy.
City staff wrote in meeting documents that the new tech would enhance the department’s capacity ahead of a string of mega-events — including this summer’s FIFA World Cup, the 2027 Super Bowl and the 2028 Olympics.
The city has not yet finalized contract terms with Axon. Councilmembers could vote Tuesday to authorize city staff to wrap up negotiations and execute a final agreement.
The city estimated Inglewood could pay an average of $1.3 million annually over the life of a five-year agreement with Axon, which would provide software platforms along with the new equipment.
Here’s the tech that comes in the package
The package would include body cameras as well as new Tasers, meeting documents indicate. The Inglewood Police Department has 186 sworn officers, according to the city website.
Twenty-five vehicles would be outfitted with Fleet 3 video cameras that can automatically read and look up vehicle license plates. The ALPR tech will also be rolled out via 98 stationary cameras affixed to light posts and mounted in other locations.
Stationary ALPRs scan license plates and log a vehicle’s location at a given time. Police tout their ability to rapidly locate stolen vehicles or fleeing suspects. Critics say they lack oversight and that their data can be too broadly shared, including with federal immigration agents.
The devices Inglewood is purchasing also have livestream video capability, according to Axon’s website.
The city will also get a total of seven camera drones, including the Skydio 10 and its indoor-focused cousin, the Skydio R10.
How to make your voice heard
The Inglewood City Council meets at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Inglewood City Hall, 1 W. Manchester Blvd. Members of the public will have an opportunity to comment on the proposed purchase ahead of the city council’s vote.
Limited seating is available in council chambers. Members of the public have been directed to watch proceedings and deliver public comment from an overflow room during some recent meetings.
If people can’t make the meeting, they may submit written comments to the city clerk at athompson@cityofinglewood.org, or to the deputy city clerk at dwesley@cityofinglewood.org.
Comments must be submitted by 8 a.m. Tuesday in order to be distributed to councilmembers ahead of the meeting.
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Adolfo Guzman-Lopez
is an arts and general assignment reporter on LAist's Explore LA team.
Published April 25, 2026 5:00 AM
A customer selects some plants in The Plant Chica.
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Adolfo Guzman-Lopez
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LAist
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Topline:
A local store, The Plant Chica in Leimert Park plans to give away 2,000 plants to help introduce people to the rewards of living with a plant. The event will take place on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Why it matters: Sandra Mejia, co-founder of Plant Chica, says many of her customers have never had a plant in their home.
Where to go: Adopt a plant giveaway at The Plant Chica, 4311 Degnan Blvd, Leimert Park, CA 90008. Giveaway hours: Saturday, 11a.m. - 4p.m.
The backstory: Sandra Mejia started Plant Chica in 2016 near the South LA neighborhood where she grew up. She wants to spread the positive aspects of plant ownership and care.
Staff with The Plant Chica were busy the day before the event receiving, labeling and preparing indoor plants at the open-air shop in Leimert Park. The company’s co-founder, Sandra Mejia, said everyone should have a plant in their home.
“Plants aren't necessarily something that people are going out of their way to buy,” she said.
And many people who’ve come to her adopt-a-plant events have never had plants in their homes and, therefore, have not experienced what it’s like to take care of a plant and see it grow.
“If we're giving them out for free, then people come and they take them, and then now they're plant people,” which means, she said, that some become advocates for more plants indoors and outdoors as well as public green space.
The giveaways have grown
Mejia’s first plant giveaway started in her home, she said, in 2018. It was an effort to clear out the less popular plants. It didn’t go so well, but after she moved it to her shop, which has been in several locations around South L.A., near where she was raised by Salvadoran parents, the plant giveaway has grown.
Her family first instilled a love of plants, and she keeps them involved.
“My dad is at home right now, printing the information sheet for the plant so people know how to take care of the plants, and he's cutting them for me,” Mejia said.
Some of the plants are donated by local greenhouses and the rest are paid for, about $2,500 she said, out of her business’ marketing budget.
Staff at The Plant Chica, Philip Bucknor and Odessey Osteen-Diluca
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Adolfo Guzman-Lopez
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LAist
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What kind of plants are we talking about
The giveaway includes philodendrons, like pink princess, which are good starter plants because they’re low maintenance, tradescantia plants, which have green and purple leaves, as well as prayer plants, whose scientific name is maranta leuconeura. These get their nickname from the opening of their leaves during the day and closing at night, like hands in prayer.
“Everybody deserves a plant that's cleaning the oxygen around them. Everybody should have some sort of thumb in the green somewhere,” said Philip Bucknor, who started out as DJ at events for The Plant Chica and began working for the shop last year with the unofficial title of “vibe curator.”
That includes helping people through a feeling he hears a lot — “I don’t want to kill the plant.”
“My thing is helping people understand the right plant for them and not overthinking these tasks of taking care of a plant,” he said.
That means, he said, don’t overdo watering, be chill and feel your plant’s vibe.
He’s set to do that with people who come to the plant giveaway Saturday.
Josie Huang
is a reporter and Weekend Edition host who spotlights the people and places at the heart of our region.
Published April 25, 2026 5:00 AM
Some 5,000 women participated in the Saree Run that took place in March in Pune, India.
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Courtesy of the Saree Run
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Topline:
The Saree Run, a viral event that began with eight women in India running in saris, is making its U.S. debut in Huntington Beach on Sunday.
Why now: It’s coming to the U.S. after L.A.-based organizer Aanal Patel jumped at bringing its message of culturally-inclusive fitness to South Asian communities here.
The backstory: The event started in 2016 in Bangalore as a way to lower barriers for women to exercise, growing into a multi-city movement with thousands of participants.
What's next: Patel hopes to keep the event going in Southern California and says she's already getting interest from people in other cities like Austin and Chicago.
Details: Saree Run Where: Central Park East, Huntington Beach When: 5K Fun Run / Walk: 7 a.m. - 11 a.m. Programming and a vendor village operate until 4 p.m. Cost: $50 ticket to run. All other programming is free.
As the story goes, it started with eight women in India.
A small group of runners in bright flowing saris darted through the streets of Bangalore to show that fitness doesn’t have to be about running gear and race culture but can look like anything you want it to.
Ten years and thousands of participants later, the Saree Run is crossing the ocean.
The U.S. edition of the Saree Run debuts Sunday in Huntington Beach Central Park East, where 5K runners and walkers are encouraged to drape themselves in saris in a celebration of health and culture.
The U.S. edition is the brainchild of L.A.-based Indian American event organizer Aanal Patel. She discovered the Saree Run through an Instagram video, one of many online, sent by a friend urging her to bring it to the U.S.
“I thought it was really, really cool,” Patel, 35, said. “But I was like, I don't know if people in the States would be interested in this because mainly here we wear saris for special occasions like weddings and receptions."
In contrast to India where the sari is part of everyday wear for many women, the sari is worn in the U.S. more for special occasions like weddings.
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Courtesy of Aanal Patel
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By contrast, saris are part of everyday dress for many women in India. But the idea stuck with Patel, who’d run plenty of races herself. She’s also spent years organizing events for the South Asian diaspora like Bollywood trivia games and singles mixers.
The Saree Run, she reasoned, could be another place for the diaspora to connect and spotlight urgent issues. Like how South Asians face higher rates of heart disease, diabetes and other chronic conditions. And how many women, she said, don't prioritize their health.
“We are consistently putting other people in front of our own health – our husbands, our children, our community, our households,” Patel said.
Another driving force for Patel — and a point of departure from the event’s origins in India — is the lack of South Asian visibility in fitness and wellness branding in the U.S.
“India is the birthplace of yoga. We're also the birthplace of Ayurveda, and you still don't see us represented in those spaces,” Patel said. “I wanted to bring representation into that space.”
Saree Run Where: Central Park East, Huntington Beach When: 5K Fun Run / Walk: 7 a.m. - 11 a.m. Programming and a vendor village operate until 4 p.m. Cost: $50 ticket to run. All other programming is free.
Where it began
Before Patel moved forward with putting on a Saree Run, she sought the blessing of the event’s founder Pramod Deshpande.
A Bangalore-based tech consultant specializing in A.I., Deshpande is also a former competitive runner and long-time running coach focused on getting Indians to move more.
The 63-year-old “Coach Pramod,” as his runners call him, came up with the Saree Run after noticing how in India women rise to top roles in government and boardrooms but are noticeably missing from the fitness world.
When he and his trainees ran through neighborhoods, women would stare at them “like we are somebody from another world.”
“Then we realized that these ladies are really interested in doing this, but are held back because of other social pressures and family responsibilities,” Deshpande said.
Safety concerns about running alone as a woman is also a big issue. The Saree Run offers strength in numbers as well as a sense of ease. Running in saris – about six yards of fabric which can be draped to fit every body type – takes the pressure off the women to feel that they have to look like models in fitness ads, Deshpande said.
The Saree Run has held nine editions in six cities across India since 2016.
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Courtesy of the Saree Run
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Saree Run participants who kept at it typically shed their saris for lighter running gear like Deshpande’s own mother-in-law. She started running at 78 and now at 82 recently completed a half-marathon in pants and a T-shirt.
Stories like hers have helped fuel the Saree Run’s growth. Since 2016, the Saree Run has held nine editions across six cities with tens of thousands joining so far.
At the most recent event in Pune, more than 5,000 women turned out, Deshpande said.
A call from abroad
When Patel reached out to Deshpande about bringing the concept to the U.S., he was surprised – and impressed.
“I thought, this girl has some guts,” he said, noting it took years for the Saree Run to gain traction in India.
Patel, who moved to L.A. a year and a half ago from Denver, has gamely taken on challenges of organizing a run for the first time with a small team of volunteers.
She scouted a dozen parks across L.A. and Orange counties before settling on Huntington Beach's Central Park East because it could accommodate both the run and a full day of free programming.
Aside from the 5K, there will be yoga sessions, dance classes, wellness workshops and a speaker series.
Tickets to participate in the run will be $50 a person and includes a swag bag. After expenses, proceeds will go to the Artesia-based nonprofit South Asian Helpline And Referral Agency for abuse survivors.
Run participants are strongly encouraged – but not required – to wear South Asian cultural attire which could also include a dupatta, a traditional scarf, or a kurti, a long tunic.
“Because our goal is to break the stigma,” Patel said. “Our goal is fitness without inhibitions.”
Most, though, will come in saris. Given that there are over 300 draping styles, what will Patel choose?
She’s opting for the dhoti style, which "does allow a separation between the legs for movement."
Interest has already come from other cities like Austin, Denver and Chicago with people online asking when the event might come their way.
Deshpande is also looking ahead. From India, he’s hoping to assist Patel with growing the U.S. version by tapping into diaspora networks.
“I'm here to help Aanal make it big,” Deshpande said.