Sponsored message
Audience-funded nonprofit news
radio tower icon laist logo
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Subscribe
  • Listen Now Playing Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Staff laid off after county pulls funding
    A perplexed woman checks her smart phone
    The non-crisis warm line will lay off 127 staffers and cut its operating hours in half as county officials pull all its funding following a change in California’s mental health spending.

    Topline:

    Orange County’s mental health warm line is set to lay off 127 staff members on Tuesday and faces an impending shutdown, as county officials pull the entire $5 million in funding allocated to run it following a change in California’s behavioral health spending

    Why it matters: The warm line is a confidential phone and text service for people who are struggling emotionally. Amy Durham, the CEO of NAMI Orange County, the group that runs the line, said the warm line serviced people such as students anxious about taking a test or getting bullied, or men in their 50s feeling the financial pressure of supporting a family. In the aftermath of the January wildfires that tore across Los Angeles, calls increased from 800 a day to 900 a day.

    What's next?: The state also operates a warm line, but its budget was also slashed this year, with people often having to leave a message and wait 48 hours for a call back. Durham said she’s found about 100 volunteers to staff the local line from 12 p.m. to 12 a.m., instead of 24/7, but even at the reduced capacity, she can only keep it going two to three more months.

    Orange County’s mental health warm line is set to lay off 127 staff members on Tuesday and faces an impending shutdown, as county officials pull the entire $5 million in funding allocated to run it following a change in California’s behavioral health spending.

    The confidential phone and text service for people who are struggling emotionally, but not in crisis, serves 800 callers a day.

    “If you were just starting to feel a little bit of anxiety, or maybe you didn’t talk to anyone during the day and you want someone to talk to, we were there 24/7,” said Amy Durham, the CEO of NAMI Orange County, the group that runs the line. “Well, that service is going away, and there’s no fix, there’s no place for them to go.”

    The warm line is one of 38 programs Orange County is sunsetting after California voters approved Proposition 1 last year. The initiative changed how mental health dollars in the state are allocated, with money originally focused on early intervention and community programs redirected to helping people with serious mental illness get housing.

    While advocates mourn the loss of any service in a mental health system that they see as under-resourced overall, some welcome the shift to prioritizing the sickest people.

    “Our population is so underserved, we do not want that being diluted,” said Lisa Dailey, executive director of Treatment Advocacy Center, which focuses on people with psychotic illness. “I don’t want cuts anywhere, but if the refocusing of the programs actually leads to targeted interventions that are more likely to actually reach this population, then I would say that that’s great.”

    For people suffering from hallucinations or delusions, a warm line is not very helpful, Dailey added.

    But for students anxious about taking a test or getting bullied, or men in their 50s feeling the financial pressure of supporting a family, or for an elderly person who hasn’t seen their family in weeks and is thinking about suicide, Durham said, the warm line has been crucial. In the aftermath of the January wildfires that tore across Los Angeles, calls increased from 800 a day to 900 a day.

    “Being heard is healing,” Durham said.

    While there is no data on what happens to people after their 15-20-minute conversation, Durham believes the warm line has kept people out of crisis.

    It also provided jobs for people with mental illness, many of whom had never worked before, she said, and a sense of pride in tapping their own struggles to help others in the community. These peer counselors were trained in de-escalation and how to identify callers who needed to be transferred to 988, the national suicide hotline.

    When Durham learned the county planned to pull funding for operating the Orange County warm line — which at its peak was close to $11 million a year — she began looking for alternatives.

    The state also operates a warm line, but its budget was also slashed this year, and Durham said people often have to leave a message and wait 48 hours for a call back. She’s found about 100 volunteers to staff the local line from 12 p.m. to 12 a.m., instead of 24/7, but even at the reduced capacity, she can only keep it going two to three more months.

    “I think we’re going to see it get a lot worse before it gets better,” she said.

  • Here's all the details
    A crowd watches drummers and dancers perform at the Sunday African Marketplace & Drum Circle in Leimert Park.
    A crowd watches drummers and dancers perform at the Sunday African Marketplace & Drum Circle in Leimert Park.
    Topline:
    The Los Angeles Official Martin Luther King Day Parade will take Monday in South L.A. So, whether you’re attending the parade or watching it on TV, here’s everything you need to know about Monday’s parade.

    The details: The procession will begin at 10 a.m., with ABC7 set to begin a broadcast at 11 a.m. Organizers say the best place to catch the parade in person is the intersection of Crenshaw Boulevard and Martin Luther King Jr. King Boulevard, or “camera corner,” where the parade will culminate and organizers are planning a live preshow. Bleacher seats, though, will be limited.

    Getting there: The Metro K Line runs directly to the intersection, dropping people off at the Martin Luther King Jr. Metro station. Only residents will be allowed to drive into the band of neighborhoods directly along the length of the parade route. That includes the blocks from 39th Street to 42nd Street along King Boulevard and the blocks between McClung Drive and Victoria Avenue along the Crenshaw closure.

    Read on . . . for more information about street closures and the annual MLK Freedom Festival.

    In just four days, the Los Angeles Official Martin Luther King Day Parade will take over South L.A.

    The LA Local recently spoke with Sabra Wady, the parade’s lead organizer, who said this year’s parade will look much the same as recent years.

    So, whether you’re attending the parade or watching it on TV, here’s everything you need to know about Monday’s parade:

    The procession will begin at 10 a.m., with ABC7 set to begin a broadcast at 11 a.m.

    What time does the parade start? How can I watch? Is anything happening after?

    Wady said the best place to catch the parade in person is the intersection of Crenshaw Boulevard and Martin Luther King Jr. King Boulevard, or “camera corner,” where the parade will culminate and organizers are planning a live preshow. Bleacher seats, though, will be limited.

    The Metro K Line runs directly to the intersection, dropping people off at the Martin Luther King Jr. Metro station.

    Onlookers can also post up along the parade route with folding chairs and other self-arranged seating, Wady said.

    The parade broadcast will run until 1 p.m., but Wady said the procession is expected to keep going until mid-afternoon.

    “After the cameras stop rolling, it’s the people’s parade,” Wady said.

    LA City Council President Marqueece Harris-Dawson and Councilmembers Curren Price and Heather Hutt – who represent council districts 8, 9 and 10, respectively — will organize the annual MLK Freedom Festival in the Leimert Park Plaza from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

    What route will the parade take?

    The route will remain the same, running down King Boulevard from Western Avenue to Crenshaw Boulevard before turning south down Crenshaw and heading to Leimert Park. Much of the route will be closed to traffic overnight before the parade.

    More than 150 groups, including bands, floats, horseback riders and marchers, will trek down the boulevard. Wady said organizers cut off new sign-ups weeks ago in order to keep the parade manageable.

    What will road closures look like?

    Colin Sweeney, a spokesperson for the LA Department of Transportation, said in an email that the department will close off traffic down the main parade route overnight.

    Here are the roads that will be closed to all vehicles for the duration of the parade and festival.

    • King Boulevard from Vermont Avenue to Crenshaw Boulevard 
    • Crenshaw Boulevard from King Boulevard to 48th Street
    • Leimert Boulevard from 8th Avenue to Leimert Park 
    • Degnan Avenue between 43rd Street and Leimert Park

    Sweeney said only residents will be allowed to drive into the band of neighborhoods directly along the length of the parade route. That includes the blocks from 39th Street to 42nd Street along King Boulevard and the blocks between McClung Drive and Victoria Avenue along the Crenshaw closure.

    The transportation department will allow traffic to cross the parade route at major intersections — including Western Avenue, Arlington Avenue and Stocker Street — but those crossings will be shut down at 10 a.m. All closed roads will stay blocked off until the parade and festival wrap up and transportation officials determine crowds have sufficiently dispersed, Sweeney said.

    Wady said the parade is expected to peter out around mid-afternoon. The festival at Leimert Park Plaza is scheduled to end at 5 p.m.

    Vehicles parked in the parade assembly area, parade route and disbanding area will be subject to impound or tickets, Sweeney wrote.

  • Sponsored message
  • Shoot days up at end of 2025 but down from 2024
    A man with a professional camera for film and TV production sits on a cart that is situated on top of a metal track and films a scene. Other crew members holding microphones, cameras and other production equipment look on in the background.
    A film crew works on the set of author Michael Connelly's "Bosch," shooting in the San Fernando Valley. On-location film shoots in the last three months of 2025 rose 5.6% but were 16.1% lower overall during the year than in 2024.

    Topline:

    On-location filming in L-A increased over the last three months of 2025 but still lagged behind where it was at the end of 2024, according to an end-of-year report from Film L.A., the official filming office for the city and county.

    By the numbers: Film and television shoot days total 4,625 in the final three months of 2025, up 5.1 percent in that timeframe. But overall last year there were 19,694 shoot days, which is down 16.1 percent from 2024's total of 23.480.

    Why it matters: Production in Los Angeles has been slow to rebound since the COVID-19 pandemic and the Hollywood writers and actors strikes in 2023. There is also increased competition from other states that offer appealing film tax credits and other incentives for productions that decide to take their shoot outside of California. This summer, Governor Gavin Newsom expanded California's Film and TV Tax Credit Program in an effort to lure productions back to the Golden State.

    What's next: Film L.A.'s Phil Sokoloski says that many of the productions approved under the expanded tax credit program are just now getting underway, and he hopes the industry will start to see the effects of not only the tax incentive expansion in 2026, but also L.A. Mayor Karen Bass' directives to streamline the permitting and shooting process in the city.

    Topline:

    On-location filming in L.A. increased over the last three months of 2025 but still lagged behind where it was at the end of 2024, according to an end-of-year report from Film L.A., the official filming office for the city and county.

    By the numbers: Film and television shoot days totaled 4,625 in the final three months of 2025, up 5.1% in that timeframe. But overall last year, there were 19,694 shoot days, which is down 16.1% from 2024's total of 23.480.

    Why it matters: Production in Los Angeles has been slow to rebound since the COVID-19 pandemic and the Hollywood writers and actors strikes in 2023. There is also increased competition from other states that offer appealing film tax credits and other incentives for productions that decide to take their shoot outside of California. This summer, Gov. Gavin Newsom expanded California's Film and TV Tax Credit Program in an effort to lure productions back to the Golden State.

    What's next: Film L.A.'s Phil Sokoloski says that many of the productions approved under the expanded tax credit program are just now getting underway, and he hopes the industry will start to see the effects of not only the tax incentive expansion in 2026, but also L.A. Mayor Karen Bass' directives to streamline the permitting and shooting process in the city.

  • Events honoring Civil Rights leader
    U.S. civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., waves to supporters on August 28, 1963, on the National Mall in Washington D.C.
    The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. waves to supporters during the March on Washington on Aug. 28, 1963.

    Topline:

    In L.A., there is no shortage of events to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day, observed this year on January 19.

    Events at California African American Museum: The California African American Museum is hosting a King Day scavenger hunt on Sunday from 2 to 3 p.m.. On Monday, it is hosting an all-day event honoring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. that will culminate with a performance by the Inner City Youth Orchestra of L.A., which is billed as the largest majority Black youth orchestra in the country.

    Orchestra at Skirball: The orchestra will also perform at the Skirball Cultural Center on Saturday evening. The free event is already at capacity, but you can try your luck by signing up for the waitlist here. Earlier Saturday, the orchestra will join the Santa Monica Symphony for its annual MLK concert.

    Read on ... for more events to choose from.

    In L.A., there is no shortage of events to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day this year.

    Since 1986, the federal holiday is observed on the third Monday of January to honor the life and legacy of the Civil Rights leader.

    California African American Museum

    The California African American Museum is hosting a King Day scavenger hunt on Sunday from 2 to 3 p.m. On Monday, it is hosting an all-day event honoring King that will culminate with a performance by the Inner City Youth Orchestra of L.A., which is billed as the largest majority Black youth orchestra in the country.

    Orchestra at Skirball

    The orchestra will also perform at the Skirball Cultural Center on Saturday evening. The free event is already at capacity, but you can try your luck by signing up for the waitlist here. Earlier Saturday, the orchestra will join the Santa Monica Symphony for its annual MLK concert.

    Parades and celebrations

    Cedric the Entertainer will be the grand marshal of this year’s official L.A. MLK Day Parade on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard between Western and Crenshaw avenues on Monday. If you’re looking for a parade earlier in the weekend, you can head to Long Beach’s MLK Day parade on Saturday. Also on Saturday is a celebration of King’s legacy at the Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Culver City.

    Volunteer opportunities

    In 1994, President Bill Clinton officially decreed MLK Day as a day of service. If you’re looking for opportunities to volunteer, grab free tickets to Monday’s MLK Day Volunteer Festival at the L.A. Memorial Coliseum.

    Free access to state parks

    Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Friday that more than 200 California state parks will be free to enter on Monday. The move comes after the Trump administration eliminated MLK Day and Juneteenth from the list of days when it’s free to access national parks. There are 12 free state parks on the list in L.A. County, including Los Angeles and Will Rogers State Historic Parks, as well as Topanga and Malibu Creek State Parks. See the full list here.

  • How a film helped tell a fuller story.
    A young man and a middle aged Asian woman smiling and holding each other's hands while standing in the ocean. A pier and waves are visible behind them.
    Lawrence Shou and Lucy Liu in a scene from 'Rosemead.'

    Topline:

    The new movie Rosemead, starring Lucy Liu, is based on a 2017 Los Angeles Times article about the tragic story of a terminally ill woman who killed her 18-year-old son, who’d been diagnosed with schizophrenia.

    The context: It’s a carefully reported story by journalist Frank Shyong about a family, about the shame and stigma that can surround mental illness in Asian American communities, and how media portrayals of people with mental disorders can perpetuate harmful misconceptions.

    Shyong had some concerns when he was first approached about the idea of adapting the story into a narrative film, but found that it ended up "sort of completing the circle a little bit. It added parts to the story that I wanted to see depicted."

    Read on ... for more about the true story behind 'Rosemead.'

    A 2017 Los Angeles Times article tells the tragic story of Lai Hang, a terminally ill woman who killed her 18-year-old son George, who’d been diagnosed with schizophrenia.

    It’s a carefully reported story by journalist Frank Shyong about a family, about the shame and stigma that can surround mental illness in Asian American communities, and how media portrayals of people with mental disorders can perpetuate harmful misconceptions.

    So when Shyong was first approached about the idea of adapting the story he wrote into a narrative film, he had some “very intense” concerns about whether a film would get the story right.

    But after conversations with the filmmakers, and thinking through the potential value of telling fictionalized stories based on real-life events, Shyong says, “ I think I realized that my story was in a lot of ways incomplete.”

    Nine years later, the film, titled Rosemead, is finished. Directed by Eric Lin and written by Marilyn Fu, the film stars Lucy Liu as Irene, a character based on Hang, and Lawrence Shou as Joe, who’s based on George.

    And Shyong, who is credited as an executive producer and served as a consultant on the film, says “it’s sort of completing the circle a little bit” — fleshing out Hang and George as “full 360 degree human beings” and giving glimpses of how their story might have ended differently.

    Reporting on trauma in Asian American communities

    Back in 2015, when the events depicted in Rosemead happened, the breaking news coverage revealed the basics of what was known at the time — that a woman had fatally shot her son in a Rosemead motel and turned herself in.

    “ I think a lot of people probably realized there was more story there,” Shyong says. But the only person who knew the details, Hang’s longtime friend Ping Chong, had declined to talk to the media.

    Still, Shyong kept following up because the court records hinted at a story that he thought should be told.

    The court records revealed that Hang had been dying of cancer, and that Chong continued to visit her after she turned herself in, performing Buddhist rituals for her.

    “Just knowing those two facts,” Shyong says, “and knowing Asian American families, and how complete and terrifying the sense of responsibility that a parent can feel toward a child, I just thought there's gotta be something there.”

    He would visit Chong’s shop, a traditional Chinese pharmacy, leaving notes for her and talking to her about why he wanted to know more. And he gained her trust.

     ”You just have to say, ‘This is [the] story I think is here. And do you think that story is true? And if so, can you help me tell it?’ And that's all I did,” Shyong says. “I think that's all any journalist ever does.”

    It’s a story that Shyong says he would come to learn is more common than many may expect.   “When you are a caregiver in these communities,” Shyong says, “you can find and name a tragic story like this in probably every zip code.”

    How filmmaking and journalism can complement each other

    Shyong’s article ends with this poignant quote from Chong, about her friend: “People will only know her as the mother who killed her son [...] But she was more.”

    The piece itself goes a long way toward dispelling Chong’s concern, including details about Hang’s life — that she was a talented graphic designer, that she was “beautiful, smart and ambitious,” that she’d lost her husband to cancer, and that she deeply cared about her son.

    But “in this case fiction,” Shyong says, “could give closure to characters in a way that I couldn't in reality. It could tell the fullness of this family story.”

    The film shows Liu’s character Irene having fun with her son at the beach, and joining his therapy sessions at the urging of a psychiatrist, despite being visibly uncomfortable doing so.

    It shows George (Joe in the film) with his friends, who come to visit him after he has an intense schizophrenic episode at school.

    The sound design gives a sense of what it’s like to experience schizophrenia, and a part of the film where Joe runs away shows how quickly a boy with a mother and friends who care about him can become an unhoused person who someone might fear on the street.

    Ultimately, the film ends on a note of hope, which grew out of something that Shyong learned from Chong after the article was published. In a way that he couldn’t do in print, “It added parts to the story that I wanted to see depicted.”