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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Workers at some LA stores walk off the job

    Topline:

    Starbucks workers are walking off the job at hundreds of stores across dozens of cities on Tuesday, their union says, on the last planned day of what it is calling "the strike before Christmas."

    Why now: The union says the strike is in response to Starbucks backtracking on its commitment to negotiate a "foundational framework" — for collective bargaining and resolving outstanding litigation on unfair labor practices charges — by the end of the year.

    What workers want: The union is asking for a base wage of at least $20 an hour for all baristas with annual 5% raises and cost of living adjustments, enrollment in a Starbucks-sponsored retirement plan, more consistent schedules, enhanced paid leave protocols and better healthcare, among other initiatives.

    Starbucks response: Executive Vice President Sara Kelly said in a statement that the union proposals are "not sustainable, especially when the investments we continually make to our total benefits package." Those benefits include health care, free college tuition, paid family leave and company stock grants.

    Starbucks workers are walking off the job at hundreds of stores across dozens of cities on Tuesday, their union says, on the last planned day of what it is calling "the strike before Christmas."

    "Starbucks Baristas at over THREE HUNDRED stores have walked off the job to demand Starbucks bargain a fair contract from coast-to-coast," Starbucks Workers United (SBU) wrote in an Instagram post, touting it as the largest unfair labor practices strike in the coffee chain's history.

    The union says the strike is in response to Starbucks backtracking on its commitment to negotiate a "foundational framework" — for collective bargaining and resolving outstanding litigation on unfair labor practices charges — by the end of the year.

    "Our unfair labor practice (ULP) strikes will begin Friday morning and escalate each day through Christmas Eve ... unless Starbucks honors our commitment to work towards a foundational framework," it said last week.

    The strike began on Friday in three cities: Los Angeles, Seattle and Chicago.

    It has expanded every day since, with the list of participating stores now including Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland, Dallas, Denver, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Portland, Seattle and San Jose.

    Starbucks said Monday that about 60 stores nationwide were closed due to the strike, but stressed that that the "overwhelming majority" of its more than 10,000 U.S. locations remain unaffected. It said some of the stores that closed during the weekend had already reopened.

    "The public conversation may lack the important context that the vast majority of our stores (97-99%) will continue to operate and serve customers, and we expect a very limited impact to our overall operations," Executive Vice President Sara Kelly said in a statement.

    The union is urging customers to boycott Starbucks stores during the strike and show up at picket lines to show their support for workers.

    Why baristas are striking

    SWU, which first unionized in 2021, represents some 10,000 employees across 535 U.S. stores. It celebrated a milestone in February when Starbucks said it would work with the union to reach a labor agreement and resolve litigation by the end of the year.

    But last week, with matters still unsettled ahead of the last scheduled bargaining session of 2024, a whopping 98% of union partners voted to authorize a strike to "to protest hundreds of still-unresolved unfair labor practice charges (ULPs) and win a strong foundational framework for union contracts."

    The union acknowledged that both sides have engaged in "hundreds of hours of bargaining" and "advanced dozens of tentative agreements" in recent months.

    But it said hundreds of complaints accusing Starbucks of unfair labor practices — including retaliatory firings — remain unsettled, with more than $100 million in legal liabilities still outstanding. Plus, it said, the company "has yet to bring a comprehensive economic package to the bargaining table."

    People hold signs outside of a closed Starbucks as employees strike on Monday in New York City.
    People hold signs outside of a closed Starbucks as employees strike on Monday in New York City.
    (
    Adam Gray
    /
    Getty Images North America
    )

    Starbucks' latest proposal included no immediate wage increase for union baristas, and a guarantee of just 1.5% wage increases in future years. The union called that "insulting," especially compared to the salary of its new CEO, who started in September.

    "This year, Starbucks invested $113 million into CEO Brian Niccol's compensation package at a time when baristas' wages aren't keeping up with the cost of inflation," it said. "Workers regularly struggle to receive the hours we need to qualify for benefits and pay our bills. Starbucks needs to invest in the workers who run their stores."

    Ruby Walters, who works at a Starbucks location in Columbus, told member station WOSU from the picket line over the weekend that most workers "have a very similar experience of the company not affording them enough resources that they need, not only to take home and improve their lives, but literally on the job."

    "So as far as I'm concerned, what we're fighting for isn't just for us," Walters added. "It's for all Starbucks workers across the country."

    What Starbucks is saying

    Kelly, the Starbucks executive, said the union's proposals amount to an increase in the hourly minimum wage of 64% immediately and 77% over three years, which she dismissed as unrealistic.

    "These proposals are not sustainable, especially when the investments we continually make to our total benefits package are the hallmarks of what differentiates us as an employer — and, what makes us proud to work at Starbucks," she said.

    Those benefits include health care, free college tuition, paid family leave and company stock grants, Starbucks says, adding that the combination of average pay and benefits equates to an average of $30 per hour for the vast majority of baristas working at least 20 hours per week.

    The union is asking for a base wage of at least $20 an hour for all baristas with annual 5% raises and cost of living adjustments, enrollment in a Starbucks-sponsored retirement plan, more consistent schedules, enhanced paid leave protocols and better healthcare, among other initiatives.

    In the final stretch of the four-day strike, it is calling on Starbucks to present a "serious economic offer at the bargaining table."

    The company, for its part, says the union "prematurely ended" the most recent bargaining session and is urging it to come back.

    "The union chose to walk away from bargaining last week," Kelly said. "We are ready to continue negotiations when the union comes back to the bargaining table."

    Copyright 2024 NPR. To see more, visit npr.org.

  • US investment in minerals grew in 2025
    A man with white hair holds up his right hand as he speaks into a nicrophone
    President Donald Trump speaks during a Mexican Border Defense Medal presentation in the Oval Office of the White House.

    Topline:

    President Donald Trump spent most of 2025 hacking away at large parts of the federal government. One tiny corner of regulation, however, has actually grown under Trump: the critical minerals list.

    What are critical minerals?: The concept dates back to the first half of the 20th century, especially World War II, when Congress passed legislation aimed at stockpiling materials vital to the United States’ well being. In November, the U.S. Geological Survey quietly expanded the list from 50 to 60 items, adding copper, silver, uranium, and even metallurgical coal to the list. President Donald Trump established the critical minerals list in 2018, with the defining criteria being that any mineral included be “essential to the economic and national security of the United States” and have a supply chain that is “vulnerable to disruption.” A mineral’s presence on the list can convey a slew of benefits to anyone trying to extract or produce that mineral in the U.S., including faster permitting for extraction, tax incentives, or federal funding.

    The backstory: In March, Trump signed an executive order meant to jumpstart critical mineral production. That was just the first step in a coordinated effort by the Trump administration to strengthen U.S. control over existing supply chains for copper, lithium, cobalt, manganese, nickel, and dozens of other critical minerals and to galvanize new mines. The Trump administration has sought to accomplish these goals by both reducing the regulatory barriers to production and by investing in the companies poised to do it.

    Critical minerals and the military: It must also be stressed that the Trump administration’s rapid push to shore up the U.S.’s control over critical minerals isn’t about transitioning the country away from fossil fuels. Instead, the whole effort seems to mostly be geared toward military uses. Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” allocated $7.5 billion for critical minerals, $2 billion of which will go directly to the national defense stockpile. Another $5 billion was allocated for the department of defense to invest in critical mineral supply chains.

    President Donald Trump spent most of 2025 hacking away at large parts of the federal government. His administration fired, bought out, or otherwise ousted hundreds of thousands of federal employees. Entire agencies were gutted. By so many metrics, this year in politics has been defined more by what has been cut away than by what’s been added on.

    One tiny corner of regulation, however, has actually grown under Trump: the critical minerals list. Most people likely hadn’t heard of “critical minerals” until early this year when the president repeatedly inserted the phrase into his statements, turning the once obscure policy realm into a household phrase. In November, the U.S. Geological Survey quietly expanded the list from 50 to 60 items, adding copper, silver, uranium, and even metallurgical coal to the list. On Monday, South Korean metal processor Korea Zinc announced that the federal government is investing in a new $7.4 billion zinc refinery in Tennessee, in which the Department of Defense will hold a stake.

    But what even is a critical mineral?

    The concept dates back to the first half of the 20th century, especially World War II, when Congress passed legislation aimed at stockpiling materials vital to the United States’ well being. President Trump established the critical minerals list in 2018, with the defining criteria being that any mineral included be “essential to the economic and national security of the United States” and have a supply chain that is “vulnerable to disruption.” A mineral’s presence on the list can convey a slew of benefits to anyone trying to extract or produce that mineral in the U.S., including faster permitting for extraction, tax incentives, or federal funding.

    As Grist explored in its recent mining issue, critical minerals are shaping everything from geopolitics to water supplies, oceans, and recycling systems. If there is to be a true clean energy transition, these elements are key to it. Metals such as lithium, cobalt, and nickel form the backbone of the batteries that power electric vehicles. Silicon is the primary component of solar cells, and rare earth magnets help wind turbines function. Not to mention computers, microchips, and the multitude of other things that depend on critical minerals.

    Currently, the vast majority of critical minerals used in the United States come from China — some 80 percent. In his first term, Trump tried to increase domestic production of these minerals. “The United States must not remain reliant on foreign competitors like Russia and China for the critical minerals needed to keep our economy strong and our country safe,” he said in 2017. Securing a domestic supply was also a cornerstone of former president Joe Biden’s landmark climate bills, the bipartisan infrastructure law and the Inflation Reduction Act.

    Now, as Trump has taken office again, he’s made critical minerals an ever more central part of his policy platform. We’re here to demystify why this has been a blockbuster year for critical minerals in the United States — and where the industry may go in the future.

    A highly unusual strategy

    In March, Trump issued an executive order meant to jumpstart critical mineral production. “It is imperative for our national security that the United States take immediate action to facilitate domestic mineral production to the maximum possible extent,” he said. The executive order was just the first step in a coordinated effort by the Trump administration to strengthen U.S. control over existing supply chains for copper, lithium, cobalt, manganese, nickel, and dozens of other critical minerals and to galvanize new mines, regardless of concerns raised by Indigenous peoples. The Trump administration has sought to accomplish these goals by both reducing the regulatory barriers to production and by investing in the companies poised to do it.

    Since then, Trump has signed agreements with multiple countries to increase investments in critical minerals and strengthen supply chains. Most recently, the U.S. made a deal with the Democratic Republic of Congo, which holds more than 70 percent of the world’s cobalt. He has pushed federal agencies to make it easier for mining companies to apply for federal funding, and is inviting companies to apply to pursue seabed mining in the deep waters around American Samoa, near Guam and the Northern Marianas, around the Cook Islands, and in international waters south of Hawaiʻi — prompting global outrage and opposition from Native Hawaiian, Samoan, and Chamorro/CHamoru peoples. At the same time, Trump’s volatile tariff policies have made it harder for American companies to source minerals, and cuts to federal funding have harmed mining workforce training programs and research into critical minerals.

    While the Biden administration provided grants and loans to various mining companies, Trump is deploying a highly unusual strategy of buying stakes in private companies, tying the financial interests of the U.S. government with the interests and success of these commercial mining operations. Over the past few months, the Trump administration has spent more than a billion dollars in public money to buy minority stakes in private companies like MP Materials, ReElement Technologies, and Vulcan Elements. In Alaska, that strategy has involved investing more than $35 million in Trilogy Metals to buy a 10 percent stake in the company, which is a major backer of a copper and cobalt mining project in Alaska.

    In September, the Trump administration finalized another deal with the Canadian company Lithium Americas behind Thacker Pass in Nevada, which is expected to be the largest lithium mine in the U.S. The Biden administration approved a $2.23 billion loan to Lithium Americas in October 2024; the Trump administration then restructured the loan and obtained a 5 percent stake in the project and another 5 percent stake in Lithium Americas itself. (A top Interior Department official has since been reported to have benefited financially from the project.) That’s despite allegations that the mine violates the rights of neighboring tribal nations and is proceeding without their consent, which Lithium Americas has denied.

    The outlook for critical minerals

    Historically, the federal government has only taken equity stakes in struggling companies, such as through the Troubled Asset Relief Program that sought to stabilize the auto industry and U.S. banks during the 2008 financial crisis. “What we’re talking about here is something very different, which is an industry that has not yet launched,” said Beia Spiller, who leads critical minerals work at the nonprofit research group Resources for the Future.

    “Whether that’s going to work, I think is unlikely,” Spiller continued. “The best way to get an industry up and running is to have policies that raise the tide for everyone, not just choosing winners.”

    In reference to Lithium Americas, Spiller said, “If you actually look at the cost fundamentals, it’s not a very competitive company.” Lithium Americas mines metal from clay, an old process that requires a lot of land, open pit mines, and heavy machinery — whereas some newer operations use direct lithium extraction, which is more cost effective in the long term. “So we just took an equity stake in a company that is going to face headwinds in terms of costs — now the American public faces that downside.”

    It must also be stressed that the Trump administration’s rapid push to shore up the U.S.’s control over critical minerals isn’t about transitioning the country away from fossil fuels. Instead, the whole effort seems to mostly be geared toward military uses. Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” allocated $7.5 billion for critical minerals, $2 billion of which will go directly to the national defense stockpile. Another $5 billion was allocated for the department of defense to invest in critical mineral supply chains.

    In October, a former official at the defense department told the Financial Times that the agency is “incredibly focused on the stockpile.”

    “They’re definitely looking for more, and they’re doing it in a deliberate and expansive way, and looking for new sources of different ores needed for defense products,” the unnamed official said.

    Last week the administration announced that it plans to take equity stakes in more mining companies next year. It’s possible, Spiller said, these investments could extend to outfits that are piloting deep-sea mining. That carries a new set of risks, as many banks refuse to insure deep-sea mining operations, it’s unclear whether seabed mining operations will be able to even get off the ground before the end of Trump’s term, and the legal repercussions associated with undermining the Law of the Sea could fracture the stability among global powers — and make global climate action that much harder.

    Correction: A previous version of this story misstated the name of MP Materials.

    This article originally appeared in Grist at https://grist.org/energy/the-year-the-us-doubled-down-on-critical-minerals/.

    Grist is a nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future. Learn more at Grist.org

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  • Even under attack it has surged. For how long?

    Topline:

    The U.S. is forecast to add a lot less power from renewables than analysts previously expected.

    Why now: Over the past year, the Trump administration and Congressional Republicans have waged a sweeping campaign against renewable energy, throwing a fast-growing industry into turmoil.

    Why it matters: All this is occurring as electricity demand is rising faster than it has in decades. Some experts warn that limiting new power supplies could have broad economic consequences, including higher electricity costs and slower business growth. So far, it's unclear what the Trump campaign against renewables will mean for consumers or grid reliability.

  • Here's what not to miss in L.A. and SoCal.
    A float with a giant dog and yellow flowers rolls down the street next to a sign that reads, Rose Parade.
    The City of Alhambra "Good Day Dreamin" float participates in the 136th Rose Parade Presented By Honda on January 01, 2025 in Pasadena.

    In this edition:

    New Year’s Eve parties, a yoga class for the resolution-minded among us, The Roots rock Disney Hall, splurge on a caviar-pizza deal for an at-home celebration and more of the best things to do to kick off 2026.

    Highlights:

    • Join the African American Cultural Center of Long Beach (AACCLB) for a vibrant and meaningful Kwanzaa celebration honoring African American heritage. The event will feature a candle-lighting ceremony, dance performances and a traditional Karamu feast.
    • KCRW’s own Jason Bentley will be spinning all night at LA’s oldest bar, Venice Beach’s historic Townhouse.
    • The biggest ticket on New Year’s Eve is for The Roots, fast becoming a Disney Hall tradition. Questlove and friends will get you revved up for 2026 with energy, a big dance party and the best acoustics in town.
    • The Middle Age Dad Band show is sure to have some celeb appearances, karaoke go-tos, hilarious comedy moments and an all-around feel-good vibe. Embrace your inner (or outer) uncool dad mentality while still staying up till midnight at a show.

    Happy New Year! We here at LAist are wishing you all the best for a fun and safe New Year’s Eve. As you’re making those last-minute end-of-year donations, don’t forget to click that donate button so we can keep you in the loop on all the best things going on in L.A. in 2026 and for years to come.

    Our friends at Licorice Pizza will surely be hitting the town this holiday week; they suggest checking out Faster Pussycat at the Whisky on Tuesday, or singer-songwriter Rocco Deluca at Zebulon that night. There’s also legendary percussionist Pete Escovedo at the Catalina Bar & Grill the same evening. On New Year’s Eve, you have a wide range of options, including The Roots at Disney Hall, funk band Lettuce at the Bellwether, Mike Posner at Academy LA or El DeBarge at the Blue Note. And, of course, there will be big dance parties all over L.A., from downtown’s free annual extravaganza at Grand Park to Hollywood’s Club Decades.

    Elsewhere on LAist.com, Chef Roy Choi tells us the secrets to his Korean taco empire, and you can pick some shows to binge-watch before heading back to work after the holidays.

    Events

    Kwanzaa Celebration

    Monday, December 30, 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
    Expo Arts Center
    4321 Atlantic Ave., Long Beach
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    7 Black people in a frame set on a green background.
    (
    The African American Cultural Center of Long Beach
    /
    Eventbrite
    )

    Join the African American Cultural Center of Long Beach (AACCLB) for a vibrant and meaningful Kwanzaa celebration honoring African American heritage. The event will feature a candle-lighting ceremony, dance performances and a traditional Karamu feast.


    Rose Parade float decorating

    Through Tuesday, December 30 
    Rose Bowl 
    1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO

    Thursday, January 1, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
    Rose Parade 
    Pasadena 
    COST: FROM $117; MORE INFO 

    A cheer group on a float in front of a sign that says, Rose Parade.
    Ohio State Buckeyes cheerleaders participate in the 136th Rose Parade.
    (
    Jerod Harris
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    Every year, I say I’m going to do it: I’m going to forgo New Year’s and decorate floats very, very early in the morning. I never do, but don’t be like me. Surround yourself with roses and get those floats all pretty for TV! This year, there’s a special float with the theme “Rising Together” to honor the one-year anniversary of the devastating Eaton and Palisades fires. Or grab a ticket — free for fire survivors — and head up to watch the Rose Parade in person on New Year’s Day. Later in the week, on Jan. 2 and 3, there’s Float Fest, where you can check out the elaborate floats after their big hurrah.


    NYELA Celebration + Community Collage

    Wednesday, December 31, 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. 
    Gloria Molina Grand Park 
    200 N. Grand Ave., Downtown L.A.
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    Pink and gold poster for Gloria Molina Grand Park's NYE LA.
    (
    Courtesy Grand Park LA
    )

    The annual fireworks and music celebration, with headliners Bardo and Ceci Bastida, in downtown’s Gloria Molina Grand Park will usher in 2026 in a big way. In addition to music and art, the event features a Community Collage activity with photographer Josh Madson, where attendees can take part in professional portraits — part of Community Collage’s initiative ahead of LA28, where the team “aims to photograph 40,000 Angelenos for future public art murals across the city ahead of The Olympics and Paralympics.”


    Santa Monica Beach House New Year’s Eve

    Wednesday, December 31, 8 p.m.
    1212 3rd St. Promenade, Santa Monica
    COST: $23; MORE INFO 

    Poster for concert reading "Santa Monica Beach House New Years Eve"
    (
    Santa Monica Beach House
    /
    Eventbrite
    )

    Missing Burning Man? Celebrate New Year’s Eve with an “After Burn” party on the Third St. Promenade, featuring dance, drink and a party spilling out onto the street.


    Jason Bentley’s Metropolis NYE

    Wednesday, December 31, 9 p.m. Del Monte at the Townhouse
    52 Windward Ave., Venice
    COST: $40; MORE INFO

    KCRW’s own Jason Bentley will be spinning all night at L.A.’s oldest bar, Venice Beach’s historic Townhouse.


    New Year’s Eve with The Roots

    Wednesday, December 31, 7 p.m. 
    Disney Hall
    111 S. Grand Ave., Downtown L.A. 
    COST: FROM $69; MORE INFO

    A Black man wearing a beige shirt and headphones plays drums.
    Questlove performs with The Roots during the Back Cove Festival at Payson Park on August 02, 2025 in Portland, Maine.
    (
    Astrida Valigorsky
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    The biggest ticket on New Year’s Eve is for The Roots, fast becoming a Disney Hall tradition. Questlove and friends will get you revved up for 2026 with energy, a big dance party and the best acoustics in town.


    Middle Aged Dad Band New Year’s Eve Blowout

    Wednesday, December 31, 9 p.m. 
    Lodge Room
    104 N. Ave. 56, 2nd floor, Highland Park 
    COST: FROM $65; MORE INFO 

    The Middle Aged Dad Band show is sure to have some celeb appearances, karaoke go-tos, hilarious comedy moments and an all-around feel-good vibe. Embrace your inner (or outer) uncool dad mentality while still staying up till midnight at a show.


    Fiorelli Pizza x Imperia Caviar kit

    Preorder through Tuesday, December 30
    8236 W. 3rd Street, Beverly Grove
    COST: $140; MORE INFO

    A pizza, chips, bottle of wine and caviar on a wooden table.
    (
    Courtesy JS2 PR
    )

    Pizza and caviar? On the couch? For New Year’s? Don’t mind if I do. Beverly Grove's Fiorelli Pizza is partnering with Imperia Caviar for a fun DIY caviar pizza kit: a vodka sauce pizza with a side of crème fraîche, truffle potato chips and a full ounce of Imperia's caviar. Pre-order via email (lizg@fiorellipizza.com) or phone (424-466-7161); it will be available via delivery apps on Tuesday, December 30 (while supplies last).


    Grand Kiev Ballet

    Tuesday, December 30, 7 p.m. 
    Wilshire Ebell Theatre
    4401 W. 8th Street, Mid-City 
    COST: FROM $44; MORE INFO  

    A man dressed all in black holds up a puppet nutcracker in one arm.
    (
    Courtesy Grand Kiev Ballet
    )

    One more Nutcracker to wrap up the year, and this one is special. Acclaimed Ukrainian dance company the Grand Kyiv Ballet has danced through the war and is still able to blow audiences away with its dazzling production of The Nutcracker. Stay in the holiday spirit for a few more hours and enjoy this top-notch performance of Tchaikovsky’s beloved classic.


    NYE Hike to the Wisdom Tree

    Wednesday, December 31, 7 a.m. 
    Griffith Park Merry Go-Round, Lot #2
    Griffith Park
    COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

    An intermediate hike hosted by 213 Hikers, this early morning walk is not for the faint of heart. Get up early and plan your pre-midnight nap accordingly while making your way to greet the last day of 2025 at the Wisdom Tree in Griffith Park — and maybe make some new friends to kick off 2026 right.


    Flow Into the New Year yoga class

    Thursday, January 1, 10:30 a.m. 
    One Down Dog Yoga 
    2150 Colorado Blvd., Eagle Rock
    COST: VARIES; MORE INFO

    A light-skinned woman on a yoga mat sits cross-legged and twists to her left.
    (
    Dane Wetton
    /
    Unsplash
    )

    New year, same me telling you to go to yoga and set those 2026 intentions with a solid flow class. This one is at One Down Dog in Eagle Rock, but many local studios are hosting classes that are geared toward getting you out of your head and onto your mat for the new year. Ohm.

  • The French star exuded sex appeal in '50s and '60s

    Topline:

    Brigitte Bardot, the international sex goddess of cinema in the 1950s and '60s, has died aged 91.

    What we know: Bardot's animal rights foundation announced her death in a statement to news agency Agence France-Presse on Sunday, without specifying the time or place of death.

    About her career: Stylish and seductive, Bardot exuded a kind of free sexuality, rare in the buttoned-up 1950s. She modeled, made movies, influenced fashion around the world and recorded albums. She married four times.

    Brigitte Bardot, the international sex goddess of cinema in the 1950s and '60s, has died aged 91. Bardot's animal rights foundation announced her death in a statement to news agency Agence France-Presse on Sunday, without specifying the time or place of death.

    Stylish and seductive, Bardot exuded a kind of free sexuality, rare in the buttoned-up 1950s. She modeled, made movies, influenced fashion around the world and recorded albums. She married four times. Her list of lovers famously included Warren Beatty, Nino Ferrer and singer-songwriter-producer Serge Gainsbourg, with whom she recorded the French hit Bonnie and Clyde.

    Bardot's look was copied by women around the world, says Claire Schub who teaches French literature and film at Tufts University.

    "Her fashion choices, her hair, her makeup, her pout ... She became this icon, this legend, all over the globe," says Schub.

    But her image changed in her later years. Bardot was found guilty multiple times in her native France of "inciting racial hatred," mainly for comments attacking Muslims.

    A woman in a dress that shows her cleavage is running in the surf, a pier and sailboats are visible behind her.
    Bardot runs along the beach in Cannes, France, on April 28, 1956.
    (
    George W. Hales
    /
    Fox Photos/Getty Images
    )

    As an actor, Bardot worked with some of France's leading directors including Henri-Georges Clouzot in La Vérité (The Truth), Jean-Luc Godard in Le Mépris (Contempt) and Louis Malle in Viva Maria!

    Born Catholic to an upper-middle-class couple in Paris in 1934, Bardot studied ballet and modeled before becoming an actor. As a teenager, she appeared several times on the cover of Elle magazine, attracting the attention of Roger Vadim who was six years her senior. The two married in 1952. Bardot's parents made them wait until she turned 18.

    Vadim, an aspiring director, has been credited with turning Bardot into the iconic sex symbol she became. In his 1957 film And God Created Woman, Bardot plays a provocative young woman on a quest for sexual liberation.

    A woman in military fatigues and a helmet walks passed rows of uniformed men on either side.
    Bardot arrives at a Royal Air Force base in London in April 1959.
    (
    AFP via Getty Images
    )

    Vadim wanted Bardot's appearances in his films to shake off sexual taboos. He once said that he wanted to "kill the myth, this odd rule in Christian morality, that sex must be coupled with guilt."


    The New York Times panned the film but wrote that Bardot "moves herself in a fashion that fully accentuates her charms. She is undeniably a creation of superlative craftsmanship."

    The media savvy Vadim made sure Bardot appeared often in the French press. Not that it took much convincing — Bardot's alluring images helped sell both magazines and movie tickets. "To be fair, if Vadim discovered and manufactured me," Bardot once said, "I created Vadim."

    Bardot's liberating sexuality

    While she was one of France's best known exports, she wasn't always beloved at home. She was often ridiculed by critics who derided her acting even as they gushed over her body.

    Reviewing the 1959 film Babette Goes to War, in which Bardot does not bare all, one critic wrote, "In deciding not to reveal her body, Brigitte Bardot wanted to unveil only her talent. Alas, we saw nothing."

    A woman with light-tone skin and blonde hair wears a top hat and plays guitar.
    Bardot during a rehearsal of the TV program "Bonne année Brigitte" in which Bardot performed songs to ring in the new year in 1962.
    (
    Stringer
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )

    Despite the misogynistic comments and constant scrutiny of her private life, Bardot's popularity coincided with changing attitudes about sex. French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir took note of France's love-hate relationship with Bardot's sexual appetite.

    "In the game of love, she is as much hunter as she is prey," de Beauvoir wrote in her 1959 essay for Esquire, "Brigitte Bardot and the Lolita Syndrome."

    Bardot was hounded by the paparazzi, suffered from depression and attempted suicide. "What I rejected the most during my life as an actress was the limelight," she wrote in her autobiography, "That intense focus...ate at me from the inside."

    A man and a woman in costume with a large hat look at a script.
    Bardot discusses a scene with director Louis Malle during the filming of <em>Viva Maria!</em> in February 1965.
    (
    William Lovelace
    /
    Express/Getty Images
    )

    After starring in dozens of movies, Bardot retired from acting in 1973. She started an animal rights foundation.

    Convicted for 'inciting racial hatred'

    In her later years, Bardot became notorious for her racist and homophobic comments and her association with France's far right. Her fourth husband, Bernard d'Ormale, was an aide to Jean-Marie Le Pen, founder of the National Front party.

    In her 2003 book, Un Cris dans le Silence, she disparages immigrants, gays, French schools and contemporary art. She called Muslims "invaders" and railed against the killing of animals in the name of religion. She apologized in court in 2004 but also doubled down on what she called the "infiltration" of France by Islamic extremists.

    In her biography of Bardot, author and French film scholar Ginette Vincendeau writes "the high priestess of freedom resents almost everyone else's rights to exercise it."

    Bardot, the stunning, desirable beauty who once stood for sexual freedom for women, spent the latter part of her life at her home near Saint Tropez with her husband and a menagerie of pets.
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    A woman with light-tone skin is depicted in orange tones.
    A woman stands in front of Andy Warhol's "Brigitte Bardot" at Sotheby's auction house in London on May 12, 2012.
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