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What You Need To Know Today: Discovering West Adams, The Looming Heat And Why Abortion Rights Is An Issue In OC Races

Good morning, L.A. It’s Tuesday, August 30.
Today in How to LA: Discovering West Adams, Labor Day heatwave, what Asian American support for abortion rights means for O.C. Republican politicians.
I will never forget the day that my mom sat me down to watch Gone With the Wind. I had just finished reading that behemoth of a book and she just HAD to show 12-year-old me this classic (though highly problematic) story about a spoiled little girl in the antebellum South. My mom popped in the DVD and I remember seeing Hattie McDaniel, the Black actress who played “Mammy” to Vivien Leigh’s self-centered Scarlett O’Hara.
I remember feeling a sense of deep anguish and disappointment realizing that back in those times in Hollywood, humiliating stereotypes of Black women being subservient, domestic, undesirable maids with no actual life but servitude were commonplace. For McDaniel to have the quality of life she wanted back in the 1930s and 40s, she had to take on demeaning roles. Even though she gave a performance worthy of an Oscar, she was forced to sit separately from all of the other actors and was prohibited from going to clubs with other performers…just because she was Black.
But at home, in the historic West Adams neighborhood of Sugar Hill, McDaniel was in charge. McDaniel would throw parties where the best in show business showed up and showed out. I’m talking about Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Count Basie and Ethel Waters. She was THE IT Girl. In a Curbed Los Angeles article written in 2018, her biographer Jill Watts is quoted, saying of the parties: “It was private and intimate, but it was also independent and unfettered, free of white interference.”
Sugar Hill was home to many prominent Black Angelenos in the 1940s. Eventually white neighbors sued, arguing that housing covenants had been put in place earlier that restricted non-white home ownership and should be enforced (though some had expired). It was McDaniel who led and organized her neighbors in a fight against that lawsuit. In court, Judge Thurmond Clarke ended up ruling in their favor. Clarke became “the first judge in America to use the 14th Amendment to disallow the enforcement of covenant race restrictions," according to the West Adams Heritage Association.
McDaniel was just one out of many Black Angelenos who found respect, love and freedom in this neighborhood, even if it was only for a short time.
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West Adams has a history of change. It’s changing now. For the very first episode of our new podcast How To LA, Brian De Los Santos connects the dots between the area's complicated past and its nuanced present. The neighborhood’s story, like many in this city and in this nation, is one about gentrification and what it takes to preserve identity in a place that’s starting to look a whole lot different and is rapidly becoming more expensive.
I don’t want to give too much away in his very first podcast, but Brian takes us on a tour of West Adams’ streets, documenting the change, and talking to residents about it. He grew up there, too, so you know he has his own take. Check out the podcast here and his article here.
As always, stay happy and healthy, folks. There’s more news below - just keep reading.
The News You Need After You Stop Hitting Snooze
*We hope to bring you all the news freely, but occasionally you might hit a paywall. Thank you for understanding!
- It’s getting hotter, Southern California. A heatwave is coming today and is expected to stay through Labor Day weekend. Temperatures could reach highs of 110 degrees in some areas by Saturday.
- The California Senate has passed a bill to protect fast-food workers. (Los Angeles Times)
- Last year, the state ranked second for the highest life expectancy but now that number has dramatically declined according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but the question is…why? (Los Angeles Times)
- Stock up on those free COVID tests before Sept. 2. The federal government will stop providing test kits. Funding is the root of the problem.
- Six-time U.S. Open singles championship winner, Serena Williams, will be serving her last first match at the U.S Open, After announcing her retirement plans, this has become a bittersweet moment for her fans and supporters.
- Even after death, the boundary-pushing Star Trek star Nichelle Nichols will be traveling among the stars. Yes, you heard that right, the star’s ashes will be launched into deep space later this year along with those of series creator Gene Roddenberry.
Wait! One More Thing...How Asian American Views on Abortion Might Challenge Republicans in Orange County Races

It’s Tuesday - the day of the week I tell you about an interesting story I think you should read.
Today, I’m featuring my colleague Josie Huang’s story about the role the fight over abortion rights might play in upcoming elections in Orange County. In recent years, congressional races have been very tight in some districts, with conservative Asian American voters sometimes giving republican candidates an edge. Attitudes about abortion among Asian American and Pacific Islander voters could change that.
A Pew Research Center survey found that three-quarters of Asian respondents believe abortion should be legal. Josie notes this is good news for Orange County Democrats Asif Mahmood and Jay Chen and maybe not so great for Republicans Young Kim and Michelle Steel, if, notes Josie, they continue to avoid the issue. Josie writes that both Republicans say they are “pro-life” but would make exceptions in case of rape, incest and when a mother’s life is at risk. Read more about how the overturning of Roe v. Wade is testing a or Republicans in two Orange County congressional districts with significant Asian American populations.
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Got something you’ve always wanted to know about Southern California and the people who call it home? Is there an issue you want us to cover? Ask us anything.
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Isolated showers can still hit the L.A. area until Friday as remnants from the tropical storm move out.
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First aspiring spectators must register online, then later in 2026 there will be a series of drawings.
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It's thanks to Tropical Storm Mario, so also be ready for heat and humidity, and possibly thunder and lightning.
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L.A. Mayor Karen Bass suspended a state law allowing duplexes, calling more housing unsafe. But in Altadena, L.A. County leaders say these projects could be key for rebuilding.
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L.A. County investigators have launched a probe into allegations about Va Lecia Adams Kellum and people she hired at the L.A. Homeless Services Authority.
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This measure on the Nov. 4, 2025, California ballot is part of a larger battle for control of the U.S. House of Representatives next year.