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Summer heat wave, Arroyo Seco, best alien movies, TV Talk and more

The sun shines brightly on a person wearing a hat and holding a phone.
A person wears a hat for shade under the morning sun while walking along the Strand in Redondo Beach during a heat wave in March. Another stretch of heat is settling in in Southern California this week.
(
Patrick T. Fallon
/
Getty Images
)

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Today's show: AirTalk host Larry Mantle discusses the summer heat wave, electric vehicles, classic board and card games, Arroyo Seco, best alien movies and TV Talk.

Have a question or comment about a segment? Want to pitch us a story?

Fill out the form below, and please include an email address so we're able to follow up if necessary! We're not able to respond to every inquiry, but all submissions are read and reviewed by our production team.

Heat on land and sea is in the forecast — what are the long-term concerns?

The topic:

The National Weather Service has issued heat advisories for much of Southern California that will remain in effect through next week. Temperatures will be at their hottest Wednesday and Thursday, when parts of Southern California will see triple digit heat.

The details: L.A. County's inland valleys and mountains could get up to 105 degrees this week. Inland coastal areas, including downtown L.A., will likely get up to the low 90s. The Coachella Valley is under a more severe Extreme Heat Warning. Temperatures there are expected to climb as high as 116 degrees.

Why it matters: The heat wave will likely worsen fire conditions across the region, according to National Weather Service meteorologist Lisa Phillips. The hot weather is also expected to pose a significant risk of heat illness, especially for the elderly, young children and other sensitive populations.

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What's next: Temperatures are expected to dip slightly by the end of the day Friday, but they will remain above average through the weekend. The minimal respite won't last long, though. Another, even worse heatwave is headed our way next week.

Guest:

  • Ariel Cohen, Meteorologist In Charge at the National Weather Service Los Angeles/Oxnard
  • Kate Ricke, climate scientist at Scripps Oceanography and UC San Diego’s School of Global Policy and Strategy, and author of a recent study titled Targeted marine cloud brightening weakens subsequent El Niño

A check-in on the electric vehicle market

Aerial view of a white car parked in an electric vehicle charging station. Four parking spots are labeled "EV charging only."
An electric vehicle charges at an EVgo electric charger in Monrovia, Calif.
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Justin Sullivan
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Getty Images
)

The topic:

As global EV markets continue to grow, approaches to net zero carbon manufacturing for big automakers like Honda and GM have thawed. These troubles are reflected in a broader reckoning across the industry as the Trump administration’s sweeping eliminations of federal tax credits have added doubt to the consumer EV markets.

Hybrid boom: With federal EV tax credits gone, gas prices rising, and many consumers still reporting a sense of “range anxiety” with fully electric vehicles, many car buyers are turning to hybrids instead.

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Join the conversation: Do you have an EV or a hybrid? Are you considering buying one? Give us a call at 866-893-5722 or email us at atcomments@laist.com.

Guest:

  • Jessica Caldwell, Head of Insights at Edmunds, an online resource for automotive inventory and information

What is an old board game or card game you still love to play?

A close up of a table scattered with classic board game pieces such as black and beige chess pieces, red dice, and a colorful deck of cards.
What board and card games still hold up for you?
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Yuriy Gluzhetsky
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iStockphoto
)

The topic:

We ask listeners about the old or obscure board games and card games that they still play. And we get into the history behind some of today’s most enduring games.

Join the conversation: We want to hear from you! Whether it's a family tradition or a newfound hobby, what are the old board games and card games you still play? Why have these games stuck with you? Give us a call at 866-896-5722 or email us at atcomments@laist.com.

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Guest:

  • Kelli Wood, assistant professor of art history at University of Knoxville, Tennessee, and author of the book Games and Sports in Renaissance Italy: The Art of Play (Routledge, 2026)

Arroyo Seco clean water project stirs up controversy

The Arroyo Seco rushes and overflows in the Highland Park neighborhood thanks to heavy rains in December, 2021.
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Alborz Kamalizad
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LAist
)

The topic:

Pasadena and South Pasadena have proposed a project to clean contaminated water from the channelized Arroyo Seco, but to build the necessary infrastructure, they’d have to remove nearly 140 mature trees, more than half of which are invasive and highly flammable. And a portion of the cleaner water would end up irrigating a public golf course.

What's the controversy? The golf course irrigation has been a major point of contention raised by a group of residents on the Los Angeles side of the Arroyo. They have campaigned on social media and in weekly stakeouts to stop the project, which would significantly alter a small creek near the popular San Pascual Park.

Other opponents: Leaders of the Gabrieleño Band of Mission Indians-Kizh (Quiichi) Nation have also rejected the Arroyo Seco Water Reuse Project because the area is sacred and home to burial sites, said tribal chairman Andrew Salas. The tribe sent a formal opposition letter last year.

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Read the full story: for details about the project and to learn how you can weigh in.

Guest:

  • Erin Stone, LAist climate and environment senior reporter

What are the best alien movies?

Alien creature opens its mouth surrounded by smoke
Alien: Romulus (2024)
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Courtesy 20th Century Studios
)

The topic:

The release of Steven Spielberg's Disclosure Day adds to a whole lineage of extraterrestrial depictions in film that he's helped popularize through prior works like E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Although he's made four alien-related films, Spielberg's use of the concept has become a jumping-off point for a variety of themes.

Highest-grossing alien films: Top honors would go to the first two Avatar films, having grossed more than $2 billion. Other successful franchises that include aliens in their greater plots are Star Wars and Transformers.

Join the conversation: What is the best example of this science fiction subgenre? Give us a call at (866) 893-5722 or email atcomments@laist.com.

Guest:

  • Wade Major, film critic for LAist and CineGods.com, and author of the "Hollywood Heretic" Substack

TV Talk: ‘Little House on the Prairie,’ ‘The Five Star Weekend,’ and more!

Old television isolated on white background
What have you been watching?
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Pituk Loonhong
/
iStockphoto
)

The topic:

Have you felt completely overwhelmed when deciding what new show to watch these days? Us too. There’s just so much content out there between network TV and numerous streaming platforms. This week, listeners will get the latest scoop on what’s worth watching.

TV Shows:

  • Little House on the Prairie [Season 1] (Netflix)
  • Trying [Season 5] (BBC | Apple TV)
  • The Five Star Weekend [Limited Series] (Peacock)
  • Human Vapor [Limited Series] (Netflix)

Guests:

  • Angie Han, TV critic for The Hollywood Reporter
  • Steve Greene, freelance TV critic
More AirTalk episodes

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