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Imperfect Paradise

LAist's weekly on-demand news magazine show that pulls back the curtain and dives deeper into the biggest and most consequential SoCal stories of the week from our newsroom. New episodes drop every Friday.
  • Imperfect Paradise Main Tile
    Listen 20:19
    Catastrophic fires are becoming more and more common across California. After-action reports about the fires and other disasters can help officials prevent past mistakes. But the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, or CalOES, has failed to deliver legally mandated reports on time following disasters for years. LAist Science Reporter Jacob Margolis looks at why the agency is so far behind, whether anyone is being held accountable and the worrying consequences for all Californians when we can’t learn from past emergencies until years later.

    After disasters, California mandates timely reports. Why it matters that more than 100 of them are years overdue
    Catastrophic fires are becoming more and more common across California. After-action reports about the fires and other disasters can help officials prevent past mistakes. But the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, or CalOES, has failed to deliver legally mandated reports on time following disasters for years. LAist Science Reporter Jacob Margolis looks at why the agency is so far behind, whether anyone is being held accountable and the worrying consequences for all Californians when we can’t learn from past emergencies until years later.

  • Imperfect Paradise Main Tile
    Listen 23:45
    Sithy Yi and her family fled Cambodia to the U.S. following the takeover of their home country by the brutal Khmer Rouge regime. But Yi’s visa application process has taken years, and despite complying with ICE, she’s been detained. LAist Watchdog Correspondent Jordan Rynning joins us to breakdown Yi’s story and how new policy changes from the Trump administration will affect Yi’s fate and the legal status of so many other immigrants like her.

    Grow your business–no matter what stage you’re in. Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at SHOPIFY.COM/paradise

    Support for this podcast is made possible by Gordon and Dona Crawford, who believe that quality journalism makes Los Angeles a better place to live.

    A Cambodian Genocide survivor was undergoing the legal immigration process and had protections against deportation. So why was she detained by ICE indefinitely?
    Sithy Yi and her family fled Cambodia to the U.S. following the takeover of their home country by the brutal Khmer Rouge regime. But Yi’s visa application process has taken years, and despite complying with ICE, she’s been detained. LAist Watchdog Correspondent Jordan Rynning joins us to breakdown Yi’s story and how new policy changes from the Trump administration will affect Yi’s fate and the legal status of so many other immigrants like her.

    Grow your business–no matter what stage you’re in. Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at SHOPIFY.COM/paradise

    Support for this podcast is made possible by Gordon and Dona Crawford, who believe that quality journalism makes Los Angeles a better place to live.

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  • Imperfect Paradise Main Tile
    Listen 31:43
    In the podcast series Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative, host and producer Jess Shane questions the value of some basic tenets of documentary storytelling — guidelines we follow here at LAist — like, never pay your subjects, and don’t share editorial control with them. 

    The five-part series sparked so many conversations for us at LAist that Imperfect ParadiseAntonia Cereijido sat down with Jess to talk about the questions she raises in the series about how to make documentaries more ethically.
    ‘Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative’ host Jess Shane challenges the ethics of documentary storytelling
    In the podcast series Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative, host and producer Jess Shane questions the value of some basic tenets of documentary storytelling — guidelines we follow here at LAist — like, never pay your subjects, and don’t share editorial control with them. 

    The five-part series sparked so many conversations for us at LAist that Imperfect ParadiseAntonia Cereijido sat down with Jess to talk about the questions she raises in the series about how to make documentaries more ethically.
  • Imperfect Paradise Main Tile
    Listen 39:59
    This week, Imperfect Paradise brings you the first episode of Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative. In the series, host and producer Jess Shane questions the value of some basic tenets of documentary storytelling and explores what really happens when stories about people’s lives are collected, edited, and consumed. 
    Listen to Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative wherever you get your podcasts.
    ‘Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative’ on Imperfect Paradise
    This week, Imperfect Paradise brings you the first episode of Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative. In the series, host and producer Jess Shane questions the value of some basic tenets of documentary storytelling and explores what really happens when stories about people’s lives are collected, edited, and consumed. 
    Listen to Radiotopia Presents: Shocking, Heartbreaking, Transformative wherever you get your podcasts.
  • Mountain Lion, Coyote, and Bear face forward with Imperfect Paradise: Lions, Coyotes, & Bears title and LAist Studios logo in the foreground.
    Listen 29:48
    LAist Correspondent Jill Replogle speaks with Ben Goldfarb, an environmental journalist, wildlife enthusiast, and author of Crossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of Our Planet. They discuss how roads impact the wild animals in our midst, what wildlife crossings can do to mitigate that impact, and some of the other ecological solutions that are taking shape.
    Lions, Coyotes, & Bears: Part 5 - Roads & Wildlife
    LAist Correspondent Jill Replogle speaks with Ben Goldfarb, an environmental journalist, wildlife enthusiast, and author of Crossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of Our Planet. They discuss how roads impact the wild animals in our midst, what wildlife crossings can do to mitigate that impact, and some of the other ecological solutions that are taking shape.
  • Mountain Lion, Coyote, and Bear face forward with Imperfect Paradise: Lions, Coyotes, & Bears title and LAist Studios logo in the foreground.
    Listen 29:00
    Jackie and Shadow are two beloved bald eagles who live in Big Bear, a ski town a couple hours northeast of L.A. They went viral in 2024, as people tuned in to a livestream of their nest to see if their eggs would hatch. Fans around the world became deeply attached to the lovebirds, obsessing over the couple’s devotion to each other and their eggs. For Imperfect Paradise host Antonia Cereijido, the story became personal when she also began her parenthood journey. Antonia explores how our relationship to wildlife can help us better understand ourselves.

    CONTENT ADVISORY: This episode includes details about pregnancy complications.
    Lions, Coyotes, & Bears: Part 4 - The Eagle Lovebirds
    Jackie and Shadow are two beloved bald eagles who live in Big Bear, a ski town a couple hours northeast of L.A. They went viral in 2024, as people tuned in to a livestream of their nest to see if their eggs would hatch. Fans around the world became deeply attached to the lovebirds, obsessing over the couple’s devotion to each other and their eggs. For Imperfect Paradise host Antonia Cereijido, the story became personal when she also began her parenthood journey. Antonia explores how our relationship to wildlife can help us better understand ourselves.

    CONTENT ADVISORY: This episode includes details about pregnancy complications.
  • Mountain Lion, Coyote, and Bear face forward with Imperfect Paradise: Lions, Coyotes, & Bears title and LAist Studios logo in the foreground.
    Listen 48:15
    The first deadly black bear attack in California’s history was confirmed in 2024 in a small mountain town in Northern California. While wildlife officials say fatal bear attacks are rare, this recent death and growing encounters between bears and people underscore how high the stakes are as wild and urban worlds merge.

    LAist climate reporter Erin Stone takes a deeper look at bears through the lens of the mountain town of Sierra Madre, where she lives. Just 25 minutes from downtown L.A., the residents of Sierra Madre increasingly come face-to-face with black bears. 
    Erin looks at the history of bears in the U.S., how black bears ended up in Southern California, and how Sierra Madre is choosing to respond to the black bears living in its community.
    Lions, Coyotes, & Bears: Part 3 - The Bear Nuisance
    The first deadly black bear attack in California’s history was confirmed in 2024 in a small mountain town in Northern California. While wildlife officials say fatal bear attacks are rare, this recent death and growing encounters between bears and people underscore how high the stakes are as wild and urban worlds merge.

    LAist climate reporter Erin Stone takes a deeper look at bears through the lens of the mountain town of Sierra Madre, where she lives. Just 25 minutes from downtown L.A., the residents of Sierra Madre increasingly come face-to-face with black bears. 
    Erin looks at the history of bears in the U.S., how black bears ended up in Southern California, and how Sierra Madre is choosing to respond to the black bears living in its community.
  • Mountain Lion, Coyote, and Bear face forward with Imperfect Paradise: Lions, Coyotes, & Bears title and LAist Studios logo in the foreground.
    Listen 49:07
    If the mountain lion is thought of as a celebrity, then, many would think of the coyote as a villain. LAist Correspondent Emily Guerin looks into why we vilify coyotes, what scientists actually know about them, and how they’ve adapted and thrived in some of the most urban parts of Southern California. Emily also explores the historic and cultural baggage that may inform people’s attitudes about coyotes.
    CONTENT ADVISORY: This episode includes details about a deadly coyote attack of a toddler.
    Lions, Coyotes, & Bears: Part 2 - The Coyote Villain
    If the mountain lion is thought of as a celebrity, then, many would think of the coyote as a villain. LAist Correspondent Emily Guerin looks into why we vilify coyotes, what scientists actually know about them, and how they’ve adapted and thrived in some of the most urban parts of Southern California. Emily also explores the historic and cultural baggage that may inform people’s attitudes about coyotes.
    CONTENT ADVISORY: This episode includes details about a deadly coyote attack of a toddler.
  • Mountain Lion, Coyote, and Bear face forward with Imperfect Paradise: Lions, Coyotes, & Bears title and LAist Studios logo in the foreground.
    Listen 50:06
    One of Hollywood’s recent celebrities wasn’t a person, but a feline. LAist Correspondent Jill Replogle looks into P-22’s stardom, people’s obsession with him, and what his story says about our ability to coexist with wildlife in a rapidly changing, increasingly urban world.
    Lions, Coyotes, & Bears: Part 1 - The Mountain Lion Celebrity
    One of Hollywood’s recent celebrities wasn’t a person, but a feline. LAist Correspondent Jill Replogle looks into P-22’s stardom, people’s obsession with him, and what his story says about our ability to coexist with wildlife in a rapidly changing, increasingly urban world.
  •  A man looks into the distance, leaning on the U.S. / Mexico border wall. The image has a dark pink filter on it, and the title of the series: Imperfect Paradise: Return to Mexico.
    Listen 45:28
    In 2009, Gloria Arellano de la Rosa was banned from re-entering the U.S. for ten years, finding herself separated from her four children and husband. But unlike Daniel Zamora, she didn’t remake her life in Mexico. Every day she waited to go home to the U.S. Fernanda Echavarri tells the story of what happens when Gloria finally returns to the States and reunites with her family. 
    Return from Mexico
    In 2009, Gloria Arellano de la Rosa was banned from re-entering the U.S. for ten years, finding herself separated from her four children and husband. But unlike Daniel Zamora, she didn’t remake her life in Mexico. Every day she waited to go home to the U.S. Fernanda Echavarri tells the story of what happens when Gloria finally returns to the States and reunites with her family. 
  •  A man looks into the distance, leaning on the U.S. / Mexico border wall. The image has a dark pink filter on it, and the title of the series: Imperfect Paradise: Return to Mexico.
    Listen 36:36
    Unable to return to the U.S., Daniel Zamora struggles to build a life in Mexico, until a trip abroad suddenly upends his perspective. Lorena Ríos reports. 
    Return to Mexico: Part 3
    Unable to return to the U.S., Daniel Zamora struggles to build a life in Mexico, until a trip abroad suddenly upends his perspective. Lorena Ríos reports. 
  •  A man looks into the distance, leaning on the U.S. / Mexico border wall. The image has a dark pink filter on it, and the title of the series: Imperfect Paradise: Return to Mexico.
    Listen 39:08
    Daniel Zamora  waits for the decision on his deportation appeal and has to figure out how to make a life in Mexico — find work, get an apartment.  All the while, Daniel tries to keep up his cross-border relationship. Lorena Ríos reports. 
    Return to Mexico: Part 2
    Daniel Zamora  waits for the decision on his deportation appeal and has to figure out how to make a life in Mexico — find work, get an apartment.  All the while, Daniel tries to keep up his cross-border relationship. Lorena Ríos reports. 

Credits

Antonia Cereijido, Host
Nereida Moreno, Host
Monica Bushman, Producer
James Chow, Producer
Anjuli Sastry, Senior Producer
Catherine Mailhouse, Executive Producer & Dir. of Content Development
E. Scott Kelly, Audio Production Engineer