Support for LAist comes from
Audience-funded nonprofit news
Audience-funded nonprofit news
Listen
Podcasts
Take Two
solid orange rectangular banner
()
Take Two
Take Two translates the day’s headlines for Southern California, making sense of the news and cultural events that affect our lives. Produced by Southern California Public Radio and broadcast from October 2012 – June 2021. Hosted by A Martinez.

Take Two translates the day’s headlines for Southern California, making sense of the news and cultural events that affect our lives. Produced by Southern California Public Radio and broadcast from October 2012 – June 2021. Hosted by A Martinez.

Get LA News Updates Daily

We brief you on what you need to know about L.A. today.
Episodes
It's our fall member drive!
We may be defunded, but we are not defeated. Become a monthly sustaining member of LAist or increase your current support to help keep independent local journalism strong for everyone.
  • Take Two Logo
    Listen 1:34:36
    Today on the show, we'll hear about an effort to bring art back to California prisons, and we'll hear from State Sen. Ted Lieu about his support for the effort. Then, the ownerless LA Sparks and the future of the WNBA and Hollywood 'nomads' question the need and benefit of film tax credit. Plus, scientists seek to explain curious 'earthquake lights' phenomenon and in our latest Picture This, Angelo Merendino documents his wife's battle with cancer.
  • A model display of a Boeing 787 Dreamliner is exibited at the Singapore Airshow in Singapore on February 14, 2012. Boeing and Indonesian carrier Lion Air formally signed a 22.4 billion USD deal for 230 aircraft, the single largest contract in commercial aviation history.
    Listen 1:34:26
    Today on the show we start with a look at film production in L.A.: How can the city compete with states that offer big tax breaks? Then, Boeing machinists to vote on a contract that will affect production of the 777x airplane. Also, what's ahead for babies born in 2014, scientists pinpoint what has been killing bald eagles in Utah, do detox cleanses actually rid the body of toxins? Plus much more.
  • A woman looks at the HealthCare.gov insurance exchange site Oct. 1, 2013 in Washington, DC. President Barack Obama's Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare as it is commonly called, passed in March 2010, went into effect Tuesday morning.
    Listen 1:34:02
    Today on the show, we'll take a look at the new transgender bathroom law now in effect in California schools. Also, Obamacare is officially in effect for those who signed up last year. Then, a new study says pharmacists often misinform teens about obtaining emergency contraception. Pot is not legal in Colorado for recreational use. How might this influence pot laws in other states?
  • Head coach David Shaw and the Stanford Cardinal team celebrate their Rose Bowl game invite after defeating the Arizona State Sun Devils 38-14 in Pac 12 Championship game at Sun Devil Stadium on December 7, 2013 in Tempe, Arizona.
    Listen 59:53
    Today we start with an update on the Jahi McMath story. Then, a look at how the Sacramento economy is faring at the end of 2013. Then, a review of the year's best music, our regular sports contributors give us a rundown of all the bowl games coming up. Also, we learn some quirky facts about the Rose Bowl and we find out why Glendale is featuring meatball the bear on its Rose Parade Float. Finally, Patt Morrison explains what she won't miss about 2013, plus much more.
  • The regularly scheduled evening camping shot that I had planned for our time in 
Joshua Tree was made infinitely more exciting when a meteor exploded in the sky just 
after I had triggered a 30 second exposure on my camera. The resulting image is a 
stroke of good luck that, as a photographer, you dream of, but never expect to actually 
have happen. This was truly a once in a lifetime shot. Joshua Tree National Park, 
California.
    Listen 58:10
    Today on the show, we'll hear about the cash coming in from California's cap and trade program. Then, we have an audio tribute to some of the notable names we lost in 2013, KPCC's Sanden Totten looks back at the year in space and photographer Scott Rinckenberger talks about capturing a fleeting meteor. Plus, our regular On The Lot segment looks at the latest news out of Hollywood, and we look into why scientists are naming species after characters in pop culture.
  • LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 20:  U.S. Marine Corps veteran Jose Navarrete (R) listens to Brian Mendez with University of Southern California facilities management services as he looks for employment during a jobs fair for veterans called "Serving Those Who Have Served" on campus on March 20, 2013 in Los Angeles, California.  California's unemployment rate tied with Rhode Island's for highest in U.S. at 9.8 percent.  (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)
    Listen 1:35:07
    Today, we'll discuss the upcoming end to unemployment benefits for millions of Americans. Then, our Friday Flashback year-end review and Alan Alda challenges scientists to explain color to kids. Plus, your discarded Christmas lights travel to China and come back as other goods, we explain how to have the difficult end-of-life discussion with your aging relatives, LA band The Internet joins the show and much more.
  • LAPD officers watch the pedestrian traffic at Jordan Downs public housing to make sure crowds don't get out of hand.
    Listen 1:34:20
    Today on the show, we'll hear about the soil contamination problems plaguing the Jordan Downs housing project. Then, with the new year approaching, we'll get some tax tips from a local CPA. Plus, Beejoli Shah takes us inside Hollywood's diversity hire program, we'll check in with 'Dreamer' Lisbeth Mateo, Tim Hernandez talks about his new book, "Mañana Means Heaven," plus much more.
  • Cotton Hoer—Worked from 6 A.M. to 7 P.M. for One Dollar. Near Clarksdale, Mississippi, 1937
    Listen 1:34:05
    Merry Christmas Eve! Today we'll hear about a deadly fungus threatening the world's banana crop, we'll hear from a UCLA nurse helping Filipinos recover after Typhoon Haiyan, and Dana Goodyear talks about her new book on the changing American palate. Plus, getting to know Dorothea Lange, the photographer behind "Migrant Mother," looking back at the year in music and much more.
  • Covered California Executive Director Peter Lee speaks during a press conference regarding the number of new healthcare enrollees through CoveredCA.com, the health insurance exchange for the state of California, on November 13, 2013 in Sacramento, California. A total of 30,830 Californians enrolled through the exchange in the month of October, with a total of 59,830 people enrolled through November 12.
    Listen 1:34:34
    Today is the deadline to sign up for the Affordable Care Act, we'll take a look at how people are faring with the exchange website. Then, we'll take a look back to some of the biggest stories of the year. Plus, we hear from a Hollywood music composer, we get our roundup of the week;s box office news and we hear from artist Jay Shells about bringing his Rap Quotes project to Los Angeles.
  • The offices of the Central Basin Municipal Water District in Los Angeles County are seen in Commerce, Calif., in a Wednesday, June 12, 2013 photo. The state has hundreds of local water districts, which often deal with millions of dollars but operate as quasi-government entities with very little oversight or public scrutiny. They pay six-figure salaries, dole out millions in contracts and sometimes have the same type of unfunded pension liabilities that have led to so much trouble for the state. Dozens of them even ignore annual requests by the state controller for salary and staffing information, choosing to hide their operations from state government agencies. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)
    Listen 1:30:35
    Listen 1:30:35
    Today on the show we'll hear from KPCC's Karen Foshay about $2.7 million missing from the Central Basin's trust fund. Then, how payday lenders turn quick cash into a mountain of debt, we'll look at the outrage surrounding anti-gay comments made by the patriarch of the A&E show, 'Duck Dynasty.' Plus, Carey Mulligan talks 'Inside Llewyn Davis,' Washoku Japanese cuisine and more.