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DTLA Bike Tour Looks at Another SoCal Flower Parade

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Say what you will about Southern California, that it's a place that soaks in a bucketload of sunshine throughout the year, that its oranges are citrus superstars, that its June Gloom is the very gloomiest.

All pretty true, overall, but so is this: We like to cover random things in flowers.

The Rose Parade floats surely spring to your flower-focused mind first, but so should our large-scale public gardens, our massive LA Flower Mart, our marigold-laden Day of the Dead observances, and every other occasion where we turn to nature's colorful bounty to help us adequately express our emotions.

Fiesta de las Flores was one of our region's more historic floral festivities, and delving into its history and spirit, as the Rose Parade comes into view, feels like an ideal way to wind down December.

Especially, that is, if you love to cycle. For Hotel Indigo, in DTLA, and LA Cycle Tours have teamed up on a spoke-tastic outing, one that's focused on Fiesta de las Flores.

The $55 tour is open to both guests of the hotel as well as anyone who wants to know the backstory on this delightful event, which, like the Rose Parade, can trace its origins back to the late 1800s.

On the tour schedule?

You'll "(m)osey through the old Fiesta parade route," and call upon the LA Flower Market, all to gather blossoms to decorate your bike and person for your own impromptu flower parade. Learning about the fiesta, too, is paramount.

The distance, all told, is 10 miles, and everything'll wrap in less than four hours. For more details, and dates, and to book your flower power pedal adventure, visit LA Cycle Tours now.



Photo Credit: Hotel Indigo

Pet of the Week: Paula

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Meet Paula, the pet of the week for Thursday, Dec. 27, 2018.

Paula is an 8-year-old spayed gray pit bull mix available for adoption at the Downey Care Center. She is very attentive to people and likes to play with other dogs. She would do well in a home with other large dogs and children 8-years-old and up. 

Paula has a medium energy level and would benefit from continued basic manners training. 

ID: A5225680

County of Los Angeles

Department of Animal Care and Control

5898 Cherry Ave. 

Long Beach, CA 90805 

562-728-4882 



Photo Credit: County of Los Angeles - Department of Animal Care and Control

Sprinkles Has a Bubbly Cupcake to Welcome 2019

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The foods we eat as one year exits and one year sails in are so deeply steeped in myth, lore, hope, and good feeling that it is difficult to not want to make a wish with every bite taken come the end of December.

Pair this with the fact that many of us are still seeking out special confections during the holidays, the kind of treats that fit the festive feel in the air.

So how many bites will you take, and how many wishes will you make, while biting into a Champagne cupcake from Sprinkles on New Year's Eve?

A cupcake that not only boasts a bubbly character — quite literally, thanks to its headlining ingredient — but offers something unusual inside the sweet, too.

And that filling? Oh yeah, it's Pop Rocks, as in Pop Rocks, as in the pebbly-style candy that pop, pop, pops once it finds its way to the surface of your tongue.

As in those Pop Rocks. 

On the top of the golden-hued treat? Buttercream frosting, which, yes, rocks the as-promised Champagne element.

These goodies can be ordered, from Dec. 27 right through to New Year's Day, or found at a Sprinkles Cupcake shop for $4.25 each, plus tax.

Will 2019 have some fizz to it? Some panache? A lot of pop, as in opportunities opening up, much like a bottle of bubbly?

Better bite into your special Sprinkles New Year's cupcake, the one with Champagne and Pop Rocks, and make a wish, or five, or six, as you do so.



Photo Credit: Sprinkles Cupcakes

Calif. Man Learns of English Daughter After Cousin Takes DNA Test

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Sargon Isaac looks at his family with tears in his eyes during Christmas dinner when he thinks of what it took to get to this moment. At 68, the unmarried San Jose man recently discovered he's a father and grandfather.

In the 1970s, Isaac was a touring musician in England. He says he opened for Glen Campbell, Tom Jones and Engelbert Humperdinck. He wasn’t married and admits he had a series of short-term relationships.

He moved to San Jose in 1982, and last July, his cousin called him out of the blue to say she recently did an Ancestry DNA kit to learn more about her heritage. Those tests can also reveal biological relatives who’ve submitted DNA into the company database.

She told Isaac she receiving a message from a girl alleging to be her third cousin whose been looking for her biological father all her life.

"The only thing she knows about him is that he played the guitar," Isaac recalled his cousin telling him. "And I said 'So why are you calling me?' And [my cousin] says 'I think it's you.' And I go, 'Why would that be? A lot of people play guitar.'"

"She said, 'But she was born in Nottingham.'"

Isaac said he spent some time performing in Nottingham, and his parents owned a hotel there. He agreed to connect with the woman on Facebook. He says the woman looked just like his mother.

“I went online and looked and was shaking," Isaac said. "I've always told everybody in the last 10 years that I really regret not having kids.”

A DNA test confirmed Kelly Wilson was the long lost 40-year-old daughter he never knew he had. Isaac flew to England in July to meet her.

This week, Wilson and her three children flew to the Bay Area to spend Christmas with her dad for the first time.

“Incredible isn't it? I'm so blessed. I've been so welcomed,” Wilson said.

Wilson is also into music. She teaches music, arts and theater at a high school outside of Nottingham. She doesn't blame anyone for what happened in the past, saying her mom never talked about the brief relationship she had with Isaac.

“It’s God's plan. God's timing. It's really great now. If we live regretting and resentful over what could have been, then I think you end up quite bitter,” Wilson said.

On Christmas night, Isaac would host dinner with his new family, smiling and tearing up as he sang with his three new grandchildren.

Wilson gave him a framed craft she recently made.

“It’s an altered family tree,” she said.

It’s the connection Isaac always wanted but never knew he had.

“I have a lot to be thankful for,” Isaac said. “This is my best Christmas ever."

This is Wilson's first trip to the United States. She expects to make many more trips in the future to see her father.



Photo Credit: NBC Bay Area

Photos: Grinchmas Returns to Universal Studios Hollywood

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Celebrate the season with The Grinch, his faithful dog Max and Who-ville Whos at Universal Studios Hollywood. "Grinchmas" is back now daily through Dec. 30, 2018.

Photo Credit: Whitney Irick

800K Government Workers May Need Financial Aid in Shutdown

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Non-profit organizations and private companies are working to provide financial assistance to roughly 800,000 people who won't receive regularly scheduled paychecks as Congress failed to vote on a resolution to the partial government shutdown during a session Thursday, NBC News reported.

The U.S. Office of Personnel Management, an agency which handles human resources for the government's civilian workforce, advised thousands of employees who won't be paid during government shutdown to reach out to creditors in order to work out alternative payment schedules.

The OPM released sample letters Thursday on Twitter to show shutdown workers how to ask for help from mortgage companies and landlords.



Photo Credit: AP

Grandmother Dies After Being Shot By Purse Snatcher on Christmas

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A 70-year-old grandmother who was shot in Inglewood on Christmas Day has died, as investigators continue to search for the shooter.

Authorities have released a description of the suspect's vehicle and allege that the suspect stole the victim's purse before taking off with a getaway driver.

The victim, Lourdes Padilla, was a longtime Inglewood resident.

Detectives describe the suspect's vehicle as a black car with tinted windows.

The shooting occurred near Yukon Avenue and 104th Street, and a nearby security camera caught a black sedan with paper plates believed to be the getaway car.

The victim's family called police after the grandmother went to the store on Christmas Day and never returned, according to police. A woman in her 30s is believed to have exchanged words and tussled over the victim's purse before witnesses heard a single gunshot.

"They thought it was just a conversation," Lt. Neal Cochran of the Inglewood Police Department says. "They look away for a second, then, they hear a pop which was a gunshot. They look over. They see our victim on the ground, and they see the suspect taking her purse."

Police and the family are asking for the public's help in finding the shooter and the getaway driver, a man also in his 30s.   

"To shoot her, for who knows what's even in the purse? I don't see how that could ever be worth shooting someone for," Cochran said. 

The yellow paper plates and the grainy photos of the black sedan provide limited evidence to track down the suspects, but the family is hopeful that the people responsible will be caught and brought to justice.

Investigators believe the car is a black, 4-door 2019 Toyota Yaris or Scion IA with yellow paper plates saying either "Keyes" or "Longo" -- dealerships with similar paper plates.

Anyone with information about the suspects is encouraged to contact police at 310-412-5206 or anonymously to Crime Stoppers at 800-222-8277 or lacrimestoppers.org.

The family has also set up a GoFundMe account to help during the trying time. If you would like to donate to the GoFundMe, you may do so here. Please note that GoFundMe takes a percentage of donations.

One Day Only: The LA Street Dog Cheesesteak

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Hearty and decadent eats enjoyed in the middle of the holiday season? Especially during that fabled and food-laden run between Christmas and New Year's Day?

Many people are snacking a bit more lavishly, a bit more adventurously, and trying a dish that combines two edible icons seems like an especially tempting path to take.

And if those yummy staples include a hot dog? And a Philly cheesesteak? You can count on the cuisine you'll be chowing down on to be as savory, gooey, and meat-major as such meals ever come.

If this tantalizes, as does the idea that such a dish will only be available for one day, and that day happens to be National Bacon Day, which is on Sunday, Dec. 30, 2018, best find your way to Figueroa Philly, where the LA Street Dog Cheesesteak will be in the spotlight.

The "LA Street Dog" part of the name reveals that there's bacon involved, as does the fact that it will only be available on National Bacon Day.

The "Cheesesteak" end of things confirms that, yes, it is loaded with all of the classic elements of a straight-out-of-Philadelphia steak and cheese.

So just what's inside? Look for a "bacon-wrapped hot dog" plus steak plus Cheese Wiz (melted, naturally) to fill the filling sandwich.

It's twelve bucks, and, again: This is a dish that's only popping up on Dec. 30.

Still in the whole hearty holiday noshing mindset? Dig a one-day-only kind of dish? Love both cheesesteaks and frankfurters wearing a swath of bacon?

Make for the Figueroa Street eatery for a meaty mash-up of two tum-filling favorites.



Photo Credit: McKenzie Walton

Oh Baby! Texas Newborn Weighs in at 14 Pounds, 13 Ounces

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An Arlington newborn baby boy is breaking records and melting hearts.

Ali James Medlock was born on Dec. 12 at Arlington Memorial Hospital.

At 21.5 inches long, Baby Ali weighed 14 pounds, 13 ounces.

Ali’s parents, Jennifer and Eric Medlock, are both music teachers in the Arlington Independent School District. Jennifer says the hospital told them their son was a record breaker for Arlington Memorial and the biggest baby their doctor delivered in his 30-plus-year career.

Baby Ali had to remain in the NICU for a week due to his size — his blood sugar and platelets were too low — according to his mother. He also experienced rapid breathing.

Fortunately, Baby Ali has improved since his stay in the hospital.

Ali James has a big sister named Annabelle, who weighed 9 pounds, 10 ounces when she was born, according to mom.



Photo Credit: Family Photos

Blue Light Floods Sky Over Queens in NYC

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A transformer explosion in Queens sent an eerie blue light flooding the nighttime sky over New York City Thursday night as electricity flickered in homes and LaGuardia Airport was plunged into darkness. 

Con Edison says a brief electrical fire involving transformers broke out at the substation on 20th Avenue and 32nd Street in Astoria, causing a transmission dip in the area. 

The explosion lit the sky so brightly that it briefly appeared to be daytime in neighborhoods like Astoria and Woodside, residents reported. Smoke arose from the source of the blue light, visible from as far as Manhattan. 

Con Edison is investigating the cause of the transformer fire. Utility spokesman Bob McGee says no one was hurt. 

"It did create a spectacular effect on the sky, and certainly caused a lot of concern," he told News 4, calling it an "abnormal event." 

Firefighters responded along with the utility crews. They were initially called for a transformer fire there, radio transmissions on Broadcastify show. 

"There's a high-voltage emergency going on the ConEd plant, heading that way now," one firefighter says. "Can we have a representative from Con Ed meet us out on 20th Avenue? It just seems like whatever it was just shut down. We'll meet them at the main gate." 

"Yeah, whatever was arcing the skyline, it turned off, it seems like," he continued. "Just advise Battalion 49, we have a visible fire in the ConEd plant. We're going to enter off of 31st Street." 

People in Queens reported the electricity briefly flickering off in their homes, and LaGuardia Airport saw a total blackout at one point. A News 4 staffer picking up his daughter in Terminal A said the lights started to flicker, then turned off completely while the emergency lights stayed on. 

The FAA initially instituted a ground stop at LaGuardia until Friday morning, saying it wouldn't lift it until power was restored. The power came back on late Thursday night, but there were hourlong delays for both arriving and departing flights. 

A pilot near JFK Airport described the stunning scene when the transformer exploded, dispatch recordings show. 

"11 o'clock, it looks like a massive fire," he's heard saying in a dispatch with the JFK tower. 

"JetBlue 1186, you see that light out there? You know what that is?" one voice is heard in the tower transmissions. 

"Yes sir, and no, we do not, not at all, sorry," another voice responds. 

"We see colors like that off the clouds."

In another tower transmission, a voice is heard saying, "Delta 1197 heavy, let me know if you're able to see what that light is out there."

The Delta pilot said, "It's on the ground lighting up the sky."

The tower responded, "You don't know what it is?" 

"Negative," the pilot said. "Blue-green color, does not look like typical flames." 

The NYPD is asking people to avoid the area of 20th Avenue and 31st Street in Astoria while they investigated.


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North Texas Bus Driver's Good Deed Goes Viral

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When Richardson ISD school bus driver Curtis Jenkins surprised every one of his elementary school students with a Christmas gift last week, he never expected the gesture would go viral.

“I think one of the teachers said let me get a picture of you beside the bus with the presents,” said Jenkins.

Lake Highlands Elementary School posted the photos on its Facebook page Saturday, where families celebrated the good deed. NBC 5 covered the story on Sunday.

“I never could imagine the people who have reached out to me to help with my cause,” Jenkins said.

Since the weekend, Jenkins act of generosity has inspired messages of support but also efforts to raise money on his behalf.

“So many accounts has been set up on GoFundMe in my name, with my picture,” said Jenkins. “I never set up anything.”

Jenkins never asked for donations. He says he set aside money from his paycheck to pay for the gifts. He and his wife, Shaneqia, decided not to buy each other gifts for Christmas to pull off the surprise.

In an email, GoFundMe tells NBC 5, “It’s not uncommon for someone to create a GoFundMe after they see a news story because they simply want to help. When a campaign is created to raise money for another individual they don’t personally know, we place the funds on hold and work with them to transfer the funds directly to the beneficiary. In this case, we are working with all campaign organizers and we guarantee all funds raised will go directly to Mr. Jenkins. He can choose to receive the funds or refund donors.”

Jenkins says he didn’t expect people to offer money. Over the last seven years of driving a school bus for Richardson ISD, Jenkins regularly surprises students with school supplies. Last Thanksgiving, his family purchased turkeys for students’ families that needed one.

Jenkins rewards students for good behavior and maintaining a clean bus with “Bus Bucks” that can be used toward school supplies he provides. The children have responsibilities on the bus that include chairperson and safety captain.

“That little time they have with me, it means so much. I’m the first face they see before they get to school in the morning,” said Jenkins.

“I call my bus a community. We love each and everybody in the community,” Jenkins added.

Thursday, Jenkins began work to start a nonprofit foundation he’s calling “Magnify, Caring and Change.” He says he’s filing 501(c)(3) paperwork and any donations should go to Chase bank in his nonprofit’s name.

Jenkins also opened an instagram account to commute with followers on social media: CurtisJenkins2018. 

Jenkins says he hopes to advance his mission to help young students.

“I’m still on that mission from God,” said Jenkins.

Trump's Reveal of SEAL Team Could Endanger Its Members

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President Donald Trump exposed the faces of members of U.S. Navy SEAL Team 5 during his surprise trip to Iraq, and one expert said it could possibly put them in danger, NBC News reported

During his post-Christmas visit to troops in Iraq, his first trip to a combat zone since he was sworn in last year, the president and First Lady Melania Trump entered the dining hall Wednesday at the Al-Asad base west of Baghdad to greet about 100 troops.

U.S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Kyu Lee told Trump he is the chaplain for SEAL Team 5. Lee later said Trump told him, "Hey, in that case, let’s take a picture."

Retired U.S. Navy Chief Petty Officer Malcolm Nance is an intelligence consultant for U.S. special operations forces who said by email that the presence of SEAL Team 5 members should not have been revealed.

"The fact is they are a special operations force in a combat zone with a combat role," said Nance, who has also served as a counter-terrorism analyst for NBC News and MSNBC. "The reason their identities are protected is in case of capture."

The Office of the Secretary of Defense said in a statement no rules were violated by the ensuing phoyos and video. 



Photo Credit: Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images

Lakers Lose Heartbreaker to Kings Without LeBron

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This was a tough loss for the Lakers.

Bogdan Bogdanovic drained a three-pointer at the buzzer, and the Sacramento Kings stunned the Los Angeles Lakers, 117-116, without LeBron James, on Thursday night at the Golden 1 Center.

Life without LeBron proved to be an up-and-down rollercoaster ride for the young Lakers, as the team surrendered up a 15-point deficit in the final quarter to lose in heartbreaking fashion.

"If LeBron James is playing in that game, it probably finishes a little differently," said Lakers head coach Luke Walton. "With that said, we made enough plays to win, we just didn't do enough little things."

James missed his first game since the 2016-2017 season with a left groin strain suffered on Christmas Day against the Golden State Warriors, and his streak of 156 consecutive games (regular season and playoffs) was snapped.

"It's one of those things we want to make sure he's healthy before we get him back out there," said Walton. "That could be an injury where if you come back too early, you re-injure it and then you're out longer. We'll be careful and cautious when he starts playing again."

Josh Hart was inserted into the starting lineup at the shooting guard position in LeBron's absence, and Brandon Ingram moved to James small forward position.

Kyle Kuzma led all scorers with 33 points and nine rebounds, as he recorded his third 30-plus point game of the season.

A pair of 207 top draft picks went head-to-head in point guards Lonzo Ball (2) and De'Aaron Fox (5). Both players nearly mirrored each other in the game, with Ball almost recording a triple-double, scoring 20 points, 12 assists, and nine rebounds.

"The way Lonzo was playing tonight, I wanted the ball in his hands all the time," said Walton of Ball's performance.

Fox nearly had a triple-double himself, finishing with 15 points, 12 assists, and nine rebounds.

The shorthanded Lakers trailed early, going down by a dozen to start he game before closing the quarter on a 24-9 run to take a 34-30 lead.

"Sacramento went out and punched us early," continued Walton. "I thought our guys responded to that challenge and we're out there playing like veterans. If that shot doesn't go in, everyone is impressed with the way they played."

Los Angeles led by as many as 15 points in the final frame, but the Kings came all the way back to tie the game with under a minute left to play.

Justin Jackson was fouled by Kuzma on a three-point attempt with 59 seconds remaining, and sank all three free throws to tie the game at 112-112.

"We just weren't converting," Ball said of the Kings comeback. "We were playing iso-ball and getting away from what got us the lead. We missed some shots and didn't get back, and they hit some key threes."

With the Lakers up by one, and four seconds left in the game, Brandon Ingram split a pair of free throws to give Sacramento a chance to choose between going for the tie, or going for the win.

They chose the latter, as Bogdanovic took the inbound pass and moved to his right, for a step-back, fadeaway three-pointer over Tyson Chandler that found the back of the net for the game-winning shot.

"He made a hell of a shot over a seven-footer at the buzzer," said Kuzma of Bogdanovic's buzzer-beater. "That's a tough way to lose, but it is what it is."

Bogdanovic had 12 points in the fourth quarter, and finished with a team-high 23 points off the bench in the victory.

"We left a lot out there on the table and we could have handled our business," Walton added about the loss. "Give them credit they erased a double-digit lead in the fourth quarter."

Willie Cauley-Stein had 19 points, and Nemanja Bjelica finished with 18 points.

Iman Shumpert also had 18 points, tying a career-high with six three-pointers.

Buddy Hield was held in check by the Lakers, finishing with just six points, while shooting a paltry 2-of-8 from the field.

Without their leading scorer, the Lakers surpassed their season average of 113 points per game, Ingram added 22 points in the loss, Hart had 10, and Lance Stephenson finished with 10 points off the bench. 

"I could have been better all around on the floor," said Ingram. " I turned over the basketball, defensive rebounds, offensive rebounds, everything."

Tyson Chandler chipped in 11 points and 10 rebounds in 20 minutes off the bench.

The Lakers out-shot the Kings from the floor and from beyond the arc in the loss. Los Angeles shot 51 percent from the field and 40 percent from three, compared to 44 percent and 34 percent for the Kings.

Los Angeles has now split the first two games at Sacramento, and will meet the Kings again at Staples Center on Sunday.

Notes and Next

JaVale McGee practiced with the team and traveled to Sacramento, but did not dress for the game. LeBron James and Rajon Rondo did not make the trip and are listed as day-to-day. No. 2 overall pick Marvin Bagley III, did not play in the game with a left knee injury.

The Lakers will square off with their roommates in the Los Angeles Clippers on Friday night at 7:30PM PST.

Highlights



Photo Credit: AP Photo/Steve Yeater
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2018 Was a Year of Deadly Wildfires — Likely the New Normal

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This year brought wildfires from California to Sweden that were notable not just for their size but proximity to cities and death toll, experts told NBC News.

The so-called Camp Fire in November was California's most destructive on record, killing nearly 90 people. While there were U.S. fewer fires in 2018 compared to the annual average over the last 10 years, a far greater area was destroyed than normal, according to Carrie Bilbao, a spokeswoman for the National Interagency Fire Center.

She and Omar Baddour, chief of climate data for the World Meteorological Organization, said fires are increasingly cropping up in the traditional off-season, giving firefighters little reprieve.

"Our fire seasons are becoming fire years," Bilbao said.



Photo Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images, File

Signs Point to Voters Demanding Action on Climate Change

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Going into the midterm elections, few candidates made the warming planet a keystone of their campaigns despite devastating fires and storms that scientists say have been worsened by carbon pollution. Climate change has typically been low on voters’ lists of priorities.

But as a new Congress comes into power in January, that indifference could be changing. Surveys conducted for the midterms found that between 7 and 9 percent of the electorate named climate change or the environment as the top issue facing the country. Typically, the number lags around 2 percent, environmentalists say.

“That’s a green wave,” said Nathaniel Stinnett, the founder of the Environmental Voter Project, a three-year-old organization that is dedicated to getting environmentalists to vote.

Americans continue to voice more concern about health care, immigration, the economy and jobs, and depending on the poll, gun policy or federal taxes and spending. But with a record 113 million people voting in this year’s elections where Democrats retook control of the House, that could mean that up to 9 million named the environment their primary concern.

“That’s an enormously powerful constituency and I think you’re going to see more and more politicians trying to appeal to these environmental voters, especially among those running in the [2020] Democratic presidential primary,” Stinnett said.

The surveys -- one around Election Day called AP VoteCast and two conducted for NPR and PBS NewsHour by the Marist Poll, in October and after the election -- are just one indication that climate change is taking on urgency with voters, particularly young voters. Also pointing to the increased seriousness with which the issue is being treated: differences between millennials and older Americans, demands from newly elected politicians and worry about the damage that climate change is already doing to communities from Miami to Los Angeles.

A confluence of factors is driving the new attention to the devastation threatening the environment. Repeated natural disasters have brought havoc to parts of the United States, from deadly fires in California to destructive hurricanes sweeping over Puerto Rico, Florida, Texas and the Carolinas. Warnings about the world’s need to curb the use of fossil fuels come as younger people more convinced of the scientific consensus on climate change become old enough to vote. Going into the New Year, there will be more pressure on Congress to tackle the greenhouse gases that are raising temperatures.

Here’s a breakdown of the polls. AP VoteCast found that more of the electorate, 26 percent, choose health care as the number one issue facing the country than any other issue while 7 percent picked the environment. The Marist Poll in October recorded 7 percent of registered voters choosing climate change as the most important factor in deciding their vote and earlier this month, 9 percent saying that it should be Congress' top priority. Economy and jobs was the most important for the most voters, with 20 percent in October and 17 percent this month.

Stinnett said that how much change was occuring would become clearer as more data becomes available about voters and the midterm elections.

Youth Demand Action on the Environment
Young people are particularly engaged in confronting climate change, a crisis that has gathered momentum throughout their lives and which threatens to leave the Earth a much less hospitable place in the coming years.  

A pre-election survey from Tufts University that focused on young people and politics found that 59 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds support or are an active part of the environmental movement, up from 42 percent in 2016. Numbers were even higher among Democrats, and particularly those who said they were likely to vote, according to the September poll by the university’s CIRCLE, or The Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement. 

The poll’s director, Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg, said political engagement was more common among young people now than two years ago, with triple the number saying they attend marches and demonstrations — up from 5 percent to 15 percent. Part of the change can be traced to the activism of students from Parkland, Florida, which encouraged other young people to be a part of political causes, including the environmental movement, she said.

“It wasn’t drowned out by gun violence, for example, which is a big player this year, but just as many people if not more young people said, ’It’s a really important issue that I’m actively engaged in,’” she said.

The Sunrise Movement is a corps of young people working to make climate change an urgent priority across the country. As they prepared to launch, a core challenge was how to make climate change an urgent priority in the United States. They helped Democrats to take the House and now are determined to keep the issue at the top of lawmakers’ agendas. In November, 150 members of the Sunrise Movement and Justice Democrats held a sit-in at House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi’s office on Capitol Hill to demand action on climate change. They were joined by newly elected Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, who has been pushing for a Green New Deal to promote green energy and jobs and cut carbon emissions.

"She was elected as part of the movement, she intends to govern as part of the movement," Corbin Trent, a spokesman for Ocasio-Cortez, said at the time. ”She thinks there is no other priority that we should be focused on and supports the Sunrise Movement’s call for Democrats to create a plan to transition the economy to a zero carbon economy so we have that ready to go when we take back the presidency in 2020."

The activists were criticized for targeting Democrats, who support taking on climate change, but they say they know that if they do not push Democrats they will not get the action they need.

“We targeted the Democrats because we believe in them,” said a spokesman for the group, Stephen O’Hanlon. “We don’t think we’re going to get anywhere by calling on Donald Trump to stand up to fossil fuel lobbyists.”

They believe that as young people they have leverage over Democrats because it was young people turning out in record numbers that helped Democrats win the House majority. If Democrats are to win the presidency and the Senate in 2020, they will need young people again to turn out in record numbers, O’Hanlon said.

“So many politicians and especially establishment politicians think about the range of political options as what’s currently politically possible and oftentimes with climate and a lot of other issues too that’s just radically from what we need to give our generation a livable future,” he said. ”And we made the choice when we launched to push for solutions that are actually in line with what we need.”

Generational Divide in GOP
Republicans have been the most resistant to believing that climate change presents a critical danger. A Pew Research Center poll done before the midterms found that 72 percent of registered voters supporting Democrats thought climate change was a “very big” problem compared to only 11 percent of those backing Republicans.

But other Pew surveys found wide differences within the GOP. About a third of Republican millennials say the Earth is warming because of human activity, double the share of Baby Boomers and older, according to a May survey. Forty-five percent of millennials say they are seeing some effects of global climate change in their communities, compared with a third of older Republicans. But they also are in agreement with older party members that policies aimed at reducing climate change effects would make no difference.

Sara Blazevic, a co-founder and managing director of the Sunrise Movement, said the organization was made up of young people angry and frustrated after having watched a lifetime of political inaction, of witnessing hurricanes and other disasters getting worse but the environmental movement stagnating.

“Looking at some of the data a few years back we called this the urgency gap,” she said. “Because there actually are a super majority of Americans who understand that climate change is happening, is real, believe that it’s happening already because they can see with their own eyes and want something to be done about it.”

Other Pew research ranks the public’s policy priorities for the president and Congress. Protecting the environment has risen from 44 percent in January 2010 to 62 percent at the beginning of this year. Dealing with climate change similarly rose from 28 percent to 46 percent.

In December, nearly 200 countries met in Poland for the U.N.’s 24th annual climate change conference and agreed to rules for curbing greenhouse emissions, but delayed a decision on creating a market in carbon credits. The meeting follows a series of reports, among them the National Climate Assessment and one from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, warning of irreversible environmental damage absent quick action to rein in carbon emissions.

Environment Gains Prominence in the Midterms
During the midterm elections, ads highlighting global warming began appearing in races across the country, a phenomenon that was new. The League of Conservation Voters through its Victory Fund was among environmental groups that spent heavily to elect “green” candidates, in its case $80 million. Pete Maysmith, its senior vice president of campaigns, said that the more environmental issues were localized, the more voters responded.

“So we’re talking about environmental issues that are directly impacting people’s lives, and doing that in the context of the election,” he said. “It motivates them and it impacts their vote choice.”

In southern New Jersey, the organization matched environmental concerns with what it knew would be the top issue of the elections, health care, then targeted what it viewed as an important bloc of swing voters, suburban women. In a tight race, Democrat Andy Kim, a former national security aide in the Obama administration, defeated two-term Republican Rep. Tom MacArthur, who had tried to repeal the Affordable Care Act.

“When you pair the issue of pollution, whether it’s water or air pollution — so you’re talking about healthy drinking water, you’re talking about concerns around asthma and other illnesses, other disease — and then link that into the health care debate, that again is a very powerful motivator,” he said.

The League of Conservation Voters’ Victory Fund and the Environmental Defense Fund Action connected “the health impact of MacArthur’s record of gutting environmental protections and allowing more toxic pollution into our air to his efforts to eliminate protections for people with pre-existing conditions,” according to post-election analysis.

In another race in California, the League teamed up with Michael Bloomberg’s Independence USA PAC to defeat 30-year congressman, Dana Rohrabacher. One ad juxtaposed Rohrabacher’s statement that “global warming is a fraud” with black smoke and wildfires in the background. Democrat Harley Rouda, who called out Republican leaders for denying the threat of man-made climate change, ousted Rohrabacher

Maysmith’s colleague, Tiernan Sittenfeld, the senior vice president of government affairs, said of the 62 new members of the House of Representatives, 55 of them have committed to trying to bring about 100 percent clean energy by 2050. She said the organization was looking at opportunities for a “green” infrastructure package from the Democrat-dominated House and oversight as the Trump administration tries to roll back public health and environmental protections.

“It’s especially exciting because there are so many of these new members for whom the environment and addressing the climate crisis is really an enormous priority and central to who they are and in many case part of why they decided to run,” she said.

The AP VoteCast survey replaced exit polling that The Associated Press had participated in with the television networks. It was conducted for the AP and Fox News by the non-partisan research organization NORC at the University of Chicago. The AP VoteCast also found that significant numbers were concerned about the effects of climate: 70 percent of all voters were very or somewhat concerned versus 29 percent who were not too or not at all concerned. Democrats were more worried than Republicans.

This year’s exit polling, which NBC and other networks continued separately, did not ask voters across the country to rate the environment among their top issues, but it did ask voters in Florida about climate change as it had done in 2016 and in both years, 66 percent said climate change was a serious problem.

Over the last decade, the environment has historically ranked low among voters’ priorities. Polling that the Environmental Voter Project did of likely voters in the 2016 presidential election found that only 2 percent listed the environment as their top priority, with another 2 percent setting it as their second highest priority.

'Politicians Go Where the Votes Are'
“This is why it’s so hard to get politicians to lead on climate and lead on environmental issues,” Stinnett said. “Because politicians go where the votes are, that’s what they do. Politicians are in the business of winning elections and if voters don’t deeply care about a set of issues, it’s really hard to get politicians to care about those issues.”

The Environmental Voter Project targets environmentalists who don’t vote or who seldom vote to convince them to change their behavior. It focuses on the 18- to 24-year-olds and to a lesser extent 25- to 29-year-olds who are disproportionately likely to care deeply about environmental issues. Blacks and Hispanics and those who make less than $50,000 a year — and who have a higher chance of being victims of environmental racism — are also in their sights.

Stinnett estimates that the non-profit has turned more than 100,000 non-voting environmentalists into consistent voters since it started. It began in Massachusetts, in 2017 moved into Georgia, Colorado, Florida, Nevada and Pennsylvania and expects to expand further into about 20 states where it has identified large populations of non voting environmentalists. It does not spend money on changing minds, just getting people to the polls.

“Politicians care about winning elections and so they’re going to follow the voters,” Stinnett said. “I think this change will happen very quickly once environmentalists start voting. I just can’t tell you when that number in the electorate will get big enough that it forces change. But it’s getting bigger, it’s definitely getting bigger.”

“This electorate might not force change as quickly as we want it to, but something’s happening, something is absolutely happening and politicians are beginning to pay attention,” Stinnett said.


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Wild Hit-and-Run in Downey Caught on Camera

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A huge bang was heard outside a Downey home Monday where suspects of a hit-and-run left the scene just before police arrived.

That huge bang was the impact of a car crashing into Michelle Obispo’s parked Toyota Camry seconds before the other car flipped over.

“I started screaming ‘Is everyone okay, is someone there?’,” she said.

Obispo and her sister in law then saw a man stumble and crawl out of the overturned vehicle. Then, a second man slipped and fell as he got out of the same overturned car.

Obispo and her sister in law tried to get the second man to stay, but he fled before police arrived.

“He was really drunk,” Obispo said. “You can see in his face and eyes, he was really drunk.”

Police are actively investigating and are asking for the public’s help to locate the suspects of this hit-and-run. If you have any information, please contact Sgt. Haime Pelayo at 562-904-2342.

Holiday Milkshakes Are Still Very Much a Thing

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Pull out any family recipe book, the kind that lists classic end-of-the-year desserts, and you'll see some of the same words, over and over, in various orders.

Toffee. Cake. Gingerbread. Cookie. Tart. Bark. Brownie.

Repeat.

No one would dare diss a single one of these sweets, and any dessertist worthy their powdered sugar or glazed caramel understands that all of these goodies work incredibly well, all December long, in the pleasing-people department.

But what of the milkshake? Is it to be just a summertime delight or warm-weather meal-ender? Can this thick, straw-boasting cool-down confection also take a place among the puddings and pies of Christmas?

Of course, and a number of Southern California spots are showing the creamy, milkshake-merry way. A bonus? The holiday-themed milkshakes are still available, even beyond Christmas, so head for...

Milk Bar, where the Peppermint Bark MilkQuake is available through Dec. 31. Cereal Milk soft serve, plus peppermint pieces, hot fudge, chocolate cookies, and a miniature candy cane lend it fa, la, la cred. Price? It's $9.90, or $6.60 for a baby.

Monty's Good Burger, the place to pick up a plant-based Candy Cane Shake. It's vegan, yup, and only boasts five ingredients. The gluten-free nom-nom is available through Dec. 31. 

Shake Shack is rocking not one, not two, but three holiday-esque milkshakes, including the Christmas Cookie, the White Mocha, and the Chocolate Pappermint. Feeling like you might need one of these at the very beginning of 2019, to kick the new year off right? You can buy one through Jan. 2.



Photo Credit: Shake Shack

The Most Admired Women and Men of America

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The 2018 list of Gallup's Most Admired people is out, and for the first time in 17 years, voters chose a public figure other than Hillary Clinton as their most admired woman. Did your favorite public figures make the cut?

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Kitchen Fire Burns Urth Caffe in Downtown Los Angeles

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A kitchen fire spread to the attic of Urth Caffe Friday morning in downtown Los Angeles.

The fire was reported at about 7 a.m. in the 400 block of South Hewitt Street. Firefighters on the roof of the building were working to protect nearby structures.

Heavy smoke could be seen coming from the roof, which features the distinctive Urth Caffe clocktower. 

No injuries were reported.



Photo Credit: KNBC-TV

Save Bucks, See Sealife at Aquarium Late Nights

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Aquariums, like all places that teem with education, information, wonder, and life, can be delightfully overwhelming, in the best sense.

You want to see it all. You want to know it all. You want to understand why the ocean is so vast, why whales are so large, and the purposes behind a harbor seal's beautiful whiskers (sensing water changes is part of it, yep).

On the very bright side? Sometimes we have opportunities to go a bit deeper into the deep, when a favorite aquatic hangout offers extended hours paired with discounted entry prices.

The Aquarium of the Pacific is doing just that, during the holidays, all the way through to Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019.

The special hours? Be there from 5 to 8 o'clock. The special price during that time? Oh yeah, it's $14.95.

"Watch the nighttime activities of our animals, touch a shark, and enjoy the beautiful evening lighting of the Aquarium's architecture," is the tempting message on the Aquarium of the Pacific site.

One keep-in-minder, if you're a bird buff? The lorikeets are tucked up in beddie-bye, or at least will remain off-view, during Discounted Late Nights.

Also? No Discounted Late Night is listed for Dec. 31, but if you're in the area, there will be fireworks just off the water, as is tradition in Long Beach come New Year's Eve.

But bet you'll see all manner of fin-rocking, claw-waving, jelly-tastic wonders during your stroll through the water-close landmark, on the other nights of the discounted run.

Will you, to go deeper, focus on just one fish, for a full hour or even two? Will you keep to one exhibit, all to have a more thorough visit?

Or will you be so awash in amazement that you'll probably loop through the aquarium, twice, the better to have at least a glance at all of the marvels it contains?

That's up to you, as is the choice to jump on this great price, and a later-in-the-day visit, to one of the fishiest and most fantabulous of Southern California attractions.



Photo Credit: Brian Gray/Aquarium of the Pacific
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