Tag Archives: Los Angeles

3 critically hurt in explosion on film set near Los Angeles

Three people on a film set were critically hurt in an explosion that sparked a grass fire near Los Angeles on Tuesday, authorities said. The blast was reported around 4:45 p.m. in a mixed-use industrial neighborhood of Santa Clarita, said Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Abraham Bedoyan. Ambulances took three critical patients to hospitals, according to Supervisor Martin Rangel with the LA County Fire Department. Fire spread to a grassy hillside but firefighters were able to quickly douse the flames, Rangel said. Aerial TV news footage showed fire crews at a large lot with multiple cargo containers. Sheriff’s officials advised residents to stay clear of the area about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of downtown Los Angeles.

Three people on a film set were critically hurt in an explosion that sparked a grass fire near Los Angeles on Tuesday, authorities said.

The blast was reported around 4:45 p.m. in a mixed-use industrial neighborhood of Santa Clarita, said Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Deputy Abraham Bedoyan.

Ambulances took three critical patients to hospitals, according to Supervisor Martin Rangel with the LA County Fire Department.

Fire spread to a grassy hillside but firefighters were able to quickly douse the flames, Rangel said. Aerial TV news footage showed fire crews at a large lot with multiple cargo containers.

Sheriff’s officials advised residents to stay clear of the area about 30 miles (48 kilometers) north of downtown Los Angeles.

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Pranksters change Hollywood sign to ‘Hollyboob’

Breast prank ever?

Several people were arrested Monday for changing the Hollywood sign to “Hollyboob.”

The “W” and “D” of the Los Angeles landmark appeared to have been covered with “Bs” earlier in the day, according to photos and videos on social media.

Park rangers quickly restored the sign and at least six people were detained and facing trespassing charges, Deadline reported.

The prank appeared to have been part of an effort to raise awareness for breast cancer, the report said.

The 98-year-old sign has gotten facelifts in the past.

In 2017, pranksters also managed to get past the landmark’s gates and sensors to alter it to read “Hollyweed.”



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Latinos dying daily from Covid-19 increase 1,000% in Los Angeles county | US news

The average number of Latino residents dying from coronavirus each day in Los Angeles county has increased by more than 1,000% since November, according to county public health officials.

Los Angeles is battling one of the worst Covid-19 outbreaks in the US, amid a winter surge that has left hospitals across the region overwhelmed. LA county’s Latino population has faced the brunt of the crisis.

In November, the average number of Latino residents in LA county dying from Covid-19 each day stood at 3.5 per 100,000 residents. Now, it is 40 deaths per 100,000 residents. “That’s an increase of over 1,000%,” said Barbara Ferrer, the county public health director at a briefing this week.

“Los Angeles under Covid-19 has won the world series in baseball, the championship in basketball and holds the title for most Covid-19 infections and the most Latinos who are losing their lives,” said Sonja Diaz, the founding director of the Latino Policy and Politics Initiative at the University of California, Los Angeles, to the Guardian.

Los Angeles county’s population is 48.6% Latino, but Latinos are dying at a rate of more than one-and-a-half times that of all Los Angeles residents. As of this week, 231 Latinos died per 100,000 people in Los Angeles county, according to county data, as compared to 82 white people per 100,000. “Our Latinx community is, in fact, bearing the worst of this pandemic,” said Ferrer.

It’s a devastating trend that’s reflected in other parts of the state as well. Latinos represent 38.9% of California’s population, yet constitute 55% of positive Covid-19 cases and nearly half the deaths.

Diaz pointed out this is because Latinos make up much of the essential workforce and are often forced between risking exposure to the virus and earning a paycheck.





A Latino worker wears a mask and gloves as he crosses a street in the MacArthur Park area of Los Angeles. Photograph: Apu Gomes/AFP/Getty Images

“Nationally, Latino households have 1.6 wage earners per household compared to 1.2 in non-Hispanic households,” Diaz said. “That means there are more Latino households with adults who leave the house every day because of the hyper-segmentation of Latino workers in essential working situations. That means they are going to be more exposed to Covid-19, just to ensure they have the money necessary to keep shelter and food in their homes. They’re going to work not because they’re aspiring to be heroes but because our economy and the current decision-making of our leaders require that they show up to work.”

Many in these positions have reported having to work through unsafe conditions with no protective gear and no social distancing measures, Diaz said, and don’t have access to sick leave, despite legislation requiring employers to provide sick leave related to Covid-19.

“No matter what, these people of color are showing up to work and they are showing up to work under dangerous conditions that have not been remedied,” Diaz said. “We’re still expecting these low wage workers to show up to work without any of the common sense safety measures necessary.”

California this week lifted its statewide stay-at-home order after recording improving trends in the state’s rate of infections, hospitalizations and intensive care unit capacity as well as vaccinations.

The announcement came after a relentless surge of cases following the winter holidays had overwhelmed the state’s medical system and left many counties with limited ICU capacity.

Parts of the state, including southern California and the San Joaquin valley region, are still seeing high rates of infection, however.

Meanwhile, the state is trying to speed up vaccination after a slow start earlier in the year. Most regions are now vaccinating residents over the age of 65, in addition to healthcare workers and first responders.

Diaz fears what reopening will do to the Latino population. Already throughout Latino communities Los Angeles county, everybody knows somebody who has had the virus.

“We are an embarrassment to industrialized societies in our ability to get Covid-19 under control,” Diaz said. “As a result, Californians of color are getting sick and dying and having a difficult time recovering at the same time millions of Californians are requiring them to put their bodies on the line.”

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Cardi B asks Twitter for help with blackheads on her cheek and chin: ‘S*** is uncomfortable!’

Cardi B asks Twitter for help with blackheads on her cheek and chin: ‘S*** really is uncomfortable!’

Grammy-winning rapper Cardi B took to Twitter on Monday for help with acne breaking out on her cheek and chin.

‘It’s been happening for like 3 months now. S*** really is uncomfortable,’ the Bronx-born 28-year-old – who boasts 146.6M social media followers – lamented.

‘I [have] been breaking out lately and my face is extremely dry. I don’t think these products are working. I think it’s the water out here [in Los Angeles]. What are some good products for little black heads break outs and dry skin on your face?’  

Spot of bother: Grammy-winning rapper Cardi B took to Twitter on Monday for help with acne breaking out on her cheek and chin

The Bronx-born 28-year-old – who boasts 146.6M social media followers – lamented: ‘It’s been happening for like 3 months now. S*** really is uncomfortable’

Cardi (born Belcalis Marlenis Almánzar) rejected most of her fans’ advice including visiting a dermatologist, esthetician, or trying Retinol, Cetaphil, and face oil.

‘[Two weeks ago, the dermatologist] gave me some s*** that dried my face more and [made] me get more [pores],’ the Me Gusta rapper complained.

‘They said it will take 3 months but I don’t got time for that and [they] didn’t give me a reason on why I’m breaking out. I never broke out on my cheeks and chin.’ 

Cardi continued: ‘I [have] been breaking out lately and my face is extremely dry. I don’t think these products are working. I think it’s the water out here [in Los Angeles]. What are some good products for little black heads break outs and dry skin on your face?’

‘Cause they suck out here in LA’: The Me Gusta rapper rejected most of her fans’ advice including visiting a dermatologist, esthetician, or trying Retinol, Cetaphil, and face oil

Cardi wrote: ‘[Two weeks ago, the dermatologist] gave me some s*** that dried my face more and [made] me get more [pores]. They said it will take 3 months but I don’t got time for that’

It likely doesn’t help Cardi’s spotty complexion when she gets fully-contoured make-up applied almost daily by her staffer Erika La’ Pearl Roman.

In the end, it took two-time Grammy nominee Kehlani to provide the former stripper with the proper referral she so desperately needed.

‘Ok @Kehlani recommended me somebody for my face,’ Cardi tweeted hours later.

Pore-clogging daily routine: It likely doesn’t help the former stripper’s spotty complexion when she gets fully-contoured make-up applied by her staffer Erika La’ Pearl Roman (R, pictured November 13)

Coachella duo: In the end, it took two-time Grammy nominee Kehlani (R, pictured in 2018) to provide Cardi (L) with the proper referral she so desperately needed

The Joe Biden supporter tweeted hours later: ‘Ok @Kehlani recommended me somebody for my face. Imma give ya a update in 2 weeks’

‘Imma give ya a update in 2 weeks. I’m off this for a while. LOVE YA!’

The Joe Biden supporter will next launch her neon ‘Make It Loud’ Reebok collection on February 4.

Catch more of Cardi’s outsized personality in the reality show Cardi Tries ___, which streams Thursdays through February 4 on Facebook Messenger Watch.

‘Who ready?’ Cardi will next launch her neon ‘Make It Loud’ Reebok collection on February 4

‘Cardi Tries Wigs’: Catch more of the Latina It Girl’s outsized personality in the reality show Cardi Tries ___, which streams Thursdays through February 4 on Facebook Messenger Watch



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In ambulances, an unseen, unwelcome passenger: COVID-19

In ambulances, an unseen, unwelcome passenger: COVID-19

By STEFANIE DAZIO

January 25, 2021 GMT

LOS ANGELES (AP) — It’s crowded in the back of the ambulance.

Two emergency medical technicians, the patient, the gurney — and an unseen and unwelcome passenger lurking in the air.

For EMTs Thomas Hoang and Joshua Hammond, the coronavirus is constantly close. COVID-19 has become their biggest fear during 24-hour shifts in California’s Orange County, riding with them from 911 call to 911 call, from patient to patient.

They and other EMTs, paramedics and 911 dispatchers in Southern California have been thrust into the front lines of the national epicenter of the pandemic. They are scrambling to help those in need as hospitals burst with a surge of patients after the holidays, ambulances are stuck waiting outside hospitals for hours until beds become available, oxygen tanks are in alarmingly short supply and the vaccine rollout has been slow.

EMTs and paramedics have always dealt with life and death — they make split-second decisions about patient care, which hospital to race to, the best and fastest way to save someone — and now they’re just a breath away from becoming the patient themselves.

They gown up, mask up and glove up, “but you can only be so safe,” Hammond said. “We don’t have the luxury of being 6 feet apart from the patient.”

Full Coverage:  Photography

Statistics on COVID-19 cases and deaths among EMTs and paramedics — especially ones employed by private companies — are hard to find. They are considered essential health care workers but rarely receive the pay and protections given to doctors and nurses.

Hammond and Hoang work for Emergency Ambulance Service Inc., a private ambulance company in Southern California. They, like so many others, have long fostered goals of becoming first responders to serve their communities.

Hoang is attending nursing school. Hammond is one test away from becoming a paramedic. Both were called to a life in the medical field after traumatic experiences: Hammond had to call 911 after his mother had an allergic reaction, and Hoang witnessed a young bicyclist get hit by a car.

Yet as COVID-19 infections surge and the risks increase, they wonder: Is it worth risking your life — and the lives of your loved ones at home — for a small paycheck and a dream?

“It’s really hard to justify it beyond ‘I really want to help people,’” said Hammond, 25. “Is that worth the risk?”

For now, yes.

“I do want to do my part in helping people get better, in a sense,” said Hoang, 29.

And so their day starts at 7 a.m.

Wearing masks, Hoang and Hammond clean their ambulance and equipment, wiping down every surface even if the previous crew scrubbed it already. They take no chances during their daylong shift covering the Orange County city of Placentia.

The 911 calls come in with limited information: a broken bone, chest pain, difficulty breathing, stomachache, fever. Every patient is a potential carrier of the coronavirus, whether they know it or not.

Sometimes, people know they’re infected and tell 911 dispatchers before the EMTs arrive. Other times, the symptoms themselves — fever, shortness of breath — signal a possible case. But Hammond remembers one woman, suffering from hip pain, who didn’t tell him or his partner about her coronavirus diagnosis.

He only found out afterward, saying it reinforced the importance of treating every patient as if they have tested positive.

“That was definitely a call where we learned a lot,” Hammond said.

Unlike doctors and nurses, first responders must go inside homes. They walk into hot zones where everyone in a household is sick, where the virus is in the air. They lift immobile patients onto gurneys, their masked faces just inches apart.

They race to hospitals already overwhelmed with sick people, sometimes only to wait hours outside before their patient can be admitted. And then they do it all again when the next 911 call comes in.

“We don’t know the end result,” Hoang said. “We only know the beginning to the hospital.”

Then there are those who direct the EMTs where to go. In Los Angeles County, 20 miles (32 kilometers) northwest from Hoang and Hammond, three young women stood before six screens apiece recently, talking into headsets with clear, clipped voices, marshaling other ambulance crews around a territory stretching from the mountains to the sea.

Ashley Cortez, Adreanna Moreno and Jaime Hopper work 12-hour shifts as dispatchers for Care Ambulance Service Inc. If the EMTs are the front lines, these women are the scouts.

They play chess with ambulances all day. When one gets stuck at a hospital for eight, 10 or 12 hours, the dispatchers must reposition the others to cover its area. When an EMT reports a positive COVID-19 test, the dispatchers must find a way to cover the ambulance’s calls if the whole crew must quarantine. When one household has multiple coronavirus patients requiring two ambulances, the dispatchers have to plug the hole.

Their greatest fear is what’s called a “level zero” — when there are no ambulances left to send to an emergency. In Los Angeles County, one of the nation’s hardest-hit counties during the pandemic, the fear becomes a regular reality.

For Moreno, 28, the anxiety begins the night before her shift.

“I lay there and know I’m going to come in, and I know I’m going to have no units to run these calls,” she said.

On Christmas weekend, Cortez watched as call after call piled up on her screen — with no ambulances available. Typically, it takes 30 seconds to send one out. That weekend, it took up to 15 minutes. And this was even before ambulances started languishing outside hospitals for hours.

“I was just in disbelief,” said Cortez, 26.

There’s not much more the dispatchers can do. They watch those screens. They listen to radio chatter. They rearrange the crews to cover the most territory possible. And they wonder what fresh horror awaits in a virus-ravaged world where the dangers are too many and the ambulances are too few.

“What if something happens to my daughter,” Cortez said, “and there was nobody to send for her?”



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