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Rare art from Disneyland’s artisans revealed in new exhibit

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Walt Disney Co. likes to resurrect a famous Walt Disney quote saying that the empire was “started by a mouse.” But when it comes to Disneyland, its theme park that become a SoCal institution, fans and history buffs crave specifics.

A new exhibit at San Francisco’s Walt Disney Family Museum aims to chart the beginnings and early evolution of the Anaheim resort, and it begins with a trip Disney took with friend, animator and fellow train aficionado Ward Kimball to Chicago. The Midwest city, as many know, is Disney’s birthplace, but in 1948 he and Kimball embarked on a vacation to that city’s railroad fair.

At the festival, they enjoyed not only locomotives, but also an Abraham Lincoln impersonator, and expansive grounds that featured small re-creations of a frontier town and a Native American village, elements that would eventually make their way to Disneyland. And while in Chicago, the duo stopped at what is now the Griffin Museum of Science & Industry, home to a re-creation of a turn-of-the-century city street.

Early 1950s concept art for Disneyland’s Main Street, U.S.A., from Harper Goff. The work is shown in a new exhibit at the Walt Disney Family Museum in San Francisco.

(Collection of the Walt Disney Family Foundation / Harper Goff Collection / Disney)

By the time the trip had concluded, Disney’s vision of Disneyland had begun to take shape. Within days of returning to Los Angeles, Disney had written a memo capturing his ideas that would ultimately appear in Disneyland, including a train, a park and an assortment of vintage shops.

So perhaps it’s more accurate to say that, with Disneyland, it all started with a holiday to Chicago.

A red-hued building framed by the Golden Gate Bridge.

San Francisco’s Walt Disney Family Museum is dedicated to preserving the history and legacy of Walt Disney, detailing his Midwest roots, animation achievements and development of Disneyland.

(Walt Disney Family Museum)

The museum’s exhibition, “The Happiest Place on Earth: The Disneyland Story,” is based on a similarly titled book from animation producer Don Hahn and theme park designer-turned-historian Christopher Merritt. Consider the museum demonstration a sort of greatest hits companion to the coffeetable-type tomb, which is an indispensable look at Disneyland’s history, a work that collects never-before-seen concept art and places a spotlight on many of the park’s lesser-known designers.

The exhibit and book coincide with Disneyland’s 70th anniversary. The former adds to and complements the museum’s mission of preserving the legacy of Walt Disney, showing the park patriarch as something of a conductor who built Disneyland with the help of creatives across Hollywood.

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Spread across two lower-level galleries, and also including a short film from Hahn, one that places a large emphasis on that Chicago tour, the exhibit, running through May, unfolds as a sort of a walk around the park. Portions are dedicated to Disneyland lands past and present — the exhibit includes the defunct “Indian Village,” an aspect of Frontierland that flourished in the 1950s and 1960s — but rather than try to capture the park as a whole, the museum zeroes in on seldom displayed concept art from various Disneyland artisans.

The centerpiece of the primary gallery is a rarely resurrected penciled drawing of Fantasyland from Bruce Bushman, who created pre-opening concept art for the land inspired by Marvin Davis’ master plans. You’ll spy a small train coaster, a mini Ferris wheel and a circus area, complete with a large statue of a clown that would tower over guests. It’s starkly different from both the land’s Renaissance Faire-inspired beginnings and its European village look of today, but it’s also emblematic of how Disneyland didn’t emerge fully formed and was gradually iterated on prior to its July 1955 opening.

More Bushman art is shown elsewhere, in particular his drawing of Pirates of the Caribbean as a wax museum. In the mid-1950s, before it was decided the attraction would be a boat ride, it was envisioned as a walk-through experience complete with interior shops and a large battle scene. Hahn, who served as co-curator of the exhibit, in a tour of the museum’s artifacts notes that Bushman was working on “The Mickey Mouse Club” around the time he was also devising plans for Disneyland.

A museum wall with framed portraits of costumes.

Disneyland costume designs from Hollywood designer Renié Conley are on display as part of a new exhibit at the Walt Disney Family Museum.

(Frank Anzalone / Walt Disney Family Museum.)

“There’s remnants of what the ride became,” Hahn says, pointing to the map’s depictions of tunnels and sandy areas with hidden loot. “There’s battles, and you have to cross over a rickety bridge over a swamp probably with alligators. This drawing, in particular, is really special, to see the original white pencil drawing. Again, Bruce Bushman, here’s a guy doing ‘Mickey Mouse Club’ sets, but also doing these profound things.”

Earlier, the exhibition pays special attention to prominent Southern California landscape architect Ruth Shellhorn. She was hired just four months before the park opened but is credited as refining its pedestrian flow and crafting the gardens that eased transitions between Disneyland’s central hub and its lands.

“We built the park as we went along,” reads a Shellhorn quote used in the book and the exhibit and pulled from Shellhorn’s archives at the UCLA Library. “I doubt if this procedure could have been followed successfully on any other project on Earth; but this was Disneyland, a sort of Fairyland, and Walt’s belief that the impossible was a simple order of the day so instilled this spirit in everyone that they never stopped to think that it couldn’t be done.”

Costume designer Renié Conley, who worked on films such as “The Big Fisherman” and “Cleopatra,” is also showcased. Her work for the front, Main Street areas of the park is shown, and it’s Victorian, regal and just ever-so-slightly fanciful. A yellow and white dress, for instance, feels full of movement, fit equally for a tea party or a dance.

A key component of the book and exhibit, says Hahn, was a desire to focus on some of the important contributors to Disneyland who may not be household names to fans of the park. “Let’s tell the human story of this,” Hahn says. “All the crazy people who worked on this in an unbelievable short amount of time. That attracted me.”

A group of people in front of a half built Disneyland castle

Harper Goff, Bill Evans, Dick Irvine, Walt Disney, Ruth Shellhorn and Joe Fowler examine Disneyland plans in April 1955, just months before the park would open.

(Ruth Patricia Shellhorn Papers, UCLA Library Special Collections / Disney)

There’s also artwork shown for abandoned concepts, such as a never-built Chinese restaurant with a robotic host that was envisioned for Main Street, as well as alternative visions for the introductory land. Some early designs for It’s a Small World from beloved animator-turned-theme park desinger Marc Davis are in the exhibit. This is before it was decided to craft the ride in the look and tone of artist Mary Blair, and Davis’ small concepts possess a more refined look — a cartoon London, for instance, rather than a children’s playland.

A small wooden carriage with fortune telling-inspired designs in a display case.

Rare art from late Walt Disney Imagineer Rolly Crump for the never built Museum of the Weird is on display as part of a new exhibit at the Walt Disney Family Museum.

(Drew Altizer Photography / Walt Disney Family Museum)

Also rare: A small model of a vagabond’s carriage from Rolly Crump, who worked on the Haunted Mansion, the Enchanted Tiki Room and It’s a Small World, among other projects. Crump is responsible, for instance, for the whimsical facade of It’s a Small World. The carriage, with mystical, fortune telling-inspired designs, was created for the never built Museum of the Weird, which would have nestled alongside the Haunted Mansion. Crump’s son Chris says it may be one of the only surviving designs from that project.

Taken as a whole, the exhibit shows not just the beginnings of Disneyland, but how the park became an ever-evolving art project.

“It’s important,” says Hahn, when asked for this thoughts on why Disneyland has not only endured, but remains a pilgrimage for so many. Theme parks allow us to explore stories and fairy tales in a multidimensional space — an escape, yes, but also a reflection of the narratives that define a culture. And, adds Hahn, it’s a source of rejuvenation. “It’s not just kiddie stuff,” he says. “It’s important to our mental health.”

For when you go to Dinseyland, says Hahn, “you’re not thinking about your gas bill or your kid’s education or how you can’t afford to live paycheck to paycheck. It’s not cheap. It’s not a cheap day. But we still go because our hope is to get something there that we can’t get in everyday life. To me, that’s human regeneration, an ability to be inspired and get out of our head for a while.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Claire Rothman dead: Forum president during Lakers’ ‘Showtime’ dynasty

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Claire Rothman, a trailblazing sports and entertainment industry executive indelibly tied to the Los Angeles Lakers during their 1980s heyday, has died.

Family members confirmed her death, on Saturday, was due to complications from a fall. She was 97.

As the president and general manager of the “Fabulous Forum,” Rothman was pivotal in bringing big-name musicians to the Inglewood venue and had deep ties to the Lakers when it was the team’s home during the “Showtime” era, when the Lakers won five championships in a decade.

Jeanie Buss, the daughter of former Lakers owner Jerry Buss — who after the recent sale of the team acts as its governor in NBA meetings — lamented the loss of Rothman, a woman she said shaped her career.

“Claire paved the way for women working in live entertainment. She was tenacious, creative and indomitable. My father always described her as the MVP who championed the Fabulous Forum as the West Coast concert rival to the legendary Madison Square Garden,” Buss said Sunday evening.

“For me personally, she was a mentor and a guide, helping me learn and navigate an industry that had never been very open to women in leadership,” Buss said. “I learned an incredible amount from her as an executive and consider her one of the major influences in my life.”

Rothman, hired in 1975 by Lakers owner Jack Kent Cooke, became the vivacious president and general manager of the Forum during a pivotal moment in the Lakers’ history. She was frequently seen around town wearing the many championship rings that the team won during her tenure. Rothman was a prominent character in the HBO series “Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty,” played by actor Gaby Hoffmann.

“Claire Rothman is a f— legend,” Rebecca Bertuch, a writer for the show, told The Times in 2022. “I mean, she broke barriers that people didn’t think would ever be broken and she kicked ass and was notorious and well-known in her line of work for being that girl.”

Rothman has been recognized for her role in professional sports at a time when women were not commonplace or were treated poorly.

“I’m not exactly quiet,” Rothman is quoted as saying during a speech in a 1985 profile in The Times. “I am the only woman in the United States who runs a major sports arena. I have a variety of duties. I book the building. I schedule the sports. The box office answers to me, all the staffing answers to me, and at night I get to play hostess.”

She brought big-name acts such as Prince to the Forum and developed relationships with entertainers including Linda Ronstadt, Neil Diamond and Lionel Richie.

“Many building managers will not meet artists in their entire lives,” Larry Vallon, then-vice president of the Universal Amphitheatre, told The Times in 1985. “In Claire’s case, artists go out of their way to meet her. She has an incredible reputation in the industry.”

It was a remarkable position for a woman whose family had humble beginnings in this country.

Rothman’s family fled Romanian pogroms against Jewish people at the turn of the 20th century, immigrating to Philadelphia, according to Magda Peck, a cousin of Rothman’s mother.

“What I remember about Claire was how important family was to her and how close she was with my mother and the other cousins,” Peck said. “There was something about modeling how women support each other, how cousins are there for each other across generations.”

Peck, a public health expert, last saw Rothman a couple of weeks ago.

“She said, ‘Promise me that you’ll stay close to the cousins,’” Peck said. “Before she’s famous, before she’s the mother of the Lakers family, [she prioritized] the value of extended family.”

Rothman died in Las Vegas, where she had moved after leaving Southern California. She is survived by a son and a daughter, and multiple grandchildren and great-grandchildren.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Matthew Stafford is playing as good as any QB ever for the Rams

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A crescendo is building, and the Rams might be best to ignore it.

So much can happen from week to week in the NFL — check out Philadelphia’s loss to Dallas — that the Rams can’t get too comfortable, even with the way they’re playing.

In the last five games, culminating with their 27-point stomping of Tampa Bay on Sunday night, the Rams have outscored opponents in the opening quarter, 63-3.

Matthew Stafford has thrown 27 touchdown passes without an interception.

In four of the games in this six-game winning streak, the Rams defense has allowed 10 points or fewer.

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Gary Klein breaks down what went right for the Rams in their 34-7 win over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers at SoFi Stadium on Sunday night.

But it’s uncomfortably early for anyone in the organization to be thinking about Santa Clara in February. The Rams need to play with blinders on. Yes, they’ve secured the NFC’s No. 1 seed for the moment, but they have a one-game lead over the Eagles, who beat them earlier this season and therefore have the tie-breaker. There’s no wiggle room.

The glide path is far different than 2021, when the Rams wound up winning the Super Bowl on their home field. That season, they went 0-3 in November games.

This bears a closer resemblance to 2018, Sean McVay’s second season, when the last game before Thanksgiving was an instant classic at the Coliseum, Jared Goff and the Rams beating Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs, 54-51.

There’s no ignoring that we’re watching something special in Stafford, who takes the snap, scans the field and delivers a laser with remarkable reliability. He processes with the speed of AI.

It was 10 years ago at Levi’s Stadium that Denver’s Peyton Manning, quarterbacking his second franchise, won his second Super Bowl ring and decided to retire.

Could that be Stafford? Second franchise. Potential for a second ring. Then again, Manning’s body was breaking down on him and he wasn’t at the top of his game. Those Broncos ran the ball and had a great defense.

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford warms up before a 34-7 win over the Buccaneers.

Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford warms up before a 34-7 win over the Buccaneers at SoFi Stadium on Sunday.

(Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

At the moment, Stafford is playing as well as anyone who has ever played the position. He looks nothing like a 37-year-old guy who sat out training camp with back problems.

His streak of 27 touchdown passes without a pick is, according to Elias, the longest such streak by any player since play-by-play was first tracked in 1978.

“It’s hard to conceptualize the fact that you can throw — put the ball in the end zone that much,” said Rams receiver Davante Adams, who has 12 touchdown receptions this season. “Most quarterbacks can’t throw 27 passes without throwing a pick.”

Stafford’s the leading Most Valuable Player candidate, and this could be the season that secures him a bronze bust in Canton.

As for the poetry of him walking off the biggest stage the way Manning did, that’s all fantasy football now, especially with more than a quarter of the regular season remaining.

(A little more premature conjecture: It’s not inconceivable that the Rams and New England Patriots could meet in the Super Bowl for a third time.)

What is irrefutable is the Rams are continually deepening their foothold on the Los Angeles market. They set their regular-season attendance record Sunday night (75,545 tickets distributed), surpassing the mark they set a week earlier with a home game against Seattle.

This is what Rams owner Stan Kroenke was talking about when he brought the team back in 2016, and when he built SoFi Stadium with the idea of making the nearly-300-acre campus a center of gravity on the West Coast.

It’s not just home to the Rams and Chargers, but it’s the integral role the stadium will play in the World Cup, the 2028 Olympics, and in early 2027, the second Super Bowl it will host. No matter how you feel about UCLA trying to wriggle out of its Rose Bowl deal, there’s a reason the school has turned its attention to SoFi.

Kroenke always told his development team that undershooting L.A. would be a huge mistake, that the opportunity here was immeasurable.

“Sometimes when you’re a real estate developer, I think you have to be tremendously optimistic,” Kroenke told the Los Angeles Times. “You encounter so many issues. … With the NFL, you saw how difficult that whole thing was. So you had to be the optimist.

“Then you get a night like tonight, and it’s just awesome.”

Rams defensive end Kobie Turner reacts during player introductions before facing the Buccaneers.

Rams defensive end Kobie Turner reacts during player introductions before facing the Buccaneers on Sunday at SoFi Stadium.

(Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)

The stadium was loud and overwhelmingly blue, with only a sprinkling of Tampa Bay fans. That’s progress.

The peril for the Rams now is letting down their guard. They travel across the country next weekend to play at Carolina, a team that won four of five not so long ago, including an upset of Green Bay.

In his postgame news conference, cornerback Cobie Durant was asked how it feels to have the No. 1 seed in the conference.

“I didn’t know that,” he said, sounding pleasantly surprised. “I don’t keep up with that.”

Smart answer.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

One of California’s largest off-grid communities is in suburban L.A.

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Joe Badame and his wife try to reserve laundry for sunny days.

They stagger their appliance use in the mornings, checking that a fan isn’t running at the same time as the coffeemaker. At night, Badame obsessively turns off lights. They both keep a constant eye on the app tracking their solar power capacity: Badame’s 91-year-old mother-in-law relies on an oxygen machine.

“We’re very careful, we keep everything off,” Badame, 65, said. “As long as it’s sunny … it typically gets us through the night.”

If their two 13.5-kilowatt batteries, charged by rooftop panels, begin to drop near 20% capacity, they trek down a gravel path to the corner of their front yard and switch on a massive generator.

The whole process has become the new normal for them and most of their neighbors, since public utility companies cut service to much of Rancho Palos Verdes’ landslide zone more than a year ago, following months of unprecedented earth movement — making the Portuguese Bend community one of the state’s largest and unlikeliest off-grid communities.

An aerial view of Joe Badame’s home, shown at lower center, where his family is still living without municipal electricity and natural gas service because of ongoing landslide movement in the area in Rancho Palos Verdes.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

“We’ve got 100-plus homes in here that are acting like we’re out in the middle of the Mojave Desert,” said Kent Attridge, president of the Portuguese Bend Community Assn. “We’re doing what we have to do to stay in our homes.”

That’s been the overwhelming motivation for residents in this neighborhood, who have refused to relent against an erratic landslide that has presented challenge after challenge.

First it was widespread damage from accelerating land movement in early 2024: roads and homes splitting, cracking and dropping, some beyond repair. Then SoCalGas and Southern California Edison, in July and September that year, indefinitely cut their service to the area.

But with grit, determination and a bigger cash layout than most expected (and some could afford), the residents of about 120 homes have managed to stay put.

Joe Badame inspects Tesla solar batteries.

Joe Badame inspects Tesla solar batteries. It’s been more than a year without grid power, and he is worried about the winter.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

“The inconvenience is worth it,” Badame said, taking in the view of the sparkling Pacific, looking past his massive propane tank that sits just off their warped street. “We can’t afford a place like this anywhere else.”

While a testament to their resilience, “off-grid” is a designation that many hope they can soon shed, especially as the hours of available solar charging dwindle and storms return to threaten their precarious slopes.

“At this point now, it’s time to recharge the area,” Badame said. “Winter’s coming.”

Even before most people in this community relied on the sun for energy, they dreaded rain.

Increased rainfall leads to more groundwater, which in this corner of the Palos Verdes peninsula acts as fuel for a complex of slow-moving landslides that have plagued the area since the late 1950s and, in the last two years, brought escalating movement after two particularly wet seasons.

One key defense against this process: a network of de-watering wells, which pump out the water that lubricates the soil’s clay layers. But the pumps require electricity and residents want them hooked to the grid.

“We’re trying to operate these de-watering wells off of propane-powered generators … but it’s expensive,” Attridge, 78, said. “I’ve written letters, the city’s written letters, but it’s kind of fallen on deaf ears.”

An aerial view of a large fissure that opened up in Rancho Palos Verdes.

An aerial view in August 2024 of a large fissure that opened up, damaging a Portuguese Bend putting green and home after last winter’s heavy rain in Rancho Palos Verdes.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Local officials say generators struggle to run for long durations and frequently break down, meaning many of the pumps have been operating on a limited schedule.

Restoring electricity, even just for the wells, is “the biggest thing that we could have to slow the movement,” said Gordon Leon, chair of the Abalone Cove Landslide Abatement District, an assessment-funded group focused on local landslide mitigation. Since last September when Edison cut electricity, the district has spent about $235,000 on generators, fuel and related maintenance, Leon said. That’s compared with about $36,000 spent in prior years for 24/7 grid-powered electricity.

But Edison officials have continued to say it cannot safely restore power because of ongoing movement, concerned about infrastructure damage that can increase chances “of system failure, fire ignition or other public safety hazards.”

Diane Castro, an SCE spokesperson, said the utility will consider re-energizing the area after “continued and sustained reduction in land movement” at a rate of 1 inch a week or less, which she called “pre-2023 rates.”

Many fear, however, that the electricity cuts themselves are making it more difficult to reach Edison’s threshold.

“If [the wells] were on 24/7, I think we’d be well under an inch now,” said Martha de la Torre, Badame’s wife.

A crack in a foundation wall.

Badame checks a crack in a foundation wall.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The most active sections of the landslide — now mostly in the Portuguese Bend community — have fallen to around 2 inches a week, according to the city’s latest data. It’s still well above historical averages for the area, but significantly down from a peak of more than a foot a week during the summer of 2024. Other slopes in the area that had faced catastrophic movement have completely stilled.

Local officials have credited the de-watering wells with the continued declines in movement, probably aided by a relatively dry winter last year.

The city of Rancho Palos Verdes also operates a contingent of the off-grid de-watering wells and has been able to run them constantly, but it’s been a strain on their already strapped budget, said spokesperson Megan Barnes. In the last fiscal year, the city spent $1.7 million on generators and fuel to keep them pumping. And that’s on top of an estimated $150,000 for generators that power the neighborhood’s sewer system, Barnes said.

“We are hopeful that the movement can reach SCE’s threshold soon, and we continue to work with SCE … in an effort to bring residents back on the grid,” Barnes said in a statement. “These residents’ lives have been upended, and they continue to suffer significant quality of life impacts, from fuel costs, to noise, air quality, and environmental impacts from the generators — not to mention the high costs they have spent converting to alternatives.”

Joe Badame walks through an area below his home, analyzing the foundation.

Joe Badame checks on recent improvements to his home’s foundation in Rancho Palos Verdes. He recently lifted the home to try to offset ongoing land movement.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Edison has reconnected 121 customers who previously lost power in other areas also affected by the landslides, Castro said. A total of 174 remain without power, the vast majority in the Portuguese Bend community. About two dozen of those are red-tagged, deemed uninhabitable because of significant damage from the slides.

SoCalGas has not publicly shared a threshold it needs to establish before restoration, but in a statement said it is still “closely monitoring the land movement and its gas infrastructure.” Gas service has been restored to some neighborhoods near Portuguese Bend that also lost service last year.

California Water Service has maintained service in the landslide area. Most of its lines are now above ground with “swing joints” to help withstand movement, and a 24/7 crew is stationed in the area, according to spokesperson Yvonne Kingman.

But early storms that brought record November rains have many on edge.

“We don’t know what winter’s going to bring in terms of water entering the landslide,” Attridge said. “We want to keep pumping out more.”

While there is increased interest in California to move off the grid with solar panels and batteries — especially as utilities expand the use of power shutoffs to prevent fire starts — completely off-grid homes remain rare. Experts say most people moving toward energy independence remain connected to utilities for backup power.

While there are some fully off-grid dwellers, ranging from high-end desert oases and North Coast communes to the famous counterculture settlement of Imperial County’s “Slab City,” an off-grid suburb is one of a kind.

“I’ve not heard of a situation that’s being experienced in Palos Verdes,” said Scott Samuelsen, the founding director of the Advanced Power and Energy Program at UC Irvine. He compared the circumstances with those after a natural disaster, such as a hurricane that damages power lines or a major wildfire that destroys key transmission lines. But in those cases, he said utilities typically work nonstop to restore connectivity and often provide short-term backup power.

SCE has provided no direct financial support or backup power to the residents without electricity in the landslide zone.

Brad Heavner, executive director of the California Solar & Storage Assn., said the situation in Rancho Palos Verdes reminds him most of Puerto Rico, where officials are still struggling to provide dependable electricity more than eight years after Hurricane Maria wiped out much of the grid.

“A lot of [Puerto Rico] is still running on solar and storage only,” Heavner said.

In some rural locations, California’s major power providers have started installing a few permanent “remote grids,” providing almost personal power generation for hard-to-reach customers through solar panels, battery storage and a backup propane generator — a setup not so different from what most in Portuguese Bend have established.

Aimed at reducing wildfire risk, Pacific Gas & Electric has established 15 of these remote grids to serve 20 customers located “at the grid edge,” said Paul Doherty, a PG&E spokesperson. These customers still pay PG&E for their power, he said, but it is sourced from the local, independent infrastructure.

Most homeowners who spoke with The Times said they’ve spent anywhere from $40,000 to $150,000 on energy transitions: converting gas-powered appliances to electric, switching natural gas pipelines to propane, running for months on generators requiring expensive fuel, and installing solar panels and batteries.

“It’s hard financially … but it would be even more difficult to move,” Attridge said. “One of the misconceptions from mainstream media is we’re a bunch of rich people up here. … That’s not true. We’ve got a lot of elderly people — actually including myself — that are living on Social Security and pensions.”

With their de-watering wells, remote grids and jury-rigged modifications, residents in “The Bend” sometimes feel more like backcountry homesteaders.

“I’ve had to run down here in the middle of the night,” De La Torre, 68, yelled as the engine of their propane-powered generator roared to life, a sound more suitable for an airport tarmac than a suburban frontyard.

She hopes they will soon get some backup electricity, even if it’s just to power the wells and sewer system. But if not, they are now much better prepared than a year ago.

“It’s not the most convenient, but we could do it,” she said.

A home caregiver helps Elvia de la Torre get into bed.

Al Agudal, a home caregiver, helps get Elvia de la Torre into bed. She uses an electric bed and needs oxygen at night, requiring constant electricity — a challenge since public utilities cut power because of ongoing landslide movement in the area.

(Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

While some of their neighbors have left, those who remain say the struggle brought them closer together.

“We’re all learning how to live off the grid,” Leon said. He laughs about conversations that now revolve around “power management” strategies. “It’s exactly what you do with a spacecraft.”

Neighbors recommend helpful contractors and share tips for stretching their solar power. A lively group text coordinates daily volunteers who turn on and off the generators for the wells each morning and night.

In September, most gathered to mark the one-year anniversary of their life without grid power. Despite lingering frustration, some said it almost felt like a celebration. They drank wine and reminisced — and focused on a future that hopefully would be a little easier.

Sallie Reeves, who has dealt with some of the neighborhood’s worst movement, said her adult children want her to move. But now, that’s harder than ever to picture.

“It was a big neighborhood before — now it’s a family,” Reeves, 82, said. “The battle continues.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Violence in eastern DR Congo: Ituri plagued by ethnic conflict

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The province of Ituri, in eastern DR Congo, has been devastated by decades of ethnic conflict. Violence has exploded since the 1990s, with the Hema and Lendu communities clashing over access to land and mining resources. According to the United Nations, over 1,000 people have been killed since January and more than a million inhabitants have been driven from their homes. Our correspondents Aurélie Bazzara-Kibangula and Emmet Livingstone spoke to residents traumatised by the atrocities. Warning: this report contains descriptions of violence that some viewers may find disturbing.


This story originally appeared on France24

I asked ChatGPT if we’re in an AI bubble that might crash the stock market and it said…

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Image source: Getty Images

The stock market has become incredibly volatile over the past few weeks as investors worry about the possibility of an AI bubble. Given that ChatGPT’s ‘brain’ is built on gazillions of AI chips, it seemed fitting to ask it for a bit of clarity. Have I found it?

Correction or crash?

First, I asked the bot if we’re actually in an AI bubble that might cause a stock market crash. Yes, it told me confidently, there are “clear AI bubble signs“. These include “start-ups with no revenue getting $10bn valuations” and most companies now claiming to be AI-powered, including “sandwich shops“.

It also pointed to AI chip king Nvidia being worth more than entire countries, suggesting the stock is overvalued. But then it goes on to say that AI isn’t just hype, because some companies are reporting surging revenue and profits.

For example, it said Nvidia is “printing cash at record levels“. And that makes 2025 different to 1999 (when most hot internet stocks had little to no earnings).

As for a crash, the AI assistant reckons a market correction is far more likely. If true, that would be more of a gradual 10%-20% pullback in major indexes than a rapid 20%+ nosedive.

My take

ChatGPT is great at cranking out colourful turns of phrase, like “the market has gone vertical, but trees don’t grow to the moon“. But it doesn’t offer investors insights here or even much clarity, one way or the other.

My own view is that parts of the market are in a bubble. For example, quantum computing stocks look incredibly overvalued, while an OpenAI IPO at a $1trn valuation would be another red flag for me.

Remember, ChatGPT was only released three years ago. It took Apple 42 years to reach $1trn!

AI-related energy stocks also look overheated, with much higher multiples than normal. So I’m avoiding these three areas now: quantum computing, IPOs from large language model makers, and nuclear/energy stocks.

AI investments

Rather than fret about a possible AI bubble, I’ll continue taking each stock individually.

For example, Rightmove (LSE:RMV) recently said it will be investing more in AI than investors expected. As such, operating profit growth will only be 3%-5% in 2026, rather than the 9% expected this year.

This caused the FTSE 100 stock to drop sharply, putting the fall since August at 34%. Any further deterioration in profits due to AI investments could tigger another sell-off.

Basically then, Rightmove is investing in cutting-edge AI, but the market isn’t convinced about the long-term payoff. However, Rightmove is surely justified in making these technology investments. I would be more worried if it wasn’t.

One new tool it’s rolling out is AI keywords, which will help “movers more easily find a home which fits their exact requirements by inputting their bespoke requirements such as sea or river views, exposed brick, balcony, or underfloor heating“.

The stock’s sell-off looks overdone to me, with the forward price-to-earnings ratio now at around 17.5. That appears too low for a market-leading company boasting an incredible 67% operating profit margin.

My view is AI is likely to further cement Rightmove’s data-driven dominance by creating new valuable tools for customers. Therefore, I think the stock’s 34% dip is a buying opportunity worth assessing more closely.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Elon Musk’s Cost Cutting Project DOGE ‘Doesn’t Exist’ Anymore — Report

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A US official has made a shocking revelation about DOGE, led by Elon Musk. It was an initiative first suggested in 2024 by Musk and later came to fruition earlier this year. It aimed to reduce regulations and spending across the federal agencies while boosting efficiency. A new report suggests that the department has now closed down.

US officials said DOGE doesn’t exist, reports claim

Scott Kupor, Office of Personnel Management Director, shared a disappointing update about DOGE to Reuters. He said, “That doesn’t exist.” He further revealed that DOGE is no longer a “centralized entity.” It was shut down ahead of schedule, with eight months still remaining in its mandate. According to US officials and Kupor, DOGE’s responsibilities are now taken over by the federal government’s human resources office, OPM.

Kupor also further took to X (formerly Twitter) to clarify the Reuters report, which could have created a potential misunderstanding. He wrote, “The truth is: DOGE may not have centralized leadership under @USDS. But, the principles of DOGE remain alive and well: de-regulation; eliminating fraud, waste and abuse; re-shaping the federal workforce, making efficiency a first-class citizen; etc. DOGE catalyzed these changes; the agencies, along with @USOPM and @WHOMB, will institutionalize them!”

In February 2025, Musk took on questions from reporters at the Oval Office, addressing his initiative’s cost-cutting measures across the federal agencies. Standing beside President Donald Trump, he claimed that his department is trying to be as transparent as possible about its activities. Without offering any solid evidence, he confidently claimed that some officials at USAID have taken “kickbacks.” He also allegedly revealed that “quite a few people” had somehow become extremely wealthy while in office.

He said, “We are actually trying to be as transparent as possible. So all of our actions are maximally transparent. I don’t know of a case where an organization has been more transparent than the Doge organization.” (via The Guardian) Musk departed DOGE in May 2025. However, he wasn’t able to achieve the $1 trillion savings he promised earlier.

Originally reported by Shazmeen Navrange on Mandatory.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea

‘I’m a hair loss expert and this is why men go bald’

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With Men’s Health Awareness Month this month it’s time to look at one of the top-most, everyday concerns that worry men.

Hair loss — a struggle millions of men and women around the world grapple with — often shatters people’s confidence and results in bad mental health including stress, anxiety, and depression.

Despite being a prevalent health concern for men, hair loss still catches many off guard. Research indicates that approximately 25% of all men notice the first signs of hair loss before they turn 21, around half will experience some form of hair loss by the age of 50, and by 70, that figure escalates to roughly 70%.

While it’s tempting to point fingers at stress, shampoo, or even your barber, the primary culprit behind hair loss is something beyond your control — genetics. If your father, grandfather, or even your mother’s side of the family had thinning hair, there’s a high probability you will too.

This is because your hair follicles inherit their sensitivity to a hormone known as Dihydrotestosterone (DHT), and it’s this sensitivity that determines how early — and how rapidly — hair loss occurs.

DHT is a by-product of testosterone, which attaches to particular follicles on the scalp. In men who are genetically susceptible, those follicles progressively diminish, creating thinner hairs over time until they ultimately cease growing entirely.

It’s a gradual, continuous process, and it’s vital to recognise that it’s completely natural, but that doesn’t mean there’s nothing you can do about it.

Dr Dave Weinstein, an NHS GP with 18 years of experience and Clinical Lead for Men’s Health at Numan, explores the widespread issue affecting a majority of men worldwide.

Dr Weinstein provides some essential guidance on how to combat hair loss in men, explaining: “There are simple lifestyle habits that can help support overall hair health, even if they can’t change your genes. A nutrient-rich diet, gentle scalp care, and avoiding harsh chemical treatments all help create the best conditions for your hair to thrive. But when it comes to tackling genetic hair loss itself, science offers proven solutions.”

The doctor adds: “One of the most popular and well-established treatments for hair loss is Minoxidil. Applied as a lotion or foam, it works by improving blood flow to the scalp, which helps to nourish and reactivate hair follicles. Interestingly, Minoxidil was first developed to treat high blood pressure, and its ability to promote hair growth was discovered purely by chance. Consistency is crucial, however, and regular use over time is what delivers visible results.”

Another widely used treatment is Finasteride, according to the men’s health specialist. An oral tablet that addresses hair loss at its hormonal source, Finasteride blocks the transformation of testosterone into DHT — the hormone that causes hair follicles to shrink and weaken.

The doctor explains: “It doesn’t lower testosterone levels; rather, it shields the follicles from DHT’s damaging effects. In doing so, it helps men maintain the hair they have, and in many cases, regrow what’s been lost.”

Some men also consider hair transplant surgery, the doctor notes, stating: “While transplants can deliver impressive results, they are often expensive and don’t necessarily provide a permanent fix. Hair follicles can still thin or recede over time, meaning additional procedures may be needed down the line.”

Dr Weinstein concludes: “Hair loss is incredibly common and nothing to be embarrassed about. The key is to seek expert advice early, choose evidence-based treatments, and be patient. Regrowth takes time, but it’s absolutely possible.”



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

Welcome To Derry Unleashes Pennywise, But Who Didn’t Survive The Hour?

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Beep, beep Richie. “IT: Welcome to Derry” just got even better.

It’s no secret that this “IT” recapper, while seated and mostly entertained, has been somewhat antsy for HBO’s prequel series to kick into high gear. But the time has come, Constant Readers and horror TV fans, because Episode 5 delivered a rollicking hour of reveals, terror, and yes, a whole lotta gory action courtesy of none other than Pennywise the Dancing Clown.

While Leroy Hanlon is irritated that General Shaw allowed him to move his family to Derry knowing damn well that a creature was preying on the town, at least the Major is finally getting some answers. Despite that, not even Leroy could’ve possibly predicted the horror in store for him when the military continues its town-wide search for the only weapon that can be used against It.

But before we discuss the episode’s climactic final sequence — including a heartbreaking and unexpected demise – Matty is back! As the kids all meet at their secret location, they’re surprised to find their long, lost friend hiding inside a yellow tent begging for help. His hair is longer, signifying the time he’s been MIA, but otherwise, he looks normal-ish. Parched and emotionally scarred for life, but he has all his parts. He tells them that It (aka, “the clown”) lives in the sewers of Derry and that it feeds off of fear. He escaped, but Teddy and Susie, the boy confirms, weren’t so lucky. It ate Terry’s brains, while an armless Susie cried until she bled out. (Yikes. Dark.)

He’s Heeeeere!

No surprise to those who have read the source material, it all comes down to the sewers underneath Neibolt Street. The kids want to find their friend Phil with a little help from “Mommy’s Little Helpers” (Lilly’s mom’s prescription. Is it Xanax? Lorazepam? Some other kind of benzodiazepine? Anyway, her mom “eats them like M&Ms.”) But the military is also homing in on the same location in search of the pillars that are buried throughout Derry. The pillars seem to be the only thing that can control the creature. They’re not armed with hefty fear-numbing drugs, but they do have Taniel (Rose’s nephew) and Dick Hallorann guiding their way, and that counts for something.

The kids take three forget-me-nots little pills each, and by the time they get into the depths, they are drugged af. (This ain’t Coachella, kids — slow down!) I mean, Marge only has one eye and now the girl can barely walk or function! But they aren’t the only ones hallucinating. Leroy sees his wife, Charlotte, running toward him, and as she begs him to take her home, she morphs into a long-fanged creature and attacks, before he shoots “her” dead. Only, of course it’s not her, and Pauly, who was standing right beside Leroy, can’t see anything at all.

All hell breaks loose on the kids’ end, as their friends’ dead bodies appear to them, floating at their feet in the gross water they’re schlepping through. As if that isn’t bad enough, Matty begins singing a song as he circles a pole, and as he does, he transforms into Bill Skarsgård’s white and crimson clown, revealing a set of teeth that would make the shark in “Jaws” jealous. Natch, the kids flee, running toward the heavily armed Leroy and Pauly. Only Leroy thinks his son is another mirage of the creature. Pauly, being able to see Will running toward them, knows it’s really the boy, and as Lee raises his gun and pulls the trigger, Pauly pulls the nose of the weapon toward him and becomes collateral damage to the clown’s crazy antics. Leroy, in tears, apologizes as his friend slips away. (R.I.P., Pauly. You were a real one.)

Dick Survives the Madness

Meanwhile, Lilly gets separated from her friends and runs into a dead end. Pennywise finds her (“Tooo baaad, sooo saaaad” — I’m living for Skarsgård’s delivery here), and just when it seems that all hope is lost for the poor girl, the clown closes It’s mouth and disappears into the night. The camera pans down to reveal a glowing pillar in the water in front of the girl. She picks it up, clocking the fact that the mysterious object just saved her life.

As for Hallorann, the military isn’t sure if he survived the insanity in the sewers, but as the episode ends, we see him trudging into the woods. And he’s following a dead, glassy-eyed Pauly on the way out. But the creature did have one very important win during the hour. In the very last shot, we see that Hallorann’s coveted lockbox — a mental trick passed down to him by his grandmother to trap dangerous spirits and memories — has been cracked wide open. That can’t be good.

Thoughts on Episode 5, Pennywise or anything else Derry? We want to hear them! Light up the comments section below.





This story originally appeared on TVLine

Canada’s prime minister says trade talks with US will resume ‘when appropriate’

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Canada will resume trade discussions with the US “when it’s appropriate,” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said on Sunday, noting he did not have a pressing issue to address with President Donald Trump.

Trump last month suspended the talks over an anti-tariff advertisement issued by Ontario’s provincial government.

“We are very busy with the future of Canada, and with new partnerships. There will be conversations with the president, probably in the next two weeks,” Carney told reporters on the sidelines of the G20 leaders’ meeting in Johannesburg. “We will re-engage when it’s appropriate.”

Carney reiterated that he was open to dialog.

President Trump broke off trade talks with Canada last month. MediaPunch / BACKGRID

Shipping containers stacked at the Port of Montreal in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he didn’t “have a burning issue” to discuss with Trump “right now.” AFP via Getty Images

“I don’t have a burning issue to speak with the president about right now,” he said. “When America wants to come back and have the discussions on the trade side, we will have those discussions.”

Canada wants a deal to lower import tariffs on steel, aluminum and autos imposed by Trump.



This story originally appeared on NYPost