A man was shot to death early this morning on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, according to KTLA . The victim, a 19-year-old whose name has not been released, had gotten into a fight with the suspect in front of Stefano’s Two Guys From Italy Restaurant on Hollywood Boulevard near Las Palmas Avenue. more › Read the rest here: Man Shot To Death on Hollywood Walk of Fame
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NoHo Man Shot To Death By Police Had Called 9-1-1 To Report Himself, Neighbor Says
The neighbor of a man who was shot to death by police in North Hollywood in front of his home this morning told reporters that he had reported himself to the police. The neighbor Miriam Barajas described a dramatic scene to ABC 7 that sounds as if the man were trying to commit “suicide by cop.” more › See the original post here: NoHo Man Shot To Death By Police Had Called 9-1-1 To Report Himself, Neighbor Says
Watch Dramatic Video of Plane Crash-Landing Into the Pacific
You know that sinking feeling you get when you notice you’re about to run out of gas? The 65-year-old pilot of a Cessna flying to Hawaii got that feeling times a million somewhere over the Pacific last night. He radioed in his problem to the Coast Guard, and they talked him through a successful crash-landing just 13 miles off the coast of Hawaii last night. more › Read the original post: Watch Dramatic Video of Plane Crash-Landing Into the Pacific
Pencil This In: Modorer’s ‘Metropolis’ on the Big Screen at Cinefamily
Here’s what’s going down in LA tonight. OMD—yes, the “If You Leave” guys— plays Club Nokia; Boston Court’s 4th annual art exhibition continues; Beyond Baroque welcomes poets Fred Maramarco and George Kalmar; and Giorgio Modorer’s Metropolis on the big screen. Read on for all the details. more › Read the rest here: Pencil This In: Modorer’s ‘Metropolis’ on the Big Screen at Cinefamily
Equality California Will Not Pursue a Ballot Measure to Repeal Prop 8 in 2012
If you were hoping to cast your vote next year in regards to gay marriage in our state, it looks like you’ll have to wait: Equality California has announced that they won’t pursue a ballot measure to repeal Prop 8 in 2012. Instead, the group is launching an education and messaging campaign that will seek to “overcome the psychological, cultural and emotional triggers around lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people and kids that continue to impede securing full equality, including the freedom to marry… more › Read the original post: Equality California Will Not Pursue a Ballot Measure to Repeal Prop 8 in 2012
A Reflective, Charismastic John Leguizamo Performs His ‘Ghetto Klown’ in Hollywood
John Leguizamo’s latest autobiographical one-man show, “Ghetto Klown,” the fifth in a series that started with “Mambo Mouth” in 1991, captures the hyperbolically charismatic performer in a reflective, almost analytic, mode. Of course even a reflective and analytical Leguizamo on his own operates at a more frenetic pace than a pack of hounds picking up the scent of their prey. more › The rest is here: A Reflective, Charismastic John Leguizamo Performs His ‘Ghetto Klown’ in Hollywood
Hitler History: First Letter Documenting His Anti-Semitic Views Revealed Today at Museum of Tolerance
The Museum of Tolerance unveiled Adolf Hitler’s “Gemlich Letter” today, which was recently acquired by the Simon Wiesenthal Center. The letter was written and signed by the infamous dictator himself in 1919, where he first revealed on paper his radical, anti-Semitic world view. more › Read more: Hitler History: First Letter Documenting His Anti-Semitic Views Revealed Today at Museum of Tolerance
How Much $ Do We Need To Survive In CA?
Story courtesy of California Watch By Joanna Lin A family of four in California would need an average of more than $63,000 a year â nearly triple the federal poverty level â to cover its basic needs, according to an analysis of the state’s cost of living to be released today. The 2011 Self-Sufficiency Standard, released by the Insight Center for Community Economic Development , a national research organization, shows that in every county in California, the federal poverty level falls short of meeting basic needs: housing, food, child care, health care, transportation and other essential household expenses. Taking all these costs into consideration, the standard calculates the minimum annual income required for 156 family compositions in each county. The pre-tax income needed to make ends meet for a family of two working, married adults; a preschooler; and a primary school-aged child ranged from $53,775 in Tulare County to $86,629 in Marin County. For a family of four, the 2011 federal poverty level , which is based on the cost of food alone and does not take into account regional cost-of-living differences in the contiguous United States, is $22,350. “The federal poverty guidelines miss this whole population of individuals and families who are struggling to make ends meet,” said Jenny Chung Mejia, an attorney and program manager for the center. “Essentially, what happens is they earn too much to qualify but yet don’t have enough to make ends meet; they fall in this sort of policy-benefits gap.” Many people and entities, including policymakers, public agencies, philanthropic organizations, advocates and service providers, use the Self-Sufficiency Standard as a benchmarking tool to gauge the needs of their communities. In affluent counties, needs often go unrecognized, Chung Mejia said. “The public has this perception that if you live in Marin County, for example, you’re not going to be poor,” she said. While figures from the U.S. Census Bureau show 9.1 percent of the population in Marin County lives below the poverty level, the county’s median household income â $83,867 â is lower than its Self-Sufficiency Standard. Even in counties where median income exceeds the Self-Sufficiency Standard, advocates say the cost of basic needs can be striking. In Santa Clara County, for example, the median household income, $85,002, is just slightly higher than the Self-Sufficiency Standard for a family of two adults, a preschooler and a school-aged child. According to the standard, the cost of food for such a family â $852 a month, based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s low-cost food plan â eats up more than 12 percent of household income. More than 91,500 students in the county are eligible for free or reduced-price meals at school. But to qualify for the programs, a student’s household income must be at or less than 185 percent of the federal poverty level â or $41,347.50 for a family of four. “There’s this huge gap,” said Dana Bunnett, director of Kids in Common, a program of Planned Parenthood Mar Monte that advocates for children in Santa Clara County. “We really have needs for families that go beyond those federal guidelines.” Although the Self-Sufficiency Standard accounts for more basic costs than the federal poverty level does, it misses others that many Californians would consider essential â including cell phone and Internet service. “That just makes it all the more crazy,” Chung Mejia said. “We’re just putting forth a very, very modest budget.” Joanna Lin is an investigative reporter for California Watch, a project of the non-profit Center for Investigative reporting. Find more California Watch stories here. See the article here: How Much $ Do We Need To Survive In CA?