She also talked to us about revealing how she was bullied in her first TV writers’ room, and behind-the-scenes tidbits about making “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” latimes.com/entertainment-…
Speaking of the series, here's how the CW musical dramedy ended its four-season run latimes.com/entertainment/…
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Some butchers are breaking down oversized turkeys and selling them in parts.
And instead of whole-turkey dinners for large parties, restaurants are offering Thanksgiving takeout meals for two people; some are serving chicken or duck instead. latimes.com/business/story…
In Singapore, thousands of red shirt-wearing public servants in sensible shoes are tasked with roaming shopping centers, parks and crowded open- air food courts to remind people to cover up, space apart and limit groups to five people or fewer. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
It’s a job akin to a professional hall monitor that would require hazard pay were it offered in the U.S., where bouts of violence have erupted over requests to wear a mask. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
But, in Singapore, where social responsibility and conformity are buttressed by perhaps the most impressive array of rules in the developed world, the “Red Ants” are treated as another paternalistic fact of life.
“Crime-free housing” policies have expanded the power of the police to decide who can and can’t live in cities across the country.
A Times investigation has found the programs have disproportionately affected Black and Latino residents in California. latimes.com/homeless-housi…
A map of the programs' expansion has left a distinct pattern: As Black people and Latinos moved to the suburbs in search of safer neighborhoods and cheaper housing, crime-free housing policies often came soon after.
The programs approved by cities vary, but are aimed at empowering landlords to evict or exclude tenants who have had brushes with law enforcement. latimes.com/homeless-housi…
The virus itself hasn’t changed, and there has been little relaxation of the rules.
Interviews conducted with people who have recently tested positive for the coronavirus don’t show any significant shifts in behavior compared with a month ago.