The image is easy to grasp: a beautiful woman wearing a fancy hat (and, when it was warm, not much more). But the music, with strings and harpsichord over a clip-clop beat, defies classification even now. latimes.com/entertainment-…
“I Wanna Be Your Lover” (1979)
Prince’s first brush with greatness, which grew out of his crush on Patrice Rushen, is an ecstatic post-disco classic whose radio-ready hooks deliver a characteristically risky proposition. latimes.com/entertainment-…
“When Doves Cry” (1984)
When Prince topped the Hot 100 for the first time, he didn’t do it by sanding the unruly edges from his music; he did it with his weirdest song to date: a stark psychosexual drama latimes.com/entertainment-…
“Kiss” (1986)
Prince famously took back this minimalist-funk masterpiece for himself after writing it for Mazarati, a band formed by the Revolution’s keyboardist, BrownMark. latimes.com/entertainment-…
Since premiering last month, Disney+ series @falconandwinter has confronted the complicated legacy of what the shield represents and the complexities of what it means to be a Black hero in America.
From the start, as TV critic @LorraineAli wrote in her
📺 review, "The Falcon and the Winter Soldier" foregrounded the realities of racial inequity in a fantastical universe of conflicted avengers and hellbent villains 👇 latimes.com/entertainment-…
The city of Los Angeles plans to file an appeal against a sweeping order by a federal judge that demanded urgent action to get people off skid row, according to court papers filed Friday.
The preliminary injunction from Judge David O. Carter calls for the city and county of L.A. to offer housing or shelter to everyone on skid row by the middle of October. latimes.com/homeless-housi…
It also requires the city to put $1 billion in escrow — roughly the sum that Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti had pledged would go to homelessness initiatives in his upcoming budget. latimes.com/homeless-housi…
In the Mexican town of Aguililla, where eight headless bodies were dumped a few weeks ago, trapped residents described a community living in terror of armed thugs who stroll the streets and shoot at one another.
At the root of the mayhem is a struggle for control of a large segment of the narcotics trade in strife-ridden Michoacán state, and a government that has been powerless to prevent cartels from taking over large swaths of the nation.
In recent years, Aguililla, population 15,000, branched out from tomato farming, cattle ranching and marijuana cultivation to become a strategic hub for the manufacture of methamphetamine bound for the booming U.S. market.
Weaverville, a California lumber town, has repeatedly bounced back from adversity — fires, economic downtowns, COVID-19. Like the town, high school athlete Chase Kirby is a survivor. latimes.com/california/sto…
In early February, Kirby was at his 5 a.m. shift at the local sawmill. When a few pieces of wood got stuck a rotating conveyor belt, he grabbed one as the machine grabbed it, too. In an instant, the machine had his arm and was yanking him forward. latimes.com/california/sto…
Weaverville, an old Gold Rush town, is four hours north of San Francisco. The area is so synonymous with the forest that the Trinity County Board of Supervisors last year considered formally making it a crime to kill Bigfoot. latimes.com/california/sto…
"Like a whale carcass that sinks to the ocean floor, entire ecosystems popping up in the shadow of its slowly decomposing husk, the comments field below that last post is now a vibrant feeding ground where Trump’s fans and critics still converge." latimes.com/business/techn…
The last post on Trump’s Facebook has more than 700,000 comments — most of his preceding posts received between 20,000 and 200,000 — and new replies come in every few minutes.
The air branch of the California National Guard was told to place an F-15C fighter jet on an alert status for a possible domestic mission, according to four Guard sources with direct knowledge of the matter. latimes.com/california/sto…
Those sources said the order didn’t spell out the mission but, given the aircraft’s limitations, they understood it to mean the plane could be deployed to terrify and disperse protesters by flying low over them at window-rattling speeds.latimes.com/california/sto…
Deploying an F-15C, an air-to-air combat jet based at the Guard’s 144th Fighter Wing in Fresno, to frighten demonstrators in this country would have been an inappropriate use of the military against U.S. civilians, the sources said.