The business card, tossed w/ expert precision from a motorcycle as it sped away, landed at Park Chui-woo’s feet just as he was nearing the end of his wits.
The brightly colored card advertised quick low-interest loans, especially to small business owners. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Maxed out on all other lines of credit, Park, the owner of a small chain of coffee shops dialed, the phone number.
With that call 3 years ago, he entered the underground world of illegal private lending that tempts desperate South Koreans.
Soon, motorcycle-riding, tatted-up skinheads showed up to talk terms with Park. They dropped off a wad of cash and began coming by his store daily to collect interest, at an annualized rate of about 210%.
Debt is the primary motivator for characters in the Netflix hit “Squid Game,” a dystopian drama series in which 456 participants who are heavy in debt fight to the death — literally — for a chance at a life-changing windfall of 45.6 billion won.
The South Korean series has resonated worldwide, tapping into growing economic fears and becoming the streaming service’s most popular release to date, with 111 million views in the first 28 days.
Official statistics don’t capture the illicit world of private lending turned to by Park & the protagonist of “Squid Game,” when they could no longer borrow from banks & registered lenders, whose loans are capped by law at an annual interest rate of 20%.
South Korea’s shadowy lending business is hard to quantify but appears ubiquitous. Cards & fliers advertising quick cash are readily seen on subway cars, bus stops & lamp posts. The gov regulator received nearly 300K reports of illegal lending ads in 2020. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Contracts that call for a kidney or eyeball in lieu of repayment are an intimidation tactic of yore and are no longer common.
Now, lenders demand the phone numbers of debtors’ relatives and friends in order to harass them if the debt isn’t paid on time.
“Before the early 17th century, refined sugar was first known as an exotic spice and medicinal. In Europe, it was so expensive that its consumption was mostly limited to royalty and their courts.”
“This began to change suddenly, though, with the ramping up of production of sugar cane, especially in Portuguese Brazil and then in English-controlled Barbados…”
Breaking: L.A. City Councilman Mark Ridley-Thomas said Monday that he will “immediately step back” from participation in City Council meetings and committees but will not resign. latimes.com/california/sto…
Ridley-Thomas told fellow council members in a letter that he will fight the "outrageous allegations" and plans to resume participation on the powerful legislative body "at the earliest appropriate time."
Ridley-Thomas was indicted last week on federal charges that he took bribes from a USC dean in exchange for directing millions of dollars in public funding to the university when he was on the L.A. County Board of Supervisors. latimes.com/california/sto…
After 10 transformative — and at times tumultuous — years at the helm of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the organization’s chief executive, Dawn Hudson, announced that this current term will be her last. latimes.com/entertainment-…
The academy’s board of governors last year extended Hudson’s contract to run through May 2023. According to the organization, a search for a successor will begin soon and Hudson will play a critical role in the transition. latimes.com/entertainment-…
The news comes just weeks after the long-awaited opening of the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, a $480-million project that Hudson played a key role in spearheading and has been well received thus far. latimes.com/entertainment-…
It’s a simple and intuitive idea: People tend to listen more to those they know.
So in L.A. County, health officials are enlisting people living in tents, RVs and makeshift shelters to help get unhoused people vaccinated against COVID-19.
Dozens of people have become peer ambassadors through the demonstration project, which compensates them to do the work for up to eight hours in total, providing $25 gift cards to stores such as Target or Ralphs for each hour worked.
They work side by side with L.A. County Department of Health Services workers, sharing their personal experiences with the vaccine. The teams also hand out snacks, water and other critical supplies, including naloxone kits to treat opioid overdoses.
Liz Flynt doesn’t mind being called a pornographer.
“If they are going to give me that label, I’ll wear it,” she told @hugomartin in an interview at Flynt Management Group’s Beverly Hills headquarters. latimes.com/business/story…
Hustler magazine founder Larry Flynt died eight months ago.
Since Liz Flynt took the helm of her late husband's empire, she has vowed to continue his legacy. latimes.com/business/story…
Flynt Management Group has an estimated $500-million value, which includes strip clubs, video distribution business, two casinos and an adult broadcasting channel. latimes.com/business/story…
In a year of both extreme heat and extreme drought, California has reported its driest water year in terms of precipitation in a century, and experts fear the coming 12 months could be even worse.
The Western Regional Climate Center added average precipitation that had been reported at each of its stations and calculated that a total of 11.87 inches of rain and snow fell in California in the 2021 water year.
Based on the diminished levels of both precipitation and runoff, the last water year was the second driest on record, according to the California Department of Water Resources.
The last time the state reported so little rain and snowfall was in 1924.