Dodgers president Andrew Friedman said Tuesday the team is working through roster decisions, including whether to bring back third baseman Justin Turner and outfielder Cody Bellinger.
“Dave and his coaching staff did an incredible job during the regular season to lead this team to 111 wins. And I don’t feel like it’s a switch that was then turned off, or the players needed a different voice in those games.” latimes.com/sports/dodgers…
Will they try to re-sign shortstop Trea Turner, who is expected to be one of the most coveted (and expensive) free agents on the market? Will they bring back free-agent pitchers such as Tyler Anderson, Andrew Heaney and Tommy Kahnle? latimes.com/sports/dodgers…
Despite none of the #Dodgers’ starters reaching the sixth inning in the NLDS, Friedman rejected the notion he should have acquired another pitcher at the trade deadline. latimes.com/sports/dodgers…
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About 100 students walked out during a break at John Marshall High School in Los Feliz Thursday, demanding improved security measures after the on-campus stabbing Wednesday of two students. latimes.com/california/sto…
The students said the stabbings came after another on-campus student assault in a classroom earlier this week, raising their fears about campus safety. latimes.com/california/sto…
Students who walked out said school administrators need to do a better job protecting them and said various measures could be taken, including more accessible mental health counseling, a stronger police presence and random searches for weapons and drugs. latimes.com/california/sto…
After the @Clippers
’ TV deal expired this summer, some fans wondered on social media why owner Steve Ballmer didn’t simply start his own channel to broadcast the games.
All @Clippers
games will still be televised on Bally Sports, KTLA or national TV. But 74 of the 82 games can also be watched on ClipperVision, which exists, in part, because the team hopes to capture younger viewers who don’t have cable. latimes.com/sports/clipper…
The app offers six live streams of each game, ranging from the Bally Sports+ feed, live commentary in Korean and Spanish, an augmented-reality mode and “BallerVision,” which features guests, including former NBA players, reacting casually to the game. latimes.com/sports/clipper…
L.A.’s history of overcrowded housing started in the late 19th century, and continued through the bulldozing of Mexican neighborhoods in Chavez Ravine in the 1950s for the eventual construction of Dodger Stadium.
For the vast stretch of Mexico’s modern history, many denied that racism existed in the country at all.
But a growing social movement is challenging that thinking, bringing discussions of discrimination based on skin color to the fore. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
A few months ago, Sonora Grill Prime in Mexico City was accused of assigning seating according to skin color.
“Racism is real,” Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum told reporters, using a word long regarded as taboo. “We have to accept that it exists and fight it.” latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Much of the work for activists has been focused on a basic first step: getting others to recognize that Mexico is a country with racial differences. “First, we have to educate,” one activist told @katelinthicum. latimes.com/world-nation/s…
Black real estate developers behind the proposed $1.6-billion Angels Landing project in downtown L.A. said that they refuse to continue working with City Councilman Kevin De León, in light of the secretly taped racist conversation he took part in. latimes.com/california/sto…
In a letter to then-acting Council President Mitch O’Farrell Friday, two of the country’s most prominent Black builders, Victor MacFarlane and R. Donahue Peebles, called for De León to resign. latimes.com/california/sto…
The project is in De León’s district, and it may not receive the go-ahead from City Hall without his support.
But De León and former Council President Nury Martinez have declined to meet with them to discuss the project for several months, they said. latimes.com/california/sto…
Hanging on a wall at the Inn Between is a photo of John Cal Robb, the note he wrote before he died and the blue plastic butterfly that signaled to his friends that it was his time to go.
Robb’s death was especially hard on the inn. His overweight mutt, Boo Boo, still roams the facility — one of only a handful of establishments in the country dedicated to end-of-life care for homeless people. latimes.com/california/sto…
“If you are reading this, I have ridden off into the sunset with my fishing pole in hand. Thank you for helping me get to this point,” wrote Robb, who, in the photo, wears a contemplative smile, a cigarette hanging from this mouth. latimes.com/california/sto…