In other LA news…

BUZZ: You have to start some pretty big drama to overshadow the visit of the President of the United States.

President Joe Biden is on his final three-day tour of Los Angeles today, meeting with local leaders, touting his infrastructure investments and trying to rally Democrats less than a month before a key election.

But the commander-in-chief didn’t appear to have garnered the same level of attention as leaked audio revealing racist remarks in a conversation among Los Angeles City Council members, which still dominated conversations across California on Thursday. Biden already called for resignations earlier this week, through his spokesman, saying Nury Martinez, Gil Cedillo and Kevin de León should step down. But he didn’t mention it during his visit to California (at least until now). Fox’s Elex Michaelson reportedly tried to ask about it yesterday, but the president “looked at me, waved and kept walking.”

It’s no surprise that Biden would prefer to focus on current affairs in the election — inflation is still pounding the country, ballots are arriving by mail, and there are several battleground states in California that Democrats must win if they want a chance at keeping control of the House.

Biden gave a speech yesterday afternoon at the Purple Line expansion site in LA, along with Rep. Karen Bass (whom he endorsed for mayor) and other LA leaders. He didn’t touch on social issues, like abortion, that California Democrats have leaned heavily on this election cycle. Instead, he talked about “kitchen table” issues like grocery and fuel prices (note: the average in California was $6.20 a gallon yesterday).

“We have an election in a month. Democrats are working to reduce the cost of things that can be discussed at the kitchen table, from prescription drugs to health insurance to energy bills and so much more,” Biden said.

It’s the kind of rhetoric that Democrats in tight races hope will sway voters in these final weeks of the campaign. Rhetoric, of course, can only get you so far.

After his infrastructure event, Biden stopped by Brentwood to join House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at a fundraiser for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. As Deadline reported earlier this week, tickets started at $5,000 per person, rising to $10,000 per couple and $50,000 per host couple. According to the DCCC, the event raised $5 million for House Democrats.

And if that wasn’t enough, the Democratic National Committee yesterday transferred another $1 million each to both the DCCC and its Senate counterpart, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, as POLITICO’s Christopher Cadelago reports.

Today, Biden returns to the campaign trail — and, presumably, to kitchen-table rhetoric — when he heads to Irvine Valley Community College in Orange County to speak about “cutting costs for American families,” according to the White House.

Orange County, which has become increasingly contested in recent years, is home to several closely watched congressional races this year. Incumbent Democratic Rep. Katie Porter is fending off a challenge from Republican Scott Baugh. And the party is working to take seats from Republicans in the area, including Rep. Michelle Steel, who is running against Democrat Jay Chen, and Young Kim, who faces a challenge on the left from Asif Mahmood.

BUENOS DÍAS, good Friday morning. Another Los Angeles City Council meeting was scheduled for today, but Acting Council President Mitch O’Farrell postponed it, saying the council should not meet until Cedillo and de León resign. (Incidentally – if you know when, or if, this will happen, we’d love to hear about it.)

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QUOTE OF THE DAY: “I know a lot of people are working to help them understand the imperative to resign.” O’Farrell about the continued pressure for Cedillo and de León to resign, in an interview with POLITICO Thursday night.

WHERE IS GAVIN? Nothing official has been announced

LEAK FINDING – “The mystery behind the racist L.A. tape scandal: Who released it – and why?” Harriet Ryan, Terry Castleman, Summer Lin and Matt Pearce of the Los Angeles Times: “The strategy talk was supposed to be a discreet backstage conversation, but as it began in a private room at the L.A. County Federation of Labor headquarters. , someone was recording it.”

— “U-turn on desalination plants: California approves Orange County project,” CalMatters’ Rachel Becker: “After rejecting controversial proposal in Huntington Beach, state Coastal Commission greenlights another in Dana Point. Although environmentalists have expressed concern, the Commission calls it a well-planned project.”

— “USC offered Karen Bass a scholarship before she was accepted to its school of social work, records show,” Matt Hamilton of the Los Angeles Times: “But documents released by Bass’ campaign are not actually an application for admission to USC’s master of social work program , The Times learns. The form is an application for attending classes in a ‘restricted status’.”

CLINTON ON PROPOSITION 1: Hillary Clinton stunned California’s proposal to enshrine abortion rights in the state constitution Thursday at Planned Parenthood headquarters in San Francisco, saying the Proposition 1 campaign is about more than abortion, POLITICO’s Victoria Colliver reports.

“We’re here to talk about Proposition 1, but let’s understand that this is part of a much broader plan to turn back the clock on the values, rights and freedoms that this country is fighting to achieve in accordance with our core values,” said the former first lady and presidential candidate of the Democratic Party.

Clinton appeared with Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, and the visit drew state lawmakers including Sen. Nancy Skinner (D-Berkeley), Reps. Buffy Wicks (D-Oakland) and Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D-Orinda). The campaign’s first official ads debuted across radio, television, print and digital media the day before the event, pressuring California to stake its claim as an abortion sanctuary in a big way.

While Prop 1 appears headed for victory — it has the support of 71 percent of likely voters, according to an August poll — its proponents are taking nothing for granted.

— Latin Americans are increasingly leaning toward the Republicans. But not so much in California,” by Mathew Miranda of the Sacramento Bee: “Polls and recent election results show California Latinos remain largely entrenched in the Democratic Party, reflecting the legacy of California Republicans’ anti-immigrant rhetoric in the 1990s and the rise of left-leaning Hispanic leaders who have focused on serving their communities.”

BLOOMBERG BOOM — “Michael Bloomberg is almost single-handedly funding California’s Prop. 31,” SFGate’s Eric Ting: “Of the $17.3 million ‘yes’ raised on Prop. 31 committee, $15.3 million came from campaign financing from Bloomberg, Calif. records reviewed by SFGATE show. The No Committee raised just $2.1 million, meaning 79% of the money spent in the race came from just one person: Bloomberg.”

And ANSWER — “Nury Martinez’s ‘little Latina girls’ line in resignation letter backfires: ‘Girl WHAT?’, Los Angeles Times’ Christi Carras: “Actress Melinna Bobadilla, writer Myriam Gurba and TV host Areva Martin were among the many Twitter users who criticized Martinez’s post — especially the part where the disgraced politician addressed ‘all the little Latina girls around town’ and said, ‘I hope I’ve inspired you to dream bigger than what you can see.’”

WATER WATCH — “Los Angeles is running out of water and time. Are leaders willing to act?” Los Angeles Times’ Hayley Smith: “Over the past decade, the city has made significant investments in its future, including major projects to expand its ability to collect, store and recycle water. But now, ahead of the election, much of the work remains unfinished – with target dates for some major water projects set as far back as 2050.”

CROSSING THE BRIDGE — “’We Won’t Close Equity Gaps’: Despite Progress, California Community Colleges Will Fall Short of Newsom’s Aspirational Goals,” Mikhail Zinshteyn of CalMatters: “With even progress across the board, groups already lagging behind can’t catch up unless colleges graduate them faster. For this reason, graduation rates are unlikely to decrease to close the so-called “equality gap” across regions and demographics.”

— “S.F. exodus: More people say they intend to leave than in any other major metro area,” wrote Susie Neilson of the San Francisco Chronicle: “The data was released by the American Housing Survey, a biennial survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau, and shows that about 18% of San Francisco metropolitan area residents plan to move out of their home in the next year.”

— “Feds spare Laguna Honda hospital with funding extension,” Sydney Johnson of the San Francisco Examiner: “The announcement comes after months of wrangling between hospital officials and state and federal regulators over how to move forward after the facility was stripped of its certification in April when it failed a series of on-site inspection.”

— “State housing probe begins as SF races to meet key deadline,” Sarah Wright of the San Francisco Standard: “Last week, planning department officials received what they said were new guidelines from the state Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD ). zoning.”

— “Cause of death released for Kiely Rodni, missing California teen found in reservoir,” Rosalio Ahumada of the Sacramento Bee: “The Truckee teenager was missing for two weeks and was the focus of a massive search in August before her remains were found in her submerged vehicle in the tank. The sheriff’s office said her death was ‘accidental.'”

GAS DOWN — “How fast are gas prices falling in California? Compare costs to U.S. cost increases,” Sacramento Bee’s Jacqueline Pinedo: “California regular gas prices have fallen an average of 22 cents in seven days, though the national average remains well above $6 a gallon as of Thursday .”

– Jan. 6 Trump subpoena panel, POLITICO’s Nicholas Wu and Kyle Cheney: There are many factors impeding the panel’s ability to win Trump’s cooperation. There is little precedent for such a move against a former president, which would raise tricky separation-of-powers issues that have rarely, if ever, been contested.

PENNING PENNY — “Leaked Amazon slides instruct employees to ‘double down on thrift’ in joint meeting,” Business Insider’s Ashley Stewart and Eugene Kim: “The comments mark a shift in tone at Amazon as the giant retailer tightens its belt in the face of slowing growth and deterioration economic climate.”

— “Social media can still avoid repeat in 2020, civil rights groups say,” by The Protocol’s Ben Brody: “Even as platforms try to stop new election misinformation and disinformation, they should also ensure they implement policies that prohibit lies that claim The 2020 election was stolen, 11 groups led by the Leadership Conference for Civil and Human Rights said in a letter to the companies.

ACROSS STATE LINES — “Mark Wahlberg left California for Nevada to give his kids a ‘better life,’” CNN’s Marianne Garvey: “I want to be able to work from home. I moved to California years ago to pursue acting and I only did a couple of movies the whole time I was there,’ he said.”

STAYING SAFE — “’You’re clearly a target’: Rappers rethink security protocols after PnB Rock murder,” by August Brown and Kenan Draughorne of the Los Angeles Times: “But artists and managers today face a more complex set of threats than a decade ago. Social unrest and economic inequality have raised tensions across the country, while social media offers criminals new ways to find potential victims.”

– “Criminal accused of massacring California family pleads guilty to four counts of murder,” by Robert Rodriguez of the Fresno Bee.

A FORCE TO BE COUNTED – “Salesforce, San Francisco’s Largest Employer, Implements Layoffs,” by SFGate’s Joshua Bote.

— “Scapegoating Asians and Asian-Americans a major element in reported hate incidents: report,” by KQED’s Alexander Gonzalex and LAist staff.

COASTAL CRUISING – “Journeying Highway 1: Six Itineraries Along California’s Iconic Coast,” Gregory Thomas, Alissa Greenberg, Leilani Marie Labong, Jill K. Robinson, Robert Earle Howells and David Ferry of the San Francisco Chronicle.

— “The ski season is coming. What you need to know before you head to California’s most popular resorts,” Brian Clark of the Los Angeles Times.

Daniel Castro of the Center for Data Innovation … Microsoft’s Dave Leichtman

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What kind of source is the Los Angeles Times? The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California. It was founded in 1881 and is now the largest metropolitan daily newspaper in the U.S. 1.4 million people read the newspaper every day, and 2.4 million on Sundays. Since 1942, the Times has won 44 Pulitzer Prizes.

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The Los Angeles Times is the nation’s largest metropolitan daily newspaper, with more than 40 million monthly unique visitors to latimes.com, a weekly print readership of 1.6 million and a combined print and online local weekly audience of 4.4 million.

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the newspaper2002 printed circuitDigital subscribers 2019
Los Angeles Times965,633170,000
The Washington Post746,7241.7 million
New York Daily News715.07027,000

Who are the editors of the LA Times?

Kevin Merida â Executive Editor Kevin Merida is the executive editor of the Los Angeles Times. In June 2021, he took the helm of the largest newsgathering organization in the West and oversees the newsroom, as well as the Times Community News and the Los Angeles Times en Español.

How many readers does the LA Times have?

the newspaper2002 printed circuitDigital subscribers 2019
Los Angeles Times965,633170,000
The Washington Post746,7241.7 million
New York Daily News715.07027,000

How many people work for the Los Angeles Times?

The Los Angeles Times has 2,052 employees.

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Today, The Times newsroom employs 502 reporters, but is 61% white, even though the population of Los Angeles County is 26% white, according to the 2018 census.

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After 99 cents for the first four weeks, the price for digital advertising alone will rise to $3.99 per week. Other packages will be offered, including $1.99 per week for unlimited digital access and a weekly newspaper. Online access will be included at no additional charge for print subscribers.