The Wall Street Journal's Chris Kornelius joins Morning Joe to discuss the life of Randy “Crawdaddy” Miod, a local Malibu surfing legend, who died defending his home on the Pacific Coast Highway against the Los Angeles wildfires.
Welcome to the Wall Street Week newsletter, bringing you stories of capitalism about things you need to know, but even more things you need to think about. If you’re not yet a subscriber, sign up here for this newsletter.
The newest blaze, named the Sepulveda fire, had reached 45 acres with 60% containment Thursday, the Los Angeles Fire Department said. It broke out near Bel-Air, roughly 2 miles from the perimeter ...
The manse came on the market for $30 million in June 2024 before the price was slashed to $24.9 million a few months later.
A year after Collins passed away at age 77, the property was purchased in 2016 by real estate mogul Ben Nehmadi and his wife, Bita, for $21 million. The couple spent $25 million and five years gutting and transforming the home, according to the Journal.
A studio apartment in Koreatown, one-bedroom units in Long Beach and East Hollywood, and links to resources for those displaced by the fires.
The fast-growing popularity of the Chinese artificial intelligence software hit shares in tech giants like Nvidia, as Silicon Valley worried about what comes next.
The Wall Street Journal argued that California Gov. Gavin Newsom should waive environmental regulations for all Californians, not just victims of the Los Angeles fires.
The latest devastating wildfires must be a wake-up call for Los Angels to 'move away from fire-prone suburban sprawl'
Past fires in other cities provided opportunity for large-scale urban rebirth and reinvention. Southern California’s blazes pose different challenges.
Corie Mattie, who's also known by her street art name the LA Hope Dealer, put up two murals to help in the wildfire recovery effort. One is in West Hollywood on the Doheny Wall by Doheny Drive and Dorrington Avenue. The message "Together We Rise" is on the wall.