On the morning of Jan. 7, as thick black smoke billowed over the Pacific Palisades, newsrooms across the city mobilized without a key piece of news-gathering equipment.
The year was 1966. The Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, which carries passengers from Palm Springs up to the San Jacinto Mountains nearly 6,000 feet above, had opened a few years prior to great fanfare.
"This is such a unique opportunity that has never existed. No region has hosted a Super Bowl and World Cup in the same year." ...
The 34-minute delay created two distinct halves of football and, according to the Ravens, nearly cost them a Super Bowl title ...
Los Angeles Times columnist Glenn Whipp talks with Adrien Brody, Guy Pearce, Felicity Jones and Brady Corbet to get to the ...
An exhibition and film screening honor the soldiers who endured the Bataan Death March and the scars — and legacies — they ...
A month after the L.A. firestorms brought unprecedented levels of destruction, the region is still grappling with basic ...
Administrator Lee Zeldin, President Trump’s envoy for special missions Richard Grenell and other federal and state officials ...
Trump denounced California's bullet train and said his administration would investigate it days after a critical inspector ...
Firefighters who reported to assist during the devastating Palisades and Eaton fires were kept from helping on the front ...
The thriller follows an ambitious Army Intelligence officer during the Vietnam War assigned to investigate a decorated ...
All aboard the "Crazy Train" — Black Sabbath will be reuniting for a performance in Ozzy Osbourne's hometown of Birmingham, U ...