In a new interview, Melissa Gilbert opened up about her journey from Hollywood to New York, leaving behind California’s "anti-aging" culture.
The former Manhattan co-op apartment of the late actor Sidney Poitier hit the market on Tuesday for $11.5 million.
The scale of the destruction is hard to comprehend: The fires have consumed more the 60 square miles, according to state fire officials, and killed at least 24 people even as the search for additional victims remains ongoing.
A law barring monthly rents of more than $10,000 for new listings is stopping high-end homes from going on the market, real estate agents and brokers say. Such homes could be in demand for wealthy fire victims.
LA leaders are beginning to ponder a monumental task: rebuilding what was lost in the Southern California wildfires.
Even as four wildfires continued to burn in Los Angeles County, the blazes were already rewriting the record books.
Erewhon, the luxury supermarket chain that turned grocery shopping into a hyper-trendy Los Angeles lifestyle, is ramping up its pace of expansion with three new stores planned to open in 2025.
What this means, the newspaper explains, is that proper management is not really about preventing wildfires "but instead preventing points of ignition within communities by employing 'home-hardening' strategies—proper landscaping, fire-resistant siding—and enjoining neighbors in collective efforts such as brush clearing."
Erewhon — an anagram of “nowhere” and a favorite of celebrities and influencers alike — will open storefronts in Glendale, West Hollywood and Manhattan Beach in 2025, the L.A. Times first reported. The new branches will join 10 other Erewhon outposts spread across Southern California.
It was dramatic … overwhelming,” FDNY Chief of Department John Esposito told the Daily News, recalling the miles of scorched earth and destroyed homes in L.A.’s Palisades
The wet weather will bring relief to Southern California after a prolonged period of dryness, but there’s concern that any bursts of heavy rainfall could cause flooding.
Top Trump administration officials, including 'border czar' Tom Homan and the acting deputy attorney general, visited Chicago on Sunday.