Thứ Hai, 4 tháng 6, 2018

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Hi I'm Yolanda Wight I am 34 years old, I am married, I have 3 children.

So my mom was from Mexico City, my father Italian.

We lived in Huntington Beach, and it was kind of hard to feel fitting in, in the 90's there

was a lot of racism, lot of white supremacy in Huntington Beach, I was chased by a lot

of white supremacists in middle school

the weird thing is I don't like, it's Fountain Valley like where I live right now in Westminster

I feel like this is not anti-immigrant, it's actually embraced immigrants the most.

My son's school, the back side's in Vietnamese, everything's in English on one side

and the back side's in Vietnamese.

When we had a lot of Mexican immigrants when I was young, the backside wasn't in Spanish.

So then when the election came, I had my neighbors who were like about to hang trump signs in

their yard and I'm super uncomfortable.

I saw the line starting, I saw the separation starting,

I saw the anger starting, I saw my kids starting to be scared, I saw them starting to feel

like... wait, people don't like us because of our skin color? I don't understand

So my kids actually feel it. They're the ones who brought it up.

They actually asked me why does Trump not love us?

Why does he want to get rid of all the Mexicans what did we do?

Why are we so bad?

Why would you build a wall?

There is just hate, all I see is hate, all everybody talks about is hate.

It's just so much anger.

We don't need walls we need bridges with flowers on them and lights, you know?

Beautiful lit up bridges.

That's what I want.

There's power in numbers.

We are, we have the most numbers, I feel that we can and we want to make change.

I feel like everybody in California truly has the heart

and the love to make the change.

And they want it.

For more infomation >> California Counts - Yolanda - Duration: 2:38.

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California earthquake - Big One fears grow after quake strikes near Anaheim - Duration: 2:26.

For more infomation >> California earthquake - Big One fears grow after quake strikes near Anaheim - Duration: 2:26.

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Trump could hurt California GOP in midterms - Duration: 1:30.

Voters in California weren't the biggest fans of then-candidate Donald Trump during the

2016 presidential election.

In fact, he received 31.6 percent of the state's popular vote — less than any other Republican

candidate since the 19th century.

His popularity there hasn't changed much.

As of April 2018, he had a net approval rating of -27.

Considering how Californians feel about the president, some GOP candidates, like John

Cox, have tried to separate themselves from him ahead of the June 5 primary — even after

receiving his endorsement.

But the party might have more to worry about.

Out of the 19 million voters in California, independents now outnumber Republicans by

73,000, according to a recent analysis — making them the second-largest voting group next

to Democrats.

But the number of voters who identify as Democrats has fallen slightly, too.

Before the 2016 election, 44.92 percent of California voters were registered Democrats;

now that number has dropped to around 44.4 percent.

So while the Democratic Party is in the lead among affiliated California voters, it has

the same problem the Republican Party has.

The main difference is that California's Democrats hold a lot more seats in Congress than its

Republicans do, and the state has more potential toss-up races than any other in the upcoming

midterm elections.

For more infomation >> Trump could hurt California GOP in midterms - Duration: 1:30.

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California's primary could be train wreck for Democrats - Duration: 4:41.

For more infomation >> California's primary could be train wreck for Democrats - Duration: 4:41.

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Is Jerry Brown killing California? | Part 2: Economy - Duration: 9:04.

For more infomation >> Is Jerry Brown killing California? | Part 2: Economy - Duration: 9:04.

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Is Jerry Brown killing California? | Part 1: Immigration - Duration: 10:39.

For more infomation >> Is Jerry Brown killing California? | Part 1: Immigration - Duration: 10:39.

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Is Jerry Brown killing California? | Part 3: Homelessness - Duration: 8:09.

For more infomation >> Is Jerry Brown killing California? | Part 3: Homelessness - Duration: 8:09.

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Will California determine if Democrats take back the House? - Duration: 6:12.

For more infomation >> Will California determine if Democrats take back the House? - Duration: 6:12.

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Midterm battle over California gas tax - Duration: 2:06.

For more infomation >> Midterm battle over California gas tax - Duration: 2:06.

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Feeding Ostriches (Fun Things to do in Solvang, California) Solvang with Kids - Duration: 5:07.

Hotel accommodations was provided by King Frederick Inn.

Hello Bloggineers, this is day two in Solvang and we're at Ostrichland.

[Brother] Ahhh!!!!

This is a ranch where big birds roam and people can buy cups of food to feed them, with a gift shop that sells fresh eggs.

First, we're reading some fun facts about the ostrich.

And then it's time to feed them.

Warning, they do like to bite.

The backdrop of the landscape on which they ram resembles their native desert.

In case you are wondering what we're feeding them, the ostrich food is mainly made of hay.

Come and get it.

And now it's Brothers turn.

Slow mo.

Let's watch that again.

[Brother] Haha, two ostriches!

Then this bird is doing some crazy dance.

[Marvin Gaye's Let's Get It On]

Looks like she's gonna crack her head.

Now he's chasing other birds around.

We're moving to another part of the farm.

All right. Let go, let go, let go!

That's like half of it.

Ostriches aren't the only birds here.

Now we're feeding some emu.

We had so much fun at Ostrichland.

Our next stop is the Old Mission Santa Ynez.

Founded in 1804, this was the 19th of the 21 missions built in California by the Franciscan fathers.

Today we'll be going on a self-guided tour.

Brother is looking at the map to see where to go next.

We're now entering the cathedral.

The mission church interior was restored in 2007.

Next we're visiting the courtyard.

Counting this we've been to seven California missions and we have 14 more to go.

Now it's time to get some brunch

and some snacks.

Our next stop is the Wildling Museum.

This museum inspires visitors to enjoy, value, and conserve wildlife and natural area through art.

Brother is going to make some crafts.

Let's go check out the second floor.

I'm doing a scavenger hunt on this mural.

We're going up to level three.

There were many art made by children on display here.

Brother found another room with hands-on activities. He's going to be making an origami.

We had so much fun here.

Now we're at Quicksilver Ranch.

This is a breeding facility for miniature horses.

Brother smile for a picture.

No we're having dinner at Chomp.

This is a family friendly restaurant that serves all American cuisines such as hamburgers, fries, and shakes.

I'm having the chicken pesto sandwich that I'm waiting to cool down.

And Brother's having some sliders.

And my parents are having a hamburger and fish tacos.

Okay, I'm going to try to eat this hot chicken pesto thing right now while it's so hot.

The chicken pesto is really, it's really tasty.

The chicken is super juicy and tender. The pesto is pesto. It's delicious

And the bread is nice and crispy.

And Brother gives it his signature thumbs up.

I'm having an ice cream sundae, and Chocolate is having...

I"m having an ice cream sundae and Brother is having a Chocolate ice cream for dessert.

This is a recreational area with a unique theme wooden playground.

We have so much fun in Little Denmark.

Plan your trip at solvangusa.com.

Please hit the subscribe button and remember to look for your own adventure.

For more infomation >> Feeding Ostriches (Fun Things to do in Solvang, California) Solvang with Kids - Duration: 5:07.

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El fantástico "Lago Mono" de California - Duration: 6:22.

For more infomation >> El fantástico "Lago Mono" de California - Duration: 6:22.

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SLO Blues sweep California Expos on walk-off wild pitch, 11-10 - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> SLO Blues sweep California Expos on walk-off wild pitch, 11-10 - Duration: 0:59.

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National Cheese Day: The History of California's Cheesemaking Industry | Heavy.com - Duration: 11:02.

National Cheese Day: The History of California's Cheesemaking Industry | Heavy.com

The idea for Humboldt Fog goat's milk cheese first came to Mary Keehn in a dream.

She fell asleep on an airplane and awoke with a vivid picture in her mind of how the cheese looked.

And then she set out to realize her vision – in the process, helping to launch a late-20th-century American renaissance in artisan cheese-making.

But the dream didn't come from nowhere.

In Keehn's telling, the revelation occurred on a transatlantic flight home from France, where she'd gone in 1992 as a young cheese-maker looking for new inspiration by tasting traditional French cheeses and visiting their makers.

Indeed, a wheel of Humboldt Fog melds elements of two iconic French cheeses, with a Morbier-like ribbon of ash running through chalky paste more reminiscent of a soft-ripened Valançay.

The result is thoroughly distinct.

The story of Keehn's Cypress Grove Cheese is a quintessential telling of the California dream.

Not merely an entrepreneurial success story, it is a narrative of self-reinvention.

The California dream is about moving west (or, as in Keehn's case, farther north, to Humboldt County from Sonoma) to start anew, seeking not so much to get rich quick as to envision and inhabit a new identity.

Cypress Grove's heroine embodies characteristics that could describe the American artisan cheese industry as a whole: scrappy, innovative and unapologetically indebted to European tastes and know-how – condensing themes that emerged through anthropological research I conducted across the United States for my book, "The Life of Cheese.".

Back to the land, making cheese.

Mary Keehn acquired her first goats in 1970, wanting to feed fresh goat's milk to her first daughter, whom she was herself then weaning.

For years, Keehn and her family lived as self-sufficiently as possible.

Overwhelmed with more goat's milk than her human companions could or were willing to drink, she began experimenting in her kitchen and learned to make fresh cheese, or chèvre.

A friend who was opening a restaurant told Keehn, now a divorced mother of four, "If you start a [licensed] cheese factory, I'll buy your cheese." And in 1983 – without any official training, apprenticeship or business experience beyond selling her goats' breed stock – Keehn launched Cypress Grove.

For nine years, prior to the trip to France and subsequent introduction of Humboldt Fog, Cypress Grove sold fresh chèvre and fromage blanc, cheeses more wholesome than gourmet.

Indeed, Keehn was one of a number of Americans involved in the back-to-the-land movement who, in the early '80s, began making cheese by hand for commercial sale.

Located in the Northern California coastal town of Arcata, Keehn grew Cypress Grove into a successful business with national distribution and name recognition that employs over 40 workers – a far cry from its modest origins.

In 2010, Keehn sold the company to the Swiss corporation Emmi, although her daily involvement continues.

Today's cheese lovers can drive (or internet browse) along the California Cheese Trail, stretching from Crescent City near the Oregon border south to Los Angeles.

It leads to artisan microdairies as well as Kraft Foods subsidiaries.

Created in 2010 by a Marin County dairy farmer's daughter on the model of wine-tasting maps, the California Cheese Trail today features 72 cheese-making operations.

Nationwide, the American Cheese Society counts more than 900 artisan and specialty cheese operations.

Reflective of the state's cultural diversity, the variety in California cheese-making is neither new nor unique to the state.

But it is indicative of how food-making traditions in the United States are often animated by personal narratives of innovation rather than, as in Europe, adherence to customary tradition.

Since 2000, the number of California's artisan cheese producers has grown exponentially.

But while hippie goat ladies have been celebrated as cheese-making pioneers, they are not without precedent.

The California dream of a century earlier saw a similar flourishing of cheese-making activity in port cities up and down the Pacific Coast.

Gold rush roots for new cheese markets.

The Marin French Cheese Company, in Petaluma, California, claims to be the oldest continuously operating cheese factory in the United States.

In 1865, with Lincoln in the White House and the Civil War coming to an end, Marin French (originally Thompson Brothers Cheese Co.) got its start when Jefferson Thompson, a dairy farmer, recognized an emergent market niche in the nearby port town of San Francisco.

The now late Jim Boyce, who purchased Marin French in 1998 from Thompson's descendants, related the company's history to me in the course of my own research.

During the California Gold Rush between 1849 and 1855, European stevedores who sailed into what's now called San Francisco Bay delivering goods to support the mining enterprises got "caught up in the fever" themselves.

Many abandoned ship to seek their own fortunes mining.

After the gold rush went bust, workers returned to the bay to make a living at the dockyards.

As Boyce said to me, "Now, in any workman's bar or inn… the beer gives them hydration and carbohydrate but no protein," so "typically in a workman's bar there's a jar of pickled eggs or something like that – pig knuckles, sausage." But in the Bay Area at that time agriculture had yet to be fully developed.

"There weren't any eggs," Boyce explained, as there were no commercial hen farms.

So according to Boyce, enterprising dairy farmer Jefferson Thompson said to himself:.

"in a moment of marketing brilliance, 'I wonder if they'd eat cheese, instead?' So he starts making these little cheeses, three-ounce cheeses, more or less.

And he hauls them off to the docks, and they put them on the table in a bowl, and they were an immediate hit! Why? Because these are European stevedores: They knew cheese! They ate it breakfast, lunch and dinner.

And that was the origin of the company.".

With new migrants come new tastes.

If Mary Keehn's Humboldt Fog exemplifies personal insight and passion, Jefferson Thompson's Breakfast Cheese (now Marin French's Petite Breakfast) celebrates the generation of new markets.

It's a reminder that the California dream of entrepreneurial reinvention requires not only creative genius but also the appreciative taste of willing consumers.

The Gold Rush brought European deckhands eager to eat soft-ripened cheeses.

Marin French was at the ready, hand-ladling Camembert.

In the late-20th century, hippie eaters of "health foods" gave way to American Europhiles who valued a diversity of distinctive tastes.

Here it is worth remembering that California, nearly all the up way to present-day Arcata, was until 1848 part of Mexico.

Cross-cutting immigrant histories have long underwritten the California dream – and they still do.

The California Cheese Trail declares Ariza Cheese, established in 1970, to be "the oldest artisan Mexican cheese-maker in Southern California." It specializes in Salvadoran cheeses in addition to crumbly Mexican Cotija.

You will find Ariza just off Alondra Blvd.

in the city of Paramont, east of Compton in LA County.

Heather Paxson, Professor of Anthropology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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