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Coming to you live from California, USA

It's LJ

I said, it's LJ

Aww sh*t

Kathy!

What happened to you and LJ?

I'm just waiting on my Oover, I don't know where LJ is.

Why do you need an Oover? You're a ghost you can fly

I'm a ghost trapped in a human body! Ugh whatever

What am I supposed to do?

Well you're already there!

Do something to entertain them!

But I need some time

I need to find some filler

What the f*ck

Dude I'm tryna f*cking skate! This is bulls*it

Jacka**

What the f*ck

I gotta find something to do for the show

Incoming call? Must be the executives

Hello Executives What's going on?

We come because we that

Your show is not on the air

LJ is missing.

Yes, but if the show does not go on

That is a lot of company money being wasted

Yes, I understand

But it's gonna be hard

To do LJ's World

Without LJ

Look

We're not saying is has to be about LJ, we're saying that the show

Has to be made. It's all written here in the contract

Well you better figure out something!

Keep in mind that this is the first episode! And that if it does not go well...

We are allowed to not order more episodes

Wait so if the episode does not go right...

Then the show will be cancelled? Immediately?

Yes. Immediately cancelled

You're lucky we're giving you an extra chance and extra money.

So if the next episode happens to go wrong

It's all over?

Yes, it will be all over

Right?

*Angry Sigh*

Yes then it will be all over

We're signing off. Don't disappoint us Nikodemiopolous!

I hate working on

This show

But they just gave me my next new idea

All I gotta do

Is make the next episode

Extremely terrible

Then it will be cancelled in a instant

And i'll be free to go back to my home planet to rule

Well then get ready America!

Because in the next episode of LJ's World...

You can expect the...

UN-EX-PECTED

TO BE CONTINUED?

For more infomation >> LJ's World | Episode 1 | Live from California - Duration: 5:06.

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Autoridades de California anuncian inspecciones a centros de detención en donde hay niños migrantes - Duration: 2:03.

For more infomation >> Autoridades de California anuncian inspecciones a centros de detención en donde hay niños migrantes - Duration: 2:03.

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California vows immediate inspections of facilities housing children separated from parents - Duration: 5:09.

California regulators said Saturday they will immediately begin inspections at facilities where scores of immigrant children who were separated from their parents at the U

S.-Mexico border under a Trump administration crackdown are being held.  Michael Weston, a spokesman for the Department of Social Services, said Saturday that state officials were reinspecting facilities run by groups that have federal contracts to house unaccompanied children

The inspections were underway on Saturday, and were initially focusing on providers that work with the youngest children, he said

Advertisement  Several facilities in Southern California are now housing children, including the David & Margaret Youth and Family Services in La Verne, Crittenton Services for Children and Families in Fullerton as well as Nuevo Amanecer Latino Children's Services and International Christian Adoptions, which place children in foster homes

 Most of the kids in the L.A. area are under 9. They are reportedly being housed in facilities and foster homes run by at least four nonprofit agencies

 Officials with the Office of Refugee Resettlement, the federal agency charged with managing the children, did not respond to repeated requests for comment

 According to federal contracting data, three of the agencies have been awarded three-year federal grants that will pay them $2

7 million to $22 million to shelter and find foster care for unaccompanied minors

 It remains unclear how long the children will be at the facilities.  The process of reunifying families that have been separated at the border could take months, federal officials said Friday

Lawyers, advocates and lawmakers said the path ahead remained murky and chaotic, and the Trump administration failed again to provide clear direction on how to resolve the issue

 Federal officials say about 2,300 children have been detained apart from their parents since May, when the administration began holding many adults who had crossed the border illegally and charging them with misdemeanors, rather than allowing them go free while awaiting asylum hearings — a process President Trump has derided as "catch and release

"  On Wednesday, Trump signed an executive order intended to halt the separation of parents and children by instead detaining families together

Since then, his administration has struggled to articulate a plan to put the families back together or determine what effect doing so would have on enforcement, given the limited bed space for families

 On Friday, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said he was trying to get information about the kids in his city

 His office said he knows about the facilities housing them and is monitoring the situation

He has requested details from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, but the agency has not yet responded, his office said

 Meanwhile, Garcetti said he was working to find ways to support the kids, through donations and community outreach

 "The biggest gap, if the federal government would take us up on this, is matching … kids and parents," Garcetti said

"I don't see any system for that right now."

For more infomation >> California vows immediate inspections of facilities housing children separated from parents - Duration: 5:09.

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Heat Wave Brings Triple Digit Temps To Northern California - Duration: 2:05.

For more infomation >> Heat Wave Brings Triple Digit Temps To Northern California - Duration: 2:05.

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California's net neutrality legislation just got watered down in a big way - Duration: 6:31.

California's state capitol building. (Flickr / Jeff Turner) Lawmakers in California's State Assembly have weakened a landmark bill aimed at implementing a local version of the Federal Communications Commission's now-defunct net neutrality rules, in a blow to Internet activists who had hoped for stronger measures

Approved by the California Senate last month, the bill sought to impose strict regulations on how broadband providers, such as AT&T and Comcast, may handle Internet content

Key provisions not only banned ISPs from blocking or slowing down websites, but also prohibited the carriers from exempting specific apps and services from wireless data caps for an extra fee, a practice known as zero-rating

The bill as initially proposed, SB 822, could have become the toughest such legislation in the country, with additional provisions that banned providers from charging websites extra fees to reach Internet users

[This crafty tactic may let states get around the FCC on net neutrality] But in a vote Wednesday in a key State Assembly committee, lawmakers led by Chairman Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles) moved to strip the bill of some of its central components

 The deleted provisions include the ban that prohibited ISPs from charging websites new fees to access customers, as well as the restrictions on zero-rating

Also deleted were a large section of definitions — without which California's attorney general will have more difficulty prosecuting violations of the legislation, its supporters said

The committee still sought to advance the bill, but the vote drew criticism from Internet activists who accused Santiago of being swayed by broadband industry lobbyists

"The level of corruption we just witnessed literally makes me sick to my stomach," said Evan Greer, a spokeswoman for Fight for the Future, an Internet advocacy group

"The actions of this committee today are an attack not just on net neutrality, but on our democracy

" Campaign finance disclosures show that Santiago has received $22,600 in contributions from AT&T since 2014, and $4,500 from Comcast

In spite of the changes weakening the bill, Santiago said Wednesday that he stands by the FCC's 2015 net neutrality rules, and that the legislation as amended reflects the Obama-era regulations

"Trump's rollback of these regulations are a concern to me, as they should be to every American," Santiago said in a statement

He also responded to his critics' lobbying and campaign finance concerns as "irresponsible at best, and insulting beyond that

" AT&T and Comcast didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. Internet providers have argued against tougher net neutrality rules on the grounds that the regulations could discourage investments in network upgrades and prevent ISPs from developing new business models

AT&T has previously urged Congress to write a national net neutrality law that would apply equally to broadband providers and Internet companies alike

 Many of its representatives in Washington have called for something similar. [With Facebook on the ropes, Internet providers seek to press their advantage in Washington] Sen

Scott Wiener (D), who introduced SB 822 in the California Senate earlier this year, said the amendments this week have effectively "eviscerated" his bill

Wiener downplayed the significance of the Internet providers' campaign contributions, saying the committee vote was the result of a simple disagreement among colleagues

"We had a strenuous disagreement here, but to me, it's not about campaign contributions," he said in an interview

"I will say, in general, AT&T and Comcast, they spent a lot of money in California targeting members with Twitter and Facebook ads, doing robo-calls to seniors telling them their bills are going to go up, that this bill is going to make your monthly payment go up

They flooded the capitol with lobbyists." Despite the Assembly's changes to the bill, California could still wind up passing net neutrality legislation in some form in the coming months

The bill now heads to an Assembly committee dealing with privacy issues; further changes to the legislation could come at any point between now and the end of the legislative session in August

Should a net neutrality bill be finalized, analysts say, it could invite a court challenge from Internet providers and possibly the FCC, whose current approach to net neutrality tries to ban states from circumventing its policies

At that point, a lawsuit concerning the scope of the FCC's preemption powers would join the numerous other cases pending on net neutrality

More than 20 states have sued the FCC to overturn the agency's repeal of the national net neutrality rules

Meanwhile, opponents of the rules are waiting to hear whether the Supreme Court could take up a case challenging the regulations as they were approved in 2015

For more infomation >> California's net neutrality legislation just got watered down in a big way - Duration: 6:31.

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California House of Horrors: 5 Key Questions About the Shocking Child Abuse Case - Duration: 15:49.

 Police in Perris, California, were shocked in mid-January to discover the 13 children of David and Louise Turpin had apparently been living in a house of horrors: Allegedly kept malnourished from lack of food and regularly abused, nearly all of the kids had also been imprisoned and tortured in the home, authorities believe

 Only the youngest child, it seems, was somewhat spared.  The Turpin parents were soon arrested and remain in custody, having pleaded not guilty to the dozens of charges against each of them

Their attorneys have noted they are presumed innocent.  The children, ages 2 to 29 at the time they were rescued, were hospitalized for months where they reportedly provided information to investigators and adjusted to new lives

 As the prosecution proceeds, amid continuing developments and revelations, discussion of the case has often narrowed to a few key areas

 Some of these questions — What's next? How did this happen? — have answers, if only partially

Others are mysteries that may never be fully solved. 1. How Did the Family Allegedly Keep Such Extreme Abuse Hidden?  Speaking to reporters on Jan

18, Riverside County, California, District Attorney Michael Hestrin said, "It appears no one noticed what was happening

" He detailed a few pieces of information from the investigation that show how this could have been the case

 For example, Hestrin said, the Turpin family was regularly sleeping all day and up all night

 What's more, the six minor children were officially being home-schooled so they rarely had to leave the house and were kept off the radar of outsiders such as teachers, coaches or counselors

 The family also had a history of relocating. Though David and Louise reportedly grew up in Princeton, West Virginia, they later moved to Texas where they lived for 17 years after marrying in February 1985, when she was 16 and he was 23

 In 2010, they moved from the greater Fort Worth area to Murrieta, California, and then from Murrieta to nearby Perris in 2014

 As they relocated, the abuse of the children only intensified, Hestrin alleged at the Jan

18 news conference.  Separately, he told PEOPLE, "Crimes that occur within a family like this are by their very nature difficult to uncover because they happen at night, under the cover of darkness, behind closed doors

They happen in secret, so there has got to be something that uncovers what happened in the dark and in the secret of this family

"  Neighbors have reported having limited contact with the Turpins, and Louise's brother, Billy Lambert, told PEOPLE he was unable to speak with his nieces and nephews, despite repeated requests

 "They were a little odd, but I didn't see anything to call authorities for," neighbor Wendy Martinez told PEOPLE

 When another neighbor and her son saw three Turpin kids putting up Christmas decorations in 2015, she said they were taken aback by the interaction

 "We said, 'Oh, the decorations look so nice,' and they froze," Kimberly Milligan recalled

"Like when young children want to divert a threat they think they can pretend to be invisible

… That was the last time the family put out Christmas lights." 2. What May Have Motivated the Parents?  Much about the family's behavior is still unclear, including why the suspected abuse allegedly escalated over time and how the parents were able to control their children so absolutely, especially when the oldest ones are in their 20s and at least one son was enrolled in college

 Hestrin was asked about a possible motive on Jan. 18 and said, "I don't know that I can answer that completely

As a prosecutor, there are cases that stick with you, that haunt you … sometimes in this business we're faced with looking at human depravity and that's what we are looking at here

"  The son in community college was always chaperoned by his mother, Hestrin said

 RELATED VIDEO: House of Horrors: Expert Weighs in on If Children Will Be Able to Move Forward – 'It's a Very Scary World'  • Want to keep up with the latest crime coverage? Click here to get breaking crime news, ongoing trial coverage and details of intriguing unsolved cases in the True Crime Newsletter

 As to the possibility of a cult or religious element in the family's behavior, Hestrin said, "Not that I know, no

"  When asked if the children were brainwashed, he said he'd be "speculating."  Lambert, Louise's brother, said she and David had met in church and "ran away" to Texas to marry in 1985 before being returned to West Virginia, where Louise's father consented to the nuptials

 Louise had her first child at 20, Lambert said.  "She had mentioned the Kate Plus 8 show, that it was a cool reality show," he said

"I think deep down that is what she wanted [a big family]." 3. The Teen Girl Who Escaped — Where Did She Get a Phone?  The conditions inside the Turpin home were only made public after one of their children, a 17-year-old girl, escaped the home before sunrise on Jan

14 and then called 911. Authorities believe she likely slipped out of her bedroom window

 But how did one of the siblings, whose activities appear to have all been tightly controlled, get access to the phone that put her parents behind bars?  Authorities have not confirmed how the teen came to acquire the device, which was deactivated at the time she used it, meaning it allowed her only to place an emergency call

 "The girl, with several of her siblings, had been discussing some kind of escape plan," Hestrin told PEOPLE

"For up to two years they at least thought about escape. As to why they chose that day or that  time, I just don't know

I think we will know more when we get this case ready for preliminary hearing." 4

Dad Is Accused of a Sex Crime. Are There More Charges to Come?  In addition to the dozen charges each of torture and false imprisonment that David and Louise face, they are also accused of seven counts of abuse of a dependent adult and six count of child abuse

 But David faces an accusation that Louise does not: He is charged with one count of lewd act on a child under 14, though authorities have not elaborated further on their allegation he was sexually abusive

 "About the only thing the children were allowed to do while chained up or in their rooms was to write in journals," he told reporters

"We now have recovered those journals — hundreds of them — and we are combing through them for evidence

"  "If our investigation uncovers more crime, we will file more charges," Hestrin said in January

  In late February, more charges were indeed filed against both parents: three new child abuse charges each for David and Louise and one felony assault charge against Louise, according to an amended criminal complaint

 Attorneys for David and Louise, who are barred from contacting their children, have declined to comment on the case beyond broad reactions to the seriousness of the allegations

5. One of the Kids Previously Tried to Escape in Texas, So Why Wasn't the Family Discovered Then?  A former neighbor of the Turpins told PEOPLE in late January that one of the siblings tried to get free years ago when the family lived in Rio Vista, Texas

 "One of the girls escaped and I was always told that the police returned her," said Rick Vinyard

"One of the girls did try to run away. It was probably three or four years after they moved in

"  Vinyard said that the Turpin family first lived in a brick house across the street from him

In time, he said, the family moved out of that home and into a double-wide trailer parked on the same lot

 "They moved out of the brick house because the family had trashed it so bad, it was unlivable," Vinyard claimed

"They had left pets in there that starved to death. We found a dead dog and a dead cat in that house

The kitchen just looked horrible. There were dirty diapers piled waist-high."  The Turpins moved to California after 10 years in the neighborhood, Vinyard said

They left behind a "filthy" house that contained "barracks"-like bedrooms and a "makeshift school," other Texas neighbors said in April

 But it seems that, just as in Riverside County, no red flags were raised until the teenage girl's escape

 "We researched thoroughly and we didn't have any reports," a spokesman for Texas' Department of Family and Protective Services told PEOPLE in January

 An official with the Hill County sheriff in Texas said that while authorities had some long-ago interactions with the Turpins, they were relatively minor

 In 2001, the family dog bit their 4-year-old daughter and the girl was hospitalized and the dog put down, Chief Deputy Rick White told PEOPLE

And in 2003, "Their pigs got out and ate the neighbor's dog food. They replaced the dog food and the trash can that the pigs tore up

"  Speaking about the revealed allegations against David and Louise, Hestrin, the prosecutor, praised the teenager who exposed them

 "I think we are very happy and fortunate that the girl mustered the courage to do what she did when she did it," he said in January

"It is an unbelievable story. It really is."  Anyone with information about the Turpin family is urged to call 888-934-KIDS

 • With reporting by ELAINE ARADILLAS, K.C. BAKER, JASON DUAINE HAHN, CHRIS HARRIS and CHRISTINE PELISEK

For more infomation >> California House of Horrors: 5 Key Questions About the Shocking Child Abuse Case - Duration: 15:49.

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California Billboard Credits ICE With Making 'Kids Disappear' - Duration: 3:49.

 Activists in California altered a billboard on a busy highway to remind citizens what the U

S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's priorities are all about.   "We make kids disappear' - I

C.E." the billboard, changed Wednesday night, reads on Emeryville's Shellmound St, referring to the U

S. law enforcement agency by its acronym. It previously read "We Make Junk Disappear" for an ad for trash removal, CBS San Fransisco reported

 Activist group Indecline created the new piece as a response to the separation of children from their parents along the U

S.-Mexico border. It also refers to the migrant child detention centers springing up across the country

 Spokesman Heran Medhin said the billboard is an attempt to publicly condemn President Donald Trump's anti-immigration policies

 He also cited the president's "willingness to inflict immense trauma on young children and their families under his banner of xenophobia" in a statement to the Washington Post

 Thousands of children are still detained across the U.S. despite Trump's executive order signed on Wednesday that has put a halt to the separations

In just one Texas facility, nearly 1,500 children are being kept in cages. At other facilities, journalists and politicians who want to view the conditions inside have been turned away

   "I think it's a pretty powerful political statement," Medhin said. "I think ultimately we have to be concerned with children

They didn't do anything to deserve to be separated from their parents." Download BEFORE YOU GO PHOTO GALLERY Immigrant Families At The U

S.-Mexico Border Sebastian Murdock Senior Reporter, HuffPost Suggest a correction MORE: Politics And Government California U

S. Immigration And Customs Enforcement Child Ice

For more infomation >> California Billboard Credits ICE With Making 'Kids Disappear' - Duration: 3:49.

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Well-meaning proposals to change California's mental health law fall short - Duration: 7:17.

At the core of the homelessness crisis in Los Angeles and around California is the simple fact that thousands of people spend their nights beneath overpasses, beside freeways and on the street because they cannot afford other places to live

 There is a significant subset that is homeless because mental illness leaves them incapable of doing much of the day-to-day business of living beyond finding a place to sleep, something to wear and a little to eat; but for most of those street-dwellers as well, the problem is essentially the same: There is no other place for them to go

The community-based residential and outpatient treatment facilities that were supposed to go hand in hand with the closure of state psychiatric hospitals beginning in the 1960s never got the promised funding or political support

Advertisement  Society broke its promise, and the solution — even 50 years later — is simple: Stop breaking it

Build and staff the residences and clinics.  So it's odd that so much attention is devoted instead to making it easier for authorities to force mentally ill homeless people into involuntary treatment even if they are not an immediate danger to themselves or to others

Once we grab them — and remove them from whatever comfort or support structure they have managed to create — where do we put them? If we force them into hospitals for medical treatment they say they don't want, then what? It won't be long before we have to send them back out to the street, to the same conditions that contributed to their medical problems in the first place

Enter the Fray: First takes on the news of the minute from L.A. Times Opinion »  That's the quandary surrounding two bills moving through the state Legislature

One is Assembly Bill 1971 — a proposal by Los Angeles County to amend the landmark Lanterman-Petris-Short Act to make it easier to involuntarily commit mentally ill people

 But California's failure is on the service supply end. Current law already gives officials the ability to take into custody people who can't see to their most basic care

But it doesn't actually supply any of the care. Neither would the proposed change

 The move to amend the law arises from the best motivation — to help those who cannot help themselves

More than 800 people died on the streets of Los Angeles County last year, frustrating officials who believe they could have saved them with timely, if unwelcome, medical intervention

 But proper motives do not by themselves make workable policy. Under the bill, officials would be able to check people into hospitals against their will if the officials believe "a failure to receive medical treatment [would result] in a deteriorating physical condition or death

"  "Deteriorating physical condition" is almost certainly an unconstitutionally vague term that could apply to any person living on the street, with or without a mental illness

That raises the specter of homeless sweeps and re-institutionalization, an unwelcome prospect that some bill supporters — although not its authors — say they would like to see

 But the bill neither requires nor provides any housing or clinical care, either in the near term or on a continuing basis

Without them, changing the law to get more people off the street just makes the revolving door of street-to-hospital-to-street spin faster

 The bill wouldn't apply just to the homeless, and could in theory be used to commit anyone suffering with a potentially deadly addiction, or even anorexics who are starving themselves

Proponents say they want only to reach seriously sick, mentally ill homeless people — but their bill is not similarly limited

 Hospitals oppose the bill because they know they could not legally release people who have no place to go, nor could they legally treat them in the first place against their will, absent an emergency or a time-consuming court hearing and judicial order

 The second bill making its way through the Legislature, Senate Bill 1045, suffers from similar shortcomings, although its reach is limited to homeless people

 As written, the bills express good intentions but would do more harm than good

They should be recrafted to ensure a workable plan for housing and healthcare for people forcibly removed from the street for medical treatment

They should be more narrowly tailored to cover only those who cannot be reached under existing law

They should better respect the right of people to make their own choices about their medical care

 And perhaps these bills should take a back seat to efforts to finally do what California committed to do more than 50 years ago: build enough community-based residential and outpatient clinics and supportive housing to meet the needs of people evicted from inadequate and often abusive state psychiatric institutions

For more infomation >> Well-meaning proposals to change California's mental health law fall short - Duration: 7:17.

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Essential Arts: Superb 'Humans,' 400 Fringe plays and Pasadena's Museum of California Art to close - Duration: 15:33.

Bring on the weekend! I'm Carolina A. Miranda, staff writer at the Los Angeles Times, with your dose of what's good culture-wise — including a stellar cast of 'Humans' and Ellsworth Kellys' fine lines:  ALL TOO HUMAN Advertisement  "If there's a better ensemble working in America right now than the extraordinary cast of 'The Humans,' " writes Times theater critic Charles McNulty, "I'm unaware of its existence

" Stephen Karam's drama, which won the Tony Award for best play in 2016, and which just opened at the Ahmanson Theatre with nearly the entire Broadway cast, is set around the family dinner table at Thanksgiving

It's a "yawningly familiar" structure, McNulty notes, but the play captures in "wincingly accurate detail" the nature of "contemporary American domestic life

" Los Angeles Times "The Humans" is set in a sunless Manhattan apartment designed by David Zinn

(Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)  'LONG DAY'S JOURNEY' RENEWED  Speaking of great casts: Jeremy Irons, Lesley Manville and Jessica Regan have been starring in the recent production of "Long Day's Journey Into Night" since it was first revived at the Old Vic in Bristol in 2016

But as the play has traveled from Bristol to London to New York and now Los Angeles (it's on view at the Wallis in Beverly Hills), the Eugene O'Neill play has changed and evolved

In every city, Regan tells The Times Christina Schoellkopf and Sara Cagle, it feels like a "totally different production

" Los Angeles Times Jeremy Irons in his dressing room at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts

(Sara Cagle / Los Angeles Times)  A MODERN LYSISTRATA  A new production of Aristophanes allegorical comedy, "Lysistrata," about a band of women who come together and withhold sex until the men of their nation stop warring, updates the ancient Greek tale, using as inspiration Cindy Sheehan, the military mom who lost her son in Iraq and became an antiwar protester

"Lysistrata Unbound," written by Eduardo Machado and directed by John Farmanes-Bocca at the Odyssey Theatre, links to the ancient theatrical origins, notes Times contributing reviewer Philip Brandes, "but the graft of modernist sensibilities is not a seamless one

" Los Angeles Times A reenvisioned version of Lysistrata (Brenda Strong, center) finds herself boxed in by an inflexible patriarchy

(Enci Box)  400 PLAYS IN TWO WEEKS  The Hollywood Fringe Festival is in its home stretch

The Times' Makeda Easter writes about the festival of nearly 400 ensemble and solo theatrical works, comedy, cabaret and dance shows covering everything from black self-actualization to #MeToo and PTSD

The Fringe, says director Ben Hill, provides "a heartbeat of where the performing arts are at any given time

" Los Angeles Times Hollywood Fringe Festival director Ben Hill during 2017's festival

(Matt Kamimura / Hollywood Fringe)  ON THE STAGE  Times contributing reviewer F

Kathleen Foley checks out Rogue Machines' production of Leslie Ayvazian's play "100 Aprils" at the MET Theatre, about a dying Armenian man contending with the genocide that haunts him

Unfortunately, notes Foley, the play "falls precipitously into the divide between surrealism and political didacticism

" Los Angeles Times  Foley also rounds up everything that's going down in the city's 99-seat theaters, including a play about slaughterhouse workers and a farce about online love

Los Angeles Times  Matt Cooper has weekend picks, including performances by the dance troupe Herencia Flamenca and the Gay Men's Chorus

Los Angeles Times  Cooper also has a look at the week ahead at Southern California theater, including Henry Ong's "The Blade of Jealousy," a modern adaptation of Spanish playwright Tirso de Molina's classic comedy "La Celosa De Si Misma (Jealous of Herself)" and The Eve of Jackie: A Tribute to Jackie Wilson, a salute to the R&B legend by Broadway's Chester Gregory

Los Angeles Times  PASADENA MUSEUM TO CLOSE  The Pasadena Museum of California Art, which since its founding in 2002 has focused on exhibiting historic and contemporary art from California, has announced that it will close after the current exhibitions conclude on Oct

7. Museum director Susana Smith Bautista told Times culture writer Deborah Vankin that the museum has been experiencing financial problems — but didn't provide an exact reason for the shutdown

"I would love to believe there was still a way to keep the museum open, but there's a lot of work to do and I don't know if it can be done," says Bautista

"I don't feel like I was given enough time." Los Angeles Times Advertisement An installation view of work by Alexandra Grant and Steve Roden in the 2015 exhibition "These Carnations Defy Language

" (Don Milici)  CLASSICAL NOTES Times classical music critic Mark Swed took in a performance of a semi-staged "Boris Godunov" opera by the San Francisco Symphony, led by Michael Tilson Thomas

Tilson Thomas's strategy was "not to overtly update 'Boris,' " but to integrate it with other art forms

(The scenic and costume design was inspired by an Andrei Tarkovsky film.) Tilson Thomas "took a stately approach," writes Swed

"Bells and orchestral brilliance brightened the hall when needed. Mainly, though, an understated melancholy from the orchestra pervade

" Los Angeles Times Advertisement Michael Tilson Thomas conducts Mussorgsky's "Boris Godunov" with the San Francisco Symphony and Chorus

(Cory Weaver / San Francisco Symphony)  Swed also caught a show of work by Ben Johnston, America's "dean of microtonal music," at REDCAT

The performances were "transcendent," writes Swed, anchored by the L.A.-based Lyris Quartet and a crew of "supple" microtonal players

Los Angeles Times  Matt Cooper has a look at the week ahead in classical music, including the California Philharmonic's summer opener at Disney Hall

Los Angeles Times  WALLS GO UP AND COME DOWN  In the latest of my Venice Architecture Biennale dispatches, I have a look at the urbanist and cultural legacy of the Berlin Wall, which has now been gone longer than it was up

The German pavilion at the biennale explored this history in the gripping "Unbuilding Walls," a timely, informative and beautifully installed exhibition that looks at the indelible scars left behind by arbitrary political division

Los Angeles Times A crowd in West Berlin watches East German border guards demolish the Berlin Wall near Potsdamer Platz in 1989

(Gerard Malie / AFP/Getty Images)  CRITIC PROOF  Its design may be scorned, but The Times' Roger Vincent notes that the L

A. Live complex has been crucial to downtown's resurgence. Los Angeles Times A view of L

A. Live in downtown Los Angeles. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)  ELLSWORTH KELLY'S EYE  An exhibition of works by Ellsworth Kelly at Pasadena's Norton Simon Museum shows the dual paths the artist took throughout his seven-decade career — bold color and spare line drawings

The show, writes Times contributor R. Daniel Foster, offers a "a kind of pristine awareness

" Los Angeles Times Details of "Blue Over Orange (Bleu sur Orange)," left, and "Camellia II," both by Ellsworth Kelly

(Norton Simon Museum / Ellsworth Kelly Foundation and Maeght Éditeur)  Need more art happenings? In my weekly Datebook I've got a gallery's 25th anniversary show and a show of paintings that explores police violence — plus much more

Los Angeles Times  And Matt Cooper looks at the week ahead in Southern California museums, including the Laguna Art Museum's centennial celebration of the Laguna art colony

Los Angeles Times  IN OTHER NEWS…  — The architecture of separation: design writers Diana Buddis and Alissa Walker examine the architecture of the camps for migrant children

Curbed  — The Atlantic posted a flurry of new pieces this month in its Metropolis Now series on technology and cities, including Georgina Voss on the Brexit effect on Britain's ports, Anthony Alofsin's defense of suburbs, Geoff Manaugh's look at how the L

A. County Sheriff's use of quadcopter rescue drones might change cityscapes and our sense of privacy, plus my own piece on the awkward ways automation is shaping architecture

Will spaces be designed for people to come together? Or for us to transact with machines? The Atlantic  — 250 things an architect should know

Reading Design  — Tom Hanks had to improvise during a medical emergency during a production of "Henry IV

" Deadline Hollywood  — The Broadway show "The Band's Visit" sees an uptick on music streaming sites following the Tony Awards

Los Angeles Times  — Plus, as Tony Shalhoub prepares to leave "The Band's Visit," Sasson Gabay prepares to take the lead role

Vulture  — Michael Jackson's estate is developing a Broadway musical on the entertainer's life

New York Times  — A show at the Skirball Cultural Center brings together ephemera from the life of composer Leonard Bernstein

Los Angeles Times Advertisement — Gia Kourlas has a round-up of exquisite dance costume

New York Times  — Former MOCA curator Helen Molesworth delivered the commencement address at UCLA's School of the Arts and Architecture, passionately inveighing against "outmoded forms of thought" and the "death rattle of our colonial past

" Hyperallergic  — A show in London looks at how Mexican painter Frida Kahlo transformed herself into an icon — not just through painting, but through dress

Los Angeles Times  — Anish Kapoor has sued the National Rifle Association for showing his iconic "Bean" sculpture in a promotional video

Curbed Chicago  AND LAST BUT NOT LEAST…  The historic art ladies photoshopped into modern office environments

I'm the one on the right, draped on the cabinet. @MedievalPete Sign up for our weekly Essential Arts & Culture newsletter »

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