UpdatedWed, Apr 28, 2021 at 6:10 pm PT
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Openaire at The LINE Hotel in LA is among Los Angeles-area restaurants rolling out Mother’s Day menus for 2021. (Credit: Beth Saravo)
Baskin-Robbins has a new Floral Bouquet Cake on shop menus for Mother s Day. (Courtesy of Baskin-Robbins)
Gelson’s Markets has a slew of Mom s Day brunch-to-go options available for pre-order. (Courtesy of Gelson’s)
Redbird in Los Angeles has Scotch Eggs among prix-fixe menu choices for Mother s Day brunch & dinner. (Credit: Redbird)
Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills has brunch options and make-at-home breakfast kit for a great mom s day. (Courtesy of Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills)
Jimmy Shaw
If you’re wondering where to find chef Jimmy Shaw these days, check the small strip mall on the southern side of Pico Boulevard, just a few steps west of Crenshaw. There’s a good chance you’ll find him there, wearing a ¡Loteria! Grill logo pullover, taking calls in the parking lot or darting in and out of an opaque storefront that has doubled as his commissary kitchen for nearly 20 years. Depending on the framing, this small space might be seen as the last stand for Shaw, once one of the city’s most well-regarded chefs with a collection of Loteria restaurants to his name but he believes it’s more of a brand new beginning, for himself and his way of life, and for the restaurant group he’s built over the past two decades. Want to hear his side of the story? Just ride over there and ask him.
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Los Angeles and the nation braced for protests and uncertain upheaval Tuesday, as a weary populace awaited a verdict in the Derek Chauvin trial.
The California National Guard mobilized 450 of its members in preparation for possible public response, the Los Angeles Police Department had thousands of extra officers split over a morning and evening shift, and L.A. city officials temporarily closed nine city-run COVID-19 vaccination sites and suspended 10 mobile clinics Tuesday afternoon as a precaution, saying appointments would be rescheduled for later in the week.
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The sound of a pot clanging in celebration could be heard in the hills of Mount Washington. On a hilly street in Silver Lake, a woman screamed “Yes!” through an open window.
And in Leimert Park Village, a woman rolled down a sidewalk in an electric wheelchair, shouting “Guilty on all charges” while pumping her right fist in the air.
Sporadic celebrations broke out around Los Angeles on Tuesday shortly after the verdict was read in the case of Derek Chauvin, a white
former Minneapolis police officer who was convicted of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter in the death of George Floyd.