UpdatedTue, Mar 2, 2021 at 9:22 pm PT
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Workers outlining a message of hope at the Disneyland Super POD. (OC Health care Photo)
ORANGE COUNTY, CA Orange County is a hair s breadth away from further easing coronavirus restrictions. Still, it must maintain its current rates through Sunday to move to the less restrictive red tier of Gov. Gavin Newsom s Blueprint for a Safer Economy. If current trends continue, Orange County could graduate to the less-restrictive red tier of the state s coronavirus reopening system by St. Patrick s Day, the county s chief health officer and director of the Orange County Health Care Agency told reporters Tuesday.
Photo: Joshua Sudock/Disneyland Resort via Getty Images)
One of the more interesting stories of the
horrified shudder first third or so of the COVID-19 pandemic was the months-long feud between AMC and NBCUniversal that started when Universal announced that
Trolls World Tour had done so well on on-demand platforms after losing its theatrical run that future Universal movies would also potentially be skipping the theaters even after the pandemic had ended. AMC was so mad about this that it declared that no Universal movie would ever play in an AMC theater again, which Universal could not have cared less about, but a few months later they came to an agreement involving shortened theatrical windows that apparently made everyone happy. Then, Disney started dropping movies right on Disney Plus and Warner Bros. announced that its entire 2021 slate would be released in theaters and on HBO Max simultaneously. Basically, while AMC was worrying about NBCUniversal upending the traditional
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City of Hope Orange County unveiled Tuesday its countywide campaign to decorate the region with images of hope as Californians pass the one-year mark of the first stay-at-home order issued in the state because of the coronavirus pandemic.
The campaign is done in partnership with the Orange County Health Care Agency and other community organizations and businesses. More than 70 artists were recruited for the effort.
The initiative is called “Hope Lives in OC.”
“We’re not just experts in cancer care, but we have a tenet that there’s no good in healing the bodies if we destroy the soul in the process,” said Annette Walker, president of City of Hope Orange County. “When we were reflecting upon our community and all the things that have gone on in the last year with the global crisis, job losses, loss of life, we wanted to acknowledge that there’s hope on the horizon.”