West
Actor James Woods recalls chaotic moments as Palisades fire gained momentum, praises 'good' neighbors for help
Actor James Woods recalled the chaotic moments Tuesday afternoon in Pacific Palisades as a deadly wildfire began sweeping across his neighborhood, destroying home after home.
Woods and his family fled their house as the flames inched closer and closer. He’s unsure if his house is still standing but told “The Ingraham Angle” Wednesday “it’s possible.”
“It’s astonishing that what happened during this experience was that we found out that none of us is a celebrity. None of us is a poor person or a rich person, a Democrat or a Republican. We were just neighbors, just really helping each other,” said Woods.
RAGING PALISADES FIRE DESTROYS HIGH SCHOOL FEATURED IN MULTIPLE HOLLYWOOD FILMS
A structure burns during the Palisades Fire in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, US, on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025. Uncontrolled wildfires tore through parts of the Los Angeles region, fanned by extreme winds, forcing thousands of residents to flee and grounding firefighting aircraft. Photographer: Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The multiple-time Emmy Award winner added that his neighbor ran over to his house after he and his family had evacuated to try and stop the flames from coming onto his deck, even staying overnight to fight the blaze.
“It was an extraordinary experience of realizing how essential good neighbors, good friends, good relative[s] [are],” said Woods.
His neighbor told him Wednesday morning that the houses to the left and right of him had burned down, as well as “every house” across the street, but Woods’ roof was still visible.
PHOTO GALLERY: PALISADES FIRE BEFORE AND AFTER
A fire-damaged Bank of America branch is seen after the Palisades Fire swept though in the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of Los Angeles, Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2025. (Eugene Garcia/AP)
Officials estimated Wednesday morning that more than 1,000 structures had burned as the wildfire continues to besiege Los Angeles County.
Woods told Fox News host Laura Ingraham he saw a firetruck parked in front of his house as the blaze started growing, but the firefighters couldn’t pump any water because “there was none.”
Erik Scott, the public information officer for the Los Angeles Fire Department, acknowledged in a post on X that there were indeed challenges with regard to water pressure.
“LADWP [Los Angeles Department of Water and Power] proactively filled all available water storage tanks, including three 1-million-gallon tanks located in the Palisades area,” Scott wrote. “However, water availability was impacted at higher elevations, which affected some fire hydrants due to limited replenishment of water tanks in those areas. The extreme demand caused a slower refill rate for these tanks which created a challenge for our firefighting effort.”
An airtanker made a drop on the Palisades Fire. (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Woods called out California Gov. Gavin Newsom for his alleged fire mismanagement and said the ongoing aftermath of the wildfire is more than a “wake-up call.”
“If it is true that things were handled this way. If it is true that Gavin Newsom is the absolute blithering idiot that I believe he is in the way he has handled fire management in this state again and again and again and again, this isn’t a wake-up call. This is the kind of thing they have tribunals for – where they try people and say, you had an oath of office to perform certain duties,” said Woods.
“When you’re the fire chief, this isn’t a social justice exercise that you’re in charge of. This is you getting water to areas that need water because there are fires in hundred-mile-an-hour winds burning houses to the ground.”
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New Mexico
Dispatches from Route 66: Finding queer hope in New Mexico and Arizona
As I sit in an Albuquerque auditorium at the 3rd Annual New Mexico Draggy Awards, surrounded by drag queens, kings, and everyone in between, I find myself wiping away tears for the second time that evening.
New Mexico transgender advocate Bunnie Cruse is standing on the stage giving out an award for activism, and she calls Democratic U.S. Congresswoman Melanie Stansbury to the stage.
“Your existence is an act of resistance; an act of resilience and fuck Trump!” shouts Stansbury from the stage while wearing a black and white dress and a beat-up pair of red Converse. Fans clack, and the crowd erupts in cheers.
Related: Dispatches from Route 66: How queer communities are rebuilding safety along the Mother Road
Albuquerque: Where hope took the stage
Stansbury then quotes an invocation she heard earlier that week at the opening of the Obama Presidential Center: “Hope is a call to action. Resilience is a call to action. Change is a call to action, and continuing to fight for our democracy is a call to action.”
Hope radiates from the stage. I’m just passing through New Mexico, yet I find myself feeling seen by an elected official in a way I rarely do back home in Ohio.
Less than 24 hours earlier, I had been in Amarillo listening to transgender people describe contingency plans for their families if one of them were detained. Now, in Albuquerque, a member of Congress stood onstage at a drag awards ceremony celebrating the very community that had been living in fear just one state away.
My third week on Route 66 searching for the Mother Road’s LGBTQ+ story, past, present, and future became a study in what hope looks like when communities feel safe enough to be visible. To better understand why Albuquerque felt so different, I sat down with leaders from Bold Futures, a statewide advocacy organization for women and people of color.
A museaum display in Albuquerque, New Mexico.Alysse Dalessandro for The Advocate
“I think that’s one of the most beautiful things about organizing with folks is that they don’t even know about their brilliance until they’re given a safe place to sort of feel some softness and have some space,” shares Bold Futures Executive Director Charlene Bencomo.
That emphasis on safety is intentional. Bold Futures has been organizing for these marginalized voices since its founding in 1999, and its community-driven approach reflects New Mexico as a whole.
“New Mexico is a really unique place, and I think it is because of the culture and the heritage that we have,” says Bencomo. “We are more community-driven than individualistic a lot of times. We move in community. So when we’re taking a story to a decision-maker, we’re not just saying, ‘Here are the statistics, this is the bottom line.’ We’re saying, ‘Here are the statistics, here’s the bottom line, and here are the people who are going to tell you about what it looks like in their neighborhood.’”
Charlene Bencomo’s words that New Mexicans “move in community” stuck with me during my four days in Albuquerque. By the end of my time there, I understood exactly what she meant.
Related: Dispatches from Route 66: Discover the queer stories hidden along the iconic road trip
Pride written into the road
The more time I spent in Albuquerque, the more I realized that resistance was woven into the fabric of New Mexico. During a Route 66 History Tour in the city, I learned that long before Route 66 reached the city, New Mexico had already fought to preserve its identity by resisting pressure to rename the territory during its path to statehood.
Just 14 years after becoming a state, Route 66 cut through the heart of town. Today, that same stretch of Central Avenue continues to tell Albuquerque’s story. Unlike many places I’d visited along Route 66, here you don’t have to dig through museums or archives to find its LGBTQ+ history. It’s painted directly onto Historic Route 66 in the form of rainbow crosswalks.
Writer Alysse Dalessandro standing at the Route 66 sign in Albuquerque, New Mexico.Alysse Dalessandro for The Advocate
I learned that these crosswalks commemorate the city’s first Pride March, when 25 University of New Mexico students marched from Morningside Park to the intersection of Morningside Drive and Central Avenue in 1976.
To this day, Albuquerque’s Pride march still traverses Route 66 down Central Ave. Each year, Bold Futures hosts a Family Pride in Morningside Park. For the organization’s 15th Family Pride, they themed it around a Quinceañera Fiesta, intentionally weaving Pride into this Mexican cultural tradition.
“We have all the cultural staples but then make them part of Pride,” shares Bold Futures Deputy Director Heather Smith. “So now you’re also exposing people who are there, who are not familiar with those cultural traditions; they’re learning them, and it’s a cultural exchange.”
Rather than asking LGBTQ+ people to choose between their cultural and queer identities, Family Pride celebrates both at once and invites the broader community to learn alongside them.
Route 66 hasn’t just been a gathering place; it has also long been a place where LGBTQ+ travelers searched for safety, sex, and community. A 1977 edition of Bob Damron’s Address Book, a national gay travel guide, listed the stretch of Central Avenue from the University of New Mexico to the area near The Loon as a cruising spot.
Old Downtown Albuquerque.Alysse Dalessandro for The Advocate
The queer-tolerant hotels such as the Alvarado Hotel and the Franciscan that once lined Central Ave are gone, but new hotels are still filling that need. Although the Bob Damron Address Book is no longer the go-to resource for LGBTQ+-friendly places to stay, the intention behind this book’s existence is still something I use on my own travels.
While looking for safe places to stay along Route 66 as a queer traveler, I used the Booking.com Travel Proud filter to find accommodations in Albuquerque. This allowed me to see only results for hotels that have completed Booking.com’s LGBTQ+ hospitality training. It led me to Hotel ZAZZ, a woman-owned boutique hotel along Route 66. Here was another place where I felt safe and seen.
The “other” Route 66
This visibility continued when I visited the Albuquerque Museum exhibit: The Other Route 66: 100 Years of People, Identity, and Place in Albuquerque. While other museums mostly idealized Route 66, this exhibit intentionally sought out the narratives most often ignored, presumably for their discomfort: the migrant experience, the exoticism of Indigenous communities, and the dangers for Black travelers, to name a few.
Once I reached a sign that read “The ‘Other’ Route 66,” I finally found my own visibility. Museum after museum, I felt erased and othered, but here was finally a visible inclusion of the LGBTQ+ experience on display in a Route 66 exhibit. The small display included 3 reproductions of ads for Central Ave’s gay clubs, a Pride route map, and a recent photograph from a local Pride. It was not much, but it was something.
Preservation as Resistance
At the Arizona Route 66 Museum in Kingman, I learned about Angel Delgadillo, the Seligman barber whose efforts are widely credited with launching the preservation movement that saved Route 66 from fading into history. After Interstate 40 bypassed Seligman and Route 66 was officially decommissioned in 1985, Delgadillo noticed visitors still going out of their way to stop at his barbershop to reminisce about the Mother Road. He decided to do something about it.
As I listened to the story of Route 66’s preservation, I realized it wasn’t really about saving a highway. There was a faster way to cross the country. Preserving Route 66 was about preserving the stories that gave it meaning. It was about refusing to let a community disappear. It’s Andie Smith showing up to the Edwardsville Town Square every Friday. It’s Steve Blundell buying the District Hotel. It’s Chief Egunwale Amusan creating the Real Black Wall Street Tour. It’s me driving more than 3,000 miles to document the LGBTQ+ history of Route 66 before more of it disappears. Different communities. Different histories. The same determination to refuse erasure.
Klingman, Arizone Route 66 sign.Alysse Dalessandro or The Advocate
Delgadillo rallied fellow business owners to secure historic recognition for Route 66, founding the Historic Route 66 Association of Arizona and creating a preservation model that communities along the Mother Road continue to follow today.
“If Angel Delgadillo and these other rallying people had not fought for their communities and for Route 66, it would just have remained forgotten about, “ Katie Barthlow, a communications specialist for the Historic Route 66 Association of Arizona, told me.
One of the Historic Route 66 Association of Arizona’s former officers is an out gay man. I didn’t have the opportunity to interview him during this trip, but learning he had helped preserve Route 66 left me wondering how many other LGBTQ+ people had quietly shaped the Mother Road without becoming part of its public history.
The Arizona Route 66 Museum doesn’t yet answer that question. But museum leadership readily acknowledged that LGBTQ+ history belongs in the story of Route 66 and that uncovering it will require the kind of archival research and community connections that have shaped my own journey. Alongside exhibits on the Green Book, the class struggles of the Dust Bowl migration, and the contributions of Asian Americans like restaurateur Charlie Lim, the museum paints a broader picture of who shaped the Mother Road, even if that work isn’t finished yet.
Making space to be seen
Kingman’s Route 66 history is thoroughly documented. Its LGBTQ+ history is far less visible. Unlike Flagstaff, where Pride flags lined storefronts, I had to search much harder for signs of queer community in Kingman.
I found Gideon Freeman, owner of The Bearded Baker, sitting beneath a Progress Pride flag hanging outside his garage-turned-home bakery. He tells me about how he helped to bring the first Mohave Pride to Kingman in 2019. Their first Pride event saw more than 3000 attendees. For him, Kingman’s lack of LGBTQ+ visibility isn’t about lack of support but a lack of space.
“We just need more space here to connect,” says Freeman. “There’s a lot of us here, we just don’t see each other very often. So we’ve been trying to build that community.”
Freeman directed me to Feral Tattoo, where I expected their regular Wednesday art night but instead found a group gathered around a table discussing voter education and sharing stories about life as LGBTQ+ people in town.
Just as Angel Delgadillo realized preserving Route 66 would depend on ordinary people taking action, I’ve found the same is true of the LGBTQ+ community along the Mother Road. In places with fewer dedicated resources, that work often falls to individuals like Feral Tattoo’s owner, Willow Kroenke, who are willing to make themselves visible.
Kroenke told me that being visibly queer has made them fear for their family’s safety, but they also don’t know how to build community without that visibility.
“I think if there was any lesson in Route 66, it would be to look at the people that have been fighting for equal rights for the last hundred years,” says Kroenke. “I look at what the Black Panthers did with the Rainbow Coalition. When I don’t know what to do, I make kids breakfast because that’s what they did. When I don’t know what to do, I bring my friends flowers because that’s what Marsha did.”
Listening to Willow, I found myself crying in a tattoo shop in Kingman. Three weeks earlier, I had set out looking for the hidden LGBTQ+ history of Route 66. By the time I reached Arizona, I realized that history doesn’t preserve itself. It survives because ordinary people choose to carry it forward: for their neighbors, for their communities, and for those who come after them by refusing to let the stories of those who came before disappear. That, more than anything, has been the story of Route 66.
Oregon
Strict fire restrictions in effect on BLM lands in Washington, Oregon ahead of July 4
SEATTLE — With national firefighting resources already stretched to their limits, statewide fire restrictions remain in effect for all Bureau of Land Management public lands throughout Washington and Oregon, with some local regions also implementing additional emergency closures.
As the Independence Day holiday weekend approaches, officials warned that people responsible for starting wildfires could face up to $100,000 in fines, 12 months in prison, and liability for all firefighting suppression costs.
SEE ALSO | Washington braces for earlier wildfire season due to low snowpack: ‘Worse than normal’
“There are serious consequences for starting a wildfire, including fines and possibly imprisonment, which we hope everyone can avoid through careful choices,” said Josh O’Connor, Northwest Geographic Area Fire Chief for the U.S. Wildland Fire Service. “We have already experienced excruciating loss this season. I cannot stress the gravity of the situation enough. Please help protect our firefighters and communities.”
Officials urged visitors to research their destinations in advance, noting that local restrictions can determine when power tools may be used, what kinds of stoves or campfires are allowed, and what safety equipment is required.
The BLM said the following items remain strictly prohibited on all BLM lands in Oregon and Washington: fireworks and sky lanterns; exploding or metallic targets; tracer or incendiary devices; and steel component ammunition, including core or jacket.
“Lighting a firework or leaving a smoldering campfire creates significant wildland fire risk. Under the right conditions, they easily start wildfires,” said Kim Prill, BLM Oregon/Washington acting state director. “Don’t risk it. Let’s work together to prevent every wildfire possible.”
More information on seasonal fire restrictions and fire closures is available HERE.
Utah
Lakers trade for center Walker Kessler from Utah, make their big swing with rush of signings
The Lakers kept pointing to the summer of 2026 as when they would make their big move. It’s when they would have the cap space to radically reshape the roster around Luka Doncic and better fit his style of play.
They have done exactly that — starting with trading for the center they desperately needed.
The Utah Jazz are trading 24-year-old center Walker Kessler to the Lakers for two unprotected first-round picks (2031, 2033) and two first-round pick swaps (2028 and 2030), a story first reported by Shams Charania of ESPN. The Lakers are signing Kessler, a restricted free agent, to a four-year, $130 million contract (averaging $32.5 million per season).
This is a huge win for the Lakers. Luka Doncic has said getting a center who can set picks and roll hard to the rim was key to his success, and Kessler may be the best one he has ever played with. Kessler has been at the top of the Lakers’ wish list for a while, but he was a restricted free agent, and the expectation in league circles was that Utah would pay up to keep him.
However, the price the Lakers agreed to pay — essentially four first-round picks — was just too good for Utah to pass up. Utah still has Jaren Jackson Jr., who can play center, which slides Lauri Markkanen over to the four, with Keyonte George, No. 2 pick Darryn Peterson and Ace Bailey likely rounding out the starting five. That’s still a very good team, and the Jazz now have picks they can use or trade to add around that core. Danny and Austin Ainge — the Utah brain trust — did very well in this deal, setting the Jazz up for the future.
The Lakers’ gamble here is health — Kessler played in just five games last season due to shoulder surgery and just 58 games the season before that. When healthy, he has shown his potential on both ends, and last season averaged 14.4 points and 10.8 rebounds per game when he did play. For his career, he averaged 2.4 blocked shots per game and is one of the few centers in the league equally capable of blocking shots with either hand.
Utah wanted to keep Kessler and reportedly offered four years, $140 million ($28 million a year on average). Kessler and his agent went looking for a larger deal and secured it with the Lakers (their offer is $32.5 million per season on average).
Kessler was the big splash, but it wasn’t the only move the Lakers made. Soon after that trade was reported, a series of other Lakers deals were announced:
• Guard Quentin Grimes is leaving Philadelphia to come to the Lakers on a four-year, $60 million deal.
• Floor spacing big man Sandro Mamukelashvili agreed to come to Los Angeles on a four-year, $52 million deal. He will serve as a backup big but provides the shooting the Lakers need to space the floor around Doncic and Austin Reaves.
• Point guard Collin Sexton to join the Lakers on a two-year, $19 million deal with a player option on the second year.
• All of that on top of previously having re-signed Austin Reaves to a four-year, $184.8 million deal that locks him in as the secondary guard and shot creator next to Doncic.
The Lakers have gone all-in. The only draft capital they have left to trade is a 2032 pick swap and a 2033 second-rounder. That’s it. This is their core.
But like another professional sports team in Los Angeles, the Lakers essentially said “f*** those picks” and leaned into win-now players. It worked out when the Los Angeles Rams did it, winning a championship, and the Lakers are hoping for that same level of success.
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