Business
When Wayfarers Chapel closed, their wedding plans fell apart: 'Are you kidding me?'
It’s said that rain on your wedding day is good luck, but what about when a deluge of rain forces your venue to close days before your nuptials?
That’s the situation for couples with upcoming weddings at Wayfarers Chapel in Rancho Palos Verdes, one of the most coveted event venues in Southern California.
The ocean-view chapel closed abruptly due to land movement after recent storms. The venue promised reimbursements to those who had booked weddings at its so-called “glass church,” known for its Midcentury Lloyd Wright design. Couples who spoke with The Times said they don’t blame the venue for taking precautions. But they now find themselves facing a dizzying series of eleventh hour decisions.
They described dealing with disbelief and disappointment as they tried to figure out how to salvage their big day.
‘I’d much rather get married in an art museum than die in a mudslide’
Ryan D. Harbage, a literary agent from Brooklyn, was scheduled to marry fiancée Jazmine Robinson at the chapel March 24.
Ryan D. Harbage and his fiancee, Jazmine Robinson, were supposed to get married at Wayfarers Chapel on March 24. They will now hold their ceremony at the Long Beach Museum of Art, where their reception was already being held.
(Ryan D. Harbage)
“We’re devastated,” Harbage, 47, said Friday, a day after receiving an email from the chapel announcing the closure. “We’ve been imagining this dream ceremony at a place that is singular. It’s such a beautiful blend of nature and spirit, and we’ve been planning for a year to get married there, and it’s really, really hard to let go of that vision.”
The couple figured out a solution quickly: Their reception is at the Long Beach Museum of Art, which will now host their ceremony too.
“My fiancée and I are holding disappointment in one hand and excitement in the other,” he said. “We’re still getting married, our lives are fine, but the ceremony just won’t be as special as it would have been there; there’s no getting around it.”
He commended the chapel’s staff for reaching out directly and for immediately refunding the couple’s money.
“It’s a total drag and climate change is real. This is what it looks like,” he said. “What else can you do? Listen, I’d much rather get married in an art museum than die in a mudslide. It’s really not a contest.”
‘We definitely cannot cancel the wedding’
Sam Ng’s wedding was just 10 days away when she learned that Wayfarers was closing. It was too late to reschedule the date, especially with nearly all of her 60 guests flying in from out of state or internationally.
“We have friends that already booked Airbnbs, hotels and flights, so we definitely cannot cancel the wedding just like that,” the flight attendant from Chino Hills, 30, said.
Ng had wanted to get married at the chapel ever since her sister used it as a venue for her wedding in 2019. After scrambling to see if local golf courses or churches could accommodate the wedding on short notice, she was able to secure a spot at Santa Anita Church in Arcadia.
“We understand it’s not anybody’s fault,” Ng said. “It’s a natural disaster. No one wants that to happen.”
‘Are you kidding me? Are you kidding me?
Howard Newman, 48, and his fiancee, Dawn Sicard, 42, booked Wayfarers Chapel for their March 9 wedding after seeing the seaside church when the two were still dating and not yet engaged. When the two started planning their wedding, Newman threw out the idea of Wayfarers Chapel, and Sicard loved it.
Howard Newman, 48, and his fiancee, Dawn Sicard, 42, planned to marry at Wayfarers Chapel next month. After the chapel announced it would be shut down due to threat of landslides, the couple are hoping to marry at the Queen Mary.
(Howard Newman)
“There was no more searching,” said Newman, a Riverside resident and account manager for an auto glass distributor. “It was perfect. It’s obviously beautiful up there. We got the ball rolling, and we were excited, until two days ago.”
That’s when Newman got an email from Wayfarers Chapel staff, notifying him and Sicard that the venue was closed immediately due to landslide activity from the recent rains.
“I’m scrolling through, I’m like, ‘Are you kidding me? Are you kidding me?’” Newman said. “I was hurt for her because she really, really had her mind set on getting married there.”
The couple considered rescheduling their wedding, but Newman’s kids have their spring break from their universities then, and so the couple chose to stay with their date. They were already planning to stay at the Queen Mary after the wedding, so they inquired with the historic ship about availability on March 9 for a wedding. The ship ended up being available, so Newman is now just waiting on the venue contract to arrive, hopefully soon, so the couple can sign it.
“The initial shock and all that stuff, it’s dissipated,” he said. “It is what it is. We move on.”
The price difference between the two venues is significant — the Queen Mary costs $1,600 and Wayfarers Chapel was $6,400. Newman said he’s still waiting on his refund from Wayfarers Chapel, though he said he thinks the venue handled the situation as best as they could.
The wedding was already planned to be small and intimate — just the couple’s children from their previous marriages and their own parents for a party of 12. “The families have really just joined together beautifully,” he said. “I couldn’t ask for a better situation.”
‘Let’s just go to Vegas’
Amanda Temple, 29, had just finalized her booking with Wayfarers on Monday. “They were super upfront that it wasn’t if but when they would close, so it doesn’t come as surprise,” she accountant from Irvine said. “I probably should have had a Plan B, but nothing really compares to it.”
The one upside is that her wedding isn’t until May 2025, so she has “the luxury of time” to figure out what to do, unlike other couples with much closer dates.
She and her fiance, Zach Smith, already booked their reception at a brewery in San Pedro, so they’re stuck finding a new ceremony location nearby.
“We’re considering canceling our reception and taking a loss just because there aren’t a lot of options in the area,” she said. “He’s like, ‘Let’s just go to Vegas, I can’t do this anymore.’”
‘I’ve always pictured getting married there’
Naomi White, an occupational therapist from Temecula, had just booked Wayfarers as her wedding venue less than two weeks ago, paying a $200 deposit for a July 18 date.
A chapel employee that day warned her about the accelerated land movement in the area, but “I didn’t really take it seriously,” White, 28, said. “I just thought it was a precaution.”
Naomi White and Pete Lorenz had just booked Wayfarers Chapel as their wedding venue less than two weeks ago. They were scheduled to get married there on July 18.
(Naomi White and Pete Lorenz)
Now she and her fiance, Pete Lorenz, are trying to figure out what to do.
“I’m sort of just recalibrating,” she said. “My family’s from San Pedro and I grew up going to that chapel, so all my life I’ve always pictured getting married there.”
White said she’s thinking of postponing her wedding in the hopes that the chapel will reopen down the line.
“Whenever we were in the area we would stop by the chapel. It just became very special to me,” she said of her childhood memories. “It just has everything: It has the artistry, it has the architecture, it has the coast, it has the trees.”
Business
iPic movie theater chain files for bankruptcy
The iPic dine-in movie theater chain has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and intends to pursue a sale of its assets, citing the difficult post-pandemic theatrical market.
The Boca Raton, Fla.-based company has 13 locations across the U.S., including in Pasadena and Westwood, according to a Feb. 25 filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of Florida, West Palm Beach division.
As part of the bankruptcy process, the Pasadena and Westwood theaters will be permanently closed, according to WARN Act notices filed with the state of California’s Employment Development Department.
The company came to its conclusion after “exploring a range of possible alternatives,” iPic Chief Executive Patrick Quinn said in a statement.
“We are committed to continuing our business operations with minimal impact throughout the process and will endeavor to serve our customers with the high standard of care they have come to expect from us,” he said.
The company will keep its current management to maintain day-to-day operations while it goes through the bankruptcy process, iPic said in the statement. The last day of employment for workers in its Pasadena and Westwood locations is April 28, according to a state WARN Act notice. The chain has 1,300 full- and part-time employees, with 193 workers in California.
The theatrical business, including the exhibition industry, still has not recovered from the pandemic’s effect on consumer behavior. Last year, overall box office revenue in the U.S. and Canada totaled about $8.8 billion, up just 1.6% compared with 2024. Even more troubling is that industry revenue in 2025 was down 22.1% compared with pre-pandemic 2019’s totals.
IPic noted those trends in its bankruptcy filing, describing the changes in consumer behavior as “lasting” and blaming the rise of streaming for “fundamentally” altering the movie theater business.
“These industry shifts have directly reduced box office revenues and related ancillary revenues, including food and beverage sales,” the company stated in its bankruptcy filing.
IPic also attributed its decision to rising rents and labor costs.
The company estimated it owed about $141,000 in taxes and about $2.7 million in total unsecured claims. The company’s assets were valued at about $155.3 million, the majority of which coming from theater equipment and furniture. Its liabilities totaled $113.9 million.
The chain had previously filed for bankruptcy protection in 2019.
Business
Startup Varda Space Industries snags former Mattel plant in El Segundo
In an expansion of its business of processing pharmaceuticals in Earth’s orbit, Varda Space Industries is renting a large El Segundo plant where toy manufacturer Mattel used to design Hot Wheels and Barbie dolls.
The plant in El Segundo’s aerospace corridor will be an extension of Varda Space Industries’ headquarters in a much smaller building on nearby Aviation Boulevard.
Varda will occupy a 205,443-square-foot industrial and office campus at 2031 E. Mariposa Ave., which will give it additional capacity to manufacture spacecraft at scale, the company said.
Originally built in the 1940s as an aircraft facility, the complex has a history as part of aerospace and defense industries that have long shaped the South Bay and is near a host of major defense and space contractors. It is also close to Los Angeles Air Force Base, headquarters to the Space Systems Command.
Workers test AstroForge’s Odin asteroid probe, which was lost in space after launch this year.
(Varda Space Industries)
Varda is one of a new generation of aerospace startups that have flourished in Southern California and the South Bay over the last several years, particularly in El Segundo, often with ties to SpaceX.
Elon Musk’s company, founded in 2002 in El Segundo, has revolutionized the industry with reusable rockets that have radically lowered the cost of lifting payloads into space. Though it has moved its headquarters to Texas, SpaceX retains large-scale operations in Hawthorne.
Varda co-founder and Chief Executive Will Bruey is a former SpaceX avionics engineer, and the company’s spacecraft are launched on SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9 rockets from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara County.
Varda makes automated labs that look like cylindrical desktop speakers, which it sends into orbit in capsules and satellite platforms it also builds. There, in microgravity, the miniature labs grow molecular crystals that are purer than those produced in Earth’s gravity for use in pharmaceuticals.
It has contracts with drug companies and also the military, which tests technology at hypersonic speeds as the capsules return to Earth.
Its fifth capsule was launched in November and returned to Earth in late January; its next mission is set in the coming weeks. Varda has more than 10 missions scheduled on Falcon 9s through 2028.
For the last several decades, the Mariposa Avenue property served as the research and development center for Mattel Toys. El Segundo has also long been a center for the toy industry as companies like to set up shop in the shadow of Mattel.
The Mattel facility “has always been an exceptional property with a legacy tied to aerospace innovation, and leasing to Varda Space Industries feels like a natural continuation of that story,” said Michael Woods, a partner at GPI Cos., which owns the property.
“We are proud to support a company that is genuinely pushing the boundaries of what’s possible, and are excited to watch Varda grow and thrive here in El Segundo,” Woods said.
As one of the country’s most active hubs of aerospace and defense innovation, El Segundo has seen its industrial property vacancy fall to 3.4% on demand from space companies, government contractors and technology startups, real estate brokerage CBRE said.
Successful startups often have to leave the neighborhood when they want to expand, real estate broker Bob Haley of CBRE said. The 9-acre Mattel facility was big enough to keep Varda in the city.
Last year, Varda subleased about 55,000 square feet of lab space from alternative protein company Beyond Meat at 888 Douglas St. in El Segundo, which it started moving into in June.
Varda will get the keys to its new building in December and spend four to eight months building production and assembly facilities as it ramps up operations. By the end of next year, it expects to have constructed 10 more spacecraft.
In the future, Varda could consolidate offices there, given its size. Currently, though, the plan is to retain all properties, creating a campus of three buildings within a mile of one another that are served by the company’s transportation services, Chief Operating Officer Jonathan Barr said.
“We already have Varda-branded shuttles running up and down Aviation Boulevard,” he said.
Business
How Iran War Is Threatening Global Oil and Gas Supplies
Ships near the Strait of Hormuz before and after attacks began
Every day, around 80 oil and gas tankers typically pass through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway off Iran’s southern coast that carries a fifth of the world’s oil and a significant amount of natural gas.
On Monday, just two oil and gas tankers appear to have crossed the strait, according to a New York Times analysis of shipping activity from Kpler, an industry data firm. Since then, one tanker passed through.
“It’s a de facto closure,” said Dan Pickering, chief investment officer of Pickering Energy Partners, a Houston financial services firm. “You’ve got a significant number of vessels on either side of the strait but no one is willing to go through.”
Tankers have been staying away from Hormuz since the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran that began on Saturday. A prolonged conflict could ripple broadly across the global economy, threatening the energy supplies of countries halfway around the world and stoking inflation.
International oil prices have climbed 12 percent since the fighting began, trading Tuesday around $81 a barrel, and natural gas prices have surged in Europe and in Asia.
A senior Iranian military official threatened on Monday to “set on fire” any ships traveling through the Strait of Hormuz. Vessels in the region have already come under attack. Several oil and gas facilities have also been struck or affected by nearby shelling, though the damage did not initially appear to be catastrophic.
Where ships and energy facilities have been damaged
A fire broke out Tuesday at a major energy hub in Fujairah, United Arab Emirates, from the falling debris of a downed drone, the authorities said. On Monday, Qatar halted production of liquefied natural gas, or fuel that has been cooled so that it can be transported on ships, after attacks on its facilities.
The sharp reduction in tanker traffic is reducing the supply of oil and gas to world markets, pushing up prices for both commodities. And the longer that ships stay away from the Strait of Hormuz, the less oil and gas get out to the world, which could raise prices even more.
Shipping companies have paused their tankers to protect their crew and cargo, and because insurance companies are charging significantly more to cover vessels in the conflict area.
On Tuesday, President Trump said that “if necessary,” the U.S. Navy would begin escorting tankers through the strait. He also said a U.S. government agency would begin offering “political risk insurance” to shipping lines in the area.
In addition to tankers, other large vessels regularly go through the strait, including car carriers and container ships. In normal conditions, nearly 160 make the trip each day.
Some ships in the region turn off the devices that broadcast their positions, while others transmit false locations — making it hard to give a full picture of the traffic in the strait.
The Shiva is a small oil tanker that has repeatedly faked its location, according to TankerTrackers.com, which tracks global oil shipments. It is suspected of carrying sanctioned Iranian oil, according to Kpler. The Shiva was one of the two tankers that crossed the strait on Monday.
The oil and gas that typically move through the strait come from big producing countries like Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran and United Arab Emirates, and are exported around the world.
Where tankers moving through the Strait have traveled
In 2024, more than 80 percent of the oil and gas transported through the Strait of Hormuz went to Asia. China, India, Japan and South Korea were the top importers, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Countries have energy stockpiles that could last them into the coming months, but a continued shutdown of the strait could damage their economies.
Several big disruptions have roiled supply chains in recent years, but the tanker standstill in the Strait of Hormuz could have an outsize impact.
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