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Melvin Edwards, sculptor who welded the African diaspora in ‘Lynch Fragments,’ dies at 88

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Melvin Edwards, sculptor who welded the African diaspora in ‘Lynch Fragments,’ dies at 88

Melvin Edwards, a sculptor best known for abstract steel works that illustrated the history and resistance of African Americans, died March 30 at his Baltimore home. He was 88.

His death was confirmed by Alexander Gray Associates, the gallery that represents him.

Edwards rose to prominence in 1963 with the first works of what would become his most notable series, “Lynch Fragments.” A collection of small, wall-mounted sculptures, he combined fragments of found and recycled steel and welded them into forms of chains, sharp tools, barbed wire and other metal objects.

The series spans several decades, drawing inspiration from racial violence during the civil rights movement, the Vietnam War, his personal relationship to Africa, people in his own community and across the African diaspora.

Over the years, Edwards made more than 300 “Lynch Fragments.”

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Recurring materials in his works held layered meanings. Barbed wire served as a symbol of violence and oppression, but also of agriculture, cultivation and survival.

“Melvin was somebody who looked at multiple dimensions of any situation or person,” said Alexander Gray, a gallery owner and close personal friend of Edwards. “He really looked at the world, not through any kind of binary lens, but through a personal lens that was respectful of other people’s perspective.”

Born May 4, 1937, in Houston, the eldest of four children, Edwards grew up surrounded by racial segregation. As a child, he took drawing classes and visited museums, and he also played football.

“The world that I came from was American racism, segregation. I may have been young, but I paid attention,” Edwards said in an introduction to “Lynch Fragments” at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Melvin Edwards, seen here in fellow sculptor Hal Gebhardt’s class at USC sometime between 1959 and 1960, died March 30 at his home in Baltimore.

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His artistic career began while studying art on a football scholarship at USC, where he met and was mentored by Hungarian painter Francis de Erdely. Edwards’ L.A. roots were critical to his identity as an artist. Here, he began experimenting with welded steel, which became his primary medium.

After moving to New York City in 1967, he became, in 1970, the first African American sculptor to have a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Throughout his career, Edwards remained committed to public art, creating sculptures for universities, public housing projects and museums around the world.

Those who knew him described him as overwhelmingly positive, which shaped both his work and his relationships.

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“Melvin’s community of artists was remarkable because it spanned the globe. You could spin a globe, land anywhere, say the name of the country or the city, and he would know three people there, minimum,” said Gray. “He could recall a conversation he had with a person 35 years ago without any hesitation. He had an incredible constellation of people that he was surrounded by.”

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D4vd dismembered teen girl with chainsaw and tried to cover his tracks, prosecutors allege

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D4vd dismembered teen girl with chainsaw and tried to cover his tracks, prosecutors allege

D4vd allegedly used a chainsaw to dismember the body of a teenager he was sexually abusing, then amputated two of her fingers to destroy a tattoo linking him to the girl, according to a court document made public Wednesday afternoon by L.A. County prosecutors.

David Anthony Burke, 21, is charged with murder, continuous sex abuse of a minor and mutilating a corpse. Prosecutors say he killed 14-year-old Celeste Rivas Hernandez because she threatened to expose his abuse and ruin his music career. He pleaded not guilty last week.

In advance of a preliminary hearing that was supposed to begin Friday, Los Angeles County Deputy Dist. Atty. Beth Silverman filed a nine-page brief laying out the evidence she planned to present. In the document, Silverman detailed an abusive relationship between the singer and the young girl, which started when she was just 11, and wrote that Burke had chainsaws, body bags, an inflatable pool and a shovel delivered to his home in order to dispose of Hernandez’s body.

“Knowing he had to silence the victim before she ruined his music career as she had threatened, very soon after her arrival at his home, defendant stabbed the victim to death multiple times and stood by while she bled out,” Silverman wrote.

Burke also had a “burn cage” delivered to his residence, which acts as a portable incinerator, according to the document. The pool was apparently used to contain Hernandez’s body as the singer dismembered her remains. Bits of plastic from the pool were discovered embedded in Hernandez’s corpse, the document said.

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The purchases from online retailers like Amazon and Home Depot were made under an alias, Victoria Mendez.

The singer has long been linked to Hernandez’s disappearance and death, after her badly decomposed body was found in the trunk of a Tesla he owned at a Hollywood tow yard last September. Authorities said Hernandez was last seen at Burke’s Hollywood residence on April 23, 2025. The two got into a “lengthy argument” the night before, with Hernandez expressing jealousy over Burke’s relationships with other women, prosecutors said.

“[Hernandez] became extremely upset and threatened to disclose damaging information about her relationship with defendant to end his career and destroy his life,” Silverman wrote.

On the night police believe Hernandez was killed, according to the new court filing from prosecutors, the singer ordered an Uber to bring her from her Lake Elsinore home to Hollywood around 8:40 p.m.

An autopsy report made public last week revealed Hernandez died from a pair of stab wounds. Her body was dismembered when police found it in the trunk and two of her fingers had been amputated, according to the medical examiner’s report. In the document made public Wednesday, Silverman alleged Burke cut off those digits to remove evidence of a tattoo Hernandez had gotten of the singer’s name.

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In the document, Silverman said Burke first met Hernandez when she was only 11. The two began a sexual relationship when she turned 13 but “broke up” in late November 2024, according to Silverman. Text messages between the two contained references to “sex, pregnancy, abortion and use of the Plan B emergency contraceptive,” she wrote.

Investigators also found images of Hernandez naked and performing sex acts on Burke’s phone, according to the document. Silverman said in court last week that search warrants turned up “a significant amount of child pornography” on Burke’s devices.

Hernandez was reported missing by her family multiple times in Lake Elsinore in 2024. Riverside County sheriff’s investigators questioned Burke about her whereabouts in February 2024, but Burke claimed he was “unaware she was a minor or that she had been reported missing,” Silverman wrote.

Two days later, she returned home and her parents took away her cellphone. But Burke allegedly drove to Lake Elsinore and paid a junior high school student $1,000 to give her a new phone so they could stay in touch, according to the document filed Wednesday. Over the next year, Hernandez traveled with the singer to Las Vegas, Texas and London where she met “his family,” Silverman wrote.

Burke’s lead defense attorney, Blair Berk, was not immediately available for comment on the filing.

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She asked Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge Charlaine Olmedo to seal the filing on Wednesday afternoon, but the judge denied her request.

The singer took steps to cover his tracks in the moments before the killing, as well as the days after. Twenty minutes after she arrived on the night of April 23, Burke allegedly sent a series of text messages to her phone asking where she was. Prosecutors charge that he had just killed Hernandez and was trying to make it seem as though she never arrived.

That night he drove to a lake in Santa Barbara County, where prosecutors say he disposed of many of her personal items. He returned to the same remote area two other times last May, according to the Wednesday court filing. In January 2026, Hernandez’s identification was found off the highway near Lake Cachuma.

Berk previously said she does not believe the prosecution’s case can hold up to scrutiny and pushed for an immediate preliminary hearing. Defendants have a right to a preliminary hearing, in which a judge determines whether prosecutors have enough evidence to bring a case to trial, within 10 business days.

But on Wednesday afternoon, attorney Marilyn Bednarski asked that the hearing be pushed back to May 26, citing the voluminous amount of discovery in the case. Olmedo agreed there was “good cause” to delay the hearing a few weeks. Burke is due back in court on May 1 for a status hearing.

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Silverman expressed some annoyance at Bednarski and Berk’s change of heart, noting she’d already warned the defense team that prosecutors had a trove of evidence to turn over.

Silverman said last week that discovery materials would include the results of a wiretap and searches of Burke’s cellphone and iCloud accounts. Law enforcement executed 54 search warrants in the case, according to court records.

The medical examiner’s report detailing how Hernandez died was not available to the defense until last week. Prosecutors also convened three secret grand juries between November 2025 and February 2026 to collect evidence against Burke, according to Silverman. Transcripts from those hearings were under seal as of last week.

Bednarski said Wednesday she needed “additional time to review the discovery we either just got, or are about to get, in order to have a full and free preliminary hearing.”

“We told them that this was what was going to be coming,” Silverman argued in reply. “As I said in my brief, we sent out subpoenas, we’ve been preparing, we’ve been telling witnesses to cancel planned vacations.”

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In asking Olmedo to seal the brief, Berk expressed worry it was “one-sided” and might taint the jury pool.

“The prosecution has appeared to file a rather unusual pre-preliminary hearing brief that appears to be a very one-sided view of what is anticipated as the evidence in this case. But no evidence has been presented by the prosecution in a courtroom. Certainly there has been no adjudication of the admissibility of that evidence,” Berk said.

Legal experts said Silverman’s move to show her hand so early in the case was as unorthodox as Berk’s initial decision to race toward a preliminary hearing.

“It is very unusual in pre-prelim for a prosecutor to file such a brief. But the prosecutor wants to be transparent with the public, and it educates the judge,” said Dmitry Gorin, a former sex crimes prosecutor in Los Angeles.

“The defense was seeking to capture the government off balance. But obviously, the DA was more than ready here,” Gorin said. “As a defense attorney, you have to be ready like a good boxer; you need to know how to pivot.”

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The Devil Wears Prada 2 review – a sequel? For spring? Groundbreaking

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The Devil Wears Prada 2 review – a sequel? For spring? Groundbreaking

Twenty years have gone by; the fashion and publishing worlds have changed but Satan’s clothing and accessory choices are pretty much what they were. It’s time for a sprightly and amiable sequel to the adored mid-00s Manhattan romcom that followed the adventures of would-be serious writer and saucer-eyed ingenue Andrea “Andy” Sachs, played by Anne Hathaway. Straight out of college in one of the flyover states, she fluked a job at iconic New York fashion magazine Runway, edited by the terrifying and amusingly surnamed Miranda Priestly, played of course by Meryl Streep. Miranda doesn’t look a day older in the sequel, and nor does Nigel, played by Stanley Tucci, still in post as her loyal, worldly, privately melancholy second-in-command.

This follow-up is fun, though let down by Andy’s bafflingly dreary and chemistry-free romance with a dull Australian real estate magnate (a tepid role for Patrick Brammall from TV’s Colin from Accounts). Miranda’s latest submissive prince-consort boyfriend is played by Kenneth Branagh, bizarrely the lead violinist in a string quartet. The film also gives us a lot of star-fan cameos – this is usually a bad sign, but managed well enough here. Not the big cameo though, not the one they were surely chasing, the white whale of cameos: Anna Wintour, the Vogue editor on whom Priestly is modelled.

So Andy has come back, having been laid off by some Jeff Bezos-type meanie from the upmarket broadsheet where she’d been winning awards for super-serious but boring articles. She can’t afford to turn down a mephistophelean offer to be features editor for Runway, where she finds things are very different. The magazine now has nothing like the colossal budgets of old; embarrassingly, it has to distance itself from the sweatshop economy, and is ground down by chasing clicks and eyeballs in a fickle digital world ruled by a teen customer base with no class and no taste. Miranda has to pay pursed lip-service to body positivity and rejecting heteronormativity in the workplace, and gets schooled in correct language by her new assistant Amari (Simone Ashley). She even has to fly coach.

Stanley Tucci as Nigel and Anne Hathaway as Andy in The Devil Wears Prada 2. Photograph: 2026 20th Century Studios/PA

In fact, the hauteur prerogative has passed on to Andy’s old nemesis, the ice queen of aspirational couture and Miranda’s former top assistant Emily, who is now the head of Dior, calling the shots and making the shrewd point that ultra-luxury brands for the 0.1% are recession-proof. She is played once again with style and plenty of nice lines by Emily Blunt.

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It is a pleasure to see (most of) the old gang back, including screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna and director David Frankel. (I groan at the grumpy and obtuse response I had to the first film, before watching it again on TV and epiphanically realising how great it is.) It’s very funny when Miranda hasn’t the smallest memory of who Andy is. Or has she? Justin Theroux is amusing as Emily’s grinningly daft-yet-sinister plutocrat boyfriend Benji.

Emily Blunt in The Devil Wears Prada 2. Photograph: 20th Century Studios/AP

The movie takes us through new versions of the beats from the first film: Andy dishing with Nigel in the cafeteria; Nigel picking out something for the ungrateful Andy to wear, this time for a trip to Miranda’s place in the Hamptons; Andy going to a fashion mecca (Milan); Andy frantically engaging in backstairs shenanigans to protect Miranda from some wicked corporate coup. And for the DWP connoisseurs, there’s even an outing for Andy’s awful blue polyblend sweater that Nigel found to be such a windup back in the day. This is good-natured, buoyant entertainment. It’s wearing well.

The Devil Wears Prada 2 is released on 30 April in Australia, and 1 May in the UK and US

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L.A.’s comedy scene is in a golden era. Netflix Is a Joke proves it

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L.A.’s comedy scene is in a golden era. Netflix Is a Joke proves it

The L.A. comedy scene has never been just one thing. Sure, we’re home to some of the best comedy clubs and comedians in the world. Legendary improv troupes? We’ve got ’em. Podcasts and hilarious content creators? We’re drowning in them. When it comes to variety shows, drag brunches and clowns, our town is top tier. Yet still, at some point even the most omnivorous comedy fan can hit a wall when it comes to looking for new things in this city to laugh about.

Thankfully, every other year for the last six years, the Netflix Is a Joke Festival injects L.A. with a large dose of discovery, turning our local scene into an onstage version of TV’s upfronts for the comedy world.

“Comedy is so much about discovery,” said Netflix head of comedy Tracey Pakosta. “Being able to put groups of people together, or talent that’s been doing this for so long, I think that’s what makes the festival great.”

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Taking over L.A. with surprising comedy shows of all shapes and sizes has been the inspiration behind the sprawling festival since it debuted in 2022. Initially stymied by the pandemic in 2020, it was revived two years later and there had been nothing in the country like it. The two-week bonanza of major talent from all over the world supported by the world’s biggest streaming platform managed to set itself apart from longtime fests like Montreal’s Just For Laughs or the Moontower Comedy Festival in Austin, Texas. This year, NIAJ is distilled from two weeks down to one between May 4 through 10. Making use of clubs, theaters, bars and arenas all over L.A., the event encourages Angelenos to spin the block and reexamine well-trodden territory to find dozens of unique lineups, new comedians, new formats and memorable surprises all while (hopefully) finding a parking space.

These building blocks of the fest are personified by the big red “Netflix Is a Joke” blocks found on almost every stage. From the giant ones at the Hollywood Bowl the size of a Fiat to handheld ones at a small club that fit on a barstool, you will find them everywhere all week long. They’re part of the branding that unifies every show and a reminder of how big and diverse the scene really is.

“We have so many opportunities for comics to showcase themselves and we have such unique voices here and there’s such diversity,” comedian Iliza Shlesinger said about the festival, which includes her headlining a sold out “Iliza and Friends” show at the Comedy Store. “It’s a chance to see all of your favorite comics in one place. And then about 500 other comics. It may not be great for your brake pads or your traffic time, but there’s a lot going on.”

Shlesinger’s point is evidenced by the comedians she’s sitting next to on a recent afternoon while talking about the impact of the festival on L.A. comedy. Atsuko Okatsuka, Sheng Wang and Shlesinger all took different paths to grow into marquee headliners — from indie clubs to major theaters to shooting their own one-hour specials. Part of what makes them stand out in their L.A. home base is that even at the heights they’ve all reached in their careers, they still love playing small shows all over town.

“There’s a lot of smaller shows around town that are also listed as part of the festival,” said Wang, whose special “Purple,” directed by longtime friend and stand-up star Ali Wong, recently premiered on Netflix. “I like doing those rooms just to practice and to get reps. But it’s cool that they are partnering with the festival so that they can kind of build a profile for themselves.”

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1 Sheng Wang.

2 Atsuko Okatsuka.

3 Iliza Shlesinger.

1. Sheng Wang. 2. Atsuko Okatsuka. 3. Iliza Shlesinger. (Matt Seidel / For The Times)

Okatsuka, who is performing at the Orpheum as part of her national Big Bowl Tour, said it’s significant that the fest, which she describes as “Comedy Coachella,” is happening in the city where she found her voice in comedy. “For me it was the alt rooms that helped me grow because you know everyone has different energies and backgrounds and backstories,” she said. “I’m not someone that could start at a comedy club, my personality doesn’t allow for it.”

With over 350 shows happening all over seven days, NIAJ has the chance to continue its streak of introducing unique live formats and pairings for comedy that have room to grow. The other side of NIAJ’s impact on L.A. comes from massive shows like Gabriel Iglesias’ sold-out gigs at Dodger Stadium (only recently surpassed in ticket sales by his SoFi Stadium gig with Jo Koy), or innovations in livestreaming like last year’s roast of Tom Brady at the Forum. And let’s not forget John Mulaney’s stab at late-night experiment with the live series “Everybody’s in L.A.”

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The past two installments of the festival have shown Netflix’s desire to take comedy to new heights. It continues this year with the live roast of Kevin Hart at the Forum, hosting its first all-Spanish-language show at the Bowl with Marcello Hernandez and Colombian singer Feid, and more musically-driven comedy variety shows hosted by major music acts like Lizzo and Jelly Roll. And then of course there are one-off shows like the 40th anniversary of “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” — a comedy variety show hosted by Patton Oswalt, which Wang will also be a part of.

“I’m just grateful to be part of this bigger show,” Wang said. “I’m a childhood fan of Pee-wee Herman, and I’m so grateful to be part of such a bigger tribute to him.”

There are several big variety shows including the Night of Too Many Stars at the Bowl and Seth Goes Greek at the Greek Theatre, starring Seth Rogen. And then there are true oddities like Stamptown, which is shooting its debut special for Netflix during the festival on May 8 and 9 at the Montalban Theatre, that thrive on being an uncategorizable ball of comedic energy with dancers, funny acrobats, skits and stand-up. Being around so many different types of shows also forces a lot of comedians to add more elements to their shows for the festival.

“I do think initially, when the festival started, it was about us going to talent, to try to come up with these ideas and brainstorm what is the most exciting show that could be done,” Pakosta said. “But now it’s a lot of incoming calls with talent having a really clear point of view on what they want to do.”

Some shows are obviously driven by Netflix programming as a way to cross-promote a comic and a TV show the platform is invested in. That includes live podcasts at the Wiltern where Bill Simmons interviews Shane Gillis and the cast of the Netflix sitcom “Tires,” or Tim Dillon doing a live discussion with the cast of real estate reality shows “Selling Sunset” and “Selling the OC.”

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While boosting the visibility of the shows on their platform has become a big part of the fest, that also includes backing comics they support, no matter how controversial they may be. This year the fest’s inclusion of Louis C.K. at the Bowl comes on the heels of the streamer producing his latest special “Ridiculous,” slated for a summer release. It marks his first major partnership with a streaming service since allegations of sexual misconduct in 2017. Since 2020, he’s put out several specials independently on his own website.

Asked about the decision to work with C.K. again, Pakosta said Netflix is in the business of giving comedy fans the choice to see someone they think is still the best at what they do.

“I think it sort of goes back to wanting to be in business with incredibly talented people,” Pakosta said. “And a lot of comics were talking about Louis C.K. and what he was putting out recently. In order to make sure that we have the best and the most variety on-service, having him perform at the festival and then ultimately launching a special [on Netflix] gives members the opportunity to see it if they want to … when we were getting the talent that we were working with, that we have a lot of respect for, saying how great he is and that he’s doing this again, it’s like OK, we want to be able to give people the choice to see it.”

For many comics shooting specials during the week the fest is in town, it’s also a chance to bring more work back to town for film crews and below-the-line workers who need jobs.

“It’ll be almost a year since my special ‘Father’ came out on Hulu and I shot that in L.A. too,” said Okatsuka, who chose to film her 2025 special at Hollywood’s El Capitan Theater and plans to shoot her next special in L.A. later this year. “So many productions have gone to other places and so a lot of crew have lost work or have left… I purposely was like, I’m gonna try to do my L.A. play during the festival… I’m just L.A. obsessed.”

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The feeling seems mutual between comics and their fans from L.A. and all over the world who come to buy their tickets for next week’s extravaganza and people continue to fuss over planning a week of shows where everything funny is happening all at once.

“It is like in a golden era right now,” Shlesinger said. “Comedy wanes and it waxes, and right now it is just everywhere. People you’ve never heard of are micro-famous, they’ve got a billion followers. They make a jillion dollars. You’ve never heard of them. And the festival is great because it keeps growing. So there’s more opportunities for that audience to find you.”

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