Connect with us

Los Angeles, Ca

Newlyweds family home, wedding keepsakes destroyed in Mountain Fire

Published

on

Newlyweds family home, wedding keepsakes destroyed in Mountain Fire

Just days after the happiest day of their lives, a newly married couple learned that their family’s Camarillo home burned to the ground during the Mountain Fire, destroying everything in sight, including irreplaceable keepsakes from their wedding.  

Brittany Berret and Jaime Sifontes were on top of the world after celebrating their nuptials in Paso Robles, something they’d been working toward for a long time.  

Then, four days after their wedding, while they were in Monterey for their honeymoon, Berret’s parents called to tell the couple about the Mountain Fire.  

“We were supposed to leave anyway on Wednesday to come home,” Berret explained. “We had planned to stay the entire day, but got a call from my mom in the morning letting us know there was a fire nearby in the canyon but typically we don’t worry about that because it’s never really jumped the 118.”  

  • Camarillo newlyweds
  • Camarillo newlyweds
  • Camarillo newlyweds
  • Camarillo newlyweds
  • Camarillo newlyweds
  • Camarillo newlyweds
  • Camarillo newlyweds

About two hours into their drive home, her parents learned on KTLA that their house had gone up in flames. They broke the heartbreaking news to the newlyweds. 

“It felt like the longest car ride in my entire life,” Berret recalled. “There wasn’t really much we could do, so you just start thinking about everything that’s in that house, all the memories. That’s the only house I’ve ever known.”  

Advertisement

Sifontes and Berret lost everything from their wedding day.  

“My wedding dress, all of our registry gifts. We had been living with them, kind of saving everything that we didn’t have space for in their house,” Berret said. “Like, everything we were saving and building for our future.”  

For his part, Sifontes, who lived at the family home for five years, said his memories of the home are very strong as well.  

“It felt like a home to me. I’m very close with my wife’s family, obviously,” he said.  

After learning what happened to the young couple, their wedding planner organized a GoFundme campaign to help them, and their family rebuild their home and their lives.  

Advertisement

“I’m immensely grateful for the family I have, helping them. I’m so grateful to Camarillo and just working to move forward,” Sifontes said.  

Los Angeles, Ca

Ditch typing and note-taking – try these apps

Published

on

Ditch typing and note-taking – try these apps

The future of voice to text is here.

I’ve been testing a variety of tools that make taking notes, transcribing audio, and even voice typing faster and easier than ever.

If you have a smartphone, you’re already halfway there!

Google’s Pixel Recorder app is free and built into their smartphone. It’s excellent for transcribing meetings, lectures, and conversations – all in real time.

Apple’s Voice Memos App recently added transcriptions if you’re upgraded to iOS 18.

Advertisement

Samsung’s Voice recorder app now offers transcripts too – as long as you’re on their latest One UI 7 software. (Check Settings > About Phone > Software Information)

Got an older phone? Try Otter.AI. It works great for transcriptions across devices and you get 300 minutes a month free.

Don’t want to tie up your phone?

I’ve been testing AI-powered digital audio recorders from a startup named Plaud.

The Plaud Note is thin, records for hours, and can even clip to the back of your phone to record calls. Just make sure you know your local laws before using that feature.

Advertisement

The Plaud Pin can be clipped to your shirt or worn on your wrist for hands-free recording.

Both devices sync audio to a companion app that auto transcribes and summarizes.

You get five hours of transcription a month included, with options to pay for more.

Pricing for each gadget starts around $160 dollars.

Want to transcribe audio files on your computer?

Advertisement

My favorite Mac app is MacWhisper. You can even get it completely free – although paid versions are avaialble with more features and options.

On Windows, check out Vibe Transcribe, also free.

And for a web-based option, Whisper Web gets the job done.

Finally, if you want to type less and talk more… there’s an excellent AI voice-to-text app called Wispr Flow. It was previously Mac only but just became avaialble for Windows, too.

One you install it, you pick a hotkey. Then, instead of typing just press and hold down that key and dictate what you want to write.

Advertisement

Since it uses the power of AI, you can even stumble or ramble and it will clean up your words and get the punctionation right.

It’s a gamechanger for responding to emails fast! You get 2,000 words free each week with options to pay for more.

Enjoy your newfound time!

Continue Reading

Los Angeles, Ca

Prison officer survives alleged attack by inmate transferred from L.A. County

Published

on

Prison officer survives alleged attack by inmate transferred from L.A. County

An alleged attack on a state prison officer by a 43-year-old inmate transferred from Los Angeles County is being investigated as attempted homicide, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation officials announced Tuesday.  

The March 18 incident at Salinas Valley State Prison in Soledad reportedly unfolded just before 9 a.m. on what authorities describe as a “dayroom floor.”  

The inmate, Anthony G. Ramirez, is believed to have pulled an improvised weapon from his waistband before attempting to attack custody staff member, according to a CDCR news release.  

“Staff immediately responded, disarming Ramirez and placing him in handcuffs without incident,” the release detailed.  

Anthony G. Ramiez, 43, seen in this undated mug shot. (CDCR)

The 43-year-old, who was transferred to SVSP in 2008 after being sentenced to life with the possibility of parole for second-degree murder, with enhancements for the use of a firearm and causing great bodily injury or death, was placed in restrictive housing pending the investigation and possible felony prosecution by the Monterey County District Attorney’s Office.  

Advertisement

Both Ramirez and the custody staff member were examined by medical personnel who noted no serious injuries.  

Officials said that the California Correctional Peace Officers Association was notified of the incident and prison staff were offered peer support services and employee assistance programs.  

Salinas Valley State Prison, opened in 1996, houses more than 2,400 minimum, medium, maximum and high-security inmates. The facility also offers vocational programs and academic classes and employs some 1,800 people.  

Continue Reading

Los Angeles, Ca

Algal bloom sickening marine mammals off Southern California 'will only get worse'

Published

on

Algal bloom sickening marine mammals off Southern California 'will only get worse'

A toxic algal bloom leaving an increasing number of marine mammals stranded along Southern California beaches shows no signs of subsiding and “will only get worse,” officials said Monday.

“This week, we saw more stranded dolphins (both alive and deceased) than we saw during the major domoic acid (DA) bloom in 2023,” Marine Mammal Care Center (MMCC) Los Angeles posted on Facebook.

Recent tests showed DA-producing algae levels have increased, and officials believe that trend will continue in the coming weeks. “We anticipate that it will only get worse,” the post read.

MMCC asked the public not to approach sick dolphins or sea lions on the beach because they can become aggressive upon awakening from a seizure.

A dolphin stranded at Dockweiler North is seen in an image posted on March 13, 2025. (L.A. County Fire Department, Lifeguard Division)

“This is a safety issue for people and their pets as much as it is for the marine mammals,” officials said.

Advertisement

Beachgoers were also urged not to push stranded dolphins back into the water, saying it can reduce their chances of survival.

More information about domoic-acid poisoning can be found at https://marinemammalcare.org/domoic-acid/.

The volume of sick marine mammals has also had a financial impact on the MMCC.

“Our team is working heroically to respond to every call and to rescue every animal they can. Please share this post and give now at marinemammalcare.org/donate to give these marine mammals a second chance at life!” the MMCC stated.

Anyone who encounters a sick or stranded marine mammal can alert the nearest lifeguard and call 1-800-39-WHALE to make a report.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending