This holiday season, Rabbi Levi Illulian of One Lev Org wanted to do something meaningful to help those in need in the streets of Beverly Hills and the surrounding neighborhoods.
Beverly Hills City Clerk Bert Firminger looked out of his window one day and snapped a photo of his then nine-year-old daughter Jane perched on the City Hall courtyard fountain.
Twice over the span of a month, flyers containing COVID-19 conspiracy theories appeared in front of houses across Beverly Hills, tucked inside Ziplock bags with dry rice to weigh them down. In the age of internet-mediated misinformation and hate, the flyers seemed a throwback to
Peter Bogdanovich, considered one of the most influential filmmakers of the 1970s and the man behind classics such as "The Last Picture Show'' and "Paper Moon,'' died on Jan. 6 in Los Angeles at age 82.
A temporary change in city regulations allow- ing some private structures to be displayed in Beverly Gardens Park was unanimously approved by the Beverly Hills City Council during its Jan. 4 Regular Meeting.
After multiple incidents last month where flyers containing antisemitic tropes and COVID-19 conspiracies were distributed throughout the city, the Beverly Hills City Council explored possible legal and civil remedies at its Jan. 4 Regular Meeting.
Crustacean, the high-end seafood restaurant on North Bedford Drive, experienced a burglary in the early morning of Jan. 2, according to the Beverly Hills Police Department.
The Beverly Hills City Council unanimously passed a resolution backing the latest attempt to recall Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón.
On Jan. 5, Beverly Hills Unified School District (BHUSD) Superintendent Dr. Michael Bregy announced mandatory testing requirements for the return to in-classroom instruction on Jan. 10.