Using iPhone footage shared among rival gangs, the new documentary “Nothing to See Here: Watts” cut murder rates by 90% in one of America’s deadliest neighborhoods. ByDavid Hochman, Contributor.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. EXCLUSIVE: The Peacock Theater at LA Live in downtown Los Angeles is sold out tonight for a one-night only benefit screening of ...
Children with painted faces darted between booths. Bass from the stage thumped down West 108th Street, where neighbors stopped to chat, collect flyers or sway to the music in the warm summer air.
Hosted on MSN
Can a documentary help end gang violence?
The first Crips appeared on the streets of South Central Los Angeles in blue bandanas, leather jackets, and starched Levis between 1969 and 1971. Co-founder Stanley “Tookie” Williams described their ...
Sixty years ago, a young Black man from South Los Angeles was pulled over by a white California Highway Patrol officer after another motorist reported the man driving recklessly. What started as a ...
Watts: 60 years after riots, challenges persist, but this South LA community marches on Some progress, like access to health care, have occurred, but community needs more public investments, Watts ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results