Here is the view from live cameras in the Los Angeles area, from Pacific Palisades to Altadena to the Hollywood Hills, showing wildfires scorching acre after acre.
Thousands of firefighters were battling at least three separate blazes on Wednesday, from the Pacific Coast inland to Pasadena. Track them live.
Updating maps of Southern California show where wildfires, including the Palisades and Eaton fires, are burning across Los Angeles.
(AP Photo/Ethan Swope) Spots of the Eaton Fire still burn after the fire swept through the mountains of the Angeles National Forest near Mount Wilson Observatory, north of Pasadena, Thursday ...
While evacuation zones were expanded, and many people in the San Fernando Valley and Brentwood reportedly ... Sands said he is on the California Fair Plan, a basic state plan available to everyone ...
The 75-acre Woodley Fire sparked Wednesday morning near the Sepulveda Basin in the San Fernando Valley. The blaze is burning by the ... Over the past day, Southern California has been slammed by several brush fires prompting thousands of evacuation orders ...
See maps of where mandatory evacuation orders as well as warnings are in place for wildfires burning in the Los Angeles area.
There’s always something to do in the San Fernando Valley and greater Los Angeles, but check in advance to make sure these events have not been cancelled or postponed.
The highest gusts, up to 70 mph, are forecast for the northern San Fernando Valley and eastern Ventura County.
Tens of thousands of people have been notified by authorities to evacuate their homes because of the multiple fires burning in the Los Angeles region. Officials say at least five people have died in the wildfires. Billy Crystal and his wife Janice have lost their home of 45 years in the Palisades fire.
On Thursday afternoon, the Kenneth Fire started in the San Fernando Valley. It moved into neighboring ... near Mount Wilson Observatory, north of Pasadena, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025.
T he two ends of Los Angeles ’ Cultural Crescent—formed by the majestic Santa Monica and San Gabriel Mountains and their foothills, which ring the northern end of the great L.A. Basin—are gone. For nearly a century they represented two ends of L.A.’s cultural spectrum.