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WHAT REMAINS
What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. On a cool September morning in 2014, among lodgepole pines under blue mountain sky, Greg Stock shouldered a backpack full of camping gear and scientific equipment. Boyishlyslender
A KINGDOM FROM DUST
A Kingdom from Dust — The California Sunday Magazine. Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States, a fact he has tried to keep hidden while he has shaped what we eat, transformed California’s landscape, and ruled entire towns. But the one thing he can’t control is what he’s most dependent on — water. DUNKIN’ AND THE DOUGHNUT KING Dunkin’ and the Doughnut King. Ted Ngoy overcame poverty and escaped genocide, made a fortune off doughnuts and gambled it all away. Today, Ngoy is back on top — but America’s biggest doughnut chain could threaten the hundreds of California shops that are his legacy. By GregNichols.
THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
MEOW WOLF’S MAGIC KINGDOM Last year, Meow Wolf drew 500,000 people. Its gross revenue of $9 million could’ve recouped the exhibit’s construction cost nearly four times over. And every week, the line outside stretches farther and farther toward the sunbaked, 30-foot-tall robot at the opposite end of the parking lot.A CRIMINAL MIND
The judge in Dreyer’s case, Virginia Phillips, wasn’t persuaded that dementia led to his crimes and refused to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine his mental competence. On December 13, 2010, she sentenced Dreyer to ten years. He was 73 years old, and his family worried he would die in prison. While in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles, Dreyer obtained new attorneys who INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. TO CATCH A COUNTERFEITER Kevin led us into the store and pushed against a part of the wall that gave way to reveal a hidden room, roughly 8 feet by 10 feet, with deep shelves that overflowed with counterfeit Dolce & Gabbana, Gucci, and Louis Vuitton luggage, purses, and wallets. Kevin said the market gets raided weekly, but he isn’t concerned. THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo.WHAT REMAINS
What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. On a cool September morning in 2014, among lodgepole pines under blue mountain sky, Greg Stock shouldered a backpack full of camping gear and scientific equipment. Boyishlyslender
A KINGDOM FROM DUST
A Kingdom from Dust — The California Sunday Magazine. Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States, a fact he has tried to keep hidden while he has shaped what we eat, transformed California’s landscape, and ruled entire towns. But the one thing he can’t control is what he’s most dependent on — water. DUNKIN’ AND THE DOUGHNUT KING Dunkin’ and the Doughnut King. Ted Ngoy overcame poverty and escaped genocide, made a fortune off doughnuts and gambled it all away. Today, Ngoy is back on top — but America’s biggest doughnut chain could threaten the hundreds of California shops that are his legacy. By GregNichols.
THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
MEOW WOLF’S MAGIC KINGDOM Last year, Meow Wolf drew 500,000 people. Its gross revenue of $9 million could’ve recouped the exhibit’s construction cost nearly four times over. And every week, the line outside stretches farther and farther toward the sunbaked, 30-foot-tall robot at the opposite end of the parking lot.A CRIMINAL MIND
The judge in Dreyer’s case, Virginia Phillips, wasn’t persuaded that dementia led to his crimes and refused to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine his mental competence. On December 13, 2010, she sentenced Dreyer to ten years. He was 73 years old, and his family worried he would die in prison. While in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles, Dreyer obtained new attorneys who INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. TO CATCH A COUNTERFEITER Kevin led us into the store and pushed against a part of the wall that gave way to reveal a hidden room, roughly 8 feet by 10 feet, with deep shelves that overflowed with counterfeit Dolce & Gabbana, Gucci, and Louis Vuitton luggage, purses, and wallets. Kevin said the market gets raided weekly, but he isn’t concerned. WHAT HAPPENED IN ROOM 10? What Happened in Room 10? The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. The California Sunday Magazine. THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
“WHEN CAN WE REALLY REST?” In 1854, a party of U.S. Navy engineers got lost looking for a canal route, seven of them starving to death. When the Pan-American Highway was constructed in the 1930s, the only piece never completed was the Darién. The missing 66-mile link came to be known as the “DariénGap.”.
COAL. GUNS. FREEDOM. Coal was first discovered in Campbell County in the early 1900s, but development was slow. Powder River Basin coal has high moisture content and burns less efficiently than the competition from, say, West Virginia. Ranching reigned for much of the 20th century. In 1960, the population was 5,861. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Beverlyn Bisyag, 28, (right) arrived in Hong Kong last August; her sister, Elena Balantin, 38, (left), has been a domestic worker there for six years.“In Hong Kong, I’m taking care of a newborn who was born September 1,” Bisyag says. “In the Philippines, I have one girl, and she’s 6 years old. 3 KIDS. 2 PAYCHECKS. NO HOME. By Brian Goldstone. Frankie’s morning started before the sun came up, as the steadily increasing volume of his parents’ phone alarm, coming from somewhere near the dashboard, jolted the 8-year-old awake. His dad, Candido, and 6-year-old brother, Josephat, had begun to stir in the cramped rear of the minivan, emerging from a tangle ofGETTING FIRED
1. A recipe for a vegan “tuna” salad made with chickpeas. “We eat beans at every meal,” Sara says. 2. Sara sprouts her own seeds in jars. 3. To replace their monthly gym membership, the Rooses assembled a home exercise station. 4. “I’ve never been a fan of waking up and going to work and exchanging time for money.”.DIRTY BIRDS
Beatriz Dietrick is a nurse practitioner at Iliuliuk Family and Health Services and the only full-time medical care provider in Dutch Harbor. Most of the traumatic injuries she treats are from fishing or processing plant injuries — grisly finger amputations or men whose chests have been crushed by heavy, swinging metal crab pots.INTO THE WOODS
The haunting and beautiful cinematic debut of Rodarte’s Kate and Laura Mulleavy. By Ann Friedman. Photographs by Autumn de Wilde. When Kate and Laura Mulleavy set out to make a feature film, the sisters began in the redwoods. The Mulleavys, the renowned designers behind the L.A.-based fashion label Rodarte, always seem to begin in thewoods.
THE UNKNOWABLE KAMALA HARRIS A couple of years into Harris’s first term as San Francisco district attorney, she happened upon a statistic: 94 percent of San Francisco homicide victims and perpetrators younger than 25 were high school dropouts. In the preceding years, Harris and the police had struggled to get a handle on the homicide rate; countless crimes remained unsolved because her office couldn’t convince THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo. OUR BORDER — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. As told to Jessica Weisberg. From a distance, the U.S.-Mexico border is often imagined as a single place, one rife with hardship and violence. Up close, it’s a swath of almost 2,000 miles, home to dozens of cities and towns and more than 12 million people. Heading east from El Paso, lingering in small towns THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
WHAT REMAINS
What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. On a cool September morning in 2014, among lodgepole pines under blue mountain sky, Greg Stock shouldered a backpack full of camping gear and scientific equipment. Boyishlyslender
AUGUST 2018
Eleven things to know about living in a sanctuary state. By Elise Craig, Haley Cohen Gilliland, Jesse Katz, Mike Kessler, Andy Kroll, Ashley Powers, and Joy Shan. Artwork by Daniel Segrove. Photographs by Kathya Landeros, Lisette Poole, and Kayla Reefer. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
“EVERY WEEK IN CHURCH, I’M GOING, ‘CAN I COME OUT?’” In July 1847, long before Utah was a state, the LDS people roamed westward at the direction of their leader, Brigham Young, to set up a home for the church. They wanted to be free of religious discrimination, of being told the way they were was wrong. As the story goes: trains of wagons emerged from the mountains, and when Young got a look at the wide Salt Lake Valley, he declared thatA CRIMINAL MIND
The judge in Dreyer’s case, Virginia Phillips, wasn’t persuaded that dementia led to his crimes and refused to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine his mental competence. On December 13, 2010, she sentenced Dreyer to ten years. He was 73 years old, and his family worried he would die in prison. While in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles, Dreyer obtained new attorneys who “WE’RE TRYING TO BE THE JUNKYARD.” Instead, the opposite happened. “We need to get rid of some of these guns,” he says. “There’s no junkyard for guns, so we’re trying to be the junkyard.”. Chip Ayers, who is 62, didn’t handle a firearm until his early 20s, when he was beginning his career in lawenforcement.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo. OUR BORDER — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. As told to Jessica Weisberg. From a distance, the U.S.-Mexico border is often imagined as a single place, one rife with hardship and violence. Up close, it’s a swath of almost 2,000 miles, home to dozens of cities and towns and more than 12 million people. Heading east from El Paso, lingering in small towns THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
WHAT REMAINS
What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. On a cool September morning in 2014, among lodgepole pines under blue mountain sky, Greg Stock shouldered a backpack full of camping gear and scientific equipment. Boyishlyslender
AUGUST 2018
Eleven things to know about living in a sanctuary state. By Elise Craig, Haley Cohen Gilliland, Jesse Katz, Mike Kessler, Andy Kroll, Ashley Powers, and Joy Shan. Artwork by Daniel Segrove. Photographs by Kathya Landeros, Lisette Poole, and Kayla Reefer. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
“EVERY WEEK IN CHURCH, I’M GOING, ‘CAN I COME OUT?’” In July 1847, long before Utah was a state, the LDS people roamed westward at the direction of their leader, Brigham Young, to set up a home for the church. They wanted to be free of religious discrimination, of being told the way they were was wrong. As the story goes: trains of wagons emerged from the mountains, and when Young got a look at the wide Salt Lake Valley, he declared thatA CRIMINAL MIND
The judge in Dreyer’s case, Virginia Phillips, wasn’t persuaded that dementia led to his crimes and refused to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine his mental competence. On December 13, 2010, she sentenced Dreyer to ten years. He was 73 years old, and his family worried he would die in prison. While in the Metropolitan Detention Center in Los Angeles, Dreyer obtained new attorneys who “WE’RE TRYING TO BE THE JUNKYARD.” Instead, the opposite happened. “We need to get rid of some of these guns,” he says. “There’s no junkyard for guns, so we’re trying to be the junkyard.”. Chip Ayers, who is 62, didn’t handle a firearm until his early 20s, when he was beginning his career in lawenforcement.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. WHAT HAPPENED IN ROOM 10? What Happened in Room 10? The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. The California Sunday Magazine. OUR BORDER — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. As told to Jessica Weisberg. From a distance, the U.S.-Mexico border is often imagined as a single place, one rife with hardship and violence. Up close, it’s a swath of almost 2,000 miles, home to dozens of cities and towns and more than 12 million people. Heading east from El Paso, lingering in small townsA KINGDOM FROM DUST
A Kingdom from Dust — The California Sunday Magazine. Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States, a fact he has tried to keep hidden while he has shaped what we eat, transformed California’s landscape, and ruled entire towns. But the one thing he can’t control is what he’s most dependent on — water. 3 KIDS. 2 PAYCHECKS. NO HOME. By Brian Goldstone. Frankie’s morning started before the sun came up, as the steadily increasing volume of his parents’ phone alarm, coming from somewhere near the dashboard, jolted the 8-year-old awake. His dad, Candido, and 6-year-old brother, Josephat, had begun to stir in the cramped rear of the minivan, emerging from a tangle of “WE’RE TRYING TO BE THE JUNKYARD.” The few ways to get rid of a gun The NCUF began collecting guns in July 2015, when Seiler received an email through his website from a man who lived in a small town south of Erie, Pennsylvania. “We’ve recently had a really bad spate of killings,” the man wrote, referring to some homicides that had been making headlines in thearea.
INTO THE WOODS
The haunting and beautiful cinematic debut of Rodarte’s Kate and Laura Mulleavy. By Ann Friedman. Photographs by Autumn de Wilde. When Kate and Laura Mulleavy set out to make a feature film, the sisters began in the redwoods. The Mulleavys, the renowned designers behind the L.A.-based fashion label Rodarte, always seem to begin in thewoods.
THE DEEPEST DIG
Photographs by Corey Arnold. On the nights before a dive, Cindy Lee Van Dover likes to stand on the deck of her research ship, looking down into the water the way an astronaut might look up at the stars. She’s preparing herself to do an extraordinary thing: climb into a tiny bubble of light and air and sink to the bottom of the ocean,leaving
DIRTY BIRDS
Beatriz Dietrick is a nurse practitioner at Iliuliuk Family and Health Services and the only full-time medical care provider in Dutch Harbor. Most of the traumatic injuries she treats are from fishing or processing plant injuries — grisly finger amputations or men whose chests have been crushed by heavy, swinging metal crab pots. THE AUCTIONEER’S CHANT By Jeremy Lybarger. Photographs by James Hosking. It’s after lunch in McFarland, California, just north of Bakersfield, and the Idle Spur Cafe is almost empty. A couple in a nearby booth haggle over money in low tones while their child fidgets. A rancher chews the last of his hamburger and contemplates the semis rumbling by on Highway 99. THE UNKNOWABLE KAMALA HARRIS Artwork by David Samuel Stern. On April 10, 2004, Kamala Harris was in her fourth month as San Francisco’s district attorney. It was a Saturday, the day before Easter. Having prosecuted homicides in Oakland and major crimes in San Francisco, Harris knew the drill: You kept your phone on when you went home Friday night and hoped itdidn’t ring.
THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo. THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
BELOW DECK — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. Photographs by Kevin Kunishi. The clearest sign that Regie Lagarde was under pressure came with the sale of his beloved Violeta, a vintage lavender-colored Mitsubishi Lancer. He cut a bad deal and sold her for just $1,800. He’d spent the previous nine months applying for cruise ship jobs, and he was flatbroke.
WHAT REMAINS
What Remains — The California Sunday Magazine. 1554350400 April 4, 2019. What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. By Daniel Duane.DIRTY BIRDS
Beatriz Dietrick is a nurse practitioner at Iliuliuk Family and Health Services and the only full-time medical care provider in Dutch Harbor. Most of the traumatic injuries she treats are from fishing or processing plant injuries — grisly finger amputations or men whose chests have been crushed by heavy, swinging metal crab pots. THE AUCTIONEER’S CHANT By Jeremy Lybarger. Photographs by James Hosking. It’s after lunch in McFarland, California, just north of Bakersfield, and the Idle Spur Cafe is almost empty. A couple in a nearby booth haggle over money in low tones while their child fidgets. A rancher chews the last of his hamburger and contemplates the semis rumbling by on Highway 99. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. RAISING A TEENAGE DAUGHTER* Raising a Teenage Daughter*. The California Sunday Magazine. Photograph by Tabitha Soren. Assisted by Dixie Lewis, 15. Six months ago, my 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, sent me a video. In it, she’s hanging upside down by her feet from a head-high granite boulder, inching along from one end to the other. It’s everything thatyou’d ever
“AFTER WE MARRIED, I WOULD ASK HIM, ‘WILL YOU ABANDON ME When we married, I didn’t know that he was a Bangladeshi. People told me afterwards. When I asked him, he confessed. He said, “I told you I was Rohingya because I wanted to marry you.”. He said he would make me a citizen of this country. Twenty THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo. THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
BELOW DECK — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. Photographs by Kevin Kunishi. The clearest sign that Regie Lagarde was under pressure came with the sale of his beloved Violeta, a vintage lavender-colored Mitsubishi Lancer. He cut a bad deal and sold her for just $1,800. He’d spent the previous nine months applying for cruise ship jobs, and he was flatbroke.
WHAT REMAINS
What Remains — The California Sunday Magazine. 1554350400 April 4, 2019. What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. By Daniel Duane.DIRTY BIRDS
Beatriz Dietrick is a nurse practitioner at Iliuliuk Family and Health Services and the only full-time medical care provider in Dutch Harbor. Most of the traumatic injuries she treats are from fishing or processing plant injuries — grisly finger amputations or men whose chests have been crushed by heavy, swinging metal crab pots. THE AUCTIONEER’S CHANT By Jeremy Lybarger. Photographs by James Hosking. It’s after lunch in McFarland, California, just north of Bakersfield, and the Idle Spur Cafe is almost empty. A couple in a nearby booth haggle over money in low tones while their child fidgets. A rancher chews the last of his hamburger and contemplates the semis rumbling by on Highway 99. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. RAISING A TEENAGE DAUGHTER* Raising a Teenage Daughter*. The California Sunday Magazine. Photograph by Tabitha Soren. Assisted by Dixie Lewis, 15. Six months ago, my 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, sent me a video. In it, she’s hanging upside down by her feet from a head-high granite boulder, inching along from one end to the other. It’s everything thatyou’d ever
“AFTER WE MARRIED, I WOULD ASK HIM, ‘WILL YOU ABANDON ME When we married, I didn’t know that he was a Bangladeshi. People told me afterwards. When I asked him, he confessed. He said, “I told you I was Rohingya because I wanted to marry you.”. He said he would make me a citizen of this country. Twenty THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE Stories from California, the West, Asia, and Latin America.OUT OF WORK
Out of Work. The coronavirus shutdown through the eyes of the recently unemployed. Restaurants let go of their servers and cooks. Hotels furloughed housekeepers and concierges. Corporations laid off managers and salespeople. With extraordinary speed, the coronavirus has torn through nearly every corner of the economy. WHAT HAPPENED IN ROOM 10? What Happened in Room 10? The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
GONE — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE Mark Arax is a contributing writer to California Sunday. His book, The Dreamt Land: Chasing Water and Dust Across California, was published in May. His last piece for the magazine, “A Kingdom From Dust,” was the winner of the James Beard Award for Feature Reporting inA KINGDOM FROM DUST
A Kingdom from Dust — The California Sunday Magazine. Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States, a fact he has tried to keep hidden while he has shaped what we eat, transformed California’s landscape, and ruled entire towns. But the one thing he can’t control is what he’s most dependent on — water. RAISING A TEENAGE DAUGHTER* Raising a Teenage Daughter*. The California Sunday Magazine. Photograph by Tabitha Soren. Assisted by Dixie Lewis, 15. Six months ago, my 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, sent me a video. In it, she’s hanging upside down by her feet from a head-high granite boulder, inching along from one end to the other. It’s everything thatyou’d ever
COOKING LESSONS
By Daniel Duane. A little over a year ago, in a small building at the corner of East 103rd Street and Anzac Avenue in South Los Angeles, chef Daniel Patterson zigzagged among trainees in the bright clean kitchen of what was about to become Locol, the fast-food restaurant with a mission. Patterson was 47 years old, bone-pale and wiry, andamong
INTO THE WOODS
The haunting and beautiful cinematic debut of Rodarte’s Kate and Laura Mulleavy. By Ann Friedman. Photographs by Autumn de Wilde. When Kate and Laura Mulleavy set out to make a feature film, the sisters began in the redwoods. The Mulleavys, the renowned designers behind the L.A.-based fashion label Rodarte, always seem to begin in thewoods.
THE UNKNOWABLE KAMALA HARRIS Artwork by David Samuel Stern. On April 10, 2004, Kamala Harris was in her fourth month as San Francisco’s district attorney. It was a Saturday, the day before Easter. Having prosecuted homicides in Oakland and major crimes in San Francisco, Harris knew the drill: You kept your phone on when you went home Friday night and hoped itdidn’t ring.
THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo. THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
BELOW DECK — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. Photographs by Kevin Kunishi. The clearest sign that Regie Lagarde was under pressure came with the sale of his beloved Violeta, a vintage lavender-colored Mitsubishi Lancer. He cut a bad deal and sold her for just $1,800. He’d spent the previous nine months applying for cruise ship jobs, and he was flatbroke.
WHAT REMAINS
What Remains — The California Sunday Magazine. 1554350400 April 4, 2019. What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. By Daniel Duane.DIRTY BIRDS
Beatriz Dietrick is a nurse practitioner at Iliuliuk Family and Health Services and the only full-time medical care provider in Dutch Harbor. Most of the traumatic injuries she treats are from fishing or processing plant injuries — grisly finger amputations or men whose chests have been crushed by heavy, swinging metal crab pots. THE AUCTIONEER’S CHANT By Jeremy Lybarger. Photographs by James Hosking. It’s after lunch in McFarland, California, just north of Bakersfield, and the Idle Spur Cafe is almost empty. A couple in a nearby booth haggle over money in low tones while their child fidgets. A rancher chews the last of his hamburger and contemplates the semis rumbling by on Highway 99. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. RAISING A TEENAGE DAUGHTER* Raising a Teenage Daughter*. The California Sunday Magazine. Photograph by Tabitha Soren. Assisted by Dixie Lewis, 15. Six months ago, my 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, sent me a video. In it, she’s hanging upside down by her feet from a head-high granite boulder, inching along from one end to the other. It’s everything thatyou’d ever
“AFTER WE MARRIED, I WOULD ASK HIM, ‘WILL YOU ABANDON ME When we married, I didn’t know that he was a Bangladeshi. People told me afterwards. When I asked him, he confessed. He said, “I told you I was Rohingya because I wanted to marry you.”. He said he would make me a citizen of this country. Twenty THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINETHE MYSTERIOUS LAWYER XA KINGDOM FROM DUSTUNCLAIMEDHOMELESS HOMESSUPPORT The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. This is their story. By Katie Engelhart. Animations by Matt Bollinger. Photographs by Jovelle Tamayo. THE DEMOCRACY FACTORY SINCE THE EARLY 1990S, the portion of votes cast by mail has nosed upward in every presidential-election cycle, hitting an all-time high in 2016: 24 percent, or about 33 million ballots.But the national numbers mask a state-by-state variance. As a rule, voting by mail dominates the western states, while the East typically prefers to votein person.
BELOW DECK — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE The California Sunday Magazine. Photographs by Kevin Kunishi. The clearest sign that Regie Lagarde was under pressure came with the sale of his beloved Violeta, a vintage lavender-colored Mitsubishi Lancer. He cut a bad deal and sold her for just $1,800. He’d spent the previous nine months applying for cruise ship jobs, and he was flatbroke.
WHAT REMAINS
What Remains — The California Sunday Magazine. 1554350400 April 4, 2019. What Remains. For the past 148 years, Yosemite’s Lyell Glacier has taught us about the Earth — how it was created, where it was going, and now, how it might end. By Daniel Duane.DIRTY BIRDS
Beatriz Dietrick is a nurse practitioner at Iliuliuk Family and Health Services and the only full-time medical care provider in Dutch Harbor. Most of the traumatic injuries she treats are from fishing or processing plant injuries — grisly finger amputations or men whose chests have been crushed by heavy, swinging metal crab pots. THE AUCTIONEER’S CHANT By Jeremy Lybarger. Photographs by James Hosking. It’s after lunch in McFarland, California, just north of Bakersfield, and the Idle Spur Cafe is almost empty. A couple in a nearby booth haggle over money in low tones while their child fidgets. A rancher chews the last of his hamburger and contemplates the semis rumbling by on Highway 99. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
THE BELIEVER
At 19, she mounted a campaign for governor of California in a race ultimately won by Arnold Schwarzenegger. In her effort to gather the signatures needed to get her name on the ballot, she stationed herself in front of a gym, sensing that people would be in a better mood — and more likely to engage — after a workout. RAISING A TEENAGE DAUGHTER* Raising a Teenage Daughter*. The California Sunday Magazine. Photograph by Tabitha Soren. Assisted by Dixie Lewis, 15. Six months ago, my 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, sent me a video. In it, she’s hanging upside down by her feet from a head-high granite boulder, inching along from one end to the other. It’s everything thatyou’d ever
“AFTER WE MARRIED, I WOULD ASK HIM, ‘WILL YOU ABANDON ME When we married, I didn’t know that he was a Bangladeshi. People told me afterwards. When I asked him, he confessed. He said, “I told you I was Rohingya because I wanted to marry you.”. He said he would make me a citizen of this country. Twenty THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE Stories from California, the West, Asia, and Latin America.OUT OF WORK
Out of Work. The coronavirus shutdown through the eyes of the recently unemployed. Restaurants let go of their servers and cooks. Hotels furloughed housekeepers and concierges. Corporations laid off managers and salespeople. With extraordinary speed, the coronavirus has torn through nearly every corner of the economy. WHAT HAPPENED IN ROOM 10? What Happened in Room 10? The Life Care Center of Kirkland, Washington, was the first COVID hot spot in the U.S. Forty-six people associated with the nursing home died, exposing how ill-prepared we were for the pandemic — and how we take care of our elderly. INSIDE THE MASSIVE, ELABORATE CARE PACKAGES FILIPINOS SEND Sherry Anne Lacay, 37, wraps fragile objects inside secondhand clothes. Among the most important items in her box, she says, are wine and liquor for her family, since alcohol is expensive in the Philippines. “When I left home, my child was turning 7, and now he’s 17,” Lacay says. “I used to have a husband, but he went toanother house.
GONE — THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINE Mark Arax is a contributing writer to California Sunday. His book, The Dreamt Land: Chasing Water and Dust Across California, was published in May. His last piece for the magazine, “A Kingdom From Dust,” was the winner of the James Beard Award for Feature Reporting inA KINGDOM FROM DUST
A Kingdom from Dust — The California Sunday Magazine. Stewart Resnick is the biggest farmer in the United States, a fact he has tried to keep hidden while he has shaped what we eat, transformed California’s landscape, and ruled entire towns. But the one thing he can’t control is what he’s most dependent on — water. RAISING A TEENAGE DAUGHTER* Raising a Teenage Daughter*. The California Sunday Magazine. Photograph by Tabitha Soren. Assisted by Dixie Lewis, 15. Six months ago, my 15-year-old daughter, Hannah, sent me a video. In it, she’s hanging upside down by her feet from a head-high granite boulder, inching along from one end to the other. It’s everything thatyou’d ever
COOKING LESSONS
By Daniel Duane. A little over a year ago, in a small building at the corner of East 103rd Street and Anzac Avenue in South Los Angeles, chef Daniel Patterson zigzagged among trainees in the bright clean kitchen of what was about to become Locol, the fast-food restaurant with a mission. Patterson was 47 years old, bone-pale and wiry, andamong
INTO THE WOODS
The haunting and beautiful cinematic debut of Rodarte’s Kate and Laura Mulleavy. By Ann Friedman. Photographs by Autumn de Wilde. When Kate and Laura Mulleavy set out to make a feature film, the sisters began in the redwoods. The Mulleavys, the renowned designers behind the L.A.-based fashion label Rodarte, always seem to begin in thewoods.
THE UNKNOWABLE KAMALA HARRIS Artwork by David Samuel Stern. On April 10, 2004, Kamala Harris was in her fourth month as San Francisco’s district attorney. It was a Saturday, the day before Easter. Having prosecuted homicides in Oakland and major crimes in San Francisco, Harris knew the drill: You kept your phone on when you went home Friday night and hoped itdidn’t ring.
THE CALIFORNIA SUNDAY MAGAZINEIssues Subscribe
ESCAPE
Photograph by Peng Ke WHAT DO YOU WISH YOU COULD ESCAPE? Think about it for a minute. Maybe it’s the news — and that appalled, exhausted feeling a lot of us have when we look at our phones in the morning. Or your surroundings. Maybe it’s a prison cell or a climate crisis. Maybe it’s a job. Or a relationship. Escape has been on our minds this year. We started seeing stories of escape all around us. So we dedicated a whole issue to the theme — escapes big and small, literal and figurative, terrifying and exhilarating and mundane. We also teamed up with our colleagues at _Pop-Up Magazine_, our “live magazine,” to create a traveling, theatrical escape issue. We’re bringing the show to grand, historic venues in the U.S. and Canada. You can get tickets atpopupmagazine.com .
This issue unfolds in three chapters. First, escaping the past. Then, escaping the present. And finally, escaping the future. So, what do you wish you could escape?Escape The Past
A twin brother and sister leave Paradise for a second time.Belongings
from divorcees, up for saleThe people
behind the memes they can’t escapeChildren who
cross the border, in their own words David Matheson was a leading gay-conversion therapist. He is also gay.Five people
who abandoned their namesThe few ways to get
rid of a gun
SPONSOR CONTENT
TO LIVE AND THRIVE IN LAPresented by Vrbo
Escape The Present
Coming across the first official Burning ManThe cost of
leaving an abusive relationshipPeople in
three continents share their idea of escape.Released from
a detention center
Trapped inside my body Why I left my jobs ingaming How six
people (briefly) get away from their familiesEscape The Future
How Hong Kong’s youth plan their fight for democracyThe
spiritual-seekers of SedonaMy decade
as a fugitive
Four people who came near death, and what happened afterThe Honduran
climate-movers
The long,
loving search for Betsy, bovine escape artistSPONSOR CONTENT
GOLDEN STATE ESCAPES: DISCOVER SOMETHING NEW IN CALIFORNIA Presented by EventbriteENJOY YOUR WEEKEND.
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