Leader of the Campaign to Organize Digital Employees for the Communications Workers of America
Emma Kinema on KCRW
More from KCRW
‘This place literally saved her’: The profound role of Debbie Allen Dance Academy
ArtsA year ago, living in Miami, Lēya Graham’s passion for dance was waning. Then she discovered the Debbie Allen Dance Academy in LA, which served as a lifeline.
The immiseration of the American worker is a bipartisan political scam
Business & EconomyOn this episode of Scheer Intelligence, host Robert Scheer and Les Leopold discuss Leopold’s new book, “Wall Street's War on Workers: How Mass Layoffs and Greed Are Destroying the…
Crenshaw Dairy Mart’s first film festival: Stories of abolition, healing
ArtsThe Crenshaw Dairy Mart put on its first film festival in Inglewood after hearing from BIPOC filmmakers that they need more spaces to showcase their work in LA.
Lonely doing your job from home? Turn to pop-up coworking spaces
Business & EconomyFour years after the COVID pandemic made telecommuting a norm, Angelenos are getting lonely on the job. LA event organizers are now offering coworking pop-ups.
Pandemic slowed progress on closing gender pay gap in CA
Business & EconomyDespite years of progress, California women make 89% of what men do for full-time work, according to a new report. The gap is worse for many women of color.
Landslide road closure leaves Topanga Canyon in distress
TransportationA landslide on Topanga Canyon Blvd. blocks access to Pacific Coast Highway, leading to three-hour commutes and potential catastrophe in fire season.
Writer Tony McNamara on ‘Poor Things’; Disney heirs back Iger in proxy fight
EntertainmentKim Masters and Matt Belloni examine the latest developments in the Disney proxy fight. They also take a look at a peculiar lawsuit filed against CBS Studios and Paramount.
Metal thieves turn to cemeteries, historical markers
Los AngelesThieves stole hundreds of bronze headstones and plaques from LA County cemeteries. The metal used is worth big money in the scrap metal market.
SCOTUS homelessness ruling could shift LA policy
HomelessnessA Ninth Circuit case has limited how LA responds to homelessness. If the Supreme Court tosses out that decision, the city could ban camping in more places.