
Photo gallery: The top moments of the BET Awards 2023
- June 26, 2023
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 25: Busta Rhymes (C) accepts the Lifetime Achievement Award from Spliff Star (far L) onstage during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 25: (L-R) Busta Rhymes accepts the Lifetime Achievment award from Swizz Beatz onstage during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 25: Patti LaBelle performs onstage during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
US singer Patti LaBelle performs on stage during the 2023 BET awards at the Microsoft theatre in Los Angeles, June 25, 2023. (Photo by Michael TRAN / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)
Best Female Hip Hop artist winner US rapper Latto holds her award on stage during the 2023 BET awards at the Microsoft theatre in Los Angeles, June 25, 2023. (Photo by Michael TRAN / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 25: Ice Spice performs onstage during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
US rapper Ice Spice performs on stage during the 2023 BET awards at the Microsoft theatre in Los Angeles, June 25, 2023. (Photo by Michael TRAN / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 25: Soulja Boy performs onstage during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 25: (L-R) Swizz Beatz and Busta Rhymes perform onstage during the BET Awards 2023 at Microsoft Theater on June 25, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
US rapper GloRilla performs on stage during the 2023 BET awards at the Microsoft theatre in Los Angeles, June 25, 2023. (Photo by Michael TRAN / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images)
Orange County Register
Read More
Game Day: Angels’ strange weekend is ultimately a plus
- June 26, 2023
Editor’s note: This is the Monday, June 26, 2023, edition of the “Game Day with Kevin Modesti” newsletter. To receive the newsletter in your inbox, sign up here.
Good morning. When a baseball team has a weekend like the Angels’, I think of a piece of long-ago baseball lore and the right and wrong lessons to take away from it.
First, other sports news: Freddie Freeman got his 2,000th hit but the Dodgers missed a chance to sweep the Astros, losing in extra innings. Nneka Ogwumike was named to the WNBA All-Star Game, then showed why in a Sparks win over Dallas. Angel City couldn’t capitalize on a Houston red card and the teams played to a scoreless draw. Tigres UNAL beat C.F. Pachuca in Mexican soccer’s Campeon de Campeones match in Carson, and will face LAFC in the Campeones Cup between the Liga MX and MLS title winners. Florida routed LSU to set up a decisive Game 3 in the College World Series baseball final today (4 p.m., ESPN). And before NBA free-agent season, columnist Mirjam Swanson got back to basketball basics by attending the annual kids’ clinic hosted by the Clippers’ Terance Mann.
Now, about the Angels’ weekend against the Colorado Rockies in Denver. Not many baseball teams have had weekends like the Angels’. It featured a club-record-setting 25-1 victory on Saturday, but on either side of that, a come-from-ahead 7-4 loss on Friday and a nail-biting 4-3 loss yesterday.
As writer Dennis Georgatos pointed out in covering the series for Southern California News Group readers, the Angels’ plus-20 run difference in a regular-season series is the second-largest in major league history for a team that lost the series, exceeded only by the Chicago Colts’ 23-run edge in losing two of three to the Louisville Colonels in a National League game in 1897 (the team later to be known as the Cubs won the middle game 36-7).
The most historic case of a team racking up runs and losing the series occurred in, no less, the 1960 World Series. The New York Yankees won games by 13, 12 and 10 runs, but the Pittsburgh Pirates won games by 3, 2, 1 and 1 and took the championship. The 1 best remembered came thanks to Bill Mazeroski’s home run in the bottom of the ninth inning of Game 7.
“Baseball, like history, moves in strange and shifting eddies,” columnist Jimmy Powers wrote in the New York Daily News, and who hasn’t said exactly that a few times?
If they’d posted Five Things We Learned analysis in those days, one of the five surely would have been that blowout wins are for bullies and losers and that winning close games is the mark of a champion.
No doubt that’s the worry of many Angels fans frustrated by the Halos’ recent 7-7 stretch, which includes two losses by one run and four other losses by the bullpen.
Me? I’ll take the team that wins by 24 runs.
Look: There’s nothing bad about crafting ways to win one-run decisions. But if you’re trying to predict which teams will go farthest, it’s as good if not better to look at run difference than records in one-run games. If you don’t think so, compare those numbers for recent World Series teams in the detailed standings at Baseball-Reference.com.
Something jumps out if you piece together a list of one-sided wins – like the Angels’ on Saturday – since the major leagues as we know them came together in 1901. Those games are almost always won by the better team. They’re usually won by very good teams, mostly playoff-quality teams. The 13 winners include the 1936 Yankees and 1948 Cleveland Indians, both World Series champions.
Those 1960 Yankees and Pirates, of the strange and shifting eddies? The Yankees lost that World Series, but they won the next two and went to the next four. The Pirates finished sixth the next year and didn’t make it back to the World Series for a decade (winning in 1971).
It feels funny to have to say it, but the right lesson from history is that winning big means you’re a good team.
That 24-1 romp is more evidence that the Angels, currently fighting for a wild-card playoff spot, are going to get there.
TODAY
• Angels open a seven-game homestand against the White Sox, with Reid Detmers facing Chicago ace Dylan Cease and (6:30 p.m., BSW).
BETWEEN THE LINES
The Angels are scheduled to face nothing but right-handed starting pitchers in the homestand against the White Sox and Diamondbacks, according to a schedule at FantasyPros.com. They are 34-23 against right-handers (.596, sixth best in baseball), and have produced a betting profit in games against righties (plus 10.5 wagering units, fourth best), according to StatFox.com.
280 CHARACTERS
“Dodgers clawed back to send it into extra innings but couldn’t finish off a sweep of the Astros. But they end this week feeling a lot better about themselves than they did a week ago.” – Bill Plunkett (@BillPlunkettOCR) after the Dodgers won four of five games following last weekend’s sweep by the Giants.
1,000 WORDS
Denied: Tigres goalkeeper Nahuel Guzman and defender Jesus Pizarro, in yellow, prevent Pachuca’s Paullno De La Fuente Gonzalez, in stripes, from scoring in the first half of Tigres’ 2-1 victory in the Mexican league’s annual Campeon de Campeones game yesterday at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson. Photo is by Kevork Djansezian for Getty Images.
YOUR TURN
Thanks for reading. Send suggestions, comments and questions by email at [email protected] and via Twitter @KevinModesti.
Editor’s note: Thanks for reading the “Game Day with Kevin Modesti” newsletter. To receive the newsletter in your inbox, sign up here.
Related Articles
WNBA Power Rankings: Aces are No. 1, Sparks rise to No. 5 after clinching season-series against Dallas
Supreme Court allows lawsuits over sexual abuse against Ohio State
Dodgers’ Will Smith takes his best All-Star shot, again
Ducks goalie coach Sudarshan Maharaj diagnosed with pancreatic cancer
Florida sets College World Series record for runs in win over LSU that forces Game 3
Orange County Register
Read More
From sun hats to comfortable shoes: A guide to the Hajj
- June 26, 2023
By Riazat Butt | Associated Press
MECCA, Saudi Arabia — Straw hats, cross-body bags, and collapsible chairs: These are just some of the essentials Muslims bring to the Hajj pilgrimage.
Spiritually, the five-day Hajj is awe-inspiring for the faithful, an experience they say brings them closer to God and to the entire Muslim world.
Physically, it’s grueling. Pilgrims walk outdoors for hours in broiling heat around holy sites in Mecca and the surrounding desert. They are caught in unimaginable and overwhelming crowds, all trying to get to the same place. Barriers directing the traffic mean that if you miss your turn, you might walk hours more to get where you want to be.
So the more than 2 million pilgrims don’t just learn the complicated rules of how to properly perform the rituals, which began Monday. They also pick up helpful hints and tricks of the trade to get by, learned from other hajjis — as those who have completed the pilgrimage are known.
Here’s a look at what they say is essential gear.
WHAT TO WEAR
Dress for the heat, since daytime temperatures regularly soar past 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit). The majority of rituals take place outdoors in the desert, including climbing the Mount of Mercy and stoning the Jamarat, a row of pillars representing the devil.
Sun hats are key. Pilgrims often opt for wide-brimmed straw hats or even cowboy hats. Umbrellas of every color are everywhere. Some balance their prayer mats on their heads or the canopies from umbrellas.
All men are required to wear simple white robes without any stitching, a rule aimed at uniting rich and poor. Women must forego beauty products and cover their hair but have more latitude to wear fabrics from their native countries, resulting in a colorful display of Islam’s multiculturalism.
When it comes to footwear, it’s best to wear something that’s durable for the long walks but that also slips on and off easily, as pilgrims must remove their shoes before entering Mecca’s Grand Mosque.
Sandals are sensible, but some pilgrims say it’s best also to wear socks as the mosque’s marble floor can be surprisingly cold as they walk around the Kaaba seven times.
WHAT TO CARRY
A daypack of some kind is essential for carrying food, water, sunscreen and other sundries. But backpacks can be a hassle when you’re crammed shoulder-to-shoulder.
Far more popular are cross-body bags that you can access without turning around.
Many pilgrims also carry a separate drawstring bag or pouch for their shoes. Usually at mosques, you can leave your shoes with an attendant at the entrance, but with hundreds of thousands at the Grand Mosque, that’s a sure way to lose your shoes, or at best waste a long time getting them back. It would also mean you have to exit the same way you entered, not always possible when the crowd takes you in another direction.
Umaima Hafez, a five-time hajjah from Egypt, packs like a pro.
Sitting on her portable plastic stool, she reaches into her large pack and pulls out a blanket, homemade granola and crackers, a travel towel that she wets and places on her head when it gets hot, an extra-thick prayer mat — for her knees — and some medications. The stool fits into the bag as well. She’ll carry it throughout Hajj, then leave it behind for someone else to use.
She insists her bag isn’t heavy. “Everything is beautiful and easy with God. … And people give out a lot of water and food here.”
Hassan Hussain, a 24-year-old first-time pilgrim from Britain, also went for a maximal approach. His bag holds his phone, charging cable, power bank, sunglasses, water bottle, British and Saudi currency, bank cards, his shoe bag, a prayer mat and hydrating facial mist.
He said his sister, who did the Hajj last year, told him what to bring. His advice to other pilgrims is to overpack.
“You don’t know when you’re going to need things,” he said. “The person next to you might need things. Just take everything and work it out as you go along.”
In contrast, Ali Ibn Mousa, a 30-year-old Russian and father of seven, is going for maneuverability and speed, so he stays light.
His drawstring bag holds only his phone and his pilgrim ID. He’s more interested in what he will bring back from the Hajj, saying that alongside the spiritual journey he’s on the lookout for a second wife.
“If I had a heavy bag, I wouldn’t be able to do some of the things I want to,” he said. “That’s why I take a small bag that is easy to carry, so I can run inside” while circling the Kaaba.
CAMPOUT CHECKLIST
The giant flows of pilgrims move back and forth between holy sites spread out over a length of more than 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the Grand Mosque to the Mount of Mercy, or Mount Arafat, out in the desert. Even within a single ritual site, it can take much of the day to walk from one end to another, like Mina, where pilgrims will stay in one of the world’s largest tent camps and stone the pillars representing the devil.
A pilgrim has to be prepared to be stuck in a spot outside for ages, waiting for a transport to arrive or a crowd to clear, sometimes in the middle of the night.
Ikram Mohammed’s supermarket in Mecca sells camping essentials such as lightweight tents, sleeping mats and collapsible water pouches.
“They buy dried fruit and nuts, biscuits, chips. Anything they can consume easily while they are on the move that doesn’t need refrigeration or utensils,” Mohammed said. A special section specializes in fragrance-free toiletries, in keeping with the prohibition on perfume.
Mohammed also sells souvenirs for pilgrims to take back home with them, everything from chocolate and sweets to water from the sacred Zamzam well near the Kaaba.
Another popular item: Pain relief cream for achy joints.
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Orange County Register
Read More
‘Fiddler on the Roof’ lyricist Sheldon Harnick dies at 99
- June 26, 2023
By Mark Kennedy | Associated Press
NEW YORK — Tony- and Grammy Award-winning lyricist Sheldon Harnick, who with composer Jerry Bock made up the premier musical-theater songwriting duos of the 1950s and 1960s with shows such as “Fiddler on the Roof,” “Fiorello!” and “The Apple Tree,” has died. He was 99.
Known for his wry, subtle humor and deft wordplay, Harnick died in his sleep Friday in New York City of natural causes, said Sean Katz, Harnick’s publicist.
Broadway artists paid their respects on social media, with “Schmigadoon!” writer Cinco Paul calling him “one of the all-time great musical theater lyricists” and actor Jackie Hoffman lovingly writing: “Like all brilliant persnickety lyricists he was a pain in the tuchus.”
Bock and Harnick first hit success for the music and lyrics to “Fiorello!,” which earned them each Tonys and a rare Pulitzer Prize in 1960. In addition, Harnick was nominated for Tonys in 1967 for “The Apple Tree,” in 1971 for “The Rothschilds” and in 1994 for “Cyrano — The Musical.” But their masterpiece was “Fiddler on the Roof.”
Bock and Harnick were first introduced at a restaurant by actor Jack Cassidy after the opening-night performance of “Shangri-La,” a musical in which Harnick had helped with the lyrics. The first Harnick-Bock musical was “The Body Beautiful” in 1958.
“I think in all of the years that we worked together, I only remember one or two arguments — and those were at the beginning of the collaboration when we were still feeling each other out,” Harnick, who collaborated with Bock for 13 years, recalled in an interview with The Associated Press in 2010. “Once we got past that, he was wonderful to work with.”
They would form one of the most influential partnerships in Broadway history. Producers Robert E. Griffith and Hal Prince had liked the songs from “The Body Beautiful,” and they contracted Bock and Harnick to write the score for their next production, “Fiorello!,” a musical about the reformist mayor of New York City.
Bock and Harnick then collaborated on “Tenderloin” in 1960 and “She Loves Me” three years later. Neither was a hit — although “She Loves Me” won a Grammy for best score from a cast album — but their next one was a monster that continues to be performed worldwide: “Fiddler on the Roof.” It earned two Tony Awards in 1965.
Based on stories by Sholom Aleichem that were adapted into a libretto by Stein, “Fiddler” dealt with the experience of Eastern European Orthodox Jews in the Russian village of Anatevka in the year 1905. It starred Zero Mostel as Teyve, had an almost eight-year run and offered the world such stunning songs as “Sunrise, Sunset,” “If I Were a Rich Man” and “Matchmaker, Matchmaker.” The most recent Broadway revival starred Danny Burstein as Tevye and earned a best revival Tony nomination.
In a masterpiece of laughter and tenderness, Harnick’s lyrics were poignant and honest, as when the hero Tevye sings, “Lord who made the lion and the lamb/You decreed I should be what I am/Would it spoil some vast eternal plan/If I were a wealthy man?”
Harvey Fierstein, who played Tevye in a Broadway revival starting in 2004 said in a statement that Harnick’s “lyrics were clear and purposeful and never lapsed into cliche. You’d never catch him relying on easy rhymes or ‘lists’ to fill a musical phrase. He always sought and told the truth for the character and so made acting his songs a joy.”
Bock and Harnick next wrote the book as well as the score for “The Apple Tree,” in 1966, and the score for “The Rothschilds,” with a book by Sherman Yellen, in 1970. It was the last collaboration between the two: Bock decided that the time had come for him to be his own lyricist and he put out two experimental albums in the early 1970s.
Harnick went on to collaborate with Michel Legrand on “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg” in 1979 and a musical of “A Christmas Carol” in 1981; Mary Rodgers on a version of “Pinocchio” in 1973; Arnold Black on a musical of “The Phantom Tollbooth”; and Richard Rodgers on the score to “Rex” in 1976, a Broadway musical about Henry VIII.
He also wrote lyrics for the song “William Wants a Doll” for Marlo Thomas’ TV special “Free to Be … You and Me” and several original opera librettos, including “Captain Jinks of the Horse Marines” and “Love in Two Countries.” He won a Grammy for writing the libretto for “The Merry Widow” featuring Beverly Sills.
His work for television and film ranged from songs for the HBO animated film “The Tale of Peter Rabbit” in 1991 with music by Stephen Lawrence, to lyrics for the opening number of the 1988 Academy Awards telecast. He wrote the theme songs for two films, both with music by Cy Coleman: “The Heartbreak Kid” in 1972 and “Blame it On Rio” in 1984.
In 2014, off-Broadway’s The York Theatre Company revived some of Harnick’s early works, including “Malpractice Makes Perfect,” “Dragons” and “Tenderloin.” “She Loves Me” was last revived on Broadway in 2016 in a Tony-nominated show starring Zachary Levi.
Harnick was born and raised in Chicago and earned a bachelor’s degree in music from the Northwestern University School of Music after serving in the army during World War II. Trained in the violin, he decided to try his luck as a songwriter in New York.
Related Articles
Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked Pentagon Papers exposing Vietnam War secrets, dies at 92
Two-time Oscar winner Glenda Jackson, who mixed acting with politics, dies at 87
Roger Payne dies at 88; scientist discovered that whales can sing
Silvio Berlusconi, scandal-scarred ex-Italian leader, dies at 86
Musician George Winston dies at 73; New Age pianist sold millions of albums
His early songs included “The Ballad of the Shape of Things,” later recorded by the Kingston Trio, and the Cole Porter spoof, “Boston Beguine,” from the revue “New Faces of 1952.”
He and his wife, artist Margery Gray Harnick, had two children, Beth and Matthew, and four grandchildren. Harnick had an earlier marriage to actress Elaine May. He was a longtime member of the Dramatists Guild and Songwriters Guild.
Kristin Chenoweth, who starred in a 2006 revival of “The Apple Tree,” on Twitter called it “one of my favorite professional experiences of my career,” adding about Harnick: “I loved his musings. His writings. His soul.”
Orange County Register
Read More
Ducks goalie coach Sudarshan Maharaj diagnosed with pancreatic cancer
- June 26, 2023
Sudarshan “Sudsie” Maharaj, the Ducks’ long-time and well-respected goaltending coach, has been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, the team announced on Monday
Maharaj, 59, received the diagnosis after the conclusion of the Ducks’ regular season and has been receiving treatment and is scheduled eventually to have surgery. Following surgery, the team said that Maharaj “anticipates returning to his role with the Ducks.”
The Ducks will be bringing on an assistant goaltending coach while Maharaj continues his treatment and recovery, a hire to be made by general manager Pat Verbeek and Maharaj.
“While this has been a very difficult time, I have had amazing support from my family and the Ducks organization, especially owners Henry and Susan Samueli,” Maharaj said in a statement released by the team. “A special thanks also to Jillian Samueli for her amazing support and friendship.
“I plan on fighting this disease vigorously with the help of my tremendous doctors both in Toronto and with the Ducks. The hockey community is an amazingly supportive place, and I look forward to seeing you all soon.”
The Ducks also released a statement from owners Henry and Susan Samueli:
“We love Sudsie (Maharaj) so much! An amazing person and friend to so many in hockey. Our organization sends heartfelt support to his wife Yvonne, and daughters Alexandra and Katherine. Sudsie is bound and determined to beat this terrible disease, and we can’t wait until he does.”
Maharaj had first thought he was dealing with an ulcer.
“Basically, be aware … when we’re young we (think) we are invincible and we’re not always in tune with our own health,” he said in an interview with the Orange County Register. “It’s so important to listen to your body and make it a priority of getting yourself checked out and making sure you’re listening to your body.”
He has been with the organization since the 2013-14 season – serving as goaltending consultant with the Norfolk Admirals, which was then the Ducks’ AHL affiliate. Maharaj was named the Ducks goaltending coach, starting in the 2016-17 season. Previously, he spent eight seasons in the New York Islanders organization, starting in 2003-04.
When Maharaj joined the Islanders, he became the first goaltending coach of Indian descent to work in the NHL on a full-time basis. He was born in Trinidad and moved to Toronto at 6.
“More and more people of different cultures are getting involved in hockey in general,” he told NHL.com in 2018. “I think that’s having more of an impact rather than, say myself, being a role model.”
In March, the Ducks announced that assistant coach Mike Stothers had been diagnosed with stage 3 melanoma. Stothers underwent surgery in addition to immunotherapy and follow-up appointments have been encouraging.
Related Articles
NHL draft: What do the Ducks do at No. 2?
Honda Center turns 30: Here are the top 10 sports moments
Alexander: The Mighty Ducks remembered, decades later
What is it like to play for new Ducks coach Greg Cronin?
Game Day: Ducks get right coach for right now
Orange County Register
Read More
Can homebuilding save the US economy?
- June 26, 2023
After eight straight quarters of contraction, it looks like the slide in US residential investment may be finished. The nascent rebound now underway is set to remove a major obstacle to ongoing economic expansion.
With new construction activity at the highest level in more than a year, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow tracker is projecting residential investment added 0.1% to growth in gross domestic product in the second quarter. Though it may not sound like much, that would mark the first positive contribution since early 2021.
The new-home market has been slowly coming out of the woods as falling materials costs and vanishing logistics constraints have allowed builders to work their way through pandemic-era backlogs. Limited availability in the resale market is also pushing many prospective buyers toward new construction, helping support demand even as mortgage rates remain elevated.
“Construction was at the center of the storm for the surge in inflation and the supply-chain turmoil of 2021 and 2022,” said Bill Adams, chief economist at Comerica Bank. “The recent good news for construction makes it easier to imagine a soft or at least soft-ish landing for the economy.”
Government data out earlier this week showed new construction surged in May by the most since 2016, and applications for permits to build — a proxy of future activity — also rose. The unexpected increase sent homebuilding stocks rallying to a fresh all-time high and helped explain why builder sentiment is the most upbeat in almost a year.
A growing number of prospective buyers are opting for new homes amid limited availability in the resale market, where high mortgage rates have had a big impact. Before the pandemic, existing properties made up about 90% of all homes for sale — a number that as of April was closer to 70%.
It hinges on the outlook for monetary policy. The Fed has already raised its benchmark interest rate by five percentage points in a little over a year, and further increases could start to weigh on new-home construction again, said Priscilla Thiagamoorthy, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets.
“Now that the Fed has continued to signal that rate hikes are still at play, we won’t see further improvement from here,” Thiagamoorthy said. “If rates continue to rise more than one more time, that does risk the chance of a harder landing.”
Another risk is that the number of homes under construction could fall as backlogs ease and applications for permits lag the pace of housing starts. Elevated inventories of new homes could also make builders hesitant to boost output, which risks limiting upside momentum in residential investment.
“While the stock market has surged this year and the housing sector appears to have stabilized, the worst is yet to come for credit. A slowing economy will lead to increases in consumer and corporate defaults, which will tighten credit severely for the rest of the economy,” saus Bloomberg economists Anna Wong, Stuart Paul, Eliza Winger and Jonathan Church.
Still, after subtracting from growth for the longest stretch since 2005-2009, home construction is finally poised to offer the economy some breathing room at a time when other sectors are starting to cool.
Ahead of this week’s slew of housing data, Wells Fargo & Co. economists were anticipating residential investment to be a drag on GDP growth for the remainder of the year.
“Now, I would say some of the stronger-than-expected housing data means that there’s some upside risk to that forecast,” said Charles Dougherty, a senior economist at Wells Fargo. “We’re not looking for a massive run-up in new construction, but some modest pace seems very likely.”
Related Articles
No recession but sticky inflation. That’s what 71 economists predict.
Recession will cut Orange County home prices 11%, Chapman forecasts
Powell signals more rate hikes amid pressure on bank rules
Looking for a housing price crash? That’s unlikely, real estate economists say
SEC brings charges against cryptocurrency trading platform Coinbase
Orange County Register
Read More
No recession but sticky inflation. That’s what 71 economists predict.
- June 26, 2023
The US economy is now expected to narrowly dodge a recession this year but underlying inflation will be faster than previously thought, according to the latest Bloomberg monthly survey of economists.
Gross domestic product is now forecast to only contract in the final three months of the year, and it’s projected to merely stagnate in the third quarter instead of shrink, the June survey showed.
While estimates were marked up for the current quarter and next — due to stronger consumer spending and upward revisions to business investment — GDP growth is seen slightly weaker through the end of 2024.
At the same time, economists see the personal consumption expenditures price index, excluding food and energy, rising at a faster pace over the next year than they did in the May survey. That corroborates the Federal Reserve’s view as well, supporting policymakers’ assertion that another two interest-rate hikes will probably be appropriate this year.
According to the median forecast, economists see one more rate hike in the third quarter, with the federal funds rate holding in a 5.25%-5.5% range through yearend before an expected quarter-point cut in early 2024.
The survey of 71 economists from June 16-21 showed stronger views of the labor market. Forecasters mostly see increased hiring this year and next, and they also expect the unemployment rate will peak at a slightly lower level. That helps explain projections for sustained consumer spending.
The findings also support the notion that the housing market bottom has passed. While sales of previously owned homes are struggling for momentum, buyers are seeking new construction and builders have been responding to demand. Economists see that trend continuing with higher new-home sales over the next year and more housing starts.
Related Articles
Can homebuilding save the US economy?
Recession will cut Orange County home prices 11%, Chapman forecasts
Powell signals more rate hikes amid pressure on bank rules
Looking for a housing price crash? That’s unlikely, real estate economists say
SEC brings charges against cryptocurrency trading platform Coinbase
Orange County Register
Read More
Status Update: McLaren shifts supercar dealership from beach to Irvine
- June 26, 2023
McLaren Newport Beach, one of the top-selling dealerships of its kind for the supercar brand, has officially introduced a bigger retail and service facility in Irvine after 12 years at the beach.
The dealership, which had its soft opening late last year, sits on Auto Center Drive next door to Lamborghini Newport Beach in a facility that doubles the size of its previous location.
Calling Orange County “the heart of McLaren’s biggest global sales market” the dealership held a grand opening celebration on June 21. In attendance was McLaren Automotive’s Chief Executive Officer Michael Leiters and Nicolas Brown, president of McLaren Americas’ division.
The company said the Newport Beach dealership was one of the original 10 founding retailers that started selling McLaren’s MP4 12C when the supercar manufacturer first entered the market in North America in 2011.
Since then, the local dealership has sold nearly 750 McLarens, the company said. How significant is that?
“More than many countries that we operate in have sold (that many) in the same timeframe,” according to Roger Ormisher, vice president of communications for The Americas division of McLaren.
Investors and owners of the dealership include principal dealer Pietro Frigerio and Trung Nguyen, both local residents, and Robert DiStanislao, owner of the RDS Group, which operates three McLaren dealerships and is based on the East Coast.
Address: 44 Auto Center Drive, Irvine
Swim school opens its pool in Surf City
Big Blue Swim School, a swim school franchise, recently opened its first California location in Huntington Beach.
The facility offers weekly, year-round 30 to 45-minute swim lessons seven days a week for children as young as 3 months old. Level-appropriate, engaging lessons are led by professional instructors.
The Surf City location is owned by the franchise group Level 5 Swim. Olympic gold medalist swimmer Tom Dolan is the CEO of the franchise group. A second facility owned by the same group is opening later this year at the Tustin Marketplace shopping center.
Big Blue offers 90-degree water, a viewing area for family members, private changing rooms, slip-proof flooring and free Wi-Fi. A mobile app also helps customers book, schedule, track classes and the progress of each participant.
Address: 18595 Main St.
Medical spa opens in Santa Ana
Glow Up Med has opened in Santa Ana after two years of planning and preparation.
The spa offers services including Botox, fillers, painless hair removal, micro-needling, facials and more. Bianca Davila is the owner and operator. She’s enlisted the guidance of medical director and facial surgeon Taylor Pollei.
The company said services that require injections are performed by licensed nurses.
The spa’s hours are 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday and from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Fridays
For more information, go to GlowUpMedSpa.com
Address: 1951 E. Dyer Road, Unit D, Santa Ana
Hospice facility opens in Santa Ana
The VITAS Healthcare Hospice House of Orange County has opened in Santa Ana-North Tustin.
The facility provides a “comfort-focused care option” for patients nearing their end of life, the company said.
The company said its hospice facility should serve 300 seriously ill patients annually. Hospice-eligible patients include those who need acute symptom management with comprehensive and compassionate end-of-life care.
A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held on Wednesday, June 21. For more information, call 844-818-9633 go to vitas.com
Address: 18582 Vanderlip Ave.
Great Gatsby fundraiser benefits Dragon Kim
The Great Gatsby-themed Legacy Fundraiser takes place July 1 in Yorba Linda, with proceeds benefiting the Irvine-based Dragon Kim Foundation.
The nonprofit works to inspire youth to “impact their communities while discovering and pursuing their passions.”
The event takes place at 18617 Yorba Linda Blvd.
Tickets are $150 each and include food and an open bar. Poker players can register to play for $1,000 each. There will be cash prizes for winners.
For more information, contact the foundation via email at [email protected]. To buy tickets, go to dragonkimfoundation.org/donate/
Service Champions expands in Washington
Brea-based Service Champions, a provider of plumbing, heating and air conditioning services, has acquired Seatown Electric, Plumbing, Heating and Air, a family-owned home services company in the Seattle area. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The deal, the company said, will help expand Service Champions’ reach into the Pacific Northwest.
On the move
Emerald Archer is the new chief program officer at Girls Inc. of Orange County. The Santa Ana chapter of the national nonprofit has a goal of inspiring all girls to be “strong, smart, and bold.” Archer spent the last 14 years working in gender equity in higher education. Career highlights include designing a women’s and gender studies program at Mount Saint Mary’s University and developing workshops and events that advanced STEM and leadership opportunities for female students.
Jessica Cobb is the new director of philanthropy at Speech and Language Development Center in Buena Park. The nonprofit provides education and therapy services to children and adults with special needs. Cobb assumed her role in May.
Barb Krol has been appointed chief associate experience officer at Orange County’s Credit Union in Santa Ana. She will lead the human resources department as well as the learning and development team.
Milestones
Santa Ana-based Orangewood Foundation was selected as a 2023 California Nonprofit of the Year by state Sen. Thomas Umberg. The foundation was one of more than 100 nonprofits honored by their state senators and assemblymembers for outstanding contributions to local communities. Orangewood Foundation provides resources and services to youth in Orange County including groceries, hot meals, transitional housing, life skills workshops, employment leads and educational opportunities.
The Orange County Register’s 16th annual Top Workplaces program opens for nominations Sunday, May 28. (Southern California News Group)
Top Workplaces 2023 is open
The Register’s 16th annual Top Workplace is seeking nominations of Orange County’s best companies and organizations.
Any organization with 35 or more employees in Orange County is eligible to participate and includes public, private, nonprofits and government agencies.
— Participation is free.
— Nominations are due July 7, 2023
— The list of winners will be announced in late 2023
To nominate go to ocregister.com/nominate or call 714-442-2768.
Status Update is compiled from press releases by contributing writer Karen Levin and edited by Business Editor Samantha Gowen. Submit items and high-resolution photos to [email protected]. Allow at least one week for publication. Items are edited for length and clarity.
Related Articles
Status Update: Centinela Feed and Pet Supplies coming to Tustin
Status Update: Golden State Foods names new president after death of CEO
Status Update: VCA opens its first pet urgent care in Orange County
Status Update: IRS warns businesses to avoid employee tax credit scam
Orange County Register
Read MoreNews
- ASK IRA: Have Heat, Pat Riley been caught adrift amid NBA free agency?
- Dodgers rally against Cubs again to make a winner of Clayton Kershaw
- Clippers impress in Summer League-opening victory
- Anthony Rizzo back in lineup after four-game absence
- New acquisition Claire Emslie scores winning goal for Angel City over San Diego Wave FC
- Hermosa Beach Open: Chase Budinger settling into rhythm with Olympics in mind
- Yankees lose 10th-inning head-slapper to Red Sox, 6-5
- Dodgers remain committed to Dustin May returning as starter
- Mets win with circus walk-off in 10th inning on Keith Hernandez Day
- Mission Viejo football storms to title in the Battle at the Beach passing tournament