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    Power of One: Disneyland Resort Hotels Cast Member Charts Her Own Course with COMPASS
    • May 1, 2023

    As part of the Disney100 Celebration at Disneyland Resort and “World of Color – ONE” spectacular, we are highlighting cast members who, like our new show, exemplify how one small idea or action — like a single drop of water — can create a ripple that grows into a wave of positive change. Today, let’s meet Allie Kawamoto Choy, Experience Integration manager for Hotels of the Disneyland Resort. 

    By Lisa Greathouse

    If you take a walk around the Disneyland Resort with Allie Kawamoto Choy, be prepared to be stopped.

    A lot.

    That’s because she is one of those cast members every other cast member seems to know – and wants to chat with.

    It may be because she’s worked in both theme parks and at the Hotels of the Disneyland Resort over her 16-year career. Or it may be because she attained local celebrity status during her two years (2015-16) as a Disney Ambassador during the resort’s 60th anniversary. Or it might be that you’re likely to run into her at Disney VoluntEARS events in the community. Or maybe it’s her role as a leader in COMPASS, the Business Employee Resource Group (BERG) dedicated to advocating, celebrating and educating on behalf of the Asian American and Pacific Islander community.

    But most likely, it’s because Kawamoto has taken all of the above and woven her experience and passion with genuine kindness, creativity and a can-do spirit to connect people and create partnerships.

     

     

    Left: Allie Kawamoto served as Disney Ambassador from 2015-16 during the resort’s 60th anniversary, along with Jessica Bernard. Right: Kawamoto at a recent Disney VoluntEARS event with current Disney Ambassadors Nataly Guzman and Mark Everett King Jr. and 2017-18 Disney Ambassador Mikey Trujillo.

    Left: Allie Kawamoto served as Disney Ambassador from 2015-16 during the resort’s 60th anniversary, along with Jessica Bernard. Right: Kawamoto at a recent Disney VoluntEARS event with current Disney Ambassadors Nataly Guzman and Mark Everett King Jr. and 2017-18 Disney Ambassador Mikey Trujillo.

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    “Disney has a really special company culture, and groups like Disney VoluntEARS and COMPASS have kept me engaged as a cast member all these years,” said Kawamoto, who joined the company through the Disney College Program in 2007. In that first year, a fellow cast member invited her to attend a meeting to learn more about COMPASS, and that one event inspired Kawamoto to get involved and ultimately, to find ways to infuse her Japanese heritage with her passion for Disney.

    Since then, Kawamoto counts her work as a co-chair with COMPASS among her proudest accomplishments. One example is her collaboration with the Resort Enhancement team on the Emporium retail display windows this May and last to represent Children’s Day in celebration of Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month. Children’s Day is a public holiday in Japan, and the window display includes Japanese elements like the koinobori carp streamers (seen in top photo) to symbolize willpower and success and toys that represent other Asian and Pacific Islander cultures, as well.

    “Having a window display on Main Street, U.S.A., to honor this holiday meant the world to me and to so many fellow cast members,” she said. “Seeing a piece of your culture authentically represented in the park is so meaningful. And being able to bring my [then] 10-month-old son to see it made it even more special.”

    Kawamoto’s passion to share her heritage also comes in handy in her current role as Experience Integration manager at the three Hotels of the Disneyland Resort, where she helps to bring the themes and celebrations from the theme parks into the guest experience at the hotels. For instance, during last year’s Lunar New Year celebration at Disney California Adventure park, she worked with various partners to add Lunar New Year artwork to the hotel key card holders.

    “The work Allie has done with COMPASS and creating synergies in her own role have made a huge impact,” said Connie McCallon, Kawamoto’s leader and director of Hotel Strategy. “Her ability to forge meaningful relationships benefits the business while also supporting our cast and community.”

    Whether she is planning events at the hotels or serving as a cultural consultant, Kawamoto says that working at Disneyland Resort during the 100th anniversary celebration of The Walt Disney Company is a dream come true.

    “I’ve been a Disney fan for as long as I can remember, so to be able to work for the company during its 100th anniversary is a little surreal,” she said. “I feel incredibly fortunate.”

    ​ Orange County Register 

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    Orange County baseball stat leaders: Final 2023
    • May 1, 2023

    Support our high school sports coverage by becoming a digital subscriber. Subscribe now

    Final Orange County baseball stat leaders for the 2023 regular season

    To be included, teams must have their stats up to date on the MaxPreps.com leaderboards.

    HOME RUNS

    Name, school                                                     HR           PA           GP

    Chase Brunson, San Clemente                             7           112            28

    Lucas Marinelli, Portola                                         6             99            26

    Connor Sunderland, Fullerton                               6             99            25

    Jake Beauchaine, Capistrano Valley Christian     6            105            28

    Aidan Espinoza, Huntington Beach                      5            109            28

    Raffaele Velazquez, Huntington Beach                5            111            28

    Roman Blaser, Newport Harbor                            4             74            23

    Johnny Lopez, Canyon                                         4             84            23

    Neil Navarro, Buena Park                                     4             89            27

    Logan Kelly, Capistrano Valley Christian              4             92            26

    Gavin Grahovac, Villa Park                                   4           116             2

    Brandon Winokur, Edison                                      3             44           12

    Andrew Grove, Villa Park                                       3             94           25

    Bradley Navarro, Huntington Beach                       3            95           28

    Isaac Cadena, Valencia                                          3            96           27

    Jake Wood, San Clemente                                     3            96           28

    Nate Norman, Fullerton                                           3           97           25

    Kade Murray, Dana Hills                                          3           97           27

    Tyler Holland, Mission Viejo                                    3          101           29

    Zach Brown, Villa Park                                            3          104           28

    Josiah Hartshorn, Orange Lutheran                        3          105           28

    RUNS BATTED IN

    Name, school                                                      RBI           PA          GP

    Grady Jackson, Costa Mesa                                   35          104          26

    Connor Sunderland, Fullerton                                 32            99          25

    Rylan Morris, Sunny Hills                                        26            89          22

    Lucas Marinelli, Portola                                           26            99          26

    Sam Stute, Costa Mesa                                           24            98          25

    Brandon Tatch, Aliso Niguel                                     24          101          27

    Malachi Meni, Fullerton                                            23            91          25

    Anthony De Marco, Woodbridge                              23            99          28

    Keenan Anzai, Mission Viejo                                    23          108          29

    Peter Mellana, Sunny Hills                                       22             82         22

    Nate Norman, Fullerton                                            22             97         25

    Josiah Hartshorn, Orange Lutheran                         22           105         28

    Raffaele Velazquez, Huntington Beach                    22           111          28

    Logan Kelly, Capistrano Valley Christian                  21             92         26

    Zach Brown, Villa Park                                             21            104        28

    Wylan Rottschafer, Costa Mesa                               21            105        25

    Aidan Espinoza, Huntington Beach                          21            109        28

    RUNS

    Name, school                                                        Runs          PA          GP

    Wylan Rottschafer, Costa Mesa                                36           105          25

    Chase Brunson, San Clemente                                 32           112          28

    Connor Sunderland, Fullerton                                    31            99          25

    Sam Stute, Costa Mesa                                             29            98          25

    Omar Gutierrez, Costa Mesa                                     27            81          24

    Zach Fany, Fullerton                                                  27          101          25

    Derek Curiel, Orange Lutheran                                  27          110          28

    Chase Quezada, Woodbridge                                    26          100          28

    Brandon Abernathy, Woodbridge                               26          104          28

    Joey Sangenito, Bolsa Grande                                   25           95          23

    Gavin Grahovac, Villa Park                                         25         116          28

    EARNED-RUN AVERAGE

    Name, school                                                          ERA          IP         ER

    Griffin Naess, Laguna Beach                                    0.16        44.0         1

    Zack Marker, Edison                                                 0.71        19.2         2

    Tyler Bellerose, Huntington Beach                           0.72         29.0         3

    Matthew Viveros, La Habra                                      0.76         37.0         4

    Beau Schweitzer, Laguna Hills                                 0.83         42.1         5

    Tyler Onofre, Kennedy                                              0.83         42.0         5

    Andrew Parker, Foothill                                             0.94         59.1         8

    Justin Durby, Woodbridge                                         0.98         21.1         3

    Matt Carbajal, Fullerton                                             0.99         49.1         7

    Jared Day, La Habra                                                 1.01          48.1         7

    Matthew Kuromoto, Woodbridge                              1.03          61.1         9

    Andrew Grove, Villa Park                                         1.06          26.1          4

    Cohen Gomez, Canyon                                            1.08          39.0          6

    Hunter Long, Capistrano Valley Christian                 1.10          51.0          8

    Mike Erspamer, San Clemente                                  1.11         44.0           7

    STRIKEOUTS

    Name, school                                                          K              BF             IP

    Hunterr Long, Capistrano Valley Christian              87            204           51.0

    Brandon Luu, Villa Park                                           78           221           53.1

    Landon Martin, Sonora                                            71           287           66.1

    Kyler FitzPatrick, Laguna Hills                                 70           227           57.1

    Dominic Viglione, Newport Harbor                           69           231           51.1

    Will Clark, Costa Mesa                                             69           256          61.1

    Andrew Vega, Bolsa Grande                                    68           226          50.2

    Michael Joyce, Costa Mesa                                     67           264          59.0

    Joon Lee, Irvine                                                        65          258           61.2

    Shea Blanchard, Laguna Beach                               62          196           48.2

    Carson Lane, Huntington Beach                               61         200            44.1

    Matthew Kuromoto, Woodbridge                              59          243            61.1

    Cooper Berger, University                                        58          213            55.0

    Austen Barnett, University                                        57          240            57.2

    Jared Day, La Habra                                                 56          192            48.1

    Jonathan Rodriguez, Valencia                                  56          193            37.1

     

     

     

    ​ Orange County Register 

    Read More
    UCLA spring football energy is proving contagious
    • May 1, 2023

    LOS ANGELES — Throughout spring football practices, UCLA’s defensive players have boasted about their ability to play with energy. They’ve had catchphrases like, “The more tired we get, the more ‘lit’ we get,” and they practice with bravado during team periods.

    The mood is infectious among the defense, but it benefits the offense, too.

    “They’re gonna challenge you every day, but also it’s going to be competitive and we came here to strive to get better,” receiver Kam Brown said. “You really can’t take a break for the defense we already know they’re going to come with that energy every day, so we’ve got to come right back with it.”

    Monday marked the start of the final week of spring practices. Players came out in helmets and shoulder pads and practice ended a half hour earlier than usual as recovery becomes the focus for the final days of spring.

    Practice was just long enough to show the offense’s compete level against the defense. Quarterback Dante Moore, who is a contender for a starting job, hit Braden Pegan with roughly a 40-yard pass during a 7-on-7 drill.

    “We were a big running team last year,” Pegan said. “We did throw the ball a lot, but I think this year we’re going to be a big-throwing, deep-threat kind of team. So I think I’m really excited about that.”

    Receiver Logan Loya also made a diving catch on a pass from Ethan Garbers in an 11-on-11 live period during Monday morning’s practice and Jeremiah McClure hauled in a 20-yard pass from Collin Schlee.

    The Bruins lost their two top receivers of last season to graduation — Jake Bobo led with 817 yards and seven touchdowns and Kazmeir Allen was next with 403 yards and two touchdowns.

    Their departure leaves room for experienced players like Brown, who ranked third on the team last season with 362 receiving yards in his redshirt-junior campaign. Transfers J.Michael Sturdivant (Cal) and Kyle Ford (USC) will battle for playing time as well as developing talent like Pegan, who is entering his sophomore season after getting into four games as a freshman.

    The depth that’s building in the receiver room gives players almost as much energy as going against the Bruins defense does.

    “I’m excited for it,” Brown said. “The more playmakers you can have on the field, that makes everybody’s job easier. It’ll make my job easier, their job easier, everybody and to work collectively as a unit and get everybody on the same page is something that every football player loves.”

    Receivers value their position coach

    Jerry Neuheisel is in his third season as the wide receivers coach, and players are reaping benefits from working with him.

    Neuheisel is one of the youngest people on the coaching staff as a 2016 graduate of UCLA, where he was a backup quarterback and even earned the Charles Pike Memorial Award for Outstanding Scout Team Player his freshman year.

    “He tells us what the quarterback sees,” Brown said, “because a lot of times, we may see it from our point of view, but coming from the guy who throws the ball out there and what he’s looking for, he gives us great pointers all the time.”

    Last season, UCLA’s offense threw for a total of 3,463 yards and 29 touchdowns and averaged over 500 yards of total offense for the first time.

    Back on the field with the receivers this spring, Neuheisel looks and sounds like a quarterback when he coaches, throwing tight spirals and speaking with a firm and quick cadence.

    “He’ll throw deep balls and he’ll drop it in,” Pegan said with a laugh.

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    ​ Orange County Register 

    Read More
    Kings’ playoff exit hurt more because team was so close
    • May 1, 2023

    EL SEGUNDO — As the NHL’s first round crashed to a close with a Game 7 in New Jersey on Monday, the Kings were left to lick their wounds from a fierce battle with the Edmonton Oilers, who eliminated the black and silver in six games on Saturday.

    While it’s a familiar feeling – they were eliminated by Edmonton in seven games during last year’s opening round – the Kings spoke of novel coalescence and a bright future at Sunday’s exit interviews, while still healing from a series that featured a pair of overtime games and two one-goal games.

    “In the group, this year, the camaraderie in the room was amazing. Every guy would do anything for each other, and you’d feel that every day in practice and every day in games,” center Blake Lizotte said. “When you have a team that’s like that, that has a special bond away from the rink, these losses sting quite a bit more when you’d give the shirt off your back for everyone in the room.”

    Lizottte has been a career King, but even newly acquired winger and top point-per-game scorer Kevin Fiala felt the love, despite being disappointed with the Kings’ finish.

    “It felt like home, quickly. I’d been in Nashville and Minnesota longer than here, and I feel like I’ve been here the longest,” Fiala said.

    Here is a quick glance at the pluses and minuses of what was, by points total, the second-best regular-season in the 55-year history of the franchise.

    Special Teams

    Plus: The power-play

    Minus: The penalty kill

    Not only did the Kings make a historic about-face on the power play, which General Manager Rob Blake attributed to a combination of improved personnel and competition between units, they carried their success into the postseason, connecting on one third of their opportunities.

    Over a full season, that would have been the best mark in NHL history, edging out this year’s Oilers. Edmonton set the record during the campaign and then exploded for a 57.1% mark in the postseason, which once again exposed a Kings penalty kill that struggled through the bulk of the season.

    “Power play was a difference, a huge turning point for us this year, we gained a lot of momentum and we won a lot of games like that, too,” center Phillip Danault said. “We needed to be better on the kill, that was obvious.”

    Offense

    Plus: Production

    Minus: Timely scoring

    Where two years ago the Kings could barely muster one scoring line, flanking Kopitar with an aging Dustin Brown and utility man Alex Iafallo, last year they cobbled together a pace-generating second line and this year they often featured their leading scorer and a 20-plus-goal-scorer, Gabe Vilardi, on their third line. The results were tangible as the Kings finally reified the vision of Coach Todd McLellan for a high-tempo, high-chance, high-possession and, now, high-scoring system, all while playing a stingy 1-3-1 trap that flummoxed many attacks.

    Yet in the playoffs, the Kings scored their two overtime winners following Edmonton penalties and, in one case, because of an alleged missed high stick as well. After four hermetically sealed affairs to begin the series, Edmonton came up with a decisive win in Game 5 and a late tiebreaker in Game 6 that sealed the Kings’ fate. While the Kings had dominated five-on-five play and mostly been burned by two of the three Edmonton 100-point scorers this season as well as its power play, Game 6 saw Edmonton accumulate four even-strength goals, two of which came from their fourth line.

    “We were flat-out a better team this year than last year. We were because of personnel, the players that we had available to us and we improved in a lot of areas. But, to my point, so was Edmonton,” said McLellan, who coached Edmonton for more than three seasons.

    Defense

    Plus: Depth

    Minus: Decisions

    The Kings’ went from lacking a serviceable NHL defense corps to burgeoning with options in short order, but they’ve still got pieces of their blue-line puzzle strewn about the dinner table. Sean Durzi played a significant and clear-cut role quarterbacking the second power-play unit and also showed growth as a penalty killer. But his five-on-five role saw him shift sides, change partners and ultimately drop to the third pairing once Vladislav Gavrikov was acquired from Columbus. Durzi appreciated the experience but seemed to hint at a desire for more consistency, much as Fiala did when asked about his linemates.

    Though veteran Alex Edler seems like a long shot to return to the Kings and Sean Walker expressed doubts about his being a King next year, despite being under contract, that’s not the extent of their moving pieces on defense. They would like to re-sign Gavrikov, an unrestricted free agent to be, give Durzi a solid evaluation in his upcoming contract year and also integrate some prospects. Jordan Spence mostly bided his time in Ontario this year and prospect Brandt Clarke returned to the OHL to put up nearly two points a game against his peers. Blake said, in so many words, that he’d penciled Clarke into the Kings’ lineup. McLellan added that, much as they’d done with changing some of captain Anze Kopitar’s responsibilities to reduce fatigue, he was ruminating on how to ease some pressure off top defenseman Drew Doughty.

    “We’ll have to look at managing him a little bit,” McLellan said. “That’s probably a fight we’ll have because he wants to play 26 minutes a night and he’s very capable of it, but we need to get (80-plus) games out of him.”

    Goaltending

    Plus: It made it through the season

    Minus: Who knows what’s next?

    In a puzzling move, former GM Dean Lombardi invested the first pick the Kings had in the 2011 draft into Christopher Gibson, when the organization had a budding Jonathan Quick and the tantalizing prospect Jonathan Bernier. Since that point, the Kings haven’t invested anything higher than a third-round pick into a goalie and their limited commitments have been even more fruitless than they have been sparing.

    This season, they cycled through Cal Petersen, who was sent to the minors and fared worse than expected there; Quick, whose potential hall-of-fame tenure came to an abrupt and unceremonious end at the trade deadline; Pheonix Copley, who’d last seen regular NHL duty in 2019; and Joonas Korpisalo, the impending UFA who started all six playoff games.

    Copley is signed for next season at a modest cap hit, while Petersen’s carries a whopping $5 million annual average value. On a day where both goalies drew a little attention and praise, there was also talk of re-signing Korpisalo, meaning any quotes might only add to the confusion in net.

    Coaching, health and intangibles

    Though leading postseason scorer and top goal-scorer Adrian Kempe said the series might have been different if the Kings were fully healthy (three important forwards missed at least one game), they lost significantly fewer man games to injury this season and had their full array of players available for Game 6.

    McLellan will return for the fifth season of his five-year contract, and one could expect assistants Jim Hiller and Trent Yawney back. McLellan and Edmonton coach Jay Woodcroft, who remained the closest of friends, paused their relationship again during the series but resumed it immediately at the series’ conclusion. Woodcroft’s theatrics, including requesting a podium rather than a table for the postgame news conference and some braggadocious moments behind said podium, receded as he became highly complimentary of McLellan and his staff following Game 6. McLellan returned the favor Sunday but, in the NHL as in all sports, the players win championships. With Quick gone, Doughty and Kopitar are the last vestiges of the only two Stanley Cups in Kings lore, from 2012 and 2014, as other big-game performers like Kempe and Danault hope to add to the organization’s legacy.

    “I’ve seen this group mature now,” Kopitar said. “I think this window, if we’re not quite in there yet, is approaching. We’re taking strides in the right direction, the group is getting tight and I’ve seen that before.”

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    ​ Orange County Register 

    Read More
    Swanson: Lakers’ Rob Pelinka defied critics and built a contender
    • May 1, 2023

    Rob Pelinka might make a pretty successful Realtor if he weren’t already a good basketball general manager.

    Yes, you read that right.

    What did Willy Shakespeare write? Worms turn, man.

    O we of little faith: The seventh-seeded Lakers have just easily disposed of the second-seeded Memphis Grizzlies in their first-round Western Conference playoff series.

    The Lakers became the second team since the play-in tournament was instituted in 2020 to advance in the playoffs, along with the eighth-seeded Miami Heat, who also just did it. And the second team in the NBA’s broader history to start 2-10 or worse and recover to win a postseason series, according to ESPN.

    They’ve set up a monumental second-round showdown with the Golden State Warriors, seeded sixth and defending their fourth championship in eight years.

    These Lakers, down-on-their-luck protagonists since winning title No. 17 in 2020, are looking again like viable contenders for the crown – a plot twist so contrived it would be panned mercilessly if this wasn’t sports, if it wasn’t the best reality show on TV.

    To get here, Pelinka, the Lakers’ director of casting, spent months defying skeptics and eschewing experts. Just continually making assurances, and assuaging no one.

    He didn’t ever blink, even with an avalanche of criticism – from you, from me, coming even from inside the house – gaining perilously on where he stood.

    There was Pelinka’s proclamation at media day, when the Lakers introduced a head-scratcher of a roster that wasn’t fit to fix last season’s regular-season failure: “We will do everything we can, picks included, to make deals that give us a chance to help LeBron (James) get to the end.”

    And then months later, picks still untouched, his rather bold assertion – “the calculus for the Lakers is to win a championship or not” – as he discussed potential moves while introducing Rui Hachimura.

    That was on Jan. 24, when the Lakers were in 13th place and 22-26.

    But Hachimura, you remember, was the first domino in a succession of deadline-period deals that would scuttle an unhappy Russell Westbrook and his $47 million salary, as well as a few other expendable guys.

    That brought back guard D’Angelo Russell and brought aboard defensive wing Jarred Vanderbilt and shooting guard Malik Beasley, quality role players who immediately infused the Lakers’ roster with length and youth and some shooting – the necessary ingredients to pair with James, as everyone knows.

    So the Lakers’ future, at least, looked not as bleak – especially because Pelinka pulled it all off without trading the Two Picks the public had been offering up on his behalf since the offseason.

    He held onto the 2029 first-round pick, and not only that, arranged for the 2027 first-round pick he relinquished to be top-four protected. That is to say: It stays with the Lakers if they’re drafting in the top four – and, moreover, conveys to a second-round pick if the Lakers are, in fact, in the top four.

    Good deals.

    Doing trades is a little bit like the L.A. house market in that you can’t buy houses that aren’t listed,” said Pelinka, a man of many metaphors. “Ultimately sellers will determine if they want to sell a house or not, and which buyers get them. But the last thing you want to do in the housing market is overpay, or spend all your effort and energy trying to buy a house that someone doesn’t want to sell.”

    Location, location, location, but what about timing, the everything of it?

    James is 38, and playing in his 20th NBA season. Anthony Davis is 30 and oft-injured.

    And as of the Feb. 9 trade deadline, the Lakers were three games behind Portland for the 10th and final play-in spot. They’d essentially have just 26 games and scant practice time to incorporate five new players, also including center Mo Bamba.

    So better next year. But still. A shame, no? To have squandered this season of the Lakers’ star pairing?

    Not to Pelinka. The Lakers’ to-win-a-championship-or-not architect insisted the deals “set us up for hopefully a productive run now.”

    Now?

    Now.

    Remember, in 2019, the summer when Kawhi Leonard spurned the Lakers in free agency, choosing the Clippers instead? How, instead of being able to put a three-star super-squad on the court, Pelinka cobbled together a team of role players long on length or shot-making or defensive skill to complement James and Davis?

    Remember what we eventually watched go down on TV that season, in a bubble, far, far away?

    Remember that championship, a pro’s title if ever there was, and how the Lakers lived happily, well, not quite ever after … because they hadn’t found their way past the first round again until now.

    I don’t know basketball. pic.twitter.com/8YEACyyIgl

    — Harrison Faigen (@hmfaigen) February 9, 2023

    Don’t know that the Cleanup in Aisle 5 this season warrants a writeup in apology form, necessarily, not when the mess is the result of a shoddily constructed display.

    But you do have to hand it to Pelinka – and to team owner Jeanie Buss, who kept the faith in him and even quietly extended his contract – for being a smart shopper, for resisting the pressure to pay more for players he believed would be available for a better price later.

    For successfully evaluating the landscape, and then checking all the boxes, getting the Lakers into the playoffs, where now it’ll be up to James and Davis and an improved cast to bring it home.

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    ​ Orange County Register 

    Read More
    New pediatric guidelines aim to treat obesity without stigma. Critics say they’ll make bias worse
    • May 1, 2023

    Maya Lora, Angela Roberts | Baltimore Sun

    From the time Alexandra Slick was little, she knew that when she went to the doctor’s office, at least one person was probably going to tell her that she needed to lose weight.

    She remembers sitting in an examination room as a middle schooler, watching her mother cry as a nurse practitioner asked her if she wanted her daughter to die. At that point, while Slick’s weight was considered obese by the body mass index, she already had been dieting for about four years and practiced karate every week.

    “It used to be that if I had a doctor’s appointment in the day, I wouldn’t eat or drink anything until I had gone to the doctor — whether or not that appointment was at 10 a.m. or if that appointment was at 3 p.m.,” she said. “I just wanted to be as small as I could going into the doctor’s office.”

    When Slick, a 31-year-old Baltimore resident, heard about the American Academy of Pediatrics’ new guidelines for treating childhood and adolescent obesity, she shuddered.

    The guidelines, released in January by the country’s leading pediatricians group, advise primary care doctors to offer families a variety of treatments early for childhood obesity. “Watchful waiting” to see if children with obesity developed into average weight adults — the group’s previous recommendation — would no longer cut it.

    The guidelines became an immediate subject of controversy, triggering backlash from nutritionists, eating disorder clinicians and people like Slick, who know what it’s like to live in a larger body.

    They worry a focus on weight loss will trigger or worsen disordered eating in children with larger bodies, exacerbate weight stigma in doctor’s offices and lead physicians to overlook the diets and exercise routines of children whose weights are — according to the body mass index — average or low.

    Especially controversial was a guideline that doctors consider prescribing weight loss drugs to children as young as 12 and referring 13-year-olds to be evaluated for weight loss surgery.

    The guidelines use the body mass index, or BMI, a measure calculated from a patient’s weight and height. While controversial, BMI remains widely used by physicians to determine whether a patients’ weight is healthy.

    Supporters of the guidelines say surgical treatment options wouldn’t be offered in isolation. The recommendations also emphasize the need for ongoing lifestyle and behavioral treatments, such as proper nutrition and physical activity.

    “This is nothing that pediatricians can or should force on families,” said Dr. Sarah Hampl, a lead author of the guidelines and a pediatrician in Kansas City, Missouri.

    Research dating back decades has documented weight stigma among medical professionals. Primary care physicians may be less likely to show empathy, concern and understanding to patients whose bodies the doctors consider overweight or obese, while such patients have reported being mis-diagnosed and may even avoid going to a doctor.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics’ guidelines explicitly recognize the role weight stigma historically has played in medical care.

    At Kennedy Krieger Institute’s Weight Management Program, patients work with their doctors to create unique treatment plans, said Dr. Anton Dietzen, a pediatric physiatrist with the institute’s Fit and Healthy Clinic.

    “Every one of these cases is so different,” Dietzen said. “There are so many complex biopsychosocial issues going on — a lot of multigenerational households, and parents working two jobs, and issues of food insecurity, and patients who are eating two of their three meals a day at school.”

    But no matter the circumstance, Dietzen said, it’s important to offer early and intensive treatment for childhood obesity.

    The condition is a chronic disease, and its effects pile up over time, he said. The longer a child’s weight is elevated, the more likely it is they’ll develop serious diseases like cardiovascular health problems and Type 2 diabetes, he said.

    Colleen Schreyer, an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine who serves as the director of clinical research for the Johns Hopkins Eating Disorders program, has complicated feelings about the guidelines.

    “I see the need for treatment of obesity,” Schreyer said. “I also think we need to be thoughtful about how we implement those treatment interventions to prevent the onset of disordered eating.”

    Some researchers say people whose weights are considered obese by the BMI can still be healthy. But Schreyer said patients with a BMI above 30 are more likely to have conditions such as high blood pressure, elevated cholesterol levels, chronic pain and limited mobility.

    Schreyer said bariatric surgery can alleviate some of those conditions. She said before adolescents undergo surgery at Johns Hopkins, they receive six months of a behavioral weight loss intervention and meet for six months with a psychologist to identify and treat mental health concerns such as eating disorders, depression and anxiety. Hopkins offers the surgery to adolescents as young as 16.

    The guidelines recommend that doctors consider referring children to be evaluated for the surgery if their weight is 120% above the 95th percentile, according to the BMI. Schreyer said her typical adolescent patient weighs well above the 99th percentile for BMI — some around 400 pounds — and typically have other medical issues like high blood pressure and limited mobility.

    Deborah Kauffmann is a nutrition counselor who practices a non-dieting approach to weight management and is the former director of nutrition services at The Center for Eating Disorders in Towson. She said the BMI is an inaccurate measure of health.

    “Many people are born with a high number of fat cells and that doesn’t determine health,” Kauffmann said. “Even if the BMI did account for body composition, it would still be pretty meaningless and not be an indicator for your health in any way.”

    Dietzen said BMI is a useful tool when it comes to screening patients for potential weight management intervention, but doesn’t capture the complete picture.

    “Just like anything in medicine, you have to look at the individual and not the numbers,” he said.

    Kauffmann strongly objected to the guidelines’ suggestion of considering weight loss surgery consultation for teenagers as young as 13. She said bariatric surgery comes with short and long-term complications, which she’s seen in patients she’s worked with after surgery who have digestive and nutritional issues.

    Schreyer defended weight loss surgery as a long-term solution. One option involves removing up to 80% of a patient’s stomach, allowing them to feel full after eating significantly less food.

    “We know that 95% of people who start a behavioral weight loss intervention will regain the majority of their weight,” Schreyer said. “Around 60-65% of patients who undergo bariatric surgery keep their weight off five to 10 years later.”

    A bigger issue with the guidelines, Kauffman said, is that they treat obesity alone as an elevated health risk. Instead, Kauffman said, physicians need to pay attention to sudden, drastic weight loss or gain, which could be indicative of issues such as eating disorders or insulin resistance.

    “To assume that a child isn’t healthy because of a higher weight is just wrong,” Kauffmann said. “There’s no way around it — scientifically and morally, it’s wrong.”

    Jane Zeltser, who works at the Eating Recovery Center, has struggled with eating disorders herself. (Karl Merton Ferron/TNS/Baltimore Sun)

    Jane Zeltser, the practice manager for the Eating Recovery Center’s east region, said weight loss surgery is like “butchering” children “just so they can fit a mold of looking a certain way.”

    Still, Zeltser, 38, said that when she was a teenager struggling with an eating disorder, she would have jumped at the suggestion.

    “I would have done anything and everything to make myself smaller,” Zeltser said.

    At 4 years old, Zeltser immigrated with her family from what is now Kyiv, Ukraine. She said that while she couldn’t control her secondhand clothing or her accent, she could reject her hometown foods that set her apart from other students.

    By the time she got to high school, that restriction morphed with a desire to occupy a smaller body, leading Zeltser to take weight loss pills. She experienced worrying symptoms: an elevated heart rate, insomnia, headaches and even hallucinations.

    But because Zeltser never fell into the “underweight” category, help was hard to come by, especially from Zeltser’s pediatrician.

    “He would say, ‘Well, you’re in the 75th percentile. So actually maybe you could stand to lose some weight,’” Zeltser said. “I was hospitalized because of the effects of these diet pills on my body.”

    According to the National Association of Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders, fewer than 6% of people with eating disorders are medically diagnosed as underweight.

    Hampl said the American Academy of Pediatrics is working with eating disorder organizations to develop better tools to help doctors check their patients for the warnings signs of disordered eating, regardless of their weight.

    Research shows that kids who try to lose weight through fad diets are more likely to have an eating disorder, Hampl said. But kids who have a caring medical provider trying to help them “achieve a healthier weight” through a structured program are less likely to develop such disorders, she added.

    “There’s really no benefit in trying to pit the eating disorders community against the weight management community. That’s really counterproductive,” Hampl said. “Both of these issues are highly stigmatized. They’re often interrelated.”

    Schreyer said that, in her experience, obesity specialists are not primarily interested in making their patients skinnier.

    But Zeltser said her pediatrician constantly told her to eat less.

    “He fueled my eating disorder,” Zeltser said.

    Zeltser said she was sick to her stomach when she read the pediatricians’ new guidelines.

    “Children should be able to be children. And I feel like these guidelines are taking away from their childhood,” Zeltser said. “I didn’t even have a childhood because of my eating disorder.”

    ©2023 Baltimore Sun. Visit baltimoresun.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

    ​ Orange County Register 

    Read More
    CIF-SS baseball polls: Final 2023
    • May 1, 2023

    The final CIF-SS baseball polls of 2023, released Monday, May 1

    CIF-SS BASEBALL POLLS

    (Selected by the CIF-SS Baseball Committee)

    DIVISION 1

    1. Notre Dame/Sherman Oaks

    2. Santa Margarita

    3. Huntington Beach

    4. JSerra

    5. Cypress

    6. Harvard-Westlake

    7. La Mirada

    8. Corona

    9. San Dimas

    10. Pacifica/Garden Grove

    DIVISION 2

    1. Aquinas

    2. South Hills

    3. Gahr

    4. Mater Dei

    5. Crespi

    6. Vista Murrieta

    7. West Ranch

    8. Quartz Hill

    9. Crescenta Valley

    10. Tesoro

    DIVISION 3

    1. La Serna

    2. Valencia

    3. San Marcos

    4. Long Beach Poly

    5. Centennial/Corona

    6. Summit

    7. Riverside Poly

    8. Aliso Niguel

    9. Newbury Park

    10 Highland

    DIVISION 4

    1. Crean Lutheran

    2. Linfield Christian

    3. Northwood

    4. La Habra

    5. Arrowhead Christian

    6. Glendora

    7. Santa Barbara

    8. Elsinore

    9. El Rancho

    10. Brea Olinda

    DIVISION 5

    1. Bishop Montgomery

    2. Shadow Hills

    3. Peninsula

    4. Apple Valley

    5. Windward

    6. Estancia

    7. Savanna

    8. Marshall

    9. Montebello

    10. St. Anthony

    DIVISION 6

    1. Bloomington

    2. Campbell Hall

    3. Norwalk

    4. Mayfair

    5. Castaic

    6. Hesperia Christian

    7. Xavier Prep

    8. Costa Mesa

    9. Riverside Prep

    10. Lakeside

    DIVISION 7

    1. Ganesha

    2. St. Genevieve

    3. Banning

    4. Brentwood

    5. Leuzinger

    6. Calvary Chapel/Downey

    7. Coast Union

    8. Fontana

    9. Newbury Park Adventist

    10. Artesia

     

     

    ​ Orange County Register 

    Read More
    Stagecoach 2023: Our 50 best photos from the country music festival
    • May 1, 2023

    The 15th annual Stagecoach Country Music Festival in Indio was certainly a memorable one.

    It was the hottest installment of the festival weather wise that our crew can recall, with temperatures staying about about 103-105 throughout the three-day weekend on April 28-30. The sun showed no mercy and absolutely cooked the fans that came out for early sets by acts like Priscilla Block, Corey Kent, Lily Rose, Flamin’ Groovies, Nikki Lane, Drake Milligan, Luke Grimes, Sierra Ferrell and more.

    It cooled off in time for the top-tier acts on the Mane Stage, Palomino and the Honky Tonk each evening including Luke Bryan, Jon Pardi, ZZ Top, Melissa Etheridge and Girl Talk on Friday night; Kane Brown, Old Dominion, Bryan Adams, Marty Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives and Dillon Francis on Saturday; and Chris Stapleton, Brooks & Dunn, Tyler Childers, Turnpike Troubadours and Los Frequencies on Sunday.

    Mikenna Legerski, of Corona, center right, and David Schlapkohl, of Riverside, dance in the Honky Tonk during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Country artist Elle King performs on the Mane Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    ZZ Top’s Elwood Francis performs before an overflow crowd on the Palomino Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country artist Marty Stuart and His Fabulous Superlatives perform on the Palomino Stage on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country music artist Elle King blows a kiss to the crowd in the Shein Saloon as Anneliese King, no relation, 5, from Burbank, looks on on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Members of Old Dominon perform on the Mane Stage on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    A Guy Fieri assistant flips a 6 pound hamburger made from bison and elk in the Smokehouse on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons performs before an overflow crowd on the Palomin Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Brooks and Dunn perform on the Mane Stage on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Bobby and Kim Gardner, from Lake Elsinore, share a moment together as they watch and listen to country artist Parker McCollum on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Actor, and star of the televison show Yellowstone, Luke Grimes performs with his band on the Mane Stage on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country music fan Sydney Willis, from Portland, Oregon sings along to Sammy Kershaw on the Palomino Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Laird Hall, from Calgary, Alberta Canada, dances with his wife Lisa as Sammy Kershaw plays on the Palomino Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Mary Chapin Carpenter performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Country singer and Yellowstone actress Lainey Wilson reacts to a slab of grilled tomahawk steaks during a cooking demonstration in the Guy Fieri’s Smokehouse on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Ronnie Dunn and Kix Brooks of Brooks and Dunn perform on the Mane Stage on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    A country music fan reaches out as Luke Bryan performs on the Mane Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Melissa Etheridge performs to an overflow crowd on the Palomino Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    A country music fan watches as Gabby Barrett performs on the Mane Stage on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country artist Lainey Wilson perfroms on the Mane Stage on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country music fans watch as Luke Bryan performs on the Mane Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Kane Brown performs on the Mane Stage as he closes the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country music fans sing along to Old Dominion on the Mane Stage on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    A couple dances as the sun sets on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Nikki Lane performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Country music fans listen along to Kane Brown on the Mane Stage on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    A fan sits a top a persons shoulders as Melissa Etheridge performs to an overflow crowd on the Palomino Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country artist Luke Bryan performs on the Mane Stage on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Bennett Wise, from Thousand Oaks, tries to cools off under a sprinkler on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. Temperatures reached into the triple digits. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Ryan Bingham performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Gabby Barrett performs on the Mane Stage on the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Turnpike Troubadours’ Kyle Nix performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Festival goers hang out in the Spectra art installation during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Festival goers move about the ferris wheel during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    ZZ Top’s Elwood Francis, left, and Billy Gibbons performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Monica Cooper, of Los Angeles, poses for a photo in the Shein Saloon during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Festival goers walk out of the Spectra art installation during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Festival goers walk across the field as the sun sets on the last day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Fans watch as Nelly performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Nelly performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, April 29, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Kellanie Perea, of San Diego, dances in the Honky Tonk during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Trixie Mattel performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Fans watch as Trixie Mattel performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Priscilla Block performs on the Mane Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Brooks & Dunn’s Kix Brooks, left, and Ronnie Dunn perform on the Mane Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, April 30, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

    Country artist Lainey Wilson perfroms on the Mane Stage on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Country singer and Yellowstone actress Lainey Wilson along with show creator Taylor Sheridan prepare to sample a steak sandwich as they stand along side Guy Fieri in Guy Fieri’s Smokehouse on the final day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Sunday, Apr. 30, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    A country music fan cools off in a set of sprinklers on the opening day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Pole Club in Indio on Friday, Apr. 28, 2023. Temperatures at the festival reached into the triple digits Friday. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Kane Brown performs on the Mane Stage as he closes the second day of the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Saturday, Apr. 29, 2023. (Photo by Will Lester, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin/SCNG)

    Braxton Phillips holds up his mom Tino, of Roseville, as Melissa Etheridge performs on the Palomino Stage during the Stagecoach Country Music Festival at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28, 2023. (Photo by Jennifer Cappuccio Maher, Contributing Photographer)

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    There were also after-parties each evening following the Mane Stage headliners over at Late Night in Palomino.

    On Friday, drag queen, TV personality and singer-songwriter Trixie Mattel entertained the masses. Saturday, rapper Nelly drew an enormous crowd over to his turn, which featured songs like “E.I,” “Shake Ya Tail Feather,” “Air Force Ones” and he brought out Friday performer Breland to sing on “Country Grammar.” Honky Tonk curator and original Stagecoach after-party artist Diplo officially closed out the show on Sunday with a classic rock, country and EDM-filled set that fans went wild for as they danced, sang and enjoyed every last moment of Stagecoach.

     More Stagecoach Country Music Festival news

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    Stagecoach 2023: Ready to party, yet stay sober? There’s a tent for that

    Stagecoach 2023: See photos of performers and fans from Day 2

    Stagecoach 2023: Kane Brown, Bryan Adams and Nelly close out Day 2

    Stagecoach 2023: Guy Fieri, Jon Pardi toss barbecued turkey legs to hungry fans 

    Stagecoach 2023: Trixie Mattel slays Late Night in Palomino performance 

    Stagecoach 2023: See photos of performers and fans from Day 1

    Stagecoach 2023: Luke Bryan keeps fans singing, Jon Pardi gets a surprise on stage during Day 1

    Stagecoach 2023: Country music fans, performers brave the heat and cut loose during Day 1

    ​ Orange County Register 

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