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The Hollywood Reporter

Jan 17 2025
Magazine

The all-new Hollywood Reporter offers unprecedented access to the people, studios, networks and agencies that create the magic in Hollywood. Published weekly, the oversized format includes exceptional photography and rich features.

The Hollywood Reporter

Editors’ Letter

Let’s Go to the Movies • Seeking distraction from despair, Angelenos flocked to the sanctuary of cinemas, catapulting Los Angeles to dominate the list of the country’s five top-grossing theaters over the Jan. 10-12 weekend

‘God Bless Everyone. We’re All in Trauma’ • The wildfires demonstrate that the climate crisis is far-reaching and the new normal, even for celebrities

Film and TV Crews Reel Amid Wildfires • With thousands of crewmembers displaced by the blazes, will film and TV production keep drifting away from California?

David Lynch 1946-2025 • With such hallucinogenic masterworks as Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive, Twin Peaks and The Elephant Man, he often left more questions than answers

A Path to the 2025 Oscars? • Awards shows are in a frenzy trying to figure out how to meet this fast-changing fires moment. Here’s one solution

First Responders Get Star Treatment at Chateau Marmont

Yes, I Did Say That! • A look at who’s saying what in entertainment

This Just In: TV News Is Not Broken • The L.A. fires have put old-fashioned broadcast reportage back in the spotlight, with both national correspondents — like NBC’s Jacob Soboroff — and a slew of local newscasters proving that legacy media isn’t over just yet

Realtors to the Rescue: ‘I’m a Public Servant Now’ • L.A.’s A-list brokers are ignoring old rivalries and working round the clock to house the city’s displaced elite

The Great Escape • From Palm Springs to the Peninsula, THR looks at where Hollywood types are hunkering down to evade the flames

What Fire Wants • What has long been understood merely as a chemical reaction is perhaps best compared to another all-too-familiar scourge: a virus

How L.A. Got Hooked on Watch Duty • Amid the chaos of the blazes, the nonprofit wildfire alert app has become the city’s most trusted source of information

‘I Lost My Home in the Wildfire. This Is What I’m Holding On To’ • A THR writer on losing his abode in Altadena, a neighborhood that taught him perspective, gratitude and, most recently, that he’s not so good in a crisis: ‘I went for the first things under the flashlight’s gaze: a jar of moisturizer, a charge cord, three sweaters and a half-empty bag of dirty clothes’

Rising From the Ashes • As the fires continue to burn, Los Angeles has awoken from a week of hell to a new, uncertain reality, taking stock of what was lost, what was spared and what was learned

We Are All Los Angeles • It’s too soon to know how the Palisades — and Altadena and Malibu and the business of Hollywood itself — might recover. But what’s clear is that nothing will be as it was, and that solidarity is the only defense against the next disaster

What We Lost • A church that helped save hundreds of souls from addiction, the Wizard of Oz piano, and a Black neighborhood steeped in lore: just a few of the treasures buried in the rubble of the Palisades and Eaton fires

A Piece of Hollywood History • STARR PARODI on the Wizard of Oz piano

A Thriving Neighborhood • A Black Altadena community sees its heritage razed by the Eaton Fire

A Local Favorite • JENNIFER MEYER on The Reel Inn

An Architectural Masterpiece • JUSTIN DAVIDSON on Ray Kappe’s Keeler House

What We Saved • Industry denizens who lost homes in the fires reveal the precious, quixotic objects they grabbed in the moments before they fled

The Horses of Will Rogers State Historic Park • CHA CHA JAGO Equine...


Expand title description text
Frequency: Weekly Pages: 68 Publisher: Penske Media Corporation Edition: Jan 17 2025

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: January 17, 2025

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

Languages

English

The all-new Hollywood Reporter offers unprecedented access to the people, studios, networks and agencies that create the magic in Hollywood. Published weekly, the oversized format includes exceptional photography and rich features.

The Hollywood Reporter

Editors’ Letter

Let’s Go to the Movies • Seeking distraction from despair, Angelenos flocked to the sanctuary of cinemas, catapulting Los Angeles to dominate the list of the country’s five top-grossing theaters over the Jan. 10-12 weekend

‘God Bless Everyone. We’re All in Trauma’ • The wildfires demonstrate that the climate crisis is far-reaching and the new normal, even for celebrities

Film and TV Crews Reel Amid Wildfires • With thousands of crewmembers displaced by the blazes, will film and TV production keep drifting away from California?

David Lynch 1946-2025 • With such hallucinogenic masterworks as Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Mulholland Drive, Twin Peaks and The Elephant Man, he often left more questions than answers

A Path to the 2025 Oscars? • Awards shows are in a frenzy trying to figure out how to meet this fast-changing fires moment. Here’s one solution

First Responders Get Star Treatment at Chateau Marmont

Yes, I Did Say That! • A look at who’s saying what in entertainment

This Just In: TV News Is Not Broken • The L.A. fires have put old-fashioned broadcast reportage back in the spotlight, with both national correspondents — like NBC’s Jacob Soboroff — and a slew of local newscasters proving that legacy media isn’t over just yet

Realtors to the Rescue: ‘I’m a Public Servant Now’ • L.A.’s A-list brokers are ignoring old rivalries and working round the clock to house the city’s displaced elite

The Great Escape • From Palm Springs to the Peninsula, THR looks at where Hollywood types are hunkering down to evade the flames

What Fire Wants • What has long been understood merely as a chemical reaction is perhaps best compared to another all-too-familiar scourge: a virus

How L.A. Got Hooked on Watch Duty • Amid the chaos of the blazes, the nonprofit wildfire alert app has become the city’s most trusted source of information

‘I Lost My Home in the Wildfire. This Is What I’m Holding On To’ • A THR writer on losing his abode in Altadena, a neighborhood that taught him perspective, gratitude and, most recently, that he’s not so good in a crisis: ‘I went for the first things under the flashlight’s gaze: a jar of moisturizer, a charge cord, three sweaters and a half-empty bag of dirty clothes’

Rising From the Ashes • As the fires continue to burn, Los Angeles has awoken from a week of hell to a new, uncertain reality, taking stock of what was lost, what was spared and what was learned

We Are All Los Angeles • It’s too soon to know how the Palisades — and Altadena and Malibu and the business of Hollywood itself — might recover. But what’s clear is that nothing will be as it was, and that solidarity is the only defense against the next disaster

What We Lost • A church that helped save hundreds of souls from addiction, the Wizard of Oz piano, and a Black neighborhood steeped in lore: just a few of the treasures buried in the rubble of the Palisades and Eaton fires

A Piece of Hollywood History • STARR PARODI on the Wizard of Oz piano

A Thriving Neighborhood • A Black Altadena community sees its heritage razed by the Eaton Fire

A Local Favorite • JENNIFER MEYER on The Reel Inn

An Architectural Masterpiece • JUSTIN DAVIDSON on Ray Kappe’s Keeler House

What We Saved • Industry denizens who lost homes in the fires reveal the precious, quixotic objects they grabbed in the moments before they fled

The Horses of Will Rogers State Historic Park • CHA CHA JAGO Equine...


Expand title description text