Carlos De Loera is a reporter with De Los, the Los Angeles Times vertical that explores Latino culture and identity. He previously worked at The Times as a reporter with the Fast Break team, a member of the 2022-23 Los Angeles Times Fellowship class, as an editorial assistant and intern with Arts and Entertainment and at the Houston Chronicle as a features intern. De Loera is a L.A. County native and a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, where he majored in history and minored in journalism, ethics and democracy.
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Recent protests from San Diegans spotlight a growing contingent of people who are ready and willing to combat ICE agents to protect their communities.
Zoe Saldaña shared Wednesday on ‘Live With Kelly and Mark’ that she had been fighting a cold and ‘collapsed’ right after she capped off a successful awards season run with an Oscar for ‘Emilia Pérez’
Grupo Firme cancels appearance at La Onda festival, becoming latest international act to face visa issues
Grupo Firme canceled its scheduled June 1 appearance at Napa Valley’s La Onda festival after becoming the latest musical act to face visa troubles.
The director of new documentary ‘Uvalde Mom’ spoke with The Times about capturing a Texas community shaken by a mass shooting.
Longtime Houston news anchor for Fox 26 José Griñán has died at 72. In 1993, he became the first male anchor for the Fox affiliate’s morning show.
Los Tigres del Norte were honored in New York City by having a street named in their honor ahead of the band’s upcoming show at Madison Square Garden.
El Paso-born artist King Mala spoke with De Los about how Robert Eggers and Catholicism inspired her new album, ‘And You Who Drowned in the Grief of a Golden Thing.’
Grand Performances has announced its lineup for its 2025 summer concert series in downtown L.A. Artists set to perform include Adrian Quesada, Angélica Garcia, Baby Rose and Ozomatli.
Texas band Lord Buffalo canceled its upcoming European concert after drummer Yamal Said was detained by U.S. Customs and Border Protection on May 12 at Dallas Forth Worth International Airport.
The ‘Selena y Los Dinos’ documentary that premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival has been acquired by Netflix and is set for winter 2025 release.