Santa Barbara County News and Events

Audience member steps in to rescue ‘La La Land’ concert after keyboard player falls ill

Kraig Pakulski 0 3 Article rating: No rating

By Jack Guy, CNN

(CNN) — A 21-year-old university student stepped in to play piano during a performance of “La La Land in Concert” in Australia on Saturday, saving the show after the original pianist was taken ill.

Sterling Nasa was volunteered by a friend after Academy Award-winning composer Justin Hurwitz asked if there were any capable sight readers in the audience at Sydney’s Darling Harbour Theatre, CNN affiliate 7News reported.

The moment — halfway through the opening night of the show’s Sydney run — could have come straight from “La La Land,” the 2016 movie on which the concert is based, which tells the story of up-and-coming actress Mia and creatively hungry jazz musician Sebastian as they try to forge careers in Los Angeles.

Hurwitz, who won two Oscars for his score for the movie, told 7News that he had no idea what was going to happen when Nasa came on to the stage.

“Until he started playing I didn’t know how it was going to go,” he said. “Like, I was very nervous but I was trying to just, like, you know, trust it, have fun with it.”

“And as soon as he started playing, like, I was impressed,” he added.

“It’s always nice to, you know, get some applause, get some response,” Nasa told 7News on Monday.

“It’s an hour of music, you’re in an amazing orchestra with an amazing two-time Academy Award-winning conductor, so just enjoy it,” added the student, who is studying politics and international relations and also works as a bagpipes tutor, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Nasa also wrote about the experience in a post on LinkedIn on Monday.

“Crazy set of circumstances created a challenging but such a fun experience!” he said in reply to a former teacher praising his performance.

Audience member Maddie Corwin filmed the moment that Nasa took to the stage and uploaded it to her Instagram account with the caption: “The most INSANE concert experience ever last night in Sydney!! The show must go on.”

On Monday, Corwin told CNN that she had “never seen a professional production just stop and ask if anyone in the audience can step in and perform.”

“It was one of those moments where you realise that you are witnessing something completely unique,” she said, explaining that Nasa was asked to join the performance after a briefing that lasted only two or three minutes.

He “had a composure about him” and “played amazing,” added Corwin, even playing a solo at one point.

“You could really see that everyone was rooting for him,” she said.

“Everything completely flowed and meshed and you couldn’t tell really that there was any disruption,” said Corwin, who added that the episode “exemplified what ‘La La Land’ is about… artists chasing their dreams.”

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Ofertas “por tiempo limitado” y vendedores insistentes: así buscan defraudar con boletos y productos falsos para el Mundial

Kraig Pakulski 0 5 Article rating: No rating

Por Mauricio Torres, CNN en Español

“No te quedes fuera”, “Últimas piezas”, “Oferta por tiempo limitado”. Conforme se acerca el arranque del Mundial de Fútbol 2026, frases como estas comienzan a abundar más en redes sociales y páginas web de México, dicen autoridades y organizaciones civiles, quienes tienen una advertencia para las personas que lleguen a encontrarse con estos anuncios: estas ofertas muy probablemente son demasiado buenas para ser verdad.

A dos semanas de la inauguración del torneo, que se realizará el 11 de junio en la Ciudad de México, las secretarías de Seguridad federal y local prevén un aumento en los intentos de fraude con la venta de boletos y otros productos como camisetas, balones, tarjetas o paquetes conmemorativos.

En un comunicado conjunto publicado el 21 de mayo, señalaron que los defraudadores recurren a espacios patrocinados y mensajes directos para posicionarse. También advirtieron que una de sus principales estrategias es presionar a sus potenciales blancos para que acepten una supuesta oferta justo en el momento en el que la reciben.

“Los aficionados pueden ser víctimas de fraudes relacionados con la venta de artículos inexistentes o de baja calidad, e incluso de robo de datos personales e información bancaria, a través de la exigencia de pagos inmediatos mediante transferencias o métodos sin protección, lo que dificulta la recuperación del dinero”, dijeron las secretarías.

Cifras oficiales indican que el fraude es el delito más común en México. En 2024, cerró con una tasa de 7.574 casos por cada 100.000 habitantes —por encima de otros ilícitos frecuentes como el robo en la calle o en el transporte público o la extorsión—, mientras que tan solo entre enero y abril de este año se registraron 40.398 víctimas de esta actividad en el país.

Este último dato, sin embargo, no detalla cuántos de esos fraudes pudieron tener alguna relación con los preparativos para la Copa del Mundo.

El Consejo Ciudadano para la Seguridad y Justicia de la Ciudad de México, una organización no gubernamental especializada en estas materias, recientemente hizo una advertencia similar a la que plantearon las secretarías de Seguridad.

Diana Elizabeth Becerra Martínez, coordinadora jurídica de la ONG, dijo a CNN que los defraudadores buscan aprovecharse de la urgencia de los aficionados para engañarlos y obtener ganancias. Cuando “enganchan” a alguien —generalmente a través de mensajes en Facebook, Instagram o WhatsApp—, lo presionan para tratar de convencerlo de que realice el pago en ese momento, sin darle oportunidad de pensar y verificar la oferta.

Los intentos de fraude con la venta de boletos, explicó Becerra Martínez, se dan a pesar de que la FIFA ya lanzó la última fase para la compra de entradas y, aunque en esta ocasión hay un sistema de reventa oficial, mucha gente no lo sabe y puede convertirse en blanco de fraudes.

“Cuando estas personas tienen un contacto contigo, lo que van a hacer es presionarte para que tú, antes de buscar algún tipo de información, de verificar que es una oferta real, realices el depósito”, dijo la especialista.

De acuerdo con el Consejo Ciudadano, el riesgo de ser víctima de un intento de fraude no solo se extiende a los aficionados mexicanos, sino también a los extranjeros que se espera lleguen a México para alguno de los 13 partidos que se jurarán en el país: cinco en la Ciudad de México, cuatro en Guadalajara y cuatro en Monterrey.

La ONG estima también que las pérdidas econó

After almost four years away from tennis, Serena Williams is set to return to the court

Kraig Pakulski 0 2 Article rating: No rating
Serena Williams during the 2022 US Open in New York.

By Ben Church, Jill Martin, CNN

(CNN) — Tennis great Serena Williams is set to return to the court in the doubles competition at the HSBC Championships next week, Queen’s Club has confirmed.

Williams, 44, never officially announced her retirement, but it’s been almost four years since her last match. Late last year, though, the 23-time grand slam singles champion started taking steps toward a possible return to action.

“Queen’s Club feels like the perfect place to begin this next chapter,” Williams said in a statement on the Lawn Tennis Association (LTA) website. “Grass has given me some of the most meaningful moments of my career, and I’m excited to be back competing on one of the sport’s most iconic stages.”

Williams last played in 2022, when she lost in the US Open to Australia’s Ajla Tomljanović. At the time, she did not use the word “retirement,” instead saying she was “evolving away from tennis.”

The HSBC Championships are due to start in London on June 6 with women’s qualifying. The women’s main draw will then begin on June 8.

Williams is set to feature in the doubles tournament, but it’s not yet clear who her partner will be.

Hinted return

Until now, there had been no official confirmation that the American would be returning to the sport that she dominated for so many years. But there were signs.

In December 2025, her name appeared on a list on the International Tennis Integrity Agency’s (ITIA) website showing players registered in the international testing pool. The document was dated October 6, 2025.

Returning players can’t compete unless they’ve given at least six months’ written notice of their intent to return, as well as make themselves available for testing for a period of six months before competing, according to tennis anti-doping rules.

Williams, though, tried to dampen expectation at the time.

“Omg yall I’m NOT coming back,” Williams initially said on X. “This wildfire is crazy.”

On Monday, though, the 44-year-old posted what seemed like a cryptic video on her social media, which showed her walking on a tennis court before it ended with the words: “Guess everybody heard the news.”

Then, shortly after, Queen’s Club made it official, announcing she had been given a wild card entry into the doubles draw.

The grass-court tournament also serves as a build-up to Wimbledon, a place where Williams has won seven singles, six doubles and one mixed-doubles title. It’s not yet clear whether Williams will part

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