Santa Barbara County News and Events

Lompoc Celebrates Best Picture Winner, Partially Filmed At La Purisima

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating

LOMPOC, Calif. (KEYT) - At last night's award ceremony, the Oscar for Best Picture of the Year was awarded to film with portions partially filmed in Lompoc.

Some of the climactic scenes were filmed at La Purisima Mission.

The movie has had quite the social buzz leading up to the Oscars, as it was written nearly twenty years ago but has become sharply relevant to the world we live in now.

La Purisima Mission in Lompoc was selected for a location shoot for several scenes of this year’s Best Picture winner, One Battle After Another.

Already a popular tourist attraction on the Central Coast, La Purisima Mission has stood for over two centuries and contains a rich history.

The filmmakers wanted to capture that atmosphere, and also wanted to avoid having to film a key scene with any special effects, making La Purisima’s neighboring hills an ideal practical location.

Among six Oscars, the film won Best Picture and Best Film Editing – which went to UC Santa Barbara, graduate, Andy Jurgensen.

During the two weeks of filming in the summer of 2024, cast and crew were booked at several Lompoc hotels.

La Purisima’s visitor center is open for tours most days of the week, showcasing the rich history that goes much further than last night’s Oscar-winning film.

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Donation Drop-Off Begins at Habitat for Humanity’s New “ReStore”

Kraig Pakulski 0 25 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.  (KEYT) - Moving quickly after signing a lease, Habitat for Humanity in Southern Santa Barbara County is starting to fill what will be its new ReStore.

Beginning today, March 16th, items can be dropped off by the public to the back loading dock. There, the staff will evaluate them and get them ready for sale when the store officially opens this summer.

The donation drop off times are Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 10:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.

The store is at 400 State St. on the corner of Gutierrez with a drop off driveway in the back.

Habitat says acceptable donations include:

  • Air conditioning & heating units (working units less than 8 years old)
  • Appliances: major & small (less than 8 years old, must be uninstalled and disconnected)
  • Artificial grass
  • Dishwashers (2014 and newer)
  • Doors: exterior or interior (no flat slab or hollow doors. 24”, 28”, 30”, 32”, 36” doors only)
  • Exercise equipment (5 years or newer)
  • Flooring (min. 300 sq. ft., must be palletized and wrapped, no more than 2 ft. high)
  • Furniture (no broken or missing pieces)
  • Home Goods (must be packed into boxes)
  • Hot water heaters (2014 and newer)
  • Laminate flooring (min. 300 sq. ft., must be palletized and wrapped, no more than 2 ft. high)

Donations that are not accepted are:

  • Anything broken, damaged or missing parts
  • Box springs/ Mattresses
  • Carpet
  • Carpet padding
  • Children’s items, toys and books
  • Clothes/Shoes
  • Desks over 5 ft. long (“L” or “U” shaped)
  • Drop-in bathtubs
  • Large Entertainment Centers
  • Large office furniture (conference tables
  • Large filing cabinets, large bookcases)
  • Industrial light fixtures
  • Non-matching dining chairs
  • Paint
  • Roofing tiles
  • Scrap lumber (under 6 ft.)

Proceeds from items sold in the ReStore will go directly to support the Habitat efforts including producing, preserving, and protecting affordable ownership housing in Southern Santa Barbara County. 

For more information go to [email protected]

(More details, photos and video will be added here later today.)

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$5 Million Gift Fuels New Santa Barbara Clinics Project

Kraig Pakulski 0 18 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) - Santa Barbara Neighborhood Clinics received a major boost from the Wyatt family of Montecito.

The family contributed $5 million toward a new medical facility on the city’s Westside.

The three-story, 19,000-square-foot clinic is currently under construction and will significantly expand services for local residents who depend on the nonprofit network for care.

Once complete, the building will provide additional space for primary care, dental, and behavioral health services, helping meet growing demand from thousands of patients across the community.

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Trump’s handpicked Kennedy Center board approves two-year closure

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By Betsy Klein, CNN

(CNN) — President Donald Trump’s handpicked Kennedy Center board of trustees voted Monday to close the storied performing arts institution for two years for renovations.

The vote, the arts center said in a press release, was unanimous.

Trump announced the planned closure earlier this year. Monday’s stamp of approval from the board — which last year voted to rename the complex the Trump Kennedy Center — was widely expected and is just the latest effort to impose the president’s style and cultural tastes in the nation’s capital.

“It’s a little late for the board because we’ve already announced it,” Trump as the meeting was convening. “These are minor details, but I think everybody agrees,” he said, adding that new seating and marble for the renovation has already been purchased.

The closure, he added, “will enable us to complete the work much faster.”

Ex-officio members of the board whose position is mandated by Congress were permitted to attend the meeting at the White House but were not allowed to vote.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, a Rhode Island Democrat who serves as an ex-officio member because he is ranking member of a committee that oversees the arts center, declined to attend, saying in a statement that he refused to “serve as a prop” at the meeting, which he described as a “sham.”

Democratic Rep. Joyce Beatty of Ohio, who’s filed a lawsuit against Trump and the board, told CNN before the meeting that she planned to be “vocal.”

Part of Beatty’s complaint has been about Monday’s meeting — specifically ensuring that she and other ex-officio members would receive documents about the renovation plans beforehand and that she would be allowed to participate and vote. A federal judge ruled Saturday requiring the Trump administration to turn over relevant documents, but he did not weigh in on whether Beatty could vote. Beatty called the documents “inadequate” in a statement.

Separately, the lawsuit deals with the center’s closure more broadly. Beatty’s complaint cites sworn declarations from multiple performing arts experts who warn about major impacts to bookings, donors and staffing.

“In my professional judgment, the harms from a closure of the Kennedy Center at the scale and on the timeline announced are severe, immediate, and cannot be quickly reversed,” Deborah Borda, the president emerita of the New York Philharmoni, said in her sworn declaration.

“The visiting performers who are removed from the schedule will find alternative venues and will not return quickly. The staff who depart will be difficult to replace. The donors who redirect their giving will develop new institutional loyalties. The audiences who fall out of the habit of attending will … require years of effort and investment to recover,” added Borda, who’s overseen major renovations and construction at multiple major venues, including the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles and David Geffen Hall in New York City.

And Mallory Miller, the Kennedy Center’s former assistant manager of dance programming, described the long-cultivated relationships her former team has worked to manage with ballet companies — that she thinks could now be at risk.

The closure “will sever whatever goodwill remains and will likely be understood by those companies as a definitive rupture, not a temporary pause,” she wrote in a declaration.

During his first year back in office, Trump gutted the center’s board and installed loyalists who elected him chairman. They have reshap

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