Santa Barbara County News and Events

‘Regret is a wasted emotion’: The ‘I’ve Had It’ hosts on their 2025

Kraig Pakulski 0 95 Article rating: No rating

By Scottie Andrew, CNN

(CNN) — In 2025, despondent and angry Democrats wanted to hear from likeminded pundits who wouldn’t feign politeness or objectivity. And there, waiting for them, were Jennifer Welch and Angie “Pumps” Sullivan, co-hosts of the political, profane podcast “I’ve Had It.”

Welch and Sullivan, formerly an interior designer and attorney, respectively, are best friends who, in their own words, love to “b*tch to one another.” (Fans first met the prickly pair on the 2017 Bravo series “Sweet Home Oklahoma.”) Their podcast, launched in 2022, started as an extension of their treasured venting sessions, focused on trivial complaints –– one of their first episodes was called “Toddlers Are A**holes.” But the shadow of the second Trump era kept creeping into their rants before finally engulfing the show.

“We should be on here talking about petty grievances,” Welch said on an August episode. “Instead we have to talk about this fat, fascist f**k who’s ruining everything for everybody, even for his own supporters.”

Welch and Sullivan’s readiness to rail against the president, patriarchy and social ills — they often refer to the commander-in-chief as “Cankles McTaco Tits,” and his supporters as “big titty babies –– turned the pair into formidable forces in Democratic politics. But they’ve taken the party to task, too, grilling politicians like New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker.

“When you did your 25-hour speech, I was like, ‘Go Cory, I love this, that is amazing,’” Welch told Booker in an October interview. “And then there’s a photoshoot with you with Benjamin Netanyahu. I was like, ‘What in the actual f**k? Like, how can he do that?’ It was heartbreaking. I felt betrayed.”

Level-heads, listen elsewhere: As the title suggests, Welch and Sullivan are fed-up and fuming. That’s why listeners love it –– here are two women who love their country and aren’t afraid to name and shame people. Their critiques are unvarnished and often darkly funny. With Welch and Sullivan, there’s catharsis in commiserating.

What was the most memorable moment from this year?

Jennifer Welch: Sadly, when Donald Trump was inaugurated to his second term, and he predicted that the crowd size was going to be so small that he moved the inauguration inside. And it was in that moment that I realized that this is going to be the same sh*t, different day. It’s going to be the same government for fragile ego, with more corruption, more lies, more BS than before. And I have to say that Trump 2.0 has exceeded my expectations in the corruption and failure that I anticipated that it would be.

Angie “Pumps” Sullivan: No Kings rally in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, June 14. I was so surprised so many thousands of people attended in my very red state. It was the first time since the November election results I felt optimistic. Trump’s birthday parade being a total disaster later that same day was chef’s kiss.

Which of your dreams came true this year?

Welch: I moved to New York City. I love OKC, and it will always be home, however, I often felt like the skunk at the garden party. Being a progressive atheist in the heart of the Bible Belt can be exhausting. I longed to live in a diverse, walkable city, and after my youngest son fled the nest for USC, the opportunity was ripe to reinvent the narrative that “empty nests can be depressing.” Living in New York has exceeded all expectations and I love it.

Sulli

EE.UU. pausa la “lotería de visas” que permite a inmigrantes obtener green cards

Kraig Pakulski 0 75 Article rating: No rating

Por Xiaoqian Lin, CNN

La agencia de inmigración de Estados Unidos recibió la orden de suspender su programa de visas de diversidad (DV1), conocido popularmente como “lotería de visas”, después de que se descubriera que el sospechoso del tiroteo en la Universidad de Brown había ingresado al país a través del mismo, declaró la secretaria de Seguridad Nacional, Kristi Noem.

Claudio Valente ingresó a Estados Unidos a través del programa de visas de inmigrante por lotería de diversidad en 2017 y se le otorgó una green card, dijo Noem en una publicación en X el jueves por la noche.

“Este individuo despreciable nunca debió haber sido admitido en nuestro país”, agregó.

“Por orden del presidente Trump, estoy ordenando de inmediato al USCIS que suspenda el programa DV1 para garantizar que ningún estadounidense más resulte perjudicado por este programa desastroso”, agregó.

Valente, el sospechoso fallecido, era un exalumno de la Universidad de Brown de 48 años de nacionalidad portuguesa.

Según el sitio web del Departamento de Estado, el programa de visas de diversidad permite que hasta 55.000 inmigrantes ingresen a Estados Unidos cada año provenientes de países con bajas tasas de inmigración.

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™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

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Onshore flow returns, cool and rainy next week

Kraig Pakulski 0 72 Article rating: No rating

SANTA BARBARA, Calif.- High pressure begins to move South today, giving the ultimate Christmas gift of cooler temperatures for Christmas. Mostly clear skies prevail to start Friday and by Friday evening marine layer is expected to build in.

Temperatures will be in the 70s for the valleys and interior areas, high 60s to low 70s for the coasts. As temperatures cool, the region still sits above average for this time of year. Clouds increase each day on Sunday and Monday and because of rain activity in the Pacific Northwest this weekend, remnants and dense cloud coverage will drop down, giving the chance for rain or drizzle for San Luis Obispo county on Sunday. Percentages are as low as 10% to 20%.

A strong storm system is set to arrive by Tuesday evening, bringing heavy rain Tuesday and Wednesday. Plan accordingly, especially for evening commutes and travel. The National Weather Service is predicting a strong system.

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Americans are hungry for community. So why don’t we have more European-style squares?

Kraig Pakulski 0 69 Article rating: No rating

By Jeanne Bonner, CNN

(CNN) — When Elizabeth Ruane and her family spent a semester in Lüneburg, Germany, her life revolved around Marktplatz, one of the main squares in the southern German town.

“In Marktplatz, there was this massive community market and anything you could want was there. It was a place everyone went to. You’d say, ‘Let’s meet at the market.’ There were so many ‘coming together moments’ that you don’t see very often in the United States.”

It’s a long way from “Insta-carting your groceries for the week,” added Ruane, a mother of two who lives in Olympia, Washington.

Jessica Ketcham fell in love with Place Bellecour in Lyon, France.

“You could look up and see this gorgeous cathedral up on a hill,” said Ketcham, a writing professor who taught in a semester abroad program there last year. “It was something geographically awe-inspiring, even though you were in the middle of the city.”

And there’s always something interesting going on in the place — from fire juggling to literature readings, she said.

Europe is packed with these urban oases, and along with a taste for lattes and tapas, Americans are increasingly hungry for Italian piazzas, Spanish plazas, French places, and similar squares around the globe.

But the joy of experiencing life in these public squares leaves some American travelers disappointed when they return to the States.

Lily Bennett studied with Ketcham in Lyon in 2024. She, too, swooned over the town’s main square. And when she returned to America, she found the adjustment quite jarring.

“The reverse culture shock was way more intense than the initial shock of arriving in Lyon,” said Bennett, 18. “I was excited to see my family and my dog, but after the reunion, I was struck by the isolation of cities here.”

While in Lyon, she would stop to have breakfast on her way to school, seeing dozens of people along the route.

That blissful, social morning routine is a distant memory now.

“I don’t see anyone because I get in my car and go and drive somewhere,” the University of Washington student said. “I felt pretty isolated when I came back.”

Vacation lifestyle out of reach at home

As travel abroad has become common for a wider cross-section of Americans, more people have seen what life is like with a large, walkable communal point in towns and cities around the world.

But while some American cities have European roots, most don’t have central pedestrian zones where people can gather to stroll, talk and shop.

As a 2024 Economist article ranking walkable cities noted rather acidly, anyone who prizes walkability and wants to ditch his or her car “might want to avoid North America.” The ranking was part of a study looking at global mobility, and it found that cities in the US and Canada were at the bottom for walkability because “cars are king and less than 4% of people walk to work.”

All of the cities in the top 20 were in Europe, Africa or Asia, including top-ranked Quelimane, a small seaport in Mozambique; Peja, Kosovo, which ranked second; and Utrecht in Holland, which ranked third.

Many American cities are crisscrossed by freeways, in deference to car traffic, and public transit is often starved for funding.

European-style squares, by contrast, are expanses people can walk not just to, but also through and around.

“It’s also a fact that all of these places were designed around people, rather than cars,” says architect Daniel Parolek whose firm, Opticos Design, designs walkable residential communities.

And in addition to individual piazzas, these spaces were designed with streets that link one square to another.

“Any historic city you go to in Europe – in Italy, Spain, Germany – you have a network

Trump dice que no descarta una guerra con Venezuela

Kraig Pakulski 0 64 Article rating: No rating

Por Alejandra Jaramillo, CNN

El presidente de EE.UU., Donald Trump, afirmó que no descarta la posibilidad de una guerra con Venezuela, lo que indica cómo sigue la escalada en medio de la presión militar y económica sobre el líder del país.

“No lo descarto, no”, declaró Trump en una entrevista telefónica con NBC News publicada este viernes.

La respuesta de Trump se produce después de que al menos 104 personas hayan muerto en ataques estadounidenses contra presuntos barcos cargados de drogas, lo que intensifica la campaña contra Venezuela, a la que el presidente ahora culpa de robar “petróleo, tierras y otros activos” estadounidenses.

Al ser consultado por NBC News sobre si tales acciones podrían conducir a una guerra, Trump respondió inicialmente: “No hablo de eso”.

El martes, Trump anunció que ordenaría un “bloqueo total y completo” de los petroleros sancionados que entran y salen de Venezuela. Estados Unidos incautó un petrolero frente a las costas del país la semana pasada.

Trump afirmó durante la entrevista que habrá más incautaciones de petroleros en el futuro. Al preguntársele sobre el momento oportuno, respondió: “Depende. Si son tan insensatos como para seguir navegando, terminarán navegando a uno de nuestros puertos”

El presidente también se negó a decir si derrocar al presidente Nicolás Maduro era su objetivo final, pero afirmó que el presidente de Venezuela “sabe exactamente” lo que quiere y añadió: “Él lo sabe mejor que nadie”.

Esto ocurre mientras las fuerzas estadounidenses también realizaron ayer ataques contra dos presuntos barcos narcotraficantes en el océano Pacífico oriental, en los que murieron cinco personas, según el Comando Sur de EE.UU.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2025 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Con información de Piper Hudspeth Blackburn, de CNN.

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