Angie Orellana Hernandez is a 2023-24 reporting fellow at the Los Angeles Times. She previously worked at The Times in 2021 as an arts and entertainment intern. She graduated from USC, where she combined her passions for news media and Latin American culture by studying journalism and Spanish. While at USC, she got her start in journalism at the Daily Trojan. Prior to joining The Times, she covered entertainment, as well as human interest, legal and crime stories at E! News. Her writing can also be found in USA Today, the Boston Globe, CNN and KCRA3. She was born in Guatemala and raised in Sacramento. Outside of work, she can be found at movie theaters.
Latest From This Author
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Oct. 3, 2024
Democratic lawyer Derek Tran aims to unseat Republican Rep. Michelle Steel in the Southland district — a key race that could determine control of the U.S. House.
Oct. 3, 2024
Bob Navarro, one of the first Latino journalists to appear in Southern California airwaves, has died at 92. He was remembered as a ‘role model for integration.’
Sept. 30, 2024
Compton business owners said their parking lot was overrun by cars and chaos the day Kendrick Lamar filmed his music video for “Not Like Us,” forcing them to shut operations and lose money.
Sept. 14, 2024
Accusations from the past have resurfaced as Democrats Michelle Chambers and Laura Richardson run for state Senate District 35 on the November ballot.
Sept. 9, 2024
Federal authorities charged Lisa Jeanine Findley of Missouri with mail fraud and aggravated identity theft in connection with the scheme to auction off Elvis Presley’s Graceland mansion.
Aug. 16, 2024
California lawmakers are considering a bill to make a statue memorializing the Mexican repatriation of the 1930s, an operation that involved deporting about a million people.
Aug. 14, 2024
In the spirit of the loud, chaotic, inimitable City of Angels, here are nine fanciful ideas for making L.A. itself the star in four years’ time.
Aug. 11, 2024
The Los Angeles City Council will devote an additional $200,000 to cracking down on copper wire and telecommunications cable theft that has caused neighborhoods to go without street lightning or internet service.
Aug. 9, 2024
Council members lauded the copper wire task force for its efforts to curtail thefts that have left neighborhoods without street lighting or internet service.
July 30, 2024