All of the must-read news about the Golden State in one place.
Hi, I’m Mike McPhate, a former California correspondent for the New York Times. I survey more than 100 news and social media sites daily, then send you a tightly crafted email with only the most informative and delightful bits.
Each weekday at about 6 a.m., you’ll get an email like this.
Good morning. It’s Friday, April 3.
- Officials announce L.A.-area hospice fraud arrests.
- The cigarette makes a comeback in Hollywood.
- And three classic California homes hit the market.
Please note: The newsletter will pause on Monday. Back in your inbox on Tuesday.
Statewide
1.

For hundreds of years, Iran was the world’s biggest producer of pistachios. Now California dominates the market. The shift began after the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979, when dozens of Americans were taken captive. Trade embargoes followed, and a massive tariff essentially ended Iran’s pistachio reign. Now the war in Iran is cementing California’s place as the world’s pistachio king, as ship exports through the Strait of Hormuz have slowed to a crawl, the New York Times reports.
2.
On this week’s California Sun Podcast, host Jeff Schechtman talks with Severin Borenstein, an expert on the economics of energy at UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business. Borenstein noted that California’s gas challenges will remain even after an end to the war in Iran. As its refineries close, the state still has to figure out the logistics to import more gas. “Those were issues I was talking about before the war started,” Borenstein said, “and they have not gone away.”
3.

Here’s a look at three classic California homes now on the market.
- Donald Wexler, regarded as a founder of Palm Springs Modernism, incorporated Polynesian themes in the 1960s home pictured above. The steel-and-concrete design seeks to blend with the surrounding desert terrain for indoor-outdoor living. Asking price: $1.8 million. N.Y. Times | dwell
- San Francisco’s historic Sylvester House, built in 1865, is being offered for the first time in half a century. The sprawling Italianate home has six marble fireplaces, custom wallpaper, and a magnificent porch. In 2005, it won an award for its faithful restoration. Yours for $3.5 million. Realtor.com
- This renovated 1924 home is nestled along the banks of the Russian River in Guerneville. The two-story residence maximizes views of the surrounding redwood forest, with decks on both floors and an outdoor pergola with room for a bistro table and chairs. Asking price: $585,000. Sonoma Magazine
Northern California
4.
A reporter and photographer retraced the route that skiers took in the deadliest avalanche in California history. They hoped to get a feel for the place deep in the Lake Tahoe backcountry. “Was the route so intimidating, or exhausting, that it would have clouded their judgment? What we found shocked us — and made the tragedy seem even sadder and more unfair. The spot where the nine met their fate was postcard peaceful.” L.A. Times
5.
OpenAI said on Thursday that it bought TBPN, a popular technology news talk show that aims to compete with Bloomberg and CNBC. The San Francisco AI company said TBPN would retain its editorial independence, but analysts portrayed the acquisition as a marketing move. The AI industry has faced intensifying skepticism over its role in reshaping society, while OpenAI has stoked public mistrust over its dealings with the Pentagon. Wall Street Journal | N.Y. Times
Southern California
6.

Federal officials on Thursday announced the arrests of eight people accused of bilking more than $50 million in healthcare funds through sham hospice facilities across Southern California. Hospice fraud has become a political flashpoint as Republicans have sought to link the problem to lax oversight under Gov. Gavin Newsom. Bill Essayli, a Trump-appointment federal prosecutor, and Dr. Mehmet Oz, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, slammed the state during a news conference. “I call California the kingdom of fraud,” Essayli said. L.A. Times | Courthouse News Service
7.
A minor was arrested in the death of a 12-year-old girl who was struck by a metal water bottle during a Feb. 17 fight at Reseda Charter High School, police said on Thursday. Khimberly Zavaleta Chuquipa was injured when she tried to defend her older sister from bullies, her family said. She died days later after doctors discovered severe bleeding in her brain. The family has demanded that the assailant and school be held accountable. No details on the suspect were released. CBS News | L.A. Times
8.

They were featured in several Oscar best picture nominees. Kylie Jenner used one as a glamorous prop on the cover of Vanity Fair. So did Odessa A’Zion in W, and Sabrina Carpenter in Interview Magazine. And they’ve become commonplace at trendy Los Angeles clubs and parties.
The cigarette, shunned for years, is making a Hollywood comeback. The Ankler hit the streets on a recent Friday night for answers. “I’ve connected it to this thing where people are going analog,” said Jake, a comedian in his 30s who was smoking outside the restaurant Taix.
9.
From his house in Los Angeles, it took Matthew Gallagher about two months and $20,000 to start his company, a telehealth provider of weight-loss drugs called Medvi. He gained 300 customers in his first month. In 2025, Medvi’s first full year, the company collected $401 million in sales. Gallagher then hired his first employee, his younger brother. This year, they are on track to $1.8 billion. “A $1.8 billion company with just two employees? In the age of AI, it’s increasingly possible,” the New York Times wrote.
10.
After years of antisemitic and racist controversies, Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, delivered his first full live show in the U.S. since 2021 at SoFi Stadium on Wednesday night. Fans lined up for merchandise and reveled in nostalgic hits performed by the rapper on top of a futuristic orb-like stage. The spectacle, the New York Times wrote, “seemed to blot out, however momentarily, the sins that cost him lucrative business deals and tarnished his legacy as a musician and cultural figure.”
11.
A homeowner in Glendale pulled out his Bermuda grass lawn and planted a garden of native California plants including sage, lupines, and poppies. The transformation cut his water usage so dramatically that he now only waters it once a month during summer. Birds, bees, and butterflies float through the landscape. “Having a native garden brings a unique level of joy because you discover you’re doing something for the native wildlife that no other type of garden can do,” he said. “It’s a really special thing.” L.A. Times
In case you missed it
12.

Five items that got big views over the past week:
- In the 1960s and 70s, young idealists left cities for the Northern California wilderness in search of deeper meaning. The back-to-land movement faded, but many of their unconventional dwellings still stand. A photographer traveled the back roads of Mendocino and Humboldt counties collecting images of the aging pioneers and their teetering structures. Aperture
- It took 5,000 workers and five years to construct the aqueduct that first carried water from the Owens Valley to Los Angeles in 1913. Over the subsequent century, the true costs of the L.A. Aqueduct would be greater than almost anyone could have imagined. A civil engineering vlogger told the story of the “wild” water conveyance that made L.A. possible. Practical Engineering
- Chris Espinosa is Apple’s longest-tenured employee. In 1976, when he was just 14 years old, Espinosa became employee No. 8, recruited by Steve Jobs to write computer programs for the Apple II. In the intervening years, Espinosa has watched the company grow from a garage start-up into a roughly $4 trillion behemoth. N.Y. Times
- A recent poll found that nearly half of Angelenos are unhappy with the performance of Mayor Karen Bass. Even so, in early February, it seemed that she might face no real opposition in her reelection bid. But with just days before the filing deadline to run, a group of strange bedfellows scrambled to orchestrate a remarkable challenge. L.A. Material
- In 1922, the boxing promoter Sid Grauman debuted the world’s first truly ambitious cinema design with the Egyptian Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard. A few years later, he shifted his attention two blocks down the street, where he opened an even grander venue, the Chinese Theatre. The Financial Times included both in a photo feature on the world’s 24 most breathtaking cinemas.
Get your California Sun T-shirts, phone cases, hoodies, hats, and totes!
The California Sun surveys more than 100 news sites daily, then sends you a tightly crafted email with only the most informative and delightful bits.
Sign up here to get four weeks free — no credit card needed.

The California Sun, PO Box 6868, Los Osos, CA 93412
Californians have been getting hooked on us.
I love this daily newsletter on my home state, California. Captures the spirit, history and politics of it every morning. Even own the t-shirt. @mmcphate Sign up today here: https://t.co/NyUkm18xxI
— Scott Wilson (@PostScottWilson) March 27, 2019
Stop what you're doing and subscribe to @mmcphate's California Sun morning newsletter. https://t.co/9ls2TolMiF
— Jack Shafer (@jackshafer) July 13, 2020
Waking up on the west coast means being under the gun to catch up on news of the day. That's led me to subscribe to too-many newsletters. The one I open without fail every day is @mmcphate's California Sun: https://t.co/sgLy76nygE
— mat honan ☀️ (@mat) September 20, 2018
Found this in my inbox, and I'll be floating for days ... pic.twitter.com/svGaWGMWcW
— California Sun (@mmcphate) May 13, 2022
@CaliforniaSun is a #lifehack for Golden State residents. A thoughtful, brief daily email curation of what’s important and inspiring from 80+ local blogs and big media. https://t.co/JMKsG8spM4
— Tim Wagner (@wagner_tim) May 6, 2018
This is one of the best newsletters out there- it gives a great overview of NorCal and SoCal news every weekday and it's one of my favorite news to read every morning! Thanks California Sun newsletter! https://t.co/mks2835siR
— Michelle R Carney (@michellercarney) May 1, 2018
I came across @mmcphate’s California Sun daily newsletter in late February; it has become an email I actually look forward to reading every morning! Follow, sign-up, enjoy! https://t.co/vJ8ArXpDUY
— Mayra Suárez (@MediaMayra) May 1, 2018
I don't read newsletters. Ever. Except California Sun by @mmcphate. I learn something new about my home state every single day. If you love California, you want to sign up. https://t.co/xhqpx7fQrK
— Schuyler Hudak (@SchuylerLeigh) May 2, 2018
The California Sun has become my new favorite morning newsletter. https://t.co/nRKigsjWGo
— Damon Darlin✒️ (@darlin) April 11, 2023
Every day, someone in my feed mentions how much they love @mmcphate's California news wrap-up newsletter. Today's my day.
Follow the California Sun for a well-packaged daily collection of statewide and local news and photos. I do.https://t.co/OvpGMITYJ1
— @rgsharpe@sfba.social (@rgsharpe) July 11, 2018
If you love California like I do, you’ll love reading @mmcphate https://t.co/jMMmlPK8ZG. A daily collection of history, travel tips, politics, and more about the Golden State. Really worth your time. Today’s favorite bit: https://t.co/tq2oBgpf5b
— Tom Price (@Tomprice) May 9, 2022
This is so consistently good -- either to read daily or to catch up as a week in review. Not just news, but the California state of mind https://t.co/WFH6OaqM1C @mmcphate
— Shelby Grad (@shelbygrad) May 12, 2018
Get your daily dose of the Golden State.
We also have our own stories to tell.
The Sun helps you discover amazing journalism in California. But the news can be a bit grim. That’s why we write a couple stories every week that we think inspire awe — on historical wonders, innovative people, or beautiful photography.
