Skip to main content

Jeremy Rosenberg

Jeremy Rosenberg is a Los Angeles-based writer, editor, and consultant whose work has appeared in various books, magazines, newspapers, and online.

Support Provided By
For decades, two late, great, robust institutions were errantly maligned. Both were considered extinct. Both were large and said to have lumbered. Both were thought to have failed to coexist with rivals and then given way to smarter replacements that w...
"I struggled to adjust to my new life and learn English. I turned six years old, and was given a Jaws-themed game for my birthday."
"My grandmother came out to California to work and then when my grandfather decided to come out, he walked into my grandmother's office with a bunch of rattlesnakes."
"I had a big goodbye party for all my friends and family and the next day got on a plane bound for Los Angeles - the city of my childhood dreams of sunshine and skateboard parks and where I believed the next big center of art would be."
thenarrows_luisrodriguez-thumb-600xauto-11182
Like the L.A. River itself -- thanks George Wolfe and friends -- Departures: LA River can be navigated from beginning to end. But the package also features indelible moments that stand on their own, and serve as points of entry like bolt cuts to a Rive...
Los Angeles River expert and Los Angeles Urban Ranger senior ranger Jenny Price shares how a baby altered her perspectives on L.A.
lariver_main-thumb-600xauto-4341
Is the film, Apocalypse Now a film just about a river? Is the book, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn? Well, neither is KCET.org's Departures: LA River.
thankyou.jpg
Thank you to everyone who during these past two years has read, commented upon, and shared this blog.
fematrailer.jpg
RAND is out with a study that's critical of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and a Louisiana Recovery Authority for failing to successfully help people living in FEMA trailers.
abstractwaterfeature
"Of course one of the biggest and most important signals for SoCal is the El Niño. Our climate is changing. This paper is another nail in the "intellectual" coffin of the climate change skeptics."
minefieldbrettvanort.jpg
Brett Van Ort has photographed, at some personal peril, mines and minefields from a recent Balkan war. The resulting images are indelible examples of the incongruously beautiful landscapes of death.
abstractwaterbody.jpg
The oceanic phenomenon known as, "El Niño" has apparently moved from the eastern equatorial to the central equatorial area of the Pacific Ocean. Why does this matter?
Active loading indicator