From Biddy Mason to environmental activist Aurora Castillo, these LA women will inspire you

In honor of March being Women’s History Month, we’re taking a look back at the bold and accomplished female trailblazers who have helped shape Los Angeles. From the 1890s to today, these formidable women have broken barriers and been integral in making LA, and beyond, what it is today. Read on for a mini history less, plus major inspiration.

Biddy Mason

Born into slavery in 1818, Biddy Mason eventually ended up in California, a non-slave state, where Mason was able to fight and win her freedom in 1856. After settling in Los Angeles, she worked as a nurse and midwife, and eventually purchased an acre of land in what is not Downtown LA. She went on to buy more land and properties throughout Los Angeles, accumulating wealth, which she donated to numerous charities, and used to feed and shelter the poor. 

To learn more about Biddy Mason, visit the Biddy Mason Memorial Park, which features a memorial and timeline of her life at the site of her original homestead. 

333 Spring St.
DTLA
Online: laconservancy.org

Clara Shortridge Foltz

Public domain

If you've ever received a jury summon in LA, then the name Clara Shortridge Foltz may sound familiar. The criminal courthouse located downtown is known as The Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center, named for the first female lawyer on the West Coast, a crusader for public defenders (in a time before they even existed), and California’s first female deputy district attorney. According to a piece in the California Bar Journal, Foltz also "sued for entrance into California’s only law school, tried cases in court when women were not allowed to serve on juries and played a key role in winning women’s suffrage in California 100 years ago."

Amelia Earhart

The U.S. National Archives

Although Amelia Earhart grew up mostly in the midwest, she took her first flight (as a passenger) out of Long Beach in 1920. She went on to take flying lessons near Long Beach and in 1923 receive her pilot's license, making her the 16th woman in the U.S. to do so. She famously went on to become the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic, and subsequently wrote books and articles on flying and lectured on the subject. During the years leading up to her fateful flight, Earhart lived her husband in Toluca Lake, and often flew out of Grand Central Air Terminal in Glendale and what is today's Bob Hope Airport in Burbank.

Anna May Wong

Public domain

Born in 1905 in Los Angeles, Anna May Wong went on to become the first Chinese American movie star in Hollywood. While she appeared in more than 60 films, she was mostly relegated to playing smaller, supporting parts that were based on racial stereotypes. Even when Hollywood was making The Good Earth, producers passed Wong over, instead casting a white actress to play a Chinese character. As Wong said in a 1928 interview, “There seems little for me in Hollywood, because, rather than real Chinese, producers prefer Hungarians, Mexicans, American Indians for Chinese roles.”

After spending time in Europe, she eventually returned home to Los Angeles, and in 1951, starred in her own TV show, making her television's first Chinese American leading lady. Unfortunately the groundbreaking show, The Gallery of Madame Liu-Tsong, only lasted a year. But, today, Wong is still celebrated for paving the way for future Asian American actors. 

Charlotta Spears Bass

Public domain

Nearly 70 years before Kamala Harris would become our first female Vice President, Charlotta Spears Bass was the first Black woman to run for vice president of the United States in 1952, on the Progressive Party ticker. In addition to working in politics, Spears owned and ran LA-based African American newspaper The California Eagle, and a civil rights activist, according to the National Women's History Museum. Over the years, Bass's paper addressed racial injustices, including discrimination in schools, housing and employment.

Dorothy Chandler

By Hbchandler

We have Dorothy Chandler to thank for the Hollywood Bowl. In 1950, the iconic venue was in a financial crisis and near closing, when Chandler took action, organizing fundraising concerts that help saved the Bowl. After her experience with the Hollywood Bowl, she set out to raise money to build a performing arts center in Los Angeles. In 1964, thanks to Chandler's unrelenting fundraising and efforts, The Los Angeles Music Center opened. The full complex was completed in 1967, with three venues: the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, Mark Taper Forum and Ahmanson Theatre. In her 1997 obituary, the Los Angeles Times noted that "many believe [the Music Center] saved a physically and culturally decaying downtown core area."

Dolores Huerta

Dolores Huerta Foundation

In 1955 Huerta began her career as an activist when she co-founded the Stockton chapter of the Community Service Organization (CSO), which led voter registration drives and fought for economic improvements for Hispanics. She also founded the Agricultural Workers Association, a precursor to what would eventually become the United Farm Worker's Union in 1965. Over the next decade, Huerta organized and fought for farm workers rights. Her efforts contributed to groundbreaking California Agricultural Labor Relations Act of 1975, which allowed farm workers to form unions and bargain for better wages and conditions. 

Today, Huerta continues to work advocating for the working poor, women, and children. As founder and president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation, she travels across the country engaging in campaigns and influencing legislation that supports equality and defends civil rights. 

Aurora Castillo

Courtesy of Goldman Environmental Prize

In 1984, Aurora Castillo, then in her seventies, learned that the state of California had plans to build an eighth prison in East Los Angeles. Together with other residents of her predominantly Latino community, she helped found The Mothers of East Los Angeles (MELA). In addition to eventually prevailing against the state in the battle over the prison project, MELA went on to fight for environmental justice for their neighborhood, stopping the construction of a toxic pipeline. According to The Los Angeles Times, Castillo vowed to “fight like a lioness for the children of East Los Angeles.”

 

Wallis Annenberg

You might recognize her name from the community facilities she's helped create over the years, including the Annenberg Community Beach House, Annenberg PetSpace,  Annenberg Space for Photography and Wallis Annenberg Center for Performing Arts. Wallis Annenberg's philanthropic work has certainly delivered some of our favorite destinations for art, culture and fun in LA. She's also responsible for the first universally accessible treehouse—the Wilson Park Annenberg Tree House in Torrance. Guided by principles of community, inclusion and compassion, Annenberg has said, "I’ve tried to focus not just on giving, but on innovating."

 

Scientists, chefs, activists, dancers, and poets—our Bay Area history is full of inspiring women you’ll want to learn all about!

The Bay Area wouldn’t be the place of innovation, creativity and activism that it is today were it not for many of our trailblazing women. Keep reading to celebrate their accomplishments which have transformed the Bay Area and motivate your little trailblazers to set out on their own quest for a better world! 

Maya Angelou

Creative Commons

Renaissance Woman, 1928-2014

Chalking up dozens of awards and over 50 honorary degrees, Maya Angelou has worn many hats—from nightclub performer and Porgy and Bess cast member to fry cook, sex worker, and Civil Rights activist. She is best known for her written work—particularly her poetry and her memoirs spanning a series of seven autobiographies, including I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Before Amanda Gorman there was Maya Angelou, who became the first female inaugural poet in 1993.

Interesting fact: In 1944, after dropping out of San Francisco’s George Washington High at 16, Maya Angelou set her sights on becoming a cable car operator. She wanted the job because she admired the uniforms, but at first she was refused an application. She sat in the company offices every day for two weeks until she was hired, becoming one of the first Black cable car operators in San Francisco.

Juana Briones

Founding Mother, 1802-1889

Often referred to as “The Founding Mother of San Francisco,” Juana Briones was born near Santa Cruz, of mixed Spanish and African descent. Many of her family members arrived in Alta California with the de Anza and de Portola expeditions. Briones, a midwife, herbal medicine healer, and successful entrepreneur, gave birth to 11 children and adopted one. In 1844 she was granted a clerical separation (almost unheard of at the time) from her physically abusive and alcoholic husband. The same year she purchased the 4,400 acre Rancho La Purisma Concepcion in present day Palo Alto and Los Altos Hills. Through the late 1850s and 1860s she successfully fought in court to retain the title to her land in San Francisco and Santa Clara Counties.

Interesting fact: Juana Briones was killed in a cow stampede in the then city of Mayfield, now part of Palo Alto. There is an elementary school and park named for her in Palo Alto.

Charlotte L. Brown

Wikimedia Commons

Justice Seeker, 1839-?

Before Rosa Parks there was Charlotte L. Brown. She was the plaintiff in one of the earliest civil rights cases in California after being forcibly removed from a whites only horse-drawn streetcar near her home on Filbert Street in San Francisco in 1863. Brown won her case and was awarded $25, and later in criminal court the conductor was convicted of assault and battery against her. Only three days after the first trial she was ejected from a streetcar again, and once more filed suit against them, winning again. The Black-owned newspaper, the Pacific Appeal, noted at the time that the verdict “establishes the right, by law, of colored persons to ride in such conveyances.” Charlotte L. Brown’s case paved the way for similar cases that challenged the segregationist policies of private streetcar companies, culminating in an 1893 ruling officially outlawing segregation on state streetcars. The case was one of the first of several brought by Black activists in the U.S. against segregation and exclusion in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Interesting fact: Brown’s father was born enslaved and her mother, a free seamstress, purchased his freedom. They lived as Free People of Color in Baltimore in 1850, before moving to San Francisco and becoming part of the city’s burgeoning Black middle class.

Dominique Crenn

Creative Commons

Lyrical Chef, 1965-

Dominique Crenn elevated the San Francisco dining scene to the world stage after becoming the first female chef in the United States to earn three Michelin stars at her eponymous restaurant, Atelier Crenn. Lines of poetry literally accompany each course and her exquisite food is presented like an elaborate work of art. Her one Michelin-starred wine bar, Bar Crenn, is also a red hot attraction. Known for her creative modernist menus as well as her uncompromising vision, she is acclaimed as a chef and a business leader. 

Interesting fact: Crenn is engaged to Coyote Ugly and NCIS star, Maria Bello.

Isadora Duncan 

Creative Commons

Innovative Dancer, 1877-1927

Isadora Duncan, the “Mother of Modern Dance,” brought her unique free-spirited and untrained style to the field of ballet. Her ideas spread across the U.S. to Europe and the Soviet Union, and helped bring about modern expressive dance. Duncan was born in San Francisco and raised in Oakland, which is where she met Florence Treadwell Boynton. Boynton created a home and dance school in the Berkeley Hills that reflected Duncan’s dance style which was influenced by Greek art and sculpture with dances in flowing tunics. This Greek collonaded “Temple of Wings” helped solidify Berkeley’s turn-of-the-century reputation as the Athens of the West.

Interesting fact: Not only was Isadora Duncan one of the most innovative and internationally renowned dancers of her time, she also leaves behind the lesson not to wear a long scarf while riding in a car. She was strangled after it became entangled in the rear wheels.

Dian Fossey 

Creative Commons

Gutsy Naturalist, 1932-1985

San Francisco-born Dian Fossey attended U.C. Davis and San Jose City College before travelling to Rwanda where she spent 18 years studying the endangered mountain gorilla. Her “war on poaching” is generally credited with reversing the downward trend in the animal population, which reached a low of 250 in 1981. In the process she made a lot of enemies and was found brutally murdered in her cabin in 1985. Fossey made huge contributions to the study of mountain gorilla behavior and a movie was made based on her best selling autobiography, Gorillas in the Mist.

Kamala Harris

Vice President of the United States, 1964-

Born in Oakland, Kamala Harris served the people of California for many years as Attorney General for the state of California (2011-2017) and U.S. Senator (2017-2021). In 2021 she was inaugurated as vice president.  She is the United States' first female vice president, the highest-ranking female official in U.S. history, and the first Black and first Asian American vice president. After securing her historic win for Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris heralded, “I may be the first woman to hold this office. But I won’t be the last.” 

Louise Lawrence

Consciousness Raiser, 1912-1976

After marrying twice and spending the first 30 years of her life as a low key young man named “Lew,” Louise Lawrence was finally able to fully embrace who she was on the inside and moved from Berkeley to San Francisco to begin living full time as a woman. She placed personal ads and regularly scanned the newspapers for cross dressing arrests in order to find other trans and gender non-conforming people.

Lawrence started assisting at the U.C.S.F. Langley Porter Clinic and lectured to the doctors there in order to convince them not to classify being transgender as a mental disorder. Her work at U.C.S.F. put her in touch with Dr. Alfred Kinsey in 1948 who had recently released his book, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. By then, Louise Lawrence had amassed a network of nearly 200 trans people across the United States and decided to share their stories with Kinsey. She felt that gender variance was missing from his first book, and she directly facilitated its inclusion in his follow-up works. Without Lawrence’s efforts it likely would have been left out.

Interesting Fact: Louise Lawrence housed strangers travelling cross country to San Francisco to undergo gender confirmation surgery and also counseled them.

Julia Morgan 

Creative Commons

Prolific Architect, 1872-1957

After graduating from Oakland High School and then U.C. Berkeley near the turn of the twentieth century, Julia Morgan became the first woman admitted to a prestigious architectural program in Paris, and in 1904 the first woman in California licensed to practice architecture. A project assigned to her by Phoebe Hearst to improve one of her estates led to a meeting with her son, newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, and her most famous commission—Hearst Castle.

She was one of the leaders in the Bay Area Arts and Crafts Movement and her buildings can be found all over the Bay Area, including the Berkeley Women’s City Club; several buildings at U.C. Berkeley including the Hearst Greek Theater and the Women’s Gymnasium; six buildings at Mills College including El Campanil, the Margaret Carnegie Library, and the Student Union; the Julia Morgan Ballroom at the Merchants Exchange Building; numerous YMCAs; and the redesign of San Francisco’s Fairmont Hotel. In the course of her career, she designed more than 700 buildings, and in 2014 she became the first woman awarded the AIA Gold Medal for Architecture.

Isa Noyola

Wikimedia Commons

Trans Crusader, 1978-

Bay Area-raised Isa Noyola, is a Latina transgender activist and deputy director of the Transgender Law Center, the largest transgender-led civil rights organization in America. She organized the first national anti-trans violence protest in 2015, with over 100 activists—particularly trans women of color—protesting the violence trans communities face. Noyola also founded and serves as a national advocate for El/La Para Translatinas which seeks to improve the quality of life for TransLatinas in the Bay Area. She is a tireless activist in the LGBT immigration rights movement, advocating for transgender women being detained at ICE detention centers.

Amy Tan

Wikimedia Commons

Heritage-Inspired Writer, 1952-

Oakland-born Amy Tan, author of The Bonesetter’s Daughter, The Kitchen God’s Wife, and most famously her best-selling novel, The Joy Luck Club, was often inspired by her mother’s stories of growing up in China. The Joy Luck Club became the most prominent example of Asian Americans on screen for a quarter century. (This writer saw a scene from the movie adaptation being filmed at U.C. Berkeley.) 

Interesting fact: While pursuing a doctorate in linguistics at U.C. Berkeley, Tan’s best friend and roommate was murdered. She was asked to identify the body, and the shock of it all left her temporarily mute and prompted her to leave school and become a speech therapist for children.

 

 

The going rate for the Tooth Fairy might surprise you

How much should a kid get when they lose a tooth? If you’re unsure what the going rate is for the tooth fairy, Delta Dental Plans Association’s Original Tooth Fairy Poll has an answer. According to the 2023 Original Tooth Fairy Poll®, the average value of a single lost tooth during the past year increased by 16% from $5.36 to $6.23, a record high in the 25-year history of the poll.

poll that shows the going rate for the tooth fairy
Delta Dental

Even though the average under-the-pillow cash gift was over $6, the magic number did vary depending on the geographic area. This year, kids living in the South saw the highest returns, with an average of $6.59 per tooth, an increase of 14% from last year’s findings. Kids in the West saw a huge increase (53%!) with the per-tooth average coming in at $6.25. In the Northeast, the average dropped to $6.14, down from $7.36 in 2022. The Midwest is still trailing the national average at $5.36, but there was still a 32% increase over last year’s rates.

Related: Our Exclusive Interview with the Tooth Fairy

Of the poll, Gabriella Ferroni, Senior Director, Strategic Communications, says, “Delta Dental has been analyzing the Tooth Fairy’s U.S. annual giving trends for a quarter century, highlighting the role of good oral health care habits for children “We know this time-honored tradition will continue to bring great joy to homes across the country, and we look forward to seeing how the Tooth Fairy’s giving changes over the next 25 years. Given the projection, it would be in the Tooth Fairy’s best interest to invest in a larger purse.”

Historically, the Original Tooth Fairy Poll® mirrors the U.S. economy, tracking with the trends Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (S&P 500), but this year, the average price for a tooth increased 16% while the S&P 500 experienced an 11% decline.

—with additional reporting by Erica Loop

“For people with flexible schedules, this is a terrific opportunity to have a truly epic summer and then some”

We’re only in early February, but we can pretty much guarantee that you are stressing about what to do with your kids this summer. If you have a little flexibility in your schedule, this could be the summer of travel! Frontier Airlines just announced its new GoWild! All-You-Can-Fly Summer Pass, and it is a pretty sweet deal. For $399, you’ll get unlimited travel from May 2 through September 30 (blackout dates apply) and you can use it for domestic or international travel anywhere Frontier flies.

“Everyone loves summer vacation and, with the new GoWild! Summer Pass, you can enjoy even more of what you love,” said Daniel Shurz, senior vice president of commercial, Frontier Airlines. “For people with flexible schedules, this is a terrific opportunity to have a truly epic summer and then some, soaking up rays on the beach, exploring national parks, and visiting new cities.”

To use the GoWild! All-You-Can-Fly Pass to visit all those national parks and amusement parks on your list, you’d log in to your Frontier Miles account and search available flights the day before for domestic departures or up to 10 days before for international departures. All you have to pay is 1 cent in airfare plus applicable taxes, fees, and charges at the time of booking.

Baggage, seat selection, and other extras are not included in the pass. Frontier allows one small personal item for free. All other carry-on luggage and checked baggage need to be purchased.

Passes are available to be purchased for children, but passengers under the age of 15 must travel with a passenger who is at least 15 years old. The pass is not transferable, and it will automatically renew for summer travel unless canceled by the pass holder. Blackout dates apply including Memorial Day and July 4 weekends.

Frontier Airlines also offers a GoWild! Annual Pass that gets you a year of last-minute flights for $1,299.

Frontier serves destinations throughout the U.S., Mexico, the Caribbean, and Latin America. IT recently announced a major expansion of service, including eight new routes to the popular Caribbean paradise of Puerto Rico.

‘The White Lotus’ is back and in Sicily

Get ready to binge another season of The White Lotus! The hit series is back for season 2 and will include at least one of the most beloved characters from season 1.

Thus far, Jennifer Coolidge is the only series regular we know of that’s returning (clearly Armond is not). Coolidge will reprise her role as socialite Tanya McQuoid, who is likely still seeking the ultimate zen she’d been longing for in the first season.

Joining Coolidge will be cast members F. Murray Abraham, Adam DiMarco, Tom Hollander, Michael Imperioli, Aubrey Plaza, Haley Lu Richardson, Theo James, Meghann Fahy, Will Sharpe, and Leo Woodall, who will be the next set of guests to vacation at the famed hotel, The White Lotus.

Creator Mike White will return as writer and director.

The HBO hit followed rich and highly irritable resort-goers as they attempted to find inner peace and love, and formed unlikely friendships, leading to an accidental murder as the season ended. The original series, which premiered last summer, drew audiences into its shenanigans with a most unlikeable cast of characters, and we couldn’t help but love watching them self-implode during every show.

This series is shifting away from Hawaii to Sicily, where new hotel staffers and guests will (hopefully) have an equally difficult time managing their lives at a new White Lotus property. “The fun part about leaving the U.S., White told EW, is that the writers “could get into culture clash ideas and stuff like that.”

White seems to have the magic formula, so whatever he comes up with for season 2 will surely have viewers tuning in. Francesca Orsi, the network’s executive vice president, wrote in a September 2021 statement that she and others at the network “were thrilled to hear where he wanted to go next” and “can’t wait to keep following him wherever he takes us.”

Season 2 of The White Lotus will premiere in October, just a month after the Sept. 12 Primetime Emmy Awards, where the show is being nominated for 20 awards, including outstanding limited series, writing and directing for White, and supporting mentions for eight cast members, including Coolidge.

From DC to Virginia to Maryland, we found the best neighborhoods to fill your kid’s trick-or-treat bag fast this Halloween

There are a number of sweet ways to fill your trick-or-treat bag this October. Some of our favorites include candy-tossing parades, trunk-or-treat events and amusement parks with treat stations. For those looking for classic, house-to-house action on Oct. 31, we found the best neighborhoods with spooktacular Halloween decorations and candy galore so you can fill your little ghoul or goblin’s bucket fast (because let’s face it: it’s all about that end-of-the-night count!).

From the well-lit streets of Old Town Alexandria to the spooky decorations in Bethesda’s Edgemoor neighborhood, scroll down for IG-worthy trick-or-treating in Washington, DC and the surrounding ‘burbs. And just in case it rains, bookmark this epic indoor venue they’re doling out treats every night in October!

Related: Carve Out Some Fun With Pick-Your-Own Pumpkin Patches

The Best Trick-or-Treating Neighborhoods in Washington, DC

Embassy Row
Around the world can be found when you knock on doors along Embassy Row, where international embassies stretch from the Vice President’s home all the way to Dupont Circle. More than 20 embassies invite trick-or-treaters to explore cultures from around the world. You may be handed a few tourism pamphlets along with your candy bars, but where else can you say you’ve been trick-or-treating in Indonesia, Armenia, Ireland, and Portugal all in one night?

Start here: Massachusetts Ave. NW
Online: embassy.org

Capitol Hill
Candy flows in this family-heavy neighborhood with back-to-back row houses. Once you’ve had your lollipop fill, head to Eastern Market (or start there!) for some serious costume watching.

Start here: Eastern Market
Online: easternmarket-dc.org

Georgetown
While crowds of people-watchers can definitely turn Georgetown’s Halloween into a Nightmare on M St., there’s something to be said for trick-or-treating on those narrow side streets, where the row houses are so close together; you can score twice the candy in half the time! Avoid M St. and Wisconsin Ave. proper unless you and your brood are more interested in seeing the coolest costumes in town (Georgetowners do know how to dress up!), and focus on the side streets where you’ll probably need two bags to carry all your loot.

Start here: Side streets between M St. and Wisconsin Ave. NW
Online: visit.georgetown.org

Brookland
The real treat in Brookland is the house on Hamlin. You can expect over-the-top decorations from the owner of this rowhouse. Past themes include a haunted cornfield you could walk through and an ode to Stephen King's IT that featured 35 clown props. You'll find more ghoulish fun on Franklin St. near Langdon Park. Check out NextDoor for a map of homes offering treats.

Start here: 915 Hamlin St. NE
Online: brooklandbridge.com

Chevy Chase DC
The hot spot for sugary loot can be found on Rittenhouse between Broad Branch Rd. and Utah Ave. The houses on these blocks go all-out with over-the-top decorations. When you've hit all the houses, be sure to take a stroll on The Avenue where local shops hand out sweets from 4-6 p.m.

Start here: Broad Branch Rd.
Online: historicchevychasedc.org/

Columbia Heights
The annual party on 11th is fun for the whole family, including your furry friends. There is trick-or-treating and a Halloween costume contest that has gone to the dogs.

Start here: 1101 Monroe St. NW
Online: 11thandbark.org

The Best Trick-or-Treating Neighborhoods in Virginia

Old Town Alexandria
A history of haunted houses and ghost stories set the stage for a frightfully fun All Hollows Eve in Old Town Alexandria. Kids can pound the brick-layered sidewalks and knock on the doors of old style Colonials at this popular trick-or-treating destination. Many of the shops along King Street hand out candy as well. For those on the hunt for a good haunt, we recommend the candlelight ghost tour.

Start here: 221 King St., Alexandria, VA
Online: visitalexandriava.com

Great Falls
With its big houses and lots of young families, Great Falls is a great choice for trick-or treating! And you can do some pretty epic pre-gaming as well! The Great Falls Halloween Spooktacular and Pet Parade start as early as 4 p.m. and there’s even a haunted house. Enjoy trick-or-treating with local merchants in a safe environment right in the heart of town.

Start here: 776 Walker Rd., Great Falls VA
Online: celebrategreatfalls.org

Fairlington
Remember when you were a kid and your entire neighborhood got in on trick or treating action? This Arlington hideaway off of King Street will have you feeling all nostalgic for those days of yore. With back-to-back townhouses and condo buildings, this ‘hood is great for first time trick-or-treaters and trick or treating groups.

Start here: Abingdon St., Arlington, VA
Online: fairlington.org

Related: Spooktacularly Amazing Costumes Inspired by DC

The Best Trick-or-Treating Neighborhoods in Maryland

National Harbor
Trick or treat a day early at National Harbor where kids can visit over 30 stations near the waterfront. Candy will be distributed from 12:30-2:30 p.m. on Oct. 30 at the annual Harbor Halloween celebration; bring a map so you don't miss any of the goodies at these participating retailers. There will also be a pet costume parade, a pumpkin carving competition and kids in costumes get a free spin on the Capital Wheel (with purchase of an adult ticket). For more Halloween-themed fun, head to Gaylord National Harbor for selfies with Spookley the Square Pumpkin and indoor trick or treating.

Start here: Waterfront St.
Online: nationalharbor.com/

Bethesda
Bethesda's Edgemoor community makes our list for its close proximity to downtown—and for its impeccably decorated houses. Little legs will have to travel a bit further between these stately properties, but epic decorations and generous candy allotments more than make up for the extra travel time between properties. After you trick or treat, head in to town for a late dinner or a cup of hot chocolate. Pro tip: You can park at the library, which is also the ideal starting point.

Start here: Connie Morella Library, 7400 Arlington Rd.
Online: visitmontgomery.com

Kensington
If your crew is obsessed with door knocking skeletons, glow-in-the-dark pumpkins, and all other forms of Halloween decorations, spend the evening in this MD 'burb. The folks on Perry Avenue off of University Blvd. know how to do it up for Halloween. Plus, there’s candy…lots and lots of candy.

Start here: Perry Ave. off of University Blvd.
Online: kensington.com

Fells Point
Fells Point and near-by Canton and Hampden do Halloween BIG.  The epicenter of ghoulish thrills can be found where Fleet St., Eastern Ave., Aliceanna St. and Thames St. converge. You'll find a neighborhood of homes for kids and their families to trick-or-treat, as well as restaurants and shops.

Start here: Thames & S. Caroline St., Baltimore, MD
Online: fellspointmainstreet.org

 

 

 

These Netflix Halloween movies for kids will get the whole family geared up for spooky season

Halloween is on the horizon, which means it’s time to snuggle up on the couch and watch some Halloween movies to get into the spirit. But is your kid ready to be spooked? Ease them in with this perfect list of “scary” movies your kids can enjoy at pretty much any age.

The movies are rated from 1 chill (👻) to 3 chills (👻👻👻) so you can decide what to introduce to your kids. One chill will slowly introduce your kids to some suspense, three chills will have them acting cool, but probably sneaking into your bed later. Curl up with some movie snacks and check out what Halloween movies for kids Netflix has for you to enjoy this Halloween season!

Ivy & Bean: The Ghost That had to Go

Ivy + Bean: The Ghost That Had to Go - 👻

When Ivy discovers the school bathroom is haunted, Bean helps Ivy to harness her witchlike powers. With the help of their classmates, Ivy and Bean orchestrate a ritual that will free the ghosts, save the school, and also mess up Nancy’s day. 

Spookley the Square Pumpkin - 👻

Follow a scarecrow and spider trio as they help their friend Spookley the Square Pumpkin with his worries and anxieties.

The Little Vampire - 👻

Tony befriends a vampire after being bullied and struggling to make new friends. Tony and Rudolph become close friends, but when the future of the vampires becomes threatened by a vampire hunter, Tony must find the courage to protect his friend.

Super Monsters Save Halloween - 👻

The group of monster friends uses their superpowers to get their neighbors into the Halloween spirit. 

Dreamworks Spooky Stories - 👻

In a collection of animated shorts from Dreamworks, join Shrek and friends for a sleepover in Lord Farquaad's haunted castle (complete with "scary stories"), and follow up with a trip to the hometown of Monsters vs. Alien's Susan Murphy to investigate a spooky alien sighting right before Halloween. 

Related: 15 Magical Witch Movies to Watch with Your Kids This Season

A Babysitter's Guide to Monster Hunting

Gnome Alone - 👻

A girl who recently moved to an old house in a new town discovers that her house is being attacked by underground creatures. She learns that the gnomes in her house are the only creatures that can protect her.

Captain Underpants Hack-O-Ween - 👻

When Melvin makes Halloween illegal, Harold and George create their own spooky holiday. 

A Babysitter's Guide to Monster Hunting - 👻👻

When high school freshman Kelly Ferguson reluctantly agrees to babysit Jacob Zellman on Halloween, the last thing she expects is to be recruited into an international secret society of babysitters who protect kids with special powers from monsters. In order to keep Jacob safe from harm, Kelly teams with no-nonsense chapter Vice President Liz Lerue, tech genius Berna Vincent, creature expert Cassie Zhen and potions master Curtis Critter to defeat a Boogeyman known as "The Grand Guignol", a glamorous witch named "Peggy Drood" and their legion of mysterious monsters.

The Curse of Bridge Hollow - 👻👻

When a big city kid moves to the quaint, but Halloween-obsessed town of Bridge Hollow, she mistakenly releases "Stingy Jack," an ancient and mischievous spirit whose been trapped in her house for years. To get the spirit back to where he belongs, she has to team up with the one guy who thinks spirits and mystical forces are silly—her dad.  Coming to Netflix on Oct. 14.

Related: 27 Not-Too-Spooky Songs for Your Halloween Playlist

Nightbooks

A Witches' Ball - 👻👻

Beatrix can't wait to become a witch, but she has to overcome obstacles to officially take her title. 

The Boy Who Cried Werewolf - 👻👻

A teen girl transforms into a werewolf after a move to Romania and must try to escape her brother, who is out to hunt her down.

Liar, Liar Vampire - 👻👻

A new kid at school plays up to the rumor that he's a vampire. 

A Series of Unfortunate Events - 👻👻👻

Siblings Violet, Klaus, and Sunny Baudelaire are left orphaned after a horrible fire and their distant relative, Count Olaf, becomes their guardian. After going to live with him, they find he is only after their inheritance and they continually attempt to make their escape from his clutches.

Wendell & Wild - 👻👻👻

Two scheming demons get help from a teen so that they can leave the Underworld and run amok in the Land of Living. Coming to Netflix on Oct. 28.

Nightbooks - 👻👻👻

When Alex, a boy obsessed with scary stories, is trapped by an evil witch in her magical apartment, and must tell a scary story every night to stay alive, he teams up with another prisoner, Yasmin, to find a way to escape.

Bruno is voiced by Chuck Smith, an autistic actor

Thomas & Friends is getting ready to add a new friend to the mix: Bruno the Brake Car. In collaboration with the Autistic Self Advocacy Network (ASAN), Easterseals Southern California, writers and spokespeople with autism, Mattel Television has announced Bruno as the first autistic character in the franchise.

“The most important aspect of Bruno’s development was getting autistic input throughout the process of creating the character and his interactions with his world,” said Zoe Gross, Director of Advocacy at Autism Self Advocacy Network (ASAN). “It was great to be able to contribute to that as part of a team of consultants from ASAN. Autistic people have been involved in all aspects of creating Bruno, from us as consultants to writers on the show and Bruno’s voice actor—this makes Bruno ring true as an autistic character. I hope that Bruno will provide viewers with meaningful examples of inclusion in everyday life.”

So who is Bruno?

bruno the brake car
Mattel

First, he is a neurodivergent role model who is detail oriented and loves routine, schedules and knows where all the tracks go on Sodor. He plays an important roll, rolling in reverse to keep heavy cargo steady while also having a unique perspective on the world around him.

“Bruno’s introduction organically embraces a global audience that is underrepresented and deserves to be celebrated in children’s programming,” said Christopher Keenan, Senior Vice President & Executive Producer, Global Content Development and Production at Mattel. “So much care and thought went into the development of his character, and we can’t wait for audiences to meet and love Bruno as much as we do.”

Bruno is joining the Thomas & Friends franchise with appearances in consumer products, a music album, in a YouTube series, the Thomas & Friends Storytime podcast, and the upcoming Mystery of Lookout Mountain special, in addition to Thomas & Friends: All Engines Go.

You can start following Bruno when he makes his debut on season 26, set to air on Mon. Sept. 12 at 8:30 am ET/PT on Cartoonito on Cartoon Network.

Angelina Jolie shared photos of helping Zahara move in to her dorm in Atlanta

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s daughter is headed to college! The happy parents have been sharing the goings-on of helping Zaraha, 17, move to Georgia to start Spelman College in Atlanta, and sharing their thoughts on sending their second oldest off to school.

Appearing in a video by Spelman’s Vice President of Student Affairs, Jolie is every parent who is both excited and sad on college move-in day. “I’m going to start crying, don’t make me talk about today!” she says. Despite the overwhelm, Jolie admits she is so excited to be a Spelman mom. Brad Pitt is just as proud as she is.

“I’m so proud of her,” he tells Vanity Fair at the premiere of his latest film, Bullet Train. “She’s so smart. She’s going to flourish even more at college. It’s an exciting and beautiful time to find her own way and pursue her interests. I’m so proud.”

Spelman College is a liberal arts school located in Atlanta, Georgia. The college’s website shares that it is “a historically Black college and a global leader in the education of women of African descent, is dedicated to academic excellence in the liberal arts and sciences and the intellectual, creative, ethical, and leadership development of its students.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/ChFWBFmuZSO/

Zahara is the second of Jolie and Pitt’s children to head off to college. Older brother, Maddox, already attends Yonsei University in South Korea.

While time will tell where Spelman will take Zahara, the teen is already involved in plenty of advocacy efforts with Jolie. She’s visited the Senate to introduce the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act, as well as advocated with lawmakers in Washington D.C. alongside mom.

Brad Pitt summarizes dadhood perfectly when speaking to Vanity Fair: “Where does the time go, right? They grow up too fast. It brings a tear to the eye.”