Los Lonely Boys Set to Perform at 2025 Santa Barbara County Fair

Alissa Orozco

SANTA MARIA, Calif. – Los Lonely Boys are coming the Santa Barbara County Fair!

The multi-platinum selling band is scheduled to perform on Thursday, July 10th, 2025 at 7:30pm in the Minetti Grandstand Arena as part of the Michelob Ultra Concert Series. The show is will kick off with special guest, Billy Williams starting at 6:30pm!

Los Lonely Boys, Henry, Jojo, and Ringo Garza, have been playing and touring together since they were teenagers. Selling over two millions copies of their #1 hit “Heaven,” spending 76 weeks on the Billboard Top 200 album chart, and winning a Grammy for Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group.

Tickets for the show will go on sale Friday, May 23, 2025, starting at 10:00 am on the Fair’s official website.

The 2025 Santa Barbara County Fair runs July 9th through July 13th and this year’s theme is “Dancing To Your Own Beat!”

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Country-Rock Band The Red Clay Strays to Perform at California Mid-State Fair

Alissa Orozco

PASO ROBLES, Calif. – Country rock band, The Red Clay Strays, will take the stage at this year’s California Mid-State Fair as part of the Michelob Ultra Concert Series.

The Red Clay Strays, who blend Southern rock, soul, and classic country, is scheduled to perform on Monday, July 21st, 2025 at 7:30pm in the Chumash Grandstand Arena.

The band rose to fame with their viral hit “Wondering Why,” earning them the 2024 Americana ‘Emerging Artist of the Year’ title. You might have caught their performances on The Tonight Show, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, and CBS Saturday Morning, plus wins and nominations from the CMAs and Billboard Music Awards!

You can find tickets for The Red Clay Strays starting Friday, May 23rd, 2025 on the Mid-State Fair website. Ticket prices range from $65, $75, $95, $120, and $150 (pit).

The 2025 California Mid-State Fair runs July 16th through July 27th, with this year’s theme “Off To The Races!”

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Reported missing UCSB student found dead in Big Bear Lake Monday morning

Caleb Nguyen

BIG BEAR, Calif. – San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department investigators found Tanner Prentiss, a 22-year-old UCSB student, dead in Big Bear Lake just before 10:30 a.m. Monday.

Prentiss was reported missing on May 17 on a trip with friends and didn’t return to the group’s rented cabin after a night out, according to the SBSD.

He was last seen at 12:30 a.m. on Village Drive in Big Bear Lake May 17 wearing a black hoodie and jeans, according to the SBSD.

SBSD investigators followed up with people who saw him after the Sheriff’s Dive Team found Prentiss’ body in the lake near the Pine Knot Marina.

No foul play was indicated and the San Bernardino Coroner’s Office has assumed the investigation, according to the SBSD.

A GoFundMe page has been set up in support for the Prentiss Family.

Prentiss’ family asks for privacy at this time after his death.

UCSB Media Relations Manager Kiki Reyes offered a statement on behalf of the university on Prentiss’ passing:

We extend our heartfelt condolences to the family and friends of our student who passed away. Losing a member of our UC Santa Barbara community is heartbreaking. We understand the impact and stress surrounding this tragedy and are committed to supporting our campus community, who may be impacted. Our campus offers resources to students, staff, and faculty who are in need of support.

Students are encouraged to reach out to Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS), which can provide therapeutic support during this difficult time.  To request an appointment, please complete the CAPS Services Request Form. CAPS phone consultation is available 24/7/365 by calling 805-893-4411. You will be connected to a live counselor 24/7. Students can leave a voicemail requesting a phone or Zoom meeting with a therapist. All CAPS services are free. Faculty and staff are encouraged to contact the ASAP program, which offers a variety of services. A comprehensive list of wellness resources can be accessed at wellbeing.ucsb.edu.

Kiki Reyes, Media Relations Manager, UCSB

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Temperatures are Rising Along With Fire Hazards on the Central Coast

Jarrod Zinn

SANTA MARIA, Calif. – Temperatures are climbing, and so are fire hazards, especially in the wilderness areas of the Central Coast.

Fire authorities dealt with multiple brush fires last week, and at least three of them started in the Santa Maria Riverbed.

While some of last week’s Santa Maria Riverbed fires were possibly started by people in encampments, officials at multiple agencies say the brush in the countryside is at it’s maximum height after the annual rains and now it’s drying up, providing extra fuel for wild-land fires.

“Most of your municipal departments and obviously some of the county departments that we’re in kind of our hazardous fuel reduction program window right now. We’re doing the weed abatement, hazardous fuel reduction inspections, make sure that the property owners are in compliance with creating the defensible space,” says Scott Hallett with Five Cities Fire Authority.

Both Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties contain large portions of wild lands with residences and other properties interspersed throughout.

“We kind of pull the northern resources from San Luis Obispo County, southern resources from Santa Barbara County to get these contained and anytime we start having resources directed to one specific area, it has a potential to cause a threat to other areas if new fires were to start,” says Hallett.

Officials encourage residents of these areas to follow the guidelines for defensible spaces, making sure to clear any debris, and also make sure you’re signed up for your county’s emergency alert systems.

“Any time we are dealing with a vegetation fire here in the county or most of California, it’s dependent on a lot of things. What the weather’s like, the topography. California’s a lot of steep terrain, so fire can move uphill. Much faster and then a lot of it’s wind driven,” says Scott Safechuck with Santa Barbara County Fire Department.

“These more sustained longer periods of dry, hot weather just kind of exacerbate the fire season starting. And then once again, the ability for, you know, kind of fires to sustain themselves,” says Hallett.

The next 2 to 3 weeks serves as the transition into high fire season, and June 1st is the deadline in both counties to have defensible spaces clear.

And finally, officials say to remember that when your county’s public alert system gives an evacuation warning, it’s best to pack belongings and make plans for leaving.

An evacuation order is issued when your life is in jeopardy and it’s time to go.

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New Golf Cart-Style Shuttle to Operate Up and Down State Street in Downtown Santa Barbara

John Palminteri

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – A new small shuttle system is about to be rolling in downtown Santa Barbara. It will be called the State Street Loop.

It is a project that’s been months in the making after many suggestions to help those who can not comfortably walk from the waterfront to the top of the promenade district around Victoria Street.

SWEEP SB, located in the Funk Zone, is providing the vehicles under a limited contract.

The funding is coming from the City of Santa Barbara’s special tax called Measure C, designated for infrastructure improvements. Also from a driving force with planning, promotion and funding is the group Friends of State Street.

“We want people to get from Victoria Street down to the waterfront and back and experience State Street all along and all of the great things it has to offer,” said State Street Master Planner, Tess Harris. She was standing by a cart at the Farmers Market Saturday answering questions from the public.

“It is a more open-air feel,” she said. “It is just an exciting experience in and of  itself.” At the same time, “the MTD shuttle will still run on Anacapa and Chapala Streets and down to the waterfront,” said Harris. That seasonal program runs Memorial Day to Labor Day from Friday through Sunday each week.

Sharon Rich with Friends of State says three electric golf carts will start the service with some trials this week, but the official start will be next week.  It will run Thursday through Sunday.

“It has five seats for passengers and one for the driver,” she said, for a total of six. “This will be going very slow, it will go 7-8  miles an hour so we can share the location.”

The shuttle options were looked at across the country and this system was right in the city.

They are small enough and narrow enough to fit “in the bike lanes,” said Rich. It will go slow and “follow all the rules of public transit.”

It will be in a shared space on the streets.

“It allows people to move around this corridor, this historic corridor,” said Rich. She expects people to use it more than once, sometimes in a day, and you will really get to know downtown State Street,” she said.

Business owners on the top end of the promenade have, in many meetings, encouraged ways to get the public from the waterfront to the blocks around the Granada Theatre, Arlington Theatre, library plaza and the blocks around the courthouse.

Harris says a shuttle system is a top priority in many similar downtown areas. “A lot of downtowns have these golf carts or shuttle trolley systems and we are excited to bring it to Santa Barbara and it time to try something a little bit new and exciting and and we hope you hop on and enjoy the ride.”

The stops for the Loop riders will be marked on the ground, not on pole signs.

Some of the features include:

FREE Rides for all passengers.

Electric shuttles with accessible boarding

Continuous loop service along designated stops from Cabrillo Boulevard (Dolphin fountain) to Victoria Street

Service Hours: Thursday – Sunday, 12pm-7pm

Estimated Loop Time: 15-20 minutes roundtrip

For more information go to: Friends of State Street

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Friendship Center Launches Essential Transportation for Friends Living with Dementia

Patricia Martellotti

MONTECITO, Calif. – At the start of the year, nearly 50 families of Friendship Center’s current and incoming program participants, many of whom live with dementia or significant mobility needs, were given a one month notice that their subsidized transportation service would no longer provide rides to or from Friendship Center. 

This caused immense stress among families as, without transportation support, they would lose access to 7 hours a day of safety, connection, supervised engagement, personal care, and nutritious meals in a supportive community for their dependent loved one.

In less than a month, Friendship Center launched its own transportation program using loaned vehicles and existing staff. 

Directors of the organization say they did this, not because they were prepared or funded to do so, but because no other transportation service could meet this critical need.

They did not want to let transportation barriers prevent people from accessing care.

The organization is now operating two of their own vehicles, providing door-to-door rides with familiar, trusted staff members.

Starting July 1st, the non-profit is expanding transportation to new members who would otherwise be unable to attend our program. 

This is not part of their original scope of services, and it wasn’t in their budget.

Right now, the Friendship Center needs the community’s support to sustain and grow this critical new program. 

To learn more or support this initiative, visit fcsb.org, email amy@friendshipcentersb.org or call 805-869-2003.

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Ventura County Hardcore scene hosts big shows

Tracy Lehr

VENTURA COUNTY, Calif. – Local music promoter Ventura County Hardcore (@VCHCShows) has been throwing some big shows on the Central Coast.

Arena-level band, Turnstile, played the 300 person capacity Elk’s Lodge in Oxnard.

Ventura County hardcore fans gathered for mosh pits and copious amounts of stage diving took place as the band played.

VCHCShows helped coordinate the event, which was part of Turnstile’s nationwide tour of small venues.

Turnstile recently released a new EP as a preview for their next album “Never Enough.”

Local band Ceramik opened the show.

VCHCShows has more concerts planned over the next several months.

Rapid Skateboarding and Blackhole Skateshop also teamed up with Converse Cons to host a skate jam near Mussel Shoals in early May.

Ventura County skaters set up various ramps and rails for skaters, BMXers and dirt bikers, young and old.

The tricks and the bails got attention from the crowd as skaters tried their hands at the quarter pipe with a gap.

People could even use finger boards to do tricks on mini-ramps.

Local punk bands from VCHCShows including Konspiracy, Disillusion and Cosmic Joke played the festival.

Fans can follows the show on Instragram @vchcshows

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VCHCshows (@vchcshows) • Instagram photos and videos

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Cyclist Struck and Killed on State Street

Tracy Lehr

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – Santa Barbara Police reported to a fatal traffic collision that left a cyclist dead on Sunday night.

It happened before 10:00 p.m. on State Street near Pedregosa St.

First responders discovered a bicyclist with major injuries and despite life-saving attempts at the scene, the bicyclist was pronounced dead at the scene.

Santa Barbara Police have arrested a Santa Barbara who was involved in the collision for driving under the influence.

Your News Channel will have more information as soon as it becomes available.

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Tremendous postseason run ends for UCSB Softball at NCAA Regional Championship

Mike Klan

WESTWOOD, Calif. – The UC Santa Barbara Softball team (36-26, 17-10 Big West) fell in the Los Angeles Regional Final on Sunday, May 18. The Gauchos ran into a buzzsaw that was the No. 9 national seed, UCLA. The 2025 squad led the program to new heights, and set new standards across the board for the team moving forward.

HOW IT HAPPENEDUC Santa Barbara faced a challenging opponent in UCLA. The Bruins initiated the scoring in the first inning with four runs. A two-RBI single put the Bruins up early and an error on the play allowed another run to score. Following that another RBI single from brought home one more. UC Santa Barbara managed to get a runner on base with Tehya Banks’ single, but they couldn’t convert it into a score, trailing 4-0 after the first inning.

In the second inning, UC Santa Barbara responded with an Alexa Sams’ double, setting the stage for Ainsley Waddell’s RBI single that brought in the home team’s first run of the game. The inning concluded with UC Santa Barbara narrowing the score to 8-1, following the Bruins’ four additional runs earlier in the inning.

The third inning saw a defensive stand from UC Santa Barbara, as they retired the Bruins in order without allowing any runs. However, UC Santa Barbara’s offense was stifled, as they were unable to add to their score, maintaining the 8-1 deficit.

The fourth inning featured a couple of home runs for the Bruins that increased their lead. UC Santa Barbara was unable to score during their turn at bat, the defensive side showed resilience by limiting further damage, despite the Bruins’ three runs in the inning, resulting in an 11-1 score.

In the final inning of play, UC Santa Barbara managed to get two runners on base, but ultimately, they could not capitalize on these opportunities. The Bruins added one more run, sealing the game with a 12-1 victory over UC Santa Barbara.

LOOKING AT THE NUMBERS

UCLA allowed two runs across three games in the Los Angeles Regional, the Gauchos scored both runs, the only team to score on the Bruins.The Gauchos broke numerous single-season records including home runs, runs scored, runs batted in, doubles and hits.This was the first time in program history the Gauchos won a Big West Championship weather postseason or regular season.UC Santa Barbara had six players selected to All-Big West Teams following the regular season.The 2025 squad earned the first two wins in an NCAA Tournament for the program.Prior to their loss against UCLA, the Gauchos had won eight straight elimination games during The Big West Championships and the NCAA Tournament.

IN CONCLUSIONUC Santa Barbara Softball was brought to new heights and set new standards for the program. The Gauchos proved a lot and showed grit, resilience and heart throughout the season. UC Santa Barbara Softball is officially on the map and people are taking notice.

(Article courtesy of UCSB Athletics).

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ShelterBox USA President Honored by Alma Mater

Tracy Lehr

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – The long-time president of ShelterBox USA received an honorary degree during a visit to her alma mater.

During the Class of 2025 graduation ceremony at Providence College in Providence, Rhode Islands, Kerri Murray donned a cap and gown.

The 1995 graduate received an honorary human services doctorate.

Providence College President Fr. Ken Sicard said, “Kerri Murray has risen among the most esteemed voices in humanitarian service.”

Santa Barbara-based ShelterBox USA is on the front lines helping people displaced by disasters, including the LA fires, and conflicts around the globe.

For more information visit https://www.shelterboxusa.org

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