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(KGTV) - If you're heading to KAABOO Del Mar this weekend, you're in for a packed schedule of musical acts and other performers that can't be missed.Here's a look at this weekend's lineups and times:FridaySunset Cliffs Stage 232
(KGTV) — A South Bay native got the break of a lifetime while he was assembling an office chair.While working as a production assistant on set of the Netflix film "Triple Frontier," Louis Rodriguez was putting together a chair for director JC Chandor when he was asked to audition by a casting director.Despite having no previous acting experience, he given the shot to try out for the role of "Duke" in the film while in Hawaii.RELATED: Actor Mark Wahlberg visits with Camp Pendleton troops, familiesAnd, clearly, the audition went well, as he then got the chance to try out in front of Chandor a week later."They recognized me right away as the boy who was serving them coffee," Rodriguez joked.Eventually, he was casted opposite Ben Affleck, Oscar Isaac, Pedro Pascal, Charlie Hunnam, and Garrett Hedlund.RELATED: Video: Tony Hawk drives around yelling at San Diego skaters to 'do a kickflip'"It was really cool going to Columbia," Rodriguez said. "At first I felt like the kid trying to fit in in high school with the cool kids because my chair and my trailer was right next to them.""Triple Frontier" follows a group of former Special Forces operatives as they reunite to pull off a dangerous heist of a drug lord's fortune in South America.Rodriguez plays the part of brother to actress Adria Arjona's character "Yovanna." Duke has been roped into the drug trade and Yovanna works to get him out, while also serving as an informant to Isaac's character. The film is now available to stream on Netflix.Here's a preview of Rodriguez about 40 seconds in during this clip from the film, as his character "Duke" is being loaded into a truck: View this post on Instagram The mission behind the mission. #TripleFrontier A post shared by Triple Frontier (@triplefrontier) on Mar 22, 2019 at 2:26pm PDT "It was a humbling experience," Rodriguez told 10News. "My family was over whelmed when they saw me. No one knew besides my parents and brothers."Rodriguez graduated from Bonita Vista High School before attending the University of Hawai'i where he received a degree in Digital Media. According to his IMDB biography, he chose UH because of his love of surfing and to one day become an underwater documentary filmmaker."It's a once in a lifetime opportunity so I'm going to run with it," Rodriguez said. "I never saw myself in front of the camera but I've always seen myself behind it."He says that he's now looking into acting agents and exploring opportunities to continue acting. 2507

(KGTV and CNN) - President Trump will visit California next week, said White House press secretary Sarah Sanders at a briefing Wednesday. Sources familiar with Trump's plans say he is expected to tour the US-Mexico border to look at border wall prototypes in the San Diego area. The eight 30-foot tall prototypes are located near the existing wall in Otay Mesa.The President and White House have been looking to schedule a trip to the border "for a while," one source said. Trump has not visited California since he was sworn into office, though Vice President Mike Pence did a lucrative fundraising swing through the state in October.RELATED: President Trump to inspect border wall prototypesWhite House press secretary Sarah Sanders confirmed Trump is traveling to California next week but did not provide more specific details. 853
(CNN) - Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman's complaining about lack of outdoor activity may be part of a plan to escape from detention before his sentencing next month, federal officials allege.An attorney for Guzman this month asked a federal judge to intervene over "cruel and unusual" prison conditions for the drug kingpin detained in a federal prison in New York.In the more than two years he's been detained, he's not had access to fresh air or natural sunlight, and is forced to put toilet paper in his ears to mask loud prison noise, his attorney wrote in a letter to the judge.The United States issued a response to the allegations Thursday, saying the only outdoor exercise space at the facility is a rooftop with a wire mesh covering.That facility was the site of a 1981 attempted jail break -- where an inmate's cohorts hijacked a sightseeing helicopter and attempted to cut open the wire mesh covering, the US said."In this case, any outdoor exercise time would be particularly problematic for this defendant," the US said." The defendant has successfully planned and executed elaborate escapes from two high-security penal institutions. As detailed at trial, one of the defendant's escapes involved the construction of a sophisticated, ventilated tunnel that stretched for over a mile. Certainly, an escape via rooftop, using a helicopter, or any related means would be elementary by comparison."He will be sentenced next monthGuzman, once the leader of a murderous drug cartel in Mexico, was convicted in February of running a criminal enterprise and other drug-related charges. He will be sentenced on June 25.He's been in US detention for 27 months, and is in solitary confinement in a 10-by-8-foot windowless cell in Manhattan, according to his defense attorney, Mariel Colon.In the letter to the judge, the attorney described what she called a series of punishments against the drug lord. The light is always on in his cell, leading to a "serious issue of sleep deprivation," she wrote.In addition to the lack of light, the air conditioning in his cell is so loud, he is unable to sleep through the noise, his attorney said. As a result, Guzman has been using toilet paper as earplugs, and he complains of daily headaches and ear pain that makes it impossible for him to use earphones."The reason for the restriction is simple: If there were an emergency, an inmate would not be able to hear the guards alerting the inmates to the problem. Inmates could also use the earplugs as a ruse to ignore, or pretend not to hear, the guards' orders," the government said.The defendant has a week to respond The attorney asked the judge to order the Bureau of Prisons to grant Guzman access to two hours of outdoor exercise a week, earplugs and the same food and drink offerings as other inmates.But the government said he has access to "several different types of exercise equipment, including an exercise bike and elliptical, and a vented window that provides the defendant with access to fresh, outdoor air and sunlight."The US Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York and the Bureau of Prisons declined to comment when reached by CNN this month. The judge had ordered the government to respond by May 23 and the defendant a week later.The government has called for Guzman to be placed under restrictive detention conditions to prevent him from running the Sinaloa Cartel from prison, coordinating an escape from prison, or directing attacks on individuals he believes are cooperating with the government, according to the filing. 3560
(KGTV) — California has already received more than 1.5 million vote-by-mail ballots back with just under three weeks left until the 2020 election.At least 1,511,522 mail-in ballots have been recorded by the state, according to the California Secretary of State office. At this point ahead of the 2016 election, the state had received only 150,000 mail-in ballots.During the 2016 election, a total of 8,443,594 mail-in ballots were recorded, according to the state.RELATED: A step-by-step guide to voting by mail or in person in San Diego CountyThis year, election officials are preparing for an avalanche of ballots to travel through the postal system. California sent a mail-in ballot to every active, registered voter due to the coronavirus pandemic, totaling more than 21 million ballots.In San Diego County, as of Sept. 4, there were about 1,869,527 active, registered voters.Voters can still cast their ballot in person or drop off their ballot at an official. An official search to find the closest polling or drop off location to you is available online.New this year, voters across the state can also track their ballot online and find out when it was mailed, received, and counted.According to the San Diego Registrar of Voters' Michael Vu, voters are encouraged to return their ballots with plenty of time to make sure they are counted. Vu says voters should, "clearly mark that ballot, similar to when you’re going to a polling place with an ink pen. Black or blue is preferred."Vu says missing or mismatched signatures, meaning the signature on the ballot doesn’t match the one on file, are one of the most common reasons ballots get disqualified. The number one reason, however, is that ballots are sent back too late. Ballots must be postmarked on or before Election Day, Nov. 3, Vu says. 1810
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