OB Christmas Tree 2025 Goes Up! Short Video by Charles Landon

Check out this cute and quick video of the OB Christmas Tree, just erected today, Tuesday December 2. The vid is produced by Charles Landon.
Serving OB, the Peninsula and San Diego Beaches


Check out this cute and quick video of the OB Christmas Tree, just erected today, Tuesday December 2. The vid is produced by Charles Landon.
“The world needs more independent bookstores.”By Roxana Popescu / San Diego Union-Tribune / November 26, 2025
When Patrick Stewart walked into the vacant building that would become the new Library Shop Mission Hills bookstore, he was hit by two feelings: It’s perfect. And oh, boy. The empty bookshelves lining the walls spoke volumes.
But things needed to be spruced up and brought up to code. The building had housed the Mission Hills library from 1961 to 2019 and then sat unused for about five years, not counting the occasional squatter.
“We saw a lot of potential,” said Stewart, the chief executive officer of Library Foundation SD, which supports the library system through outreach, philanthropy and advocacy. “To be able to be in a community that is super, super supportive of the library, and super supportive of the Library Foundation, I think you couldn’t be in a better environment, a more welcoming environment, a very literary environment.”
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Sometimes the best truth in a newspaper can be found in its Letters to the Editor.This is what happened in today’s (Dec.2) LA Times where a reader raised needed and serious questions about a recent news article about the “Feds monitoring, detaining drivers,” that was published in the Times on Nov. 21 — with a similar story being published in the Rag that same day, with the headline, “The Border Patrol Is Monitoring the Driving of American Citizens — Detaining Those With ‘Suspicious’ Patterns.” It’s such a crazy and frightening story that none of our readers raised questions or commented. But Charles Petithomme of Burbank had the nerve to do so with the Times. Here, below is his letter in full.
Re “Feds monitoring, detaining drivers,” Nov. 21
What a frightening story that leaves so many unanswered questions.
Questions about who is being pulled over: Was the system tested before being made operational? Does the targeting algorithm have built-in biases? What is the racial composition of the people being surveilled? What is the conviction rate of those being surveilled?
By Steve Rodriguez
First comes the sighting of a Venezuelan boat.
Just about any fishing boat will suffice.
Next, fixing the target in a missile’s
crosshairs. Followed by a dramatic
blasting of the vessel. Bright flash
of light ensues, conveniently captured
by camera for later media airing.
OB Rag Staff Report
In an August 8 Rag Post, “2026 District 2 Council Race: Will Voters Get Fooled Again?”, we promised to “scrutinize the candidates in the … primary: who they are, what they’ve done, what they say, and most importantly, where their money comes from.”
The primary is six months away in June, and candidates have filed early campaign financial reports. A review of the city’s Campaign Disclosure Reports (Series 400) shows a real difference in the sources of support for three candidates who filed disclosures: Josh Coyne, Mandy Havlik, and Nicole Crosby.
Three other candidates in the race – Mike Rickey, Nicole Quillin, and Daniel Smiechowski – do not have reports on the website, which is common for candidates who don’t reach the reporting threshold.
Josh CoyneCoyne is in first place in District 2 fundraising totals with $69,148. He has made a $30,000 loan to his campaign. According to the Voters’ Voice Initiatives, his contributions from outside District 2 amount to $57,000, or more than 80 percent of his take.
Many of Coyne’s contributors are corporate leaders and lobbyists, some of whom have close ties to Mayor Todd Gloria. They include:
The annual Shop Small campaign by the Ocean Beach MainStreet Association has returned, of course, and held its kick off last Saturday along Newport Avenue.
Kristen Keltner, OBMA’s events and program manager, said the Association not only “encourages locals and visitors alike” to shop in OB but also wants people “to enjoy the holiday spirit and what small towns like Ocean Beach have to offer.”
What are some of those unique finds? Keltner points to the holiday decorations on light posts in the downtown business district and Christmas photo opportunities with the Pacific Ocean or the “Happy Holiday OB” banner, draped across the 4900 block of Newport Avenue, as a backdrop.
Then there’s the OB Christmas Tree, scheduled to appear today, Tuesday, Dec. 2.
What’s dubbed Shop Small Saturday in Ocean Beach is part of the movement known as Small Business Saturday, which follows Black Friday at the beginning of the post-Thanksgiving holiday shopping season.
By Dave Schwab / Times of San Diego / Nov. 24, 2025
Vino lovers: If you haven’t visited urban winery Gianni Buonomo’s new digs in Midway, you owe it to yourself to do so.
The boutique winery, previously on Newport Avenue in Ocean Beach, has relocated to 3492 Pickett St. in a building offering 18 on-site parking spaces.
The name, buon uomo, means “good man” in Italian.
Gianni Buonomo founder and owner Keith Rolle noted he benefits from being near the Pechanga Arena, just a seven-minute walk away.
“We opened here officially in October of last year,” he said, noting he’s going to be expanding his outreach, working with area restaurants to convince them to allow their customers to bring in Gianni Buonomo wine.
By Madison Beveridge / Times of San Diego / Nov.25, 2025
It’s guaranteed to be an intergalactic experience.
The 46th annual Ocean Beach Holiday Parade will kick off on Saturday, Dec. 6, at 5:05 p.m., running along Newport Avenue. This year’s theme, Galactic Holiday Beach Bash, will be all things aliens, spaceships, and cosmic holiday fun, boasting 106 floats.
Hosted by the OB Community Foundation and in partnership with Love Thy Neighborhood, this year’s is set to be one of the biggest yet.
The OB Community Foundation, a nonprofit focused on bettering the lives of those living in and visiting Ocean Beach since 2000, hosts several events annually geared toward deepening local community connections. The parade, however, is one of their biggest and best known events.
“This parade is our bread and butter. We have a whole committee of volunteers working with the city to get permits and put this on,” said Angelo Devlin, president of OB Community Foundation.
Back in late April of 2024, three surfers with connections with Point Loma took a camping and surfing trip to Baja. Carter Rhoad and brothers Callum and Jake Robinson ended up in Punta San José in Ensenda. Callum lived in Ocean Beach, where his brother Jake was visiting him — both brothers are from Australia — and Rhoad, a Point Loma resident, graduated from Point Loma Nazarene University in 2014.
Rhoad and brothers Callum and Jake Robinson were reported missing after they failed to show up at their planned accommodations, and days later they were found dead in Santo Tomas, Baja California.
Back in May, the governor of Baja California, Marina del Pilar Ávila Olmeda, reported that there were three people in custody as a result of the investigation into the execution-style killings. The medical examiner of Baja California said at that time that each of the victims died from a bullet wound to the head.
And much more recently on November 19th, prosecutors with the State Attorney General’s Office in Baja said a woman named Ary Gisell Silva Raya was convicted and sentenced to 20 years for robbery with violence and vehicle theft in connection to the case. Silva Raya pleaded guilty at the hearing on Wednesday and waived her right to a trial. She was fined about $3,000 as well, a number that will increase with payments due to her victims.
By Evan Weiner / Sports Talk Florida / November 19, 2025
The San Diego Planning Commission has recommended that the San Diego City Council give its approval to the Midway Rising project that could eventually become an arena-village.
San Diego needs an arena to have a chance to land either a National Hockey League or National Basketball Association franchise.
Different investors in Alpharetta, Georgia are planning to build arenas and are pushing to get an NHL expansion franchise. The NBA may expand by two franchises in the future and there might be an opportunity to land a financially struggling franchise with an expiring arena lease agreement around 2030. Las Vegas and Seattle more than likely will get the two expansion slots if the league gets around to expanding.
San Diego has a 59-year-old arena that local elected officials and business leaders think needs to be replaced. A 7,500-seat arena opened in nearby Oceanside in 2024.
The Trio Plan to Open New Restaurant on Scott Street in Point LomaBy Beth Demmon / San Diego Magazine / Nov. 14, 2025
They say the third time’s the charm, but what if the first two are already pretty damn charming? I guess we’ll find out when Cesarina Restaurant Group goes for a trifecta of Italian joints. They’ve announced plans to open a new spot on Shelter Island next spring called Corallino at 1101 Scott Street.
The restaurant group is known for its round-the-clock-made pasta, consistently named some of the best in the city. Founded by chef Cesarina Mezzoni, her husband Niccolò Angius, and longtime friend Giuseppe Capasso, they first opened Cesarina in 2019 in Loma Portal (that stretch between OB and Point Loma on Voltaire St.). Then came Elvira in 2023,
By Jim Varnadore
Dear SD U-T Editor,
There are recent rumors that San Diego will soon have a new ride-share called “Waymo”. As I understand it, Waymo is a vehicle without a driver.
I look forward to reading the newspaper coverage of that new service.
It raises a question.
Under state law drivers must exchange identification and insurance information in the event of a collision. If I were to bump into a Waymo, how do I tell it who I am and who is my car insurance carrier?
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