• Fire Ep. 1: 2025 Southern California Wildfires: The First 36 Hours (Unedited)

  • Jan 9 2025
  • Length: 12 mins
  • Podcast

Fire Ep. 1: 2025 Southern California Wildfires: The First 36 Hours (Unedited)

  • Summary

  • Los Angeles County on Fire (Recorded 1/8/2025 at 10:30pm PST)

    Some of what I’m about to say may quickly become outdated, but my goal is to help you understand the broader traffic, safety, and emergency response challenges that come with disasters like this. So let’s get into it.


    Segment 1: The Scale of the Disaster

    If you’re not from LA, here’s what you need to understand:

    •The Los Angeles metro area has over 13 million people.

    •The winds are pushing embers up to a mile ahead of the flames, so even people who think they’re safe might not be

    Right now, multiple fires are active across Southern California. The biggest threats are in the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys as well as the Santa Monica Mountains, Hollywood Hills, and sections of Santa Clarita.

    Air tankers and helicopters finally have been able to help on Weds night.


    Segment 2: Why Traffic in Fire Zones Becomes a Nightmare

    Evacuation Traffic is Worse Than Rush Hour

    •During an evacuation, everyone leaves at once—and those side roads are usually tiny canyon roads not built for high traffic volumes.

    Unpredictable Road Closures


    •Some people wait too long to leave, thinking they have more time, and then get stuck in gridlock with flames approaching.

    Emergency Vehicles Need Room, but There’s Nowhere to Move

    Smoke Reduces Visibility, Making Driving Dangerous



    Segment 3: The Bigger Picture—How Southern California Deals With Wildfires

    For anyone outside of SoCal, here’s what’s unique about these disasters compared to other natural disasters like hurricanes, tornadoes, or earthquakes:

    Winds Change Everything

    •Fires move faster when winds are strong, often outrunning evacuation orders.

    •Flying embers start new fires a mile away—so “safe zones” can become danger zones within minutes.

    Traffic Infrastructure Wasn’t Designed for This

    •Many evacuation routes are old, narrow, and not meant for mass movement.



    Segment 4: Where to Get Reliable Updates

    I’m not trying to do live traffic updates here because honestly, KNX, HometownStation.com, and the LA Times are doing a great job.

    Instead, usethese real-time sources:


    • KNX 1070 AM/97.1 FM – Continuous coverage with traffic updates.
    • HometownStation.com (KHTS Santa Clarita) – Very detailed updates for fire-affected areas.
    • ABC7 & KTLA – Live streams and evacuation maps.
    • CAL FIRE & LAFD Twitter accounts – Real-time evacuation alerts.


    Final Thoughts—Stay Safe, Stay Smart


    “I wanted to put this out there because I’ve seen how hard it is for non-lo

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