LAPD's bust of pizza joint 'super lab' cooking up THC honey oil delivers 'Breaking Bad' vibes



Authorities shut down a drug lab disguised as a pizza kitchen in North Hollywood Thursday, KABC reported.

"We've heard of secret ingredients, but this one takes the pie!" the Los Angeles Police Department quipped Saturday in an Instagram post.

The facility used to cook up the sketchy substances is a warehouse in the 7300 block of Radford Avenue, KABC reported. The bust was part of a narcotics investigation.

"Let's just say [it's] not pizza," Lillian Carranza, the LAPD's commanding officer of the Gang and Narcotics Division, tweeted.

Two people were arrested and jailed without bail, KABC also reported. Their identities were not immediately released.

The similarities to AMC's "Breaking Bad" were not lost on denizens of social media, who joked in particular about the below photo reminiscent of the popular series that ran between 2008-2013.

"No deliveries from this 'pizza' lab anymore!" the LAPD tweeted, alongside the photo.

"Your lab squad working to dismantle and render an illicit Super Lab safe," Officer Carranza also said, adding that the lab was operating in a business area next to a pet hospital.

Photos from inside the "super lab" showed some elements that do appear pizza-like, such as stacked cooling racks, ovens, and even cardboard pizza boxes labeled "hot and fresh pizza to go."

Carranza explained in a series of tweets in the same thread that the facility was a THC honey oil extraction lab. She added that those are the sorts of labs "we see explode, cause injuries, property damage, and sometimes death."

Marijuana concentrates, or THC concentrates, are highly potent, GetSmartAboutDrugs.gov explains. One popular extraction method using the highly flammable solvent butane is particularly dangerous. The substance is sometimes called 710, to mimic the word "oil" spelled backwards. Other street names include "honey oil," "budder," "shatter," and "dabs."

"We work all cases from fentanyl trafficking to these illicit labs. They are ticking time bombs," Carranza also tweeted.

Carranza challenged one individual's criticism of the bust as going for "small fish" by saying there was "nothing small about this seizure."

TheBlaze reached out to the LAPD for further comment but did not hear back in time for publication.

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'I need to change': Bryan Cranston forced to 'confront' his white privilege and 'white blindness'



In a new interview, Bryan Cranston said he was forced to acknowledge his white privilege and "white blindness" following the Black Lives Matter protests in the summer of 2020.

"I’m 65 years old now, and I need to learn, I need to change," Cranston told the Los Angeles Times.

The Hollywood actor revealed that he was tapped to direct a play at the Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles. The play would be Larry Shue's 1984 comedy "The Foreigner" about an Englishman who learns of a sinister plot by Ku Klux Klan members to convert a rural Georgia fishing lodge into a KKK meeting place, but "things go uproariously awry for the 'bad guys,' and the 'good guys' emerge triumphant."

However, Cranston felt he couldn't tackle that subject matter after the BLM protests in 2020.

"It is a privileged viewpoint to be able to look at the Ku Klux Klan and laugh at them and belittle them for their broken and hateful ideology," Cranston told the L.A. Times in an interview promoting his latest project. "But the Ku Klux Klan and Charlottesville and white supremacists — that’s still happening and it's not funny. It’s not funny to any group that is marginalized by these groups' hatred, and it really taught me something."

Cranston admits that he had been laughing at the comedy for decades. However, the protests and the pandemic caused him to come "face to face with his own 'white blindness' and privilege."

The "Breaking Bad" star said, "And I realized, 'Oh my God, if there’s one, there’s two, and if there’s two, there are 20 blind spots that I have ... what else am I blind to?' If we’re taking up space with a very palatable play from the 1980s where rich old white people can laugh at white supremacists and say, 'Shame on you,' and have a good night in the theater, things need to change, I need to change."

Cranston declined the offer from the playhouse.

"If you find a play that you need an old white guy to act in, then maybe I can be available for that," Cranston told Matt Shakman, Geffen's artistic director.

Shakman approached Cranston with a different opportunity. Cranston agreed to join the production of "Power of Sail" and play the role of Charles Nichols, a "free-speech absolutist" professor who argues, "The answer to hate speech is more speech."

The synopsis of "Power of Sail" from Geffen Playhouse:

Distinguished Harvard professor Charles Nichols (Emmy & Tony Award winner Bryan Cranston) finds himself in hot water after inviting an incendiary white nationalist to speak at his annual symposium. His colleagues are concerned, his students are in revolt, but Charles is undeterred in his plot to expose and academically thrash his invited guest. This profoundly relevant new play by Paul Grellong (The Boys, Manuscript) examines the insidiousness of hate disguised as free speech and the question of who ultimately pays the price.

The Los Angeles Times wrote, "For Cranston, 'Power of Sail' meets that criterion with its pointed critique of America’s devotion to the primacy of free speech."

The play cites philosopher Karl Popper's "paradox of tolerance" from his 1945 book "The Open Society and Its Enemies."

Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance. If we extend unlimited tolerance even to those who are intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a tolerant society against the onslaught of the intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed, and tolerance with them. — In this formulation, I do not imply, for instance, that we should always suppress the utterance of intolerant philosophies; as long as we can counter them by rational argument and keep them in check by public opinion, suppression would certainly be unwise. But we should claim the right to suppress them if necessary even by force; for it may easily turn out that they are not prepared to meet us on the level of rational argument, but begin by denouncing all argument; they may forbid their followers to listen to rational argument, because it is deceptive, and teach them to answer arguments by the use of their fists or pistols. We should therefore claim, in the name of tolerance, the right not to tolerate the intolerant. We should claim that any movement preaching intolerance places itself outside the law, and we should consider incitement to intolerance and persecution as criminal, in the same way as we should consider incitement to murder, or to kidnapping, or to the revival of the slave trade, as criminal.

The Los Angeles Times noted that Cranston is "taken with the theory."

Cranston told the newspaper, "There need to be barriers, there need to be guard rails. If someone wants to say the Holocaust was a hoax, which is against history ... to give a person space to amplify that speech is not tolerance. It’s abusive."

At the end of the interview, Cranston said, "Somewhere in this more hardened world — this less civil world that we find ourselves in — someplace, somewhere, lives forgiveness."

Real-life 'Breaking Bad': HS teacher, coach gunned down in shootout while allegedly trying to rob Mexican drug cartel



A popular high school teacher and coach from Union County, North Carolina, was killed in a shootout on April 8 while he and his brother-in-law were attempting to rob a Mexican drug cartel, authorities said.

The news is reportedly sending shockwaves through the community as students and colleagues say they remember Barney Harris — who taught Spanish and coached varsity basketball and track at Union Academy Charter School — as a kind and compassionate mentor, not someone who would be mixed up in the dangerous and deadly drug world.

But during a press conference about his death, authorities said that Harris lived a secret life that most people couldn't see, WSOC-TV reported.

According to police, Harris and his brother-in-law, Steven Alexander Stewart Jr., attempted to rob a stash house operated by the Sinaloa New Generation Cartel in Alamance County. The pair had allegedly been tracking the movements of the cartel and attempted to raid the stash house for drugs and cash.

During the raid, the two allegedly tied up and questioned an 18-year-old member of the cartel, Alonso Beltran Lara, before shooting and killing him execution-style in the back of the head. After that, other cartel members showed up and a shootout ensued. Harris was killed in the gunfight despite wearing a bullet-proof vest.

Stewart got away but was later apprehended by police. He has now been charged with first-degree murder and first-degree burglary.

'Living a double life' | Union County basketball coach killed in shootout with drug cartel youtu.be

News of the incident immediately sparked comparisons online to the hit television series, "Breaking Bad," which tells the story of Walter White, a high school chemistry teacher turned dangerous drug criminal.

Police said they discovered dozens of bullet casings at the crime scene and noted that several bullets pierced through neighboring trailers in the trailer park community where the stash house was located.

"The trailers that were shot up, it looked like an old Western shootout, that's what it looked like," Alamance County Sheriff Terry Johnson said.

Deputies reported finding five firearms, roughly $7,000 in cash, and 1.2 kilograms of cocaine during the course of the investigation.

Regarding Harris's involvement in the crime, Johnson said, "Nothing surprises me, there are people in families who have relatives that violate the law and never know what's going on."

He added that his primary concern now is about an inevitable retaliation from the drug cartel.

"I can tell you this right now," he said. "When we are dealing with the Mexican drug cartel, somebody's probably going to die as a result of this right here, somewhere else."

Sinaloa, formerly run by Mexican drug kingpin Joaquín Guzmán, known as "El Chapo," is regarded as one of the largest, most powerful drug operations in the western hemisphere, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

Union County basketball coach killed in shootout with drug cartel in Alamance County www.youtube.com