Skip to content
Search

Cara Delevingne’s L.A. Home Engulfed by Massive Fire: ‘My Heart is Broken’

Cara Delevingne’s L.A. Home Engulfed by Massive Fire: ‘My Heart is Broken’

Cara Delevingne is counting her blessings after her home in Studio City, Calif., was engulfed in flames early Friday morning, causing the roof to collapse.

“Thank you from the bottom of my heart to the firefighters and people that have showed up to help,” the model and actress wrote on social media Friday. She also shared a photo of two of her cats, seemingly implying that the pets may have been lost in the fire. “My heart is broken today. I cannot believe it. Life can change in a blink of an eye so cherish what you have.”


The fire broke out near the rear of the house, which consumed one room and “developed into a deep-seated attic fire,” according to information released by the Los Angeles Fire Department.

Delevingne is currently in London, where she has been performing as Sally Bowles in Cabaret at the Playhouse Theatre. It is unclear who was in the house at the time of the fire, but according to the LAFD, one occupant of the home sustained minor smoke inhalation.

“Crews confirmed all occupants were out of the home, and then pulled back into defensive mode due to the long duration of heavy fire exposing the structural members,” the LAFD’s statement continued, adding that the roof of the house eventually collapsed.

THE LAFD said it took 94 firefighters over two hours to put out the fire. The department is investigating the cause of the fire.

More Stories

Jesse Jackson, Civil Rights Activist and Religious Leader, Dead at 84

Jesse Jackson in Chicago circa 1975

Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Jesse Jackson, Civil Rights Activist and Religious Leader, Dead at 84

Rev. Jesse Jackson, the towering civil rights activist and religious leader who worked to improve economic conditions for Black communities and advocated for social-justice causes around the world, died on Tuesday. He was 84.

Jackson’s death was confirmed by his family, who said in a statement that he “died peacefully” while surrounded by family. “Our father was a servant leader — not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world,” the family’s statement continued. “We shared him with the world, and in return, the world became part of our extended family. His unwavering belief in justice, equality, and love uplifted millions, and we ask you to honor his memory by continuing the fight for the values he lived by.” A cause of death was not immediately available.

Keep ReadingShow less
Obama Denies Knowledge of Extraterrestrial Contact But Says Aliens Are ‘Real’
Kyle Mazza/Anadolu via Getty Images

Obama Denies Knowledge of Extraterrestrial Contact But Says Aliens Are ‘Real’

Former President Barack Obama sat down with influencer Brian Tyler Cohen for a friendly conversation that centered on the political divisions roiling the country, but there was one exchange that seemed to unite disparate factions, at least temporarily, in a shared excitement: the moment Obama seemed to confirm the existence of aliens.

“Are aliens real?” Cohen asked the former president point-blank.

Keep ReadingShow less
Joe Rogan Says He Refused to Meet With Jeffrey Epstein

Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

Joe Rogan Says He Refused to Meet With Jeffrey Epstein

Joe Rogan said on his podcast Tuesday that though his name is in the Epstein files, it meant nothing. “Jeffrey Epstein was trying to meet with me,” Rogan told Cheryl Hines, as seen in a clip via The Daily Beast. “I was like, what?” A search of the Epstein Files shows that in 2017, Epstein emailed physicist Lawrence Krauss: “I saw you did the Joe Rogan show, can you introduce me, I think hes funny.” Epstein, a sex offender who trafficked underage girls, died by suicide while in jail in 2019.

Rogan said he never would have met with him anyway. “It’s not even a possibility that I would’ve ever went,” Rogan said. “Especially after I Googled him. It’s like, ‘What the fuck are you talking about?'” Looking back on how Krauss, who’d been a guest on The Joe Rogan Experience, suggested introducing the men, Rogan exclaimed, “Bitch, are you high? What the fuck are you talking about?”

Keep ReadingShow less
Instagram Head Adam Mosseri Testifies, Says ‘Problematic Use’ Is Not ‘Clinical Addiction’

Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri arrives at the Los Angeles Superior Court before testifying on Feb. 11, 2026.

Ethan Swope/Getty Images

Instagram Head Adam Mosseri Testifies, Says ‘Problematic Use’ Is Not ‘Clinical Addiction’

Adam Mosseri, the head of Instagram, appeared in a Los Angeles courtroom Wednesday as an “adverse witness” in a landmark trial over claims that Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube functioned as “digital casinos,” dispensing dopamine-driven rewards to keep children scrolling despite known risks.

Minutes after taking the stand, he was confronted with remarks from a podcast interview he gave in March 2020 where he said, “There’s such a thing as being addicted to a social media platform.” Mosseri told jurors he had misspoken. “Clearly, I wasn’t careful with my words during that podcast,” he testified in the packed courtroom in downtown Los Angeles. “Sometimes I make mistakes.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Boulevard of Dreams on the Future of PR in a Post-Newsroom World
Photo by Lane Dorsey. Shot on site thanks to the Bisha Hotel.

Boulevard of Dreams on the Future of PR in a Post-Newsroom World

When Lori Harito started noticing the slow death of traditional media, she just knew she couldn't stay where she was. In the volatile world of Canadian content, where the ground shifts daily beneath the feet of creators, Harito’s transition from the newsroom to the boardroom of her own boutique PR agency, Boulevard of Dreams, feels less like a career pivot and more like a necessary evolution.

“Journalism is an unstable, unsteady career path, but it was something I truly, truly loved,” Harito reflects. That foundation, a deep-rooted respect for the trenches of storytelling, is exactly what is currently disrupting the often-sterile and overly corporate world of public relations. Along with her partner-in-strategy, Kelly McCabe, Harito is proving that in 2026, the most valuable currency isn't just reach, it’s keeping a finger on the pulse.

Keep ReadingShow less