PODCAST · society
Los Angeles Job Market Report
by Inception Point AI
Discover the latest trends, insights, and opportunities in Southern California with the "Los Angeles Job Market Report" podcast. Each episode delves into the dynamic LA job market, featuring expert interviews, industry analysis, and practical career advice. Stay ahead of the competition with insider tips on job hunting, networking, and career growth in Los Angeles. Whether you're a job seeker, employer, or just curious about the local economy, this podcast is your go-to resource for navigating the ever-changing job landscape in the City of Angels. Tune in and elevate your career prospects today!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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143
Los Angeles Jobs 2025: Healthcare Surge, Tech Growth, and Climate Opportunities Ahead
Los Angeles has a large, diverse job market that is growing modestly but unevenly across sectors. The region combines strengths in entertainment, trade, technology, healthcare, and tourism, while facing affordability challenges and pockets of job loss. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Los Angeles metropolitan area unemployment rate has recently hovered around the mid‑4 percent range, slightly above the U.S. average but far below pandemic peaks, with job growth concentrated in healthcare, transportation and warehousing, professional services, and state and local government. The employment landscape is shaped by a few major industries: film, TV, and digital media centered in Hollywood and Burbank; the Port of Los Angeles and logistics in the South Bay; aerospace and defense in El Segundo; tech startups clustered on the Westside; and a large base of healthcare, hospitality, retail, and public sector jobs. Major employers include the County and City of Los Angeles, UCLA and USC, Kaiser Permanente, Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, Paramount, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing. For example, Boeing is currently hiring an End‑to‑End Space Systems Engineer based in El Segundo, illustrating sustained demand in space and defense engineering. Paramount lists roles such as Inventory Market Specialist in Los Angeles, reflecting ongoing hiring in media and advertising. Whole Foods Market is hiring a full‑time Produce Overnight Team Member in the region, a snapshot of steady demand in grocery and food retail. Recent trends show hotels and tourism still adjusting; AOL reports that Los Angeles County hotels and motels saw about a 1.7 percent workforce decline year over year in late 2025 as higher local wages and slowing convention business pressured margins. At the same time, the clean energy and infrastructure transition is creating new roles; a recent California press release on the state’s “Career Passport” initiative notes that Los Angeles County alone could gain over 100,000 climate‑related jobs by 2030, adding roughly 14 billion dollars to the state economy. Government initiatives focus on apprenticeships, workforce training tied to ports, film production incentives, zero‑emission vehicles, and healthcare expansion. Commuting trends are shifting as more white‑collar roles adopt hybrid schedules, but many listeners still face long cross‑county commutes and limited transit access to job centers. Seasonal patterns include summer surges in hospitality, tourism, entertainment production, and retail hiring spikes in late fall. Key data gaps include the very latest neighborhood‑level unemployment figures, detailed wage trends by occupation, and precise counts of remote versus on‑site roles, though state and federal releases provide broad directional guidance. Overall, the key findings are that Los Angeles remains a competitive, opportunity‑rich job market with moderate unemployment, strong growth in healthcare, logistics, green jobs, and specialized tech and aerospace, but with softness in some hospitality segments and ongoing challenges around housing costs and commute burdens. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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142
Los Angeles Jobs: Growth in Healthcare, Tech, and Logistics as Market Recovers
Los Angeles has a large, diversified job market that has largely recovered from the pandemic shock, but many listeners still face high costs of living, intense competition for roles, and uneven growth across neighborhoods and skill levels. The Los Angeles County Economic Development Corporation reports employment has rebounded with total nonfarm payrolls near or above pre‑COVID levels, led by gains in healthcare, logistics, hospitality, and professional services. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Los Angeles metro unemployment rate has recently hovered around 4 to 5 percent, down sharply from double‑digit peaks in 2020, yet still slightly above the statewide average, reflecting pockets of underemployment and barriers for lower‑income communities. The regional landscape includes major industries such as entertainment and streaming production centered in Hollywood and Burbank; ports and goods‑movement jobs tied to the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach; tech and digital media on the Westside and in Pasadena; healthcare anchored by systems like Kaiser Permanente, Cedars‑Sinai, and UCLA Health; aerospace and defense; higher education; tourism; and a large small‑business and gig economy. Growing sectors include healthcare support roles, clean energy and electrification, warehouse and logistics work linked to e‑commerce, digital content creation, data and product roles in tech, and public infrastructure jobs supported by Measure M transit investments and federal infrastructure funding. The City of Los Angeles notes ongoing initiatives such as workforce development programs through WorkSource and YouthSource centers, local hiring requirements on public projects, and efforts to expand apprenticeship pipelines in construction, green jobs, and entertainment. Seasonal patterns remain visible in film and television production, tourism, retail, and port activity, which can cause short‑term swings in hours and temporary hiring. Commutes are still dominated by car travel, but Metro rail and bus expansions plus rising hybrid work are slowly reshaping commuting trends, with more listeners splitting time between home and office. Data gaps persist around informal gig work, under‑the‑table employment, and very recent month‑to‑month shifts in specific neighborhoods. To illustrate current openings, Wells Fargo is hiring a part‑time teller in East Los Angeles; Fox is listing roles such as bilingual Spanish master control operator and senior product manager in Los Angeles; and Paramount Pictures is recruiting a title payroll analyst based in Los Angeles on a fixed‑term basis. Key findings: the market is diverse and resilient, unemployment has normalized but remains uneven, healthcare, logistics, tech, and media are driving much of the growth, and policy and infrastructure investments are steadily reshaping where and how listeners work. Thank you for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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141
Los Angeles Jobs: Diverse Growth in Health Care, Tech, and Logistics
Los Angeles has a large, diverse job market, strongly influenced by entertainment, trade, health care, tourism, and tech, and it continues to add jobs despite periodic layoffs and cost-of-living pressures. The California Employment Development Department reports that the Los Angeles metro area unemployment rate has recently hovered around the mid‑4 to low‑5 percent range, slightly above the statewide average but well below pandemic peaks, with total nonfarm employment near record highs. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, key employment gains have come from health care and social assistance, leisure and hospitality, professional and business services, and government, while motion picture and sound recording jobs remain cyclical and sensitive to strikes. Major industries and employers include Hollywood studios and streamers such as Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, Netflix, and Paramount; major health systems like Kaiser Permanente, Cedars‑Sinai, and UCLA Health; trade and logistics tied to the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach; higher education at USC and the California State University system; aerospace and defense; and a growing tech and digital media cluster. Online platforms such as Indeed and Randstad show well over 150,000 open positions in the Los Angeles area at any time, spanning roles from customer service and logistics to software engineering and finance, but detailed real‑time wages and benefits by occupation are not always available, which is an ongoing data gap. Current trends show growth in health care, e‑commerce logistics, supply chain analytics, clean energy, and AI and data engineering roles, while traditional retail and some back‑office roles face automation pressure. Seasonal patterns are driven by tourism, retail, and production cycles, with hiring typically picking up in late spring and ahead of the winter holidays, and softening slightly in early year and post‑holiday periods. The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority notes that commuting remains multimodal, with many workers still driving alone but with gradual recovery in transit ridership and an expansion of rail and bus rapid transit, alongside more hybrid and remote jobs that reduce daily commuting for white‑collar roles. Government initiatives by the City and County of Los Angeles focus on workforce development for youth and displaced workers, sector‑based training in health care, construction, and green jobs, and incentives for clean tech and film production; however, listeners should note that outcome data on some newer training programs is still limited. Over the last decade, the market has evolved from a heavy reliance on entertainment and real estate toward a broader base that includes start‑ups, biotech, and advanced manufacturing, even as high housing costs and inequality remain important constraints on long‑term labor supply. As of now, examples of active openings include a Specialty RN in Labor and Delivery at Kaiser Permanente in Los Angeles, a remote Director of Data Engineering and Architecture role based in Los Angeles with Ceribell on Monster, and a Supply Chain Analytics Lead role that lists Los Angeles as one of its work locations for Nestlé. Key findings: Los Angeles offers a deep and diversified employment base with moderate unemployment, strong growth in health care, logistics, and data‑driven roles, continued but volatile opportunity in entertainment, and active government efforts to align training with emerging sectors, though housing costs and patchy data on job quality and outcomes remain challenges listeners should watch. Thank you for tuning in, and be sure to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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140
LA's Job Market: High Growth, High Unemployment, and AI's Ripple Effect
Los Angeles has a large, diverse, and evolving job market, combining strong growth sectors with pockets of elevated unemployment and high living costs. The Public Policy Institute of California reports that the state has added more than 4.2 million jobs over the past 25 years, with long‑term employment growth roughly in line with the nation, though slightly slower since the pandemic. According to the UCLA Anderson Forecast, California’s unemployment rate is around 5.3 percent, above the national 4.3 percent reported by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, with a projected peak near 5.6 percent later this year. Local press such as the Los Angeles Times notes a “high growth but high unemployment” conundrum driven by rapid AI investment, entertainment and tech restructuring, and high costs. Major Los Angeles industries include entertainment, streaming and media, aerospace and defense, international trade through the ports, professional and business services, healthcare, education, tourism, and logistics. Employers such as Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery, Netflix, Northrop Grumman, Cedars‑Sinai, UCLA, USC, Kaiser Permanente, and large public agencies anchor regional employment. Recent trends show layoffs and slower hiring in tech, media, and some manufacturing, while healthcare, social services, government, logistics, and infrastructure‑related construction are adding jobs. AI is dampening demand for some software, marketing, and media roles while boosting demand for engineers and technical specialists. New state and local initiatives, including California climate and infrastructure spending, film and television tax credits, and workforce training through community colleges and workforce boards, aim to support green jobs, advanced manufacturing, and reskilling. Seasonal patterns include summer spikes in tourism and hospitality work and production surges around film and TV projects. Commutes remain significant, with many workers traveling across county lines or using hybrid schedules, though detailed post‑pandemic commuting data for Los Angeles remains limited. Overall, the market is bifurcated: strong for healthcare, education, government, skilled trades, and some professional services, but more volatile for entertainment, tech, and lower‑wage service roles. Current postings include a part‑time After‑School Program Leader with After‑School All‑Stars Los Angeles, a part‑time Teller at Wells Fargo’s Los Angeles Brentwood office, and a Graphic Communication and Drafting Instructor in Landscape Architecture at UCLA Extension. Thanks for tuning in, and remember to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Discover the latest trends, insights, and opportunities in Southern California with the "Los Angeles Job Market Report" podcast. Each episode delves into the dynamic LA job market, featuring expert interviews, industry analysis, and practical career advice. Stay ahead of the competition with insider tips on job hunting, networking, and career growth in Los Angeles. Whether you're a job seeker, employer, or just curious about the local economy, this podcast is your go-to resource for navigating the ever-changing job landscape in the City of Angels. Tune in and elevate your career prospects today!For more info go to https://www.quietperiodplease.com/This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
HOSTED BY
Inception Point AI
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