Harrowing footage of the wildfires raging around Los Angeles are being shared, including a terrifying incident for two men and a dog trapped inside a home as flames engulf it.
The angry fire is seen mere feet away from the home as the window walls show just how cornered they seem.
The unidentified men film what’s going on as they sound unsure of what to do.
“You’re going to be OK. You’re going to be OK, alright?” the man filming reassures the dog, patting its head.
“Oh s***,” he then says, as the nearing inferno threatens the home.
It is unknown how quickly the fire spread to them because at one point, the other man asks the person filming if they should pack their bags and try to leave.
“Don’t worry about that, dude. Holy s***,” he responds as the flames grow angrier.
The pair confirmed that they had turned off their gas, cutting the risk of an explosion.
The cameraman is then asked if they should open a window, but the other man fires back, “Don’t open anything.”
RECOMMENDED VIDEO
Kevin Dalton, who shared the clip on X, wrote in an update, “I am told the dog and both his humans were eventually able to safely evacuate the property.”
Another video shared on X by The Figen shows a man’s emotional reunion with his cat after his Tarzana home caught fire and he seemingly lost everything.
Firefighters were able to rescue the pet and its owner is overcome with emotion.
Reality stars Heidi Montag and Spencer Pratt are two of the celebrities who lost their home but they were able to escape.
Pratt shared a video on TikTok after the fire tore through their home with the caption, “Nightmare came true.”
Actor James Woods posted a video on X of a fire engulfing his neighbour’s home in Pacific Palisades with the caption “Leaving.”
In the clip, Woods says he was getting ready to evacuate the area, but hours before leaving he wrote, “I couldn’t believe our lovely little home in the hills held on this long. It feels like losing a loved one.”
In a follow-up post, the Emmy winner thanked firefighters and other local authorities working to try to contain the wildfires.
“We were blessed to have LA fire and police depts doing their jobs so well. We are safe and out. There are several elementary schools in our neighborhood and there was an enormous community effort to evacuate the children safely,” Woods captioned the video.
“Cannot speak more highly of the LA fire and LAPD.”
However, Woods did note in a subsequent post that Los Angeles Fire Chief Kristin Crowley, the first female and LGBTQ fire chief of the department, made promoting a culture of DEI her priority.
“Refilling the water reservoirs would have been a welcome priority, too, but I guess she had too much on her plate promoting diversity,” Woods wrote of Crowley on X while sharing part of her bio.
Meanwhile, as hundreds of homes burn to the ground and hundreds of thousands of Californians are without power as the fires continue to wreak havoc, L.A.’s mayor is reportedly in Ghana to attend the inauguration of the Ghanan president.
Investor Wes Nichols took to X to share his anger at what he saw after leaving “the hellscape formerly known as Pacific Palisades where I’ve lived for 26 years.”
He seethed: “Our politicians have failed us. Unprepared, unimaginative, understaffed, now overwhelmed. Heads must roll for this disaster. I personally saw 100+ homes fully engulfed.”
CBS News’ Jonathan Vigliotti shared devastating footage of the aftermath of the fire.
“The mall survived. Most everything else is gone. Homes, apartment complexes … businesses,” he wrote.