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Farmer’s Market

17 May

Farmer's Market

I love the farmer’s market. I love everything about the way the herbs smell when you’re walking through the market (and that those herbs are only $1 for a bundle), the children laughing, the neighbors catching up, the yelling vendors, the sampling customers, the bongo players, blue-grass trios, acoustic guitar solos – all singing for a buck – the fresh fish, the even fresher olive oil (Verni’s – you MUST try it, tastes like it’s straight from Italy and pressed just the week before. $17 for a bottle, just $20 for the bottle and fresh olives) – all sitting in simple lines down two streets every Sunday morning.

The market will always remind me of home, those foothills of Colorado, the birthplace of Alfalfa’s, Whole Foods, etc. Growing up, people who chose organic foods were called “tree huggers” and “granolas” but as evidenced by the throngs of people purchasing organic produce today, general cultural concerns and tastes are shifting. Buying hemp clothing and organic fruit is no longer just for “tree huggers.”

The crowd is luxurious and uplifting in colorful knits and Breton tees, pink lipsticks and flowing skirts, camper shoes and hipster gear. My favorite part is the music, and mostly an older gentleman who plays the accordion, sending squeezebox melodies through the array. He is just as handsome and charming now as he must have been in his younger days.

Farmer's Market

Farmer's Market

Farmer's Market

Farmer's Market

Farmer's Market

FACEHUNTED – L.A.

13 May

If you’re an avid fashion consumer, then you’ll no doubt be acquainted with those photographer bloggers who so aptly capture the stylish women across the globe. If you’re fans of The Sartorialist, Garance Dore, Style/Click, Mr. Newton, JAK & JIL, or any number of street style blogs out there, you’ll find a kindred spirit in Yvan Rodic of Facehunter, who recently spent a few days in L.A. Most of his photos were taken right around my neighborhood, on rooftops right above Hollywood Blvd. Enjoy!!

FACEHUNTER in L.A.

Rainbow

8 May

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Fairfax Avenue & Santa Monica Blvd

Engrish off the 101

7 May

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A friend of mine took this snap near the 101 Highway. He thought it was funny because it reads like an Engrish sign. Incidentally, lovers of Asian signage marked with confused English translations, such as “slip and fall carefully”, “fragrant and hot Marxism” and drinks with the name “Jew’s Ear Juice” (as The Sartorialist recently discovered), might soon be extinct (though I’m sure various paraphernalia will remain). Zhao Huimin, the “former Chinese deputy consul general to the United States who, as director general of the capital’s Foreign Affairs Office, has been leading the fight for linguistic standardization and sobriety,” says that “the purpose of signage is to be useful, not to be amusing.”

For the Love of Urth

7 May

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Urth Cafe and their signature foamy design. If you’re lucky, you’ll get a swan. The arrival of my coffee is so exciting at 7am in the morning, I always have to take a picture of my cup. Simple pleasures….

See?!:

Coffee,Urth

Coffee,Urth

Melrose Avenue & La Cienega

The Doctor is in

19 Apr

Graffiti

Venice Beach

8:00am and the Party’s Just Begun

19 Apr

She keeps placing the five dollar sunglasses on her face, turning to the rest of us in line, and saying loudly with valley-girl whine, “They’re so cute right?!” Her blond hair swishes back and forth and she calls the checker “babe.”

“I used to pay $700 for sunglasses but I’d buy a 1,000 of these, I mean at five dollars…it’d be like…(kind of mumbling, doing the math in her head)…anyway, the recession..RIGHT?!” She shuffles in her five inch patent leather shoes, barely clothed in a black top with slits up the sides so deep, I can see the whole of her back to the top of her g-string. Just a two inch strip connects the garment in the back, it slides from the top of her neck and drapes low at the bottom. She must be freezing in her tiny shorts!

Though her body confidence is enviable. I’d never wear anything so…revealing.

She’s buying a six pack of corona, cigs, glasses and something else I cannot see alongside her mohawked boyfriend, who seems to have forgotten his belt. His pants are sagging to TMI limits and he looks tired. I’m not sure these two have gone to bed.

It’s 8:00am on Hollywood Blvd at CVS.

Sometimes I just love this town for its drunken, skanky eccentricity.

On my way home, I have to pass by the couple, and I watch them as they stagger down Hollywood, taking photos of each other and laughing, just having a great time.

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Free Humanity

13 Apr

Free Humanity

Leba

Los Angeles’ ranks of graffiti rats has another addition – Leba. You can see more work here.

Good Friday

26 Mar

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5:01pm I am impatiently waiting outside for the bus, anxious for the arrival of my particular line. Since this stop caters to several lines, I am already covered in debris from other buses that pass by – a barrage of dust, leaves and small pieces of trash kicked up by their broad wheels. I fail to use a magazine to shield my eyes.

5:10pm I’m on the bus towards home. It stinks. It smells like sweat, fecal waste and curry. This is my Friday bus ride home. Fifteen minutes. It’s not a lot. It’s doable.

5:12pm It’s worse than I thought. There’s got to be a homeless man somewhere, I can smell the urine, but I can’t spot him. There’s a teenage couple speaking quietly, their heavy-lidded eyes dropping as they take turns swigging a bottle of water while protecting several bags of protruding luggage. The boyfriend keeps lifting up his shirt to reveal heavy tattoos and skinny muscles. She tells him to put his shirt down. They are blocking the entrance to the bus with their navy blue bags and oncoming passengers are having problems getting through. Uh-oh. We’ve pulled up at the next stop and the old ladies are making their way in.

5:13pm Decorum on the bus dictates that you must move for the elderly and handicapped. There are both ascending towards the door now, but the teens aren’t moving a thing. Or at least for the moment, are making no effort to move. I’m positive that the girlfriend will wrangle her tattooed, macho boyfriend away from the door, urging their bags towards the back, but as the old lady starts to push their cases from her path, they make no movement and someone starts to yell.

5:14pm Turns out the old woman is part of a couple – a Russian couple. Her husband is helping her move the cases away, so the teens make a move for the bags and start to haul them away as the old woman starts waving her hands and yelling in Russian, joined quickly by the tattooed teen who surprisingly yells back at her in Russian. They are fighting, the girl keeps calling the old woman ‘crazy old bitch!’ and sits down in front of them with one of her bags. She glares at the old couple. The old man starts yelling and pointing menacingly, and the boyfriend starts to explain to his girl what they are threatening. The boyfriend repeats ‘I can take you!’

5:15pm Oh holy hell! The bus driver opens the back door and starts bellowing. Someone has to get off. We wait for two minutes. No one is moving. The driver finally closes the door.

5:17pm This bus ride is already too long. Just close the goddamn doors and get moving. The fighting ceases, they are simply staring at each other while the young girl continues to oscillate glances between her boyfriend and the old woman, repeating quietly ‘crazy ol’ bitch’ and shaking her head. Everyone is silently glancing around, or staring out the window. I fantasize about every which way this situation could erupt further; several scenes involve guns. I look around at today’s passengers. What are the odds? I think I watch too much tv.

5:21pm I’ve located the smell. There’s a man with matted hair and crusty white eyes nearby. He is carrying a satchel with god knows what inside. I plug my nose.

5:22pm Good Lord I can’t even concentrate on the podcast playing on my iphone. It is a hot day, heat that augments even the slightest waft of crude aromas. It is retchingly putrid.

5:24pm Oh Hallelujah. I am a minute away. I see my stop, the fresh air, the freedom to move – and my dash for the door is the worst part of all. I must make my way out of the cramped and immobilizing vehicle to the exit, roughly and clumsily falling toward the door in heels because I cannot gain my balance while trying to play twister through the crowd.

5:26pm Ha. Freedom.

Like Skittles, Full of Color and Just as Fruity

19 Mar

I recently came across an article, in the wonderfully free newspaper and L.A. Times underling, Brand X, touting the adventurous rides of a certain blogger (not me) on L.A.’s bus lines. Though I applaud the author for sniffing out and highlighting the oft erratic and tempestuous nature of metro’s particular clientele, the worst experiences of this girl amount to a small hill of beans. When it comes to strangers, I’ve got former porn star turned tweaked out judge and dirty Jesus; she’s got stares and inconvenience. We are obviously not on the same stranger train.

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Wearing a neon Lululemon jacket, matching cap and sunglasses while carrying her to-go mug, we see our hero in action marching up the sidewalk to catch the morning’s ride. Though the article aims to present the eco-friendly purpose of public transit and the unexpected opportunities to help others out (when an old woman desperately cries out for change, the rider jumps to her aid) as well as providing a petri dish to mix with new people each day, by the end I’m left with the impression that though this chosen route often presents an occasion to observe severe juxtaposition of the city’s humanity – it’s older citizens with their life stories and shaky canes, foreigners trekking their way to Grauman’s Theatre and shopping on Melrose Avenue, Mom’s with kids and groceries, the homeless tied in sheets and mumbling, tired workers, hungry students – it all comes down to convenience. A car really would be better:

“Just to note, there are some pressing things about not having a car and riding the bus that I ponder at times. Like how long it takes me to get somewhere with the leaving the house early to walk the 15 minutes to the bus stop, to wait for the bus, to play stop-and-go down Wilshire. Or, when the bus is late. I mean, I know it happens but it really puts a kink in my schedule. Or, when you just want to listen to the radio and sing at the top of your lungs with the windows rolled down”

Certainly, the freedom of a car is wished for after several months on the MTA. Though the article is truly about “one bloggers Journey through the multicolored world of the MTA” it’s a pretty tame ride, and more like ‘one bloggers journey through the primary colors’ instead of a rainbow. I think given my experiences, and the visceral nature of time spent inches away from people’s faces, flattened against strangers bodies, there could have been more meat on those bones.