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Dropping Loads…of Christmas

9 Nov

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As of November first, Christmas is making its break. With the erection of the Christmas tree at The Grove (opening reception November 27th people!), all stores have joined in the song – hanging their glittering ornaments, shuffling the fake snow, lighting the trees, arranging the pines, and Santa’s house is being constructed as we speak – it’s apparently time to do some shopping.

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So Christmas just dropped a load, and I think it’s a little early to be drunk on shiny objects and fake, well, everything (it is Los Angeles – no snow, no chilly nights for hot chocolate – we’re faking it the whole way through) and I’m feeling a wee nauseated. It gets harder each year to enjoy the jolly of Christmas spirit when it’s forced down my throat before the Turkey’s cooked. I look at the arranged pines, the lit trees, the fake snow and the dangling bulbs and think – you mean nothing to me – just a jagged set of commercialism and propaganda. That is, until December first. When that date rolls around, I’ll join in with the best of them, singing the carols, lighting my home, hanging my own fake pines (garland is expensive!) and begging my hubby to get the Christmas tree early (even though yes, it does dry out. We are terrible waterers). However, this year maybe it’ll be different. Thanks to the sagging economy and the hideous job loss, we’re looking at a stalemate. I imagine this Christmas will actually rouse more feeling for each other than for presents under the tree, and that is something to welcome. The true meaning of the holiday may not be lost after all.

Do Good

6 Nov

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Image by LAist.

If you didn’t already get a whiff of what Refinery29 is steppin’ in, then I’ve got something to share – Silverlake Junction is a fine place to spend your time shopping, and this weekend, the stores are revving up their sales and banning together for a blowout to span several blocks of the charming neighborhood. Mas Boutique, Sew LA, Mercado and more are expected to shell out clothing from $25 and up. From the Mas Boutique sidewalk sale, take a trip to Space 15 Twenty for shoes + shoes + shoes + bags, the new store housed next to Urban Outfitters, selling high-end favorites including Jeffrey Campbell, seychelles, Marais, Dolce Vita and Dr. Martens. Minx nail makeovers and food from the Green Truck are expected at 7pm tonight to usher in a good vibe. After you’ve re-vamped your wardrobe, take your old stuff to the Feature and Footcandy Clothing Drive Sale to help women in need of business attire. Neighboring boutiques Feature and Footcandy will offer a $20 dollar in-store discount for each item you bring in for the drive – which should consist of “up to 3 pieces of professional women’s clothes— suits, jackets, skirts, shoes, etc.”
Finally, since you’ll be sittin’ pretty, take in the view at the Temperley London Bridal Event and grab on to the Heist Repeat Offender Discount before it expires.

HAVE A GREAT WEEKEND! Find those sales here.

Surfer Girl She is Not

5 Nov

How a nice Jewish girl from Brooklyn rocked the Los Angeles gang scene.

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Leon Bing is a lady. She is also the former girlfriend of a leading Hollywood coke dealer, a former model, and the author of “Do or Die”. The formative study on South L.A. gang culture; which Publisher’s Weekly sums up as the profiling of “archrival Los Angeles teenage gangs the Crips and the Bloods in a harrowing docuchronicle…that should be read by all concerned with the future of urban America.” This is a woman I’d like to meet. She is, by all accounts a striking woman, and has just published her memoir titled “Swans and Pistols”; subtitled “Modeling, Motherhood, and Making It in the Me Generation”. If not a throwback to Los Angeles culture in the ’70’s and ’80’s, then certainly a journey through a life lived in the midst of Hollywood, all it had to offer, and what she took from it.

Totem Pole

5 Nov

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Runyon Canyon is run down. It’s old, was abandoned by past owners and now it needs a facelift thanks to the torrid and varied tempests that scrape through California. Indians ran through it, bandits hid in its brush, celebrities built mansions, Frank Lloyd Wright planned great things and investors abandoned their projects there. Today, it’s used as a large dog park and exercise route for tourists and Angelenos alike; drawn to the canyon not just for the exercise (of which we are keenly fond of here) but for its irresistible panoramic vistas. Known first as “Nopalera” by Gabrielino/Tongva Indians, who used the hills as camping grounds, then by the English name “No Man’s Canyon” and finally branded by Carman Runyon in the 1920’s, Runyon Canyon now sits in the conservatorship of the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and the City of Los Angeles.

In 1867, a man called “Greek George” Caralambo, aka Allen, was gifted the land by Federal Patent in appreciation for his service in the US Army Camel Corps. Quite literally, he served the US as a camel driver; hauling supplies from St. Louis to Los Angeles to build the Butterfield Overland Stage Route. When he got stalled in Los Angeles with thirty camels and no job prospects, he turned the animals loose – they wandered the area for thirty years after. When the terrorizing Mexican bandito Tiburcio Vasquez was found hiding out in the farmhouse behind Allen’s home in 1874, Vasquez was hanged and Allen became famous by association. Then in 1876 Alfredo Solano, a prominent civil engineer and one of the founders of the Los Angeles Athletic Club, bought the property. After his death, his wife Ella Brooks Solano then sold the majority of the land to Carman Runyon in 1919. Carman built a small bungalow near the Fuller entrance to the canyon and stayed there with his second wife until 1930 when he sold it to the famous Irish tenor, John McCormack. The actor and singer, who filmed ‘Song O’ My Heart’ in the canyon, fell in love with the land and bought it when the film was done. He built a mansion named ‘San Patrizio’ after Saint Patrick and lived there with his wife until 1938, abandoning the property to its former owner Carman Runyon. Though McCormack handed over the deed to Runyon, he fully expected to return, but a WWII tour intervened and death finally overtook him in 1945.

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The ‘San Patrizio’ mansion still stood after Runyon sold the property to Huntington Hartford, an heir to a grocery fortune, who renamed the estate “The Pines”. Hartford then commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright and his son Lloyd Wright to develop the lower canyon as a ‘cottage hotel’ in conjunction with a ‘play resort’ country club. A pool pavilion on the crest of the hill at Inspiration Point was built, but neighborhood opposition put Hartford’s larger plans on hold. Jealous local business owners colluded to resist any of Hartford’s attempts at development, among them the City’s officials, who gave Hartford a hell of time getting permits to develop the property. When he started spending more time in New York than California, he tried to gift the property to the City, but the Mayor at the time, Sam Yorty, refused. In anger, Hartford quickly sold the land for bottom dollar. The buyer, named Jules Berman, quickly dozed all the houses to avoid paying taxes on the deteriorating buildings and in 1973, the house that Lloyd Wright built was burned to the ground in a Canyon fire. Though the Kahlua liqueur importer saw a potential to build a “Tiffany development, a beautiful subdivision of 157 luxury homes” titled “Huntington Hartford Estates” (after the former owner of course), the park activist Daniel DeJonghe led a vehement campaign against it and successfully stopped the project before it began. Berman was the bell toll for Runyon, who let the place run down.

There are some funny things left over from the Canyon’s past. Though Berman may have grounded the buildings, the property remains stubbled with debris. No one seems to know the exact origin of each crumbled pile or mysterious concrete staircase, which is irritating when I could be posthumously standing where Vasquez camped out or walking on the once beautiful grounds of Petrizio. Likewise, Curbed LA ekes out little more material when they solicited information from their readers on the Canyon’s history. In irritation, Curbed LA finally remarks, “Runyon Canyon was an estate. The paved entry road was the driveway, and the little platform thing to the left when you walk in was I believe part of the pool house. There are little remnants scattered here and there, including the ruins on the “Outpost” sign along the ridge right before you reach the bench. You’ll also notice tennis courts, and there used to be an empty swimming pool but they filled it in with dirt. You can still find it though, if you know where to look.” In addition, in 1999 two subway tunnels were mined below it to make way for the Metro Red Line. Today, whatever lies in the Canyon, never mind it’s fractured past, it is a treasured urban spot for a quick reprieve from the noisy city; it is our curated nature trail and another homage to the city’s past.

The crumbling spires still inspire:
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Reaching for the Sky

3 Nov

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We’ll Dream of Trick-or-Treating

2 Nov

“It’s late and we are sleepy,
The air is cold and still.
Our jack-o-lantern grins at us
Upon the windowsill.
We’re stuffed with cake and candy
And we’ve had a lot of fun,
But now it’s time to go to bed
And dream of all we’ve done.”

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We came out as goblins, we came out as ghosts, we came out as pirates, princesses and, the Brokeback mountain boys. The funny thing about Halloween in Hollywood is that until the next day, when everyone is wearing their regular clothing, you don’t know who’s dressed up for Halloween and who’s simply dressed for everyday. The man standing still for hours in a gold sequined suit, face painted, waiting for you to put a dollar in his hat so he can move, is still waiting for that dollar on Halloween; alongside Cinderella and Marilyn Monroe and now, more often than not, Michael Jackson. 

The day after Halloween there are remnants. The fake cotton cobwebs clinging to bushes, signs threatening use of silly-string ($1,000 fine) nailed to neighborhood poles, front lawn decorations still lit. There are people shuffling out of friends houses in bright satin muumuu’s, angling to get to their car as fast as possible.

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As concerns my night, even I, who remain firmly stuck in the mud when it comes to dressing for Halloween, came around. Though a true cliché, I was a pirate. A fancy one; with lots of bangles and bracelets, an eye-popping earring and numerous dangling seashells. I buckled my boots, tied my bandana and partied with the rest of them until the wee hours. I saw a pantless banana, met Miss Menopause (hormonal induced mustache and all), drank vodka with Catwoman and danced with a cowboy.

Going Gaga

30 Oct

The California coast lit up this morning with the warm embrace of a sunrise so spectacular – in all it’s purply/pink/yellow glory – that the morning news didn’t stop showing shots of it until 7am, when the broadcast switched over to Good Morning America. In related news: I need more sleep. Oh, and TGIF. Time creaks slowly towards sweet, sweet, weekend.

Do you have Halloween plans? I certainly don’t, but honestly I never really try anyway. Not for Halloween. It’s too costly. It’s too time consuming, and I can’t ever drag myself out to the shops or justify the gigantic expenditures for costumes I won’t wear more than once; the general costume selection out there makes any thoughtful effort an enormous pain in my ass. If I want anything good, I will be collecting items from store to store, sewing at home, and hoping the whole thing doesn’t fall off the moment I step out the door. Likewise, disappointment sets in every time I’m invited to a party – I think it’s going to be some evening soiree with exquisitely detailed and realistic zombies, harlequins and 18th century Antoinettes – it is never as imagined; it’s just a kegger, with clowns. Last year, my hubby and I wound up in a grungy bar in the middle of some skanky part of Santa Monica, dressed as a nun and a priest. Everyone kept bowing and asking us to bless them the whole time. Those were seriously the ONLY costumes that wouldn’t require extra parts, so we bought them last minute. It is why I’m lame on Halloween. I’m the one who locks my door and turns off the lights. Then again, I never went trick or treating growing up. I don’t know why it’s exciting to go from door to door collecting candy for hours in the cold (first snow in Colorado is on Halloween). But you, I hope YOU have a good thing going tomorrow.

Be safe out there this holiday weekend. If Auroras emergence this morning has any prophecies in it, it’s that the witchy weather has vanished, and the only thing terrifying about this weekend will be the copious amounts of sugar (and possible alcohol) consumed, and more Lady Gaga’s than I’d like to see in my lifetime.

HAPPY HALLOWEEN!

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Shot taken up Runyon Canyon, 8am.

Witches Brew

28 Oct

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A forceful wind blew through the city at six o’clock. With it, the fronds from twenty foot palm trees came down with crashing thuds, cleaving placid debris, scattering waste across streets and denting parked cars. It’s a hurricane! It’s also lending itself quite nicely to the pagan festivities approaching us this weekend (though the weather here is expected to be a balmy 80 degrees that day). The unexpected blustery chaos, having rolled skulls and bones from one neighbors yard to another, uprooted tombstones and cocked the devil pitchforks, ushered in an expectant mood of suspenseful glee. It’s cold, it’s eerie, and there are strange sounds everywhere outside. The inflexible (and kind of thorny) palm fronds look like witches brooms – as if they’d been out and about and gotten knocked off their feet, losing their sticks in the process.

Release the brooms:
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What You Missed This Weekend

26 Oct

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97,000 people attended the U2 concert at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena on Sunday night. Amongst the vibrating lights and amped crowd, with Bono’s pitch perfect voice echoing the stadium walls, no prouder moment was to be had than when fifty-year olds drunk on Bud Light, wearing their favorite ripped 1995 tour tees (that managed to conceal only a portion of plump belly underneath), are shouting and loudly singing next to you in an inharmonious malodorous drone. For three hours. However, hoisting said Buds in the air, everyone rocked out to the new and the old U2 hits, taking part in Bono’s message to the world – love, peace and unity – voiced by Bono, cheered on by Los Angeles, making history with the international YouTube live broadcast of the concert.

Less inspired than the U2 concert, was the Italian Tourism Board at The Grove, which appeared at the property for the weekend. Promoting tourism across the world, The Grove has featured Hawaii, Canada, Japan and now Italy. A pop-up trailer ushered you into an air-conditioned room to be educated about the country. You could have scored a 2-inch bottle of true Italian virgin Olive Oil and some European chocolates while being told the virtues of relaxing in Sardinia.

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Also, you could have spent some money. Head over to TenOverSix for some expensive shopping (Beverly boulevard is good for that). Get on your knees and beg them to order more of the sold-out mini-cigarette shrunken literature books from Leo Tolstoy: The Death of Ivan Ilych and Father Sergius, Joseph Conrad: Heart of Darkness and Robert Louis Stevenson: Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde.

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Head Cut Off

23 Oct

I think today is a great day to say that I have felt a lot like this over the past week:

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I thought I was pregnant. But I’m not.

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Laurel Canyon Blvd.

On the eve of Halloween 2009, in the theme of all things gruesome, I offer you this portraiture. Poor chicken. Sick artist. What is the statement here?

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This does kind of make me want to stop eating chicken. If it’s statement is that vegetarianism doesn’t kill animals, then maybe I’m sold here. Actually thinking of their bloody carcass does have a way of making the appetite wander.