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Because Ryan Got it Right…

16 Feb

How to Live in Los Angeles

Ryan O’Connell is a 24 year-old writer based in the East Village, New York.

Grow up in Culver City, Brentwood or even Glendale. Know early on that your neighborhood will define you. Move to Los Angeles only if you’re from weird places like Ohio or Oklahoma and quickly discover that people born on the East Coast don’t usually set foot in L.A. In fact, they pretty much despise the city. Everyone’s too sun-fried, too lazy, dazed at the beach, or so they think.

Have a normal upbringing. Get dropped off at gallerias in middle school and house parties in Eagle Rock when you’re in high school. Know someone who knows someone who works in the entertainment industry. When you’re older and in a different city, tell people that “Growing up in L.A., you’re just surrounded by celebrities. It really wasn’t a big deal.”

Go away to college on the East Coast and become friends exclusively with people from L.A. Talk about the city like it’s a nervous tic. “OMG, I miss In-N-Out so much right now! Did you ever go to Il Trem? The one in the valley? Ugh, I just want to lay out in the sun and drive around in my car, you know?” Say these things over and over especially when it’s snowing or a homeless person has just peed on your leg in the subway. These conversations about L.A. are never interesting, but they provide you with a sense of comfort. You feel safer somehow. People from Massachusetts or Rhode Island will overhear and treat you like an alien. You kind of are, but that’s okay. You’re going to move back after college anyway!

Graduate and move back. Go to a coffee shop at 3:00 in the afternoon to apply for jobs and find it packed. Wonder how people actually make a living here. Everyone always talks about a new exciting project in the works and drives a BMW, but they’re still hanging out at Coffee Bean in the middle of the afternoon with nothing to do. Something isn’t quite right here.

Know that people spend an inordinate time in hotels. They go to lunch in hotels, party at hotel lounges, read a book by the pool, but never actually check into a room. This is strange. L.A. is strange.

Grow up on the Eastide and rarely step foot west of La Brea. Grow up on the Westside and rarely step east of La Brea. Understand that the distinction between the two different sides of L.A. is very important to Los Angelenos, but never fully understand why.

Be from the Valley, but sometimes claim you’re from Laurel Canyon or Bel Air…ish. Know that the Valley has its own culture. Tarzana, Chatsworth, Northridge, Van Nuys, Reseda, even Studio City: These are the cities where the majority of the world’s porn is produced. The weather is usually too hot or too cold. There are lots of malls and Yoshinoya’s. A lot of people don’t like the Valley.

Experience some beautiful moments in Los Angeles. Driving on PCH in the warm wind and smelling the Malibu ocean. Seeing the beautiful spanish architecture of the homes in Hancock Park. Driving late at night through the canyons. These will be times when L.A. will truly feel like “the easy life”, like some weird magical utopia. And in many ways, it is.

Los Angeles can be a dichotomy though. Be surprised to see something natural. Forget that you’re surrounded by beautiful mountains and oceans. Spend a lot of time staring at fake breasts and strip malls.

Notice a glaring contradiction with the healthy lifestyles people claim to live in L.A. These are the ones who spend their days swimming in the ocean, eating their macrobiotic lunch, doing yoga. But at night, they call their coke dealer, rage at a bar and go to an after-hours party. For many people, L.A. is GTC: Gym, tan, coke. “But it’s organic…”

A few quick things: Traffic sucks, the Mexican food does not, there’s great radio stations. People say this a lot; “I love L.A. but I hate L.A.”

Come to grips with the fact that L.A. will never make sense because it’s very geographical makeup is on crack. It’s a series of freeways, dead-end streets and giant car dealerships. People feel alienated and detached from their community, but then drive three blocks to the grocery store and wonder why they never meet anyone new.

Life here is like living in a hazy dreamworld that’s drenched in sun and smog. People wear $200 tracksuits to dinner. They say and do strange things, and love every second of their freakshow lives. Discover that the city doesn’t take itself too seriously. People can dress their dogs in fur-lined outfits, buy a whole new face and it’s fine because they’re in L.A. They pay good money to be able to live here and look absolutely ridiculous. Come to the conclusion that L.A. will never adapt, you will adapt to L.A. Admire the city’s unabashed attitude and think you’re going to stay here for a long time.

How to Live in Los Angeles « Thought Catalog.

A Microcosm Interlude

14 Jan

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She used to work in porn. This is what the woman will tell me. She will also admit to being a bit of a gold-digger, say that girls with fros are violent, that no whites live in Africa and state that she borrows money from Jesus. This is what Tuesday, January 12th will mean to me. At five o’clock on the 217 bus, I will be audibly assaulted by crazy.

I’ve figured out (mostly) how not to become ensconced in conversations with strangers when I pay my $1.25 to catch a ride home. For starters, sunglasses are helpful. They obscure your focus, and everyone else’s gaze into yours. Naturally, a set of headphones help, for no one feels more invasive than interrupting your musical experience when you’re clearly enjoying a personal melody. Finally, if you are loaded with bags, shove a thick book in front of your face, sit facing toward the front and not towards others, and affect a certain abstinance from others by piercingly admiring the view from the window or aimlessly wandering your eye as to appear slightly awkward or cracked, then you’re on your way to avoiding the dreaded deranged conversation. I mean, all I want is to sit still for fifteen minutes to relax from my day and look forward to my puppy without idly nodding to someone’s maniacal dribble. Instead…

The man behind me is hissing audibly. It’s unstoppable, this hissing. I hear him mumbling, but I can’t make out any of his words, and they sound angry. Which leads me to believe he is either passionately cursing the bus driver or rattling a satanic verse; this last thought makes me shiver – with images of burnt candles, charred remains and concealing robes – but I’d curse the bus driver too (they are forever too early or too late, and never apologetic until you see the transportation authorities waving them down to check their arrival time (which does happen on occasion and definitely improves their accuracy for several weeks after)). With not a foot between us, he has decided that instead of occupying a free seat, he will stand next to me near the bus driver. A decision that leaves all incoming passengers only space enough to clumsily squeeze against my body, as I juggle a ten pound box, two wine bottles and my purse. I defend my right to stand at the front, because my stop is minus ten minutes away and pushing through twelve passengers to get to the door before it closes is hardly appropriate when you’re carrying weight. The old man hissing behind me is therefore despicable. There is no reason he should not sit down. But that’s what happened today. This is what happened yesterday…

I never caught her name, but she walked onto the bus while yelling at an elderly woman with gray hair and skin that sagged at the mouth. “OBAMA” was all I heard. Wearing an Ed Hardy hat, a red puffy jacket, tall laced boots and tight jeans that wrapped around her ample bottom, she took the space next to my seat. Not the seat, just standing. Next to me. I can be an easy mark as an open ear (it could be the female thing, or that I look so deflated at the end of the day). She starts looking around at the passengers, and promptly shakes her head. The old man beside me is muttering. “Oh, what a day. Oh, WHAT a DAY” he says. There’s a television on the bus that sits high in the front right corner, broadcasting local news and comedy segments. During the trivia portions of the program – questions from jeopardy and trivial pursuit pop up on the screen – he loudly reads the questions to himself, but his answer is always “I don’t fuckin’ know” and he presses his leg into mine.

The woman shaking her head looks at me and asks me where I’m from. “Originally?” I say, “Colorado.”

“What about you? Were you raised here?”

“I’m from West Hollywood.”

“So you were born and raised here?”

“I was born a black American. Illegal immigrants are the ones born here.”

Checkpoint reached. I’ve got eight minutes.

Later, when two young African-American High School girls enter the bus, she turns to me and says, “Those people are violent. I always have to fight them on the streets, but I don’t get physical with them, I just cuss them out badly. They’re just so violent. You have to stay away.”

Every two minutes, this woman frisks her head with rhythymic beats to her left temple. She is lightly smacking herself. She later says her head itches, but it looks too compulsive to be anything other than an obsessive or frequent tick. Her low speech continues. I cannot hear everything she says, but from what I can tell, she describes being a stay at home mom to two boys once upon a time; one of whom got into trouble with the son of a celebrity. The celebrity was someone she got involved with for monetary reasons.

“He suspected I wanted his money. I did. I won’t lie. I just wanted some of it, not all of it. Just enough for some liposuction, get my skin clear, my hair done, maybe a Jeep. You know, not all of it.” She seems anxious, and nervous and continues to look towards the back of the bus.

A tall man enters the vehicle. He looks like Jesus, or rather, the traditional portrait of Jesus. His long, dirty beard and scraggly hair hang past his shoulders, and the long white dress he wears – tied by a slight rope at his waist – is dirtied from his peripatetic wanderings down the Hollywood Walk of Fame and Fairfax Avenue. I can’t even tell if he wears sandals. The woman stops her pulsating head smacks and says hello to him. They are obviously acquaintences, but not friends.

She turns to me again. “I borrowed some money from him. I wanted to know if he got my repayment. I gave it to Spiderman to give to him, because I didn’t see him around. He says he got it back.”

Another dubious man, whom I’ve neglected to mention since he has not quite entered my narrative along this fieldtrip just yet, and who seems to be happy staring at strangers and then immediately laughing to himself while he smiles widely, sits two seats away with a rod, circled by bracelets he (I assume) is selling, resting on his lap. He yells “Jesus wasn’t a tall white man. He doesn’t look like that. But if I were a tall white man with a beard, I guess I’d dress like that too.” He laughs at his statement, and the imposter sits behind him.

There isn’t much time left here for me. The driver has turned the bus onto my street and I’m three blocks from home. The woman turns to me and says, “you probably won’t like me after I tell you this, but I worked in porn. Yeah, you should work in the entertainment business.” I stand up. “See, you’ve got the height and everything.”

I feel bad for her. Not pity, but sad. I really do want to know what her life is like and what she wants out of it. This is where my practiced social abstinance fails me. I can’t think of the right questions, and I don’t have enough time. I think of all the broken dreams here, and I shudder again. If we reach for the moon, and land in the stars, what happens then?

More Thanksgiving/Twilight

3 Dec

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Over the Thanksgiving weekend, I fully intended NOT to watch the wunderkind that is the Twilight series, holding on to some principle that getting on the bandwagon is usually not a good idea and can result in a myriad of regrets. I don’t think I have to really elaborate here (like how I watched the movie everyday since Black Friday, then watched the commentary, bought the books, googled everyone, read their interviews, and listened to the soundtrack), you know where I’m going. I got on the wagon and I’m driving at full-speed. Though I cannot tolerate the knowledge that somehow Bella turns into a whining, stupid, naïve girl in book three, I am compelled to go there because I need to know what happens. I need details, and I need them now. I feel like I’m watching Romeo & Juliet for the first time – Will they? Won’t they? PLEASE LET IT ALL WORK OUT. TOGETHER4EVER.

Then last night I met some people, we had something to drink and I asked about Twilight: “Oh I hate Kristen Stewart as Bella, I have a friend who was up for that part, it was between Kristen and her, and she at least was relatable.” Agh. Whatever.

The discussion weaned away from Twilight and the multifarious possible actor/film/director choices to talk about making a living, and more about actors (because almost everyone there was, had been, or wanted to be at one time). In fact, several actors there had auditioned in front of the casting director that I was now talking to: “When you tell someone what you do, people in L.A. never actually believe you. In New York, if you say you’re an actor, there’s some credibility to that.”

And finally we discussed the holidays. A friend mused humorously about his Thanksgiving dinner with friends and acquaintances, during which he was told by a fellow dinner guest in an excited and possibly concerned manner, “OH MY GOD, you are so skinny!” while ironically holding only a salad.

My head might hurt this morning because either:

a) I’m too punch-drunk on twilight and its brood and I’ve overindulged

b) The particular vernacular of L.A. always sets in a certain depression(we’re all TRYING TO MAKE IT)

c) Obviously, I had WAY too much to drink last night. i.e. I might still be drunk (I stumbled and fell over when I got out of bed this morning).

Butt Cracks of Dawn

25 Sep

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This depressingly long week has finally come to an end (officially 5pm, but you know, I’m pretty much there already). I’ve been testing a new system at work (long meetings and even longer data entry), walking the dog in the now dark 6am hours (should I carry mace?), tried to save a baby possum from being run over by a car (but he died later in the bushes abandoned by Mom), my Dad and I haven’t exactly been talking over the last few weeks, and this heat could make anyone want to move to Alaska and give up on the never-ending sunny days of California. So here we are, Friday. I woke up late but the 7am walk was beautiful.

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The Fires

31 Aug

Another California summer brought along with it dry heat and dry grasses; ergo the palpitating, unrelentant, blazing flames. On Saturday morning at 7:30am, atop the 3 mile hike that is Runyon Canyon, the smoky city is ghostly and stinks of sizzling debree, like burning rubber.

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The entire Valley.
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Lift Off

21 Aug

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I took five 6am walks, ten evening walks, got depressed at the sight of a dead California Fox on the side of the road, said goodbye to a friend (co-worker leaving, not a funeral), never knew what to eat, managed to maintain composure and nose-wrinkling while sitting next to pungent, unhygienic bus co-passengers, groomed my dog, scared dog with a squeaky toy (totally didn’t know he was scared by squeaks and it put him off sleeping with us at night for two days), apologized, had some drinks, took the bus, called my Mom, painted a wall, made a list of projects to do, ran, wrote and illustrated. All completely irrelevant (because) – IT’S FRIDAY!

Have a great weekend!

In The Thick Of It

18 Aug

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Last week, the marine layer refused to move, hovering over the city like bad smog. From atop the eighth floor of the parking garage at The Grove, nothing looks more ominous than toasted clouds caught in the hills. However, with the dense mist, there is a genial quiet and the smothered city sound is comforting.

Just Some Sleep

7 Aug

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This weekend is all about the fluffy pillows and twelve hours in bed, hopefully all spent dreaming in REM. We have kept the dog. The dog is cute, and cuddly, and exciting and bite-y. He will have to be trained, but he is the best bit of scruff that’s crossed my path in years and I fully embrace this 6am walking, sometimes house-broken, chasing cars, thirteen pound wonder. But I am not sleeping and so today I’ve arrived tired and anxious for the day to be over; I hope that everyone has a great weekend!!

This coming Friday, I’ll be inundating you with pics of reality tv stars in a little event known as “Murtzfest,” featuring its’ reality tv super-fan host Murtz and a legion of reality tv showsters – because he’s such a megafan they gave him his own series.

Laters!

Scrambled Eggs…

5 Aug

My Father once said that it is no wonder Dr. Seuss was able to create such imaginative tales with likewise illustrations, because California is so endemically diverse in flora and the sunsets can’t be beat – though Theodor Seuss Geisel didn’t arrive in La Jolla, California until much later in his life, it is true that some of his most famous and best-selling work was written there. It is easy to imagine the tale of The Lorax, for instance (about environmentalism and anti-consumerism), threaded from the erstwhile disappearance of the Orange Groves that covered the hills of Los Angeles or perhaps, inspired by the sight of neighborhoods populated with hundreds of attenuated and bushy-haired palms; and The Grinch (about anti-materialism)…does not need an introduction to where Seuss conceived that story; the ‘Great American Dream’ and its’ accessories was widely advertised in his time (though I estimate that 1957 was a different cultural entity and not approaching today’s cultural compass in its materialistic tendencies, so Seuss was clairvoyant). Either way, California has a nice bit of exceptional scenery.

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Adopting

3 Aug

What I remember most about owning pets (from birds to cats to several dogs) is that they weren’t around that long. This fact was not due to ill-care, but rather to a certain family member who insisted that each cat/dog/kitten/puppy/bird was succumbing to some unalterable primal behavior of chewing, throwing up, pooping, barking, mewing, attention-seeking behavior and therefore disturbing so-and-so’s sleep and costing so-and-so’s money; thus, eventually, each was given away in its turn due to some ineffaceable error.

I was delighted then, after years of dog lust, when a friend of my Sister’s found a pup. This pup, covered in fleas and wearing a cat collar when he was found, is adorable. Though a full-scale search for his former owners is in effect, nothing has come to fruition and it is assumed he may be another victim of the recession – put out due to financial strain or otherwise just losing his cuteness after growing older. On my Sisters’ friends advice, we are “testing” him out and happily took him out to see the world. However, a lot of comforting and petting and cooing had to be done, the poor pup’s been through a lot.

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Santa Monica was wonderful last night; from the salty ocean air to assembled yogis in a sunset class – with complimentary wooden flute soundtrack – butts hoisted towards the flushed sunset.

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