Thursday, April 25, 2013

The Spirit of Salt Lake

The Salt Lake City Marathon began at 7:00 a.m., in a light rain that waited until after "Sweet Caroline," a tribute to Boston, to begin falling.  Spectators, moms and dads with their children wrapped in blankets, stood on the side of the road spinning noise makers, clapping their hands, and holding up encouraging signs.  The ran came down harder, but the spectators didn't seemed fazed.

Massive crowds aren't something you'll find in Salt Lake. It is not a dense city, and therefore doesn't exhibit much fan fare around any events other than home court Jazz Games, and even the crowds at those are manageable.  The Salt Lake City Marathon only just celebrated it's 10th anniversary. The inspiration must have come from The Olympics, which the city hosted in 2001, just three years before the first Marathon. All major cities have a major race, and the honor of hosting The Olympics had given Salt Lake the notion that it might be able to apply such an adjective to itself.

The spectators did not need to be contained behind barriers - there weren't enough of them. Just small families every block or so, and a couple of yard parties of between five to ten attendees playing music on radios, barbecuing breakfast, and a few individuals, still in their pajamas, standing on their porches, coffee in hand, watching out of simple curiosity.

Their cheers made my heart leap. They shouted words of encouragement, and I pumped my fists and yelled, "thank you!" And I meant it. The connection I made with each of them felt personal and significant. These strangers were my friends.

My dad dropped me off at the starting line in the morning, and then just under an hour later met me in Sugarhouse Park, at mile five. He stood in the biggest crowd I'd seen yet - about fifteen people deep. I ran up to him and gave him a big hug.

At mile seven, a spectator - not a volunteer - handed out slices of apples. She had gone to the store, purchased boxes upon boxes of apples with her own money, had set up a little card table in front of her house and was speedily slicing them up.

At mile eight, a little boy standing near his father handed out whole bottles of water.

At mile nine, a young woman started running alongside me. "I have a question for you," she said. "Are your hands cold?" Indeed, they were. "I have this two-dollar pair of gloves. You can have them and just throw them away when you don't want them anymore." They were black chenille winter gloves. I put them on a gave her a hug and an almost tearful thank you. I wore them for the next five miles.

Along that same stretch of road, a woman had set up a soft-serve ice cream machine in her front yard and was handing out small cones of sorbet. "I hope this helps!" she said as I reached out for one.

At mile 15, I found my dad standing on the side of Van Winkle and 5100 south, just east of my old high school. He handed me half a banana and a cheese danish.  These boosted my blood sugar and are, I believe, the reason I was able to finish the race (I'd hit a wall and was near to giving up).

At mile 20, as I ran through a surprisingly rural part of town just west of where my parents live - little rambler homes with empty lots scattered between and no sidewalks - my dad stepped out from behind a cherry tree. Giving him a hug and hearing his strengthening words made me feel like I could in fact finish this thing.

At mile 22, a little boy standing next to a bucket of candy and a little table with a pitcher of lemonade on it shouted, "free treats and sugar water!"

A little girl, playing on the curb, handed me a dandelion. "Here you go!" she said.

At mile 23, my parents stood on the side of the road and watched me run by. It was raining, and my mom had her coat pulled up high around her neck.  A duck waddled across the street with five little ducklings trailing behind her.

At mile 24, my brother stood on the sidewalk of 600 East, just one block from his house. He carried a cup of coffee and had a smile of amazement on his face. "You hurting?" he said. "You've run a long way!"



At mile 25, the rain became torrential, falling in heavy sheets. Then, it became hard and hurtful and I realized it was hailing. I was alone on the road, the runners nearest me in front and behind a good twenty yards away. I started cursing at the sky, shouting a storm of obscenities about the pain, the fatigue, the wetness. Three twenty-somethings smoking cigarettes on their veranda heard me and started laughing. An old woman sitting on her enclosed porch said something that, although I couldn't hear, seemed encouraging. I smiled and said thank you.

As soon as I crossed the finish line, hugged my family and my best friend, my body went on recovery lock-down. I could barely walk. I was in such misery that when my sister texted me and asked which race I wanted to do next, I answered: "No next."

Now, less than a week later, I am excited to register for the Salt Lake City Marathon again next year. The spirit of Salt Lake City is one of love and friendship and neighborliness. I love it and it's people, and I can't wait to run through its streets again.






Saturday, April 20, 2013

The City Prolific: Weekend Events April 20 - 21

Apologies for how late I'm getting to this. I was running a marathon. The Salt Lake City Marathon, actually, 26.2 miles through my homeland.


At mile 20 I thought I might die. Then, at mile 23, when it started to hail really hard, I thought I actually was dying. No filter on this pic, I really looked that beat up.

If you are in L.A., I hope you are already at or going to either of these things:

SATURDAY, APRIL 20 and SUNDAY, APRIL 21

The L.A. Times Book Festival




This is one of my favorite events of the year, as is the following event. Fantastic authors of all genres descend upon the USC campus to talk about my favorite thing: books, writing, film and, yes, even theater.

Free

Saturday 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Sunday 10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

University of Southern California

Check the website for transit info and a schedule of events.

SUNDAY, APRIL 21

CicLAvia

LA streets are transformed into carless thorough-fares for bicycles. It's a fabulous way to get some sun and see the city. This year, the route extends to the west side (it starts at City Hall and goes out to Venice). It's one long street party. I highly, highly recommend can't recommend highly enough that you dust off your bicycle and go to this.

Free

10 a.m. - 3 p.m.

Check the website for the starting point, and route.

Follow @LAhappenings for daily event updates.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Boston

My heart has been heavy since this morning, when I first received news of Boston. I've tweeted and Facebooked about it several times, I think as a way to release some of the overwhelming emotion. The thoughts I've shared have all been alike: love to all, love to everyone. It may seem sappy, or redundant, or naive or annoying, but my default psychological gesture is one of embrace. I believe that love nurtures, nourishes, and heals. I believe that if everyone made a conscious effort to love one another more - our own families and friends as well as the stranger across the planet -  the world would be a vastly better place. Yes, I do believe that love, purposely practiced, can heal all the suffering in the world, and that despite today's horrors, the runners, volunteers, first responders, and citizens of Boston proved this to be true.

The following Martin Luther King Jr. quote has been going viral on Facebook today, and it helped bring light to my mood. I share it here, against the skyline of Boston. This is as close as I can get tonight to skywriting my love over the city itself.


Friday, April 12, 2013

The City Prolific: Weekend Events April 12 - 14


The cherry trees and jacaranda's are a blossom, as we near summer in LA: the season of outdoor festivals and screenings.  This weekend's events are a little taste of what's to come. Most everyone's at Coachella this weekend, but I for one am glad I'm not, or I'd miss Sunday's event . . .

FRIDAY, APRIL 12

Southern California Review Launch and Book Party





































My grad program, USC's Master of Professional Writing, is holding a book launch party tonight in the arts district. Food, drink, literature, all in the company of some heavyweights of the writing world.

Free

RSVP to mpw@dornsife.usc.edu

7:00pm

Daily Dose
1820 Industrial St
Los Angeles, CA 90021

Dark n' Stormy


Since you're going to be downtown anyway, grab some laughs at The Loft! This is one of the best-run indie improv shows around. It's very fun.

Free (but you should donate a few bucks!)

9:00pm

929 E. 2nd Street
DTLA

Saturday, March 30, 2013

The City Prolific: My Biggest Baddest Bucket List!


If you could make someone’s dreams come true, would you? You can! Click on this link  or the image above and vote as many ways as possible. By voting, you will be helping to SEND ME AROUND THE WORLD!

As a travel host for MyDestinations.com, I'd get six months, six continents, all expenses paid, my choice of destinations, and $50,000 cash when I return.

Travel is my greatest passion, along with uncovering the secrets of cities, living outdoors (camping, backpacking, hiking, these are the things I live for), eating and drinking everything. And I mean everything.

I believe I would be very, very good at this job. Vote. Like crazy. As many times as possible. For the next two days.  And then, get outside:

SATURDAY, MARCH 30

Food Truck Haven


Food Truck Haven, presented by Angel City Brewery in downtown, is a gathering of LA's best food trucks on the parking lot of the historic John A. Roebling Building.  Beginning today, the trucks will gather on the last Saturday of each month, from noon to 10 p.m.

Free (just bring cash for beer and food!)

12:00pm - 10:00pm

Angel City Brewery
216 S Alameda St
Los Angeles, CA

Punch Card II


Punch Card II is a group exhibition with works by six artists who merge technology and traditional textiles to create their own unique “digital stitch”. From weaving on loom to coding on a computer, it's all art.  Enjoy wine and snacks while wandering the galleries of the Santa Monica Art Studios, one of the loveliest places in our fine city.

Free

6:00pm to 8:00pm

Santa Monica Art Studios

3026 Airport Avenue
Santa Monica, CA

The Vagina Monologues with the LA Derby Dolls


This is the kind of weird mash-up at which LA excels. Taking one iconic thing and squishing it together with another iconic thing. Though L.A.'s Derby Dolls are best known for their amazonian stature and kick-ass roller skills, tonight they present ‘The Vagina Monologues’ in a benefit for local charities. The Derby Dolls will perform alongside Emma Dumont, star of the ABC Family show "Bunheads" and Janice Kent, known best as Maryellen in "The New Leave It To Beaver."

$14 general; $10 students

Doors open at 6:30pm

The Doll Factory
1910 West Temple Street
Los Angeles, CA

Saturday, March 23, 2013

The City Prolific: Weekend Events March 23 & 24



I haven't been doing much lately, other than exploring my new 'hood, (and admiring its old facades like that above), doing homework, and training for a marathon.  But there's some fun stuff around town that you ought to go do.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23

Tolkien Reading Day


Tolkein Nerds Unite! Tonight at downtown's Last Bookstore, volunteers from Tolkein Forever, L.A.'s chapter of the Tolkein Society, will be reading selections aloud from "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of The Rings" trilogy.

Free

2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.

The Last Bookstore
453 S. Spring St, Ground Floor

Downtown LA

A Current Affair Vintage Pop-Up Shop



It's Spring! Time to go shopping! This vintage pop-up show features over 40 vendors including Spanish Moss, Scout, Adored Vintage, Just Say Native, Mercy Vintage, NEW/FOUND, Timeless Vixen, and The Guise Archives.  The show is hosted by musician Nicole Simone, who will style 10 head-to-toe vintage looks that will be on exhibit and available for purchase.  Music by KCRW DJ Marion Hodges; open bar sponsored by Key Club and VitaCoco; lite bites by The Ceviche Project. Street style photographer Histyley will be snapping pictures, so you can get proof that you attended this cool event.

$10-20

3:00pm - 8:00pm

Cooper Design Space
860 S Los Angeles St, Ste 900
Los Angeles 90014

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

A Collection of Towns



It is colder in Culver City than Hollywood, and less sunny, generally. I take the bus and the train in the mornings, and as I travel, I feel the degrees falling away, see the fog hanging down.

Downtown Culver City bustles with pedestrians. People walking from work to lunch, people eating healthy lunches at sidewalk cafes, moms walking their pre-school aged children or their dogs. (There's one mom who walks around with her three year old girl who always carries a flower in each hand and does princess dances all down the street.)  It feels like a city, albeit a very small and quaint one, with groomed landscaping and social flow - like The Truman Show's Seahaven or Back to the Future's Hill Valley.

Los Angeles is a city of neighborhoods. Some call them pockets. Each little pocket has a strip. A strip is made up of five to seven shops, one or two bars, a restaurant and/or a cafe. When people ask, "Do you know Los Feliz?", they're usually referring to the two-block strip of Vermont Avenue.

Downtown Culver City has one major strip, and two off-shoot strips. There might be five cool restaurants in the area, and several good lunch spots. It also has two performing arts theatres, one movie theatre, an In'n'out, a Trader Joes, an Office Max, a Ross Dress for Less, some nail salons, and two studio lots.

It's only a city due to population, and through-traffic (all that east side to west side or vice-versa traffic that is either going to or trying to avoid the freeways). Otherwise, it more accurately resembles a large town.

This is Los Angeles, a collection of towns called cities that collectively make up one giant metropolis, if a metropolis can refer to something sprawling and incomprehensible.

Greetings from LA.  We're on our way.

Saturday, March 16, 2013

The City Prolific: Weekend Events March 16 - 17

SATURDAY, MARCH 16

Public Star Party




Join a bunch of other astronomical nerds, including the Los Angeles Astronomical Society and the Los Angeles Sidewalk Astronomers at the Griffith Observatory to look at the sun, moon, visible planets, and other objects, to try out a variety of telescopes, and to talk to knowledgeable amateur astronomers about the sky and their equipment. Bring a picnic dinner, and enjoy the gorgeous views.

Free

2:00pm - 10:00pm

Griffith Observatory
2800 E Observatory Rd
Los Angeles 90027


Gluekit - Long Play | Scion A/V Installation





































These Scion events are fun, the art is good, the crowd is cool, the wine is decent. Sometimes you just need a reason to hang out on Melrose, you know? This is it.

Free.

Reservations required.

Scion AV Installation
7667 Melrose Ave,
Los Angeles, CA 90046

Santa Monica Airport Artwalk 2013

Head out to Santa Monica to explore an incredible example of a city facility getting repurposed for the arts. You'll see a lot of wonderful art, and you'll probably see a celebrity or two (I saw Halle Berry there once - man, she's gorgeous).

Free

12pm - 5pm

Airport Ave
Santa Monica, CA

Jackpot Improv and Sketch 


Full disclosure: I'm in this show, with my improv team, It Girl. As are tons of other great teams. It is certain to be fun. Or at least weird.

Free

8:30pm - 10:30ishpm or longer

The Underground Annex
1308 N. Wilton Place, 90028

Sunday, March 17




It's St. Patrick's day, but I'm guessing everyone is planning to be hungover from celebrating the night before? Nothing going on. Am I wrong? Submit your event to me here.

Follow @LAhappenings for daily event updates.

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Again About Transit

My old apartment was half a mile from the Hollywood/Western station. My new house is over one and a half miles from the Vermont/Beverly station. Too far to walk for a typical commute, but I will not be unfazed.  For my commute to Culver City, I have my husband drive me to the station, or I take a Metro Rapid bus down Western avenue to connect with the Expo Line.

The Vermont/Beverly station is landscaped with drought-resistant desert plants along a walkway that runs behind the escalators that descend to the subway. It's got steps and levels and foot traffic flows easily through.

1993 Artist's rendering depicting the entrance of the Red Line station at Vermont and Beverly

Vermont/Beverly entrance 2013. The landscaping is very close to the artist rendering above.


Now, let's look at Hollywood/Western:


1993 artist's rendering depicting the entrance of the Red Line station at Hollywood and Western.

Hollywood/Western 2013
Comparing the artist's renderings for Hollywood/Western to how it turned out, it is hard to imagine how things went so wrong. Tiles and stone beneath a terribly dated low-income housing project. Despite the attempt at color and design, the corner is bleak as compared to the life (as in, plants, actual, breathing life) at Vermont/BeverlyOf course, the artist's rendering shows no housing unit, which is a necessity for the area, but how on earth did the actual development turn out to be so, so ugly?

Back to the bus, Metro Rapid 757 stops at the south-west corner of Melrose and Western, in front of a gas station. It is not a pretty corner. It is trash littered and hot. The bus is always crowded, standing room only, but it's a core-strengthening, balance-challenging kind of standing. I can count it as part of my exercise routine.

Nearly five years ago, when I used to take the train downtown to my job at The Unusual Suspects Theatre Company on Olive Street, I was often the only business-class person on the train, and it was never crowded. The majority of riders were families (lots of non-car-owning moms with their babies) or workers of the non-office sort, judging by apparel. No suits and ties, I mean. Sprinkled lightly within the crowd would be one or two FIDM students in their artsy, stylist get-ups.

Today, the ridership has greatly increased, and there are often no available seats on the red line (the expo line is still gaining riders, and finding a seat is never a problem).  The most marked difference between now and five years ago are the number of suits on the train. Professionals are commuting downtown by Metro.

Five years ago, there were fewer companies operating out of downtown.  Many companies didn't think it was a desirable place to be. With the revitalization of Downtown, came a shifted perception, and it became a cool place to be. "You work Downtown? Bleh," became "Wow, you work Downtown? How hip."

Gas prices have driven people out of their cars and onto their feet, and has also driven them into neighborhoods near metro stations.  This shift was fairly predictable.  After a few decades of people wanting space and isolation as well as city salaries, rising gas prices and recessions turned their desires from the suburbs to city centers  - where to get groceries or go to the movies or get drinks with a friend, all you have to do is walk out your front door.

The Metro Rapid ridership is still comprised of the demographic on the train five years ago. I don't know why the business class isn't on the bus. I wonder if it's because the street atmosphere of my particular nook of East Hollywood (Western Avenue) just isn't pretty.  Urban design and aesthetics go a long way to get people of all sorts onto transit - those who need it because they don't have a car, as well as those who have the privilege to choose to not get in their cars. Maybe it's the jostling. A crowded bus does cause a person to jostle, especially when it's charging down Western Avenue.

I know I write about public transit a lot.  That's because I'm on it a lot. And I'm on it a lot because it's a far better way to get around a city, to plan a city, to design a city, than by car.

Friday, March 8, 2013

The City Prolific: Weekend Events March 9th - March 10th

It's been a quiet winter. There's always something going on around town, but it certainly isn't like summer. We stumbled upon another Space 15 Twenty event last weekend, sipped some free Pabst, posed with some giant hearts.





































Here are a few events we might check out this weekend:

SATURDAY, MARCH 9TH 

"What's Up?" An Artist Co-op 7 Exhibition


Everyone loves an art opening. And I always love a reason to go to Bergamot.  In this exhibition, five artists from Co-op 7 present a group art show of new work that uniquely demonstrates each artist’s individuality in various media including monotype, oil, and watercolor. Exhibiting Artist Co-op 7 members are: Adria Becker, Abira Breskal, Selina Cheng, Susan Gesundheit, and Eileen Hecht.

Free

3:00pm - 7:00pm

Schomburg Gallery
Bergamot Station Arts Center
2525 Michigan Ave, Unit E3A
Santa Monica

Red Sky Journal Reading & Issue 3 Launch Party


Red Sky Journal celebrates the launch of its third issue with work by Henry Hoke, Jeremy High, Jamora Crawford, Lan Pham, Lisa Locascio, Ronald Metellus, and Jackson Burgess. There'll be snacks and other fun stuff, plus just the wonderful atmosphere of literary Echo Park.

Free

7:00pm

Stories Books and Cafe
1716 Sunset Blvd
Los Angeles 90026

ART+SOUL Party



If you haven't yet been to the Mezz, go. It's a very strange, in-between kind of space, one of the many such spaces in the Alexandria Hotel.  Rare groove vocalist and emcee Stacy Epps will appear on stage. In the last decade she’s established a reputation for sonic excellence in the underground hip hop community. The event will also feature live art, artist exhibitions, vendors + visuals.

$10 Cover; Limited $6 Presale Tickets via http://aurareleaseparty.eventbrite.com

9:00pm - 2:00am; 21+ w/ ID

The Mezz @ the Alexandria Hotel
501 S. Spring Street – 2nd Floor
Los Angeles 90013

Lenny Kravitz "Looking Back on Love:  Making Black and White America"





































I'd go just to see something at the Arena. I've always been curious about that place.  A Q&A with Director Mathieu Bitton moderated by KFWB's Leo Quinones will take place after the screenings. From the press release: "'Looking Back on Love (Making Black and White America)' brings viewers face to face with legendary rock musician Lenny Kravitz. The documentary features exclusive interviews recorded over two years.  The film also features an in-depth examination of the album's title song; Lenny's personal history about his upbringing in a mixed family; appearances by Javier Bardem and Penelope Cruz; and the message of love that Lenny has been preaching for over 20 years."

$10

Advanced Tickets available at http://arenascreen.com

Two Showings: 7:30PM, 9:20PM

Arena Cinema in Hollywood
1625 N. Las Palmas Ave.
Hollywood, CA 90028.

SUNDAY, MARCH 10

39th Annual Festival of the Kite



The sky will crawl with magic in the form on kites!  Anyone can enter the festival of the kite at Redondo Pier.  Prizes will include Highest Flying Kite, Best Handmade Kite and Youngest Kiteflyer. Come help launch a 25 foot wide kite. 7th Annual Hot Dog On A Stick Eating Contest. $200 prize-3pm. 10th Annual Redondo Throw Down Yo-Yo Competition. So much fun! All Ages Welcome and live music by Tucker Booth.

Free

12:00pm -5:00pm

Redondo Beach Pier
W Torrance Blvd
Redondo Beach 90277

ALL WEEKEND

Old Pasadena Happy Hour




Old Pasadena's finest restaurants, bars, and lounges offer extended food and drink specials all week long! Happy Hour Week runs March 1-15, 2013. From $1 martinis at Equator, $2 beers at Pita Jungle, and $3 gourmet sushi at Sushi Roku and Kabuki, among a whole bunch of other delicious deals. Check out the website for the full list: http://www.oldpasadena.org/happyhourweek/

Follow @LAhappenings for daily event updates.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Ya Voté por Los Angeles

Voting day is tomorrow! It's the primary nominating election, in which we'll choose who will be the next candidates for Mayor (I've never known LA without Villaraigosa, so that'll be weird), decide on a few new city council candidates, and sift through some ballot measures.

To get informed, check out the Arts & Culture Candidate Surveys for LA and Pasadena: http://www.artsforla.org/campaigns

And take a look at the SmartVoter site from the League of Women Voters: http://www.smartvoter.org/

This city is yours if you want it!

Who or what are you voting for? And if you're not voting, how come?

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The Millennium Hollywood

There are stretches of parking lot in Hollywood.

(If you know Hollywood at all, you just rolled your eyes as you read that. Duh, a lot of Hollywood is parking lot.)

The stretches of which I speak surround the Capitol Records building.

Imagine turning these bleak parking lots (are there any other kind) into development.  A landscape upon which life can happen. Shopping! Dining! Or, my personal favorite (and the least mentioned): a park!

A proposal is currently circulating City Hall to develop these lots into a mixed-use project comprising apartments, shopping, dining, and public areas. It sounds wonderful, in theory, but when further details, including architecture renders, emerged, a loud voice of dissent arose from the community, mine among them.

The renders show two 50-story towers stretching to the clouds, dwarfing all the other buildings at Hollywood and Vine - indeed every building in Downtown Hollywood.  The towers look unfinished, with the balconies carved into columns on either side resembling the crossbars of construction scaffolding. According to plans, the towers could be as tall as 485 and 585 feet — more than twice the tallest building in Hollywood (the CNN tower).



However, the final architectural plans for the Millennium Hollywood (by developers Millenium Partners and Argent Ventures) have not yet been approved.  The latest progress in the Millennium Hollywood project is its recent approval by the city's planning department.  Just a, "okay, we're interested, let's talk seriously about this."

The Millennium Hollywood project will be split between two parcels across the street from each other, along Vine between Yucca and Hollywood (almost 5 acres of land).

The two towers will be designed by Handel Architects, and the neighboring Capitol Records Tower and the Gogerty Building will be preserved with the expertise of architect Bill Roschen of Roschen Van Cleve Architects.  The towers will "frame" the views of the Capitol Records tower.  Millennium Partners insists that the project’s primary design objectives will be to "preserve, complement and highlight the Capitol Records Building by creating extensive and inviting open spaces that will greatly enhance the pedestrian experience of the area and forever preserve the critical views of one of the 20th century’s most recognized and beloved structures."



A more pedestrian-friendly experience in central Hollywood would be a much-needed improvement to not just the immediate area, but, with the Hollywood and Vine metro station just a few blocks away, to the progress of a more transit-oriented city at large. I love living in central Hollywood because I can walk to restaurants, bars, and shopping, and there are other people on the street doing the same thing. And then I can get to other parts of town without having to drive.  Hollywood feels like a city, but just a hint, a feeling, a potential of a better, more metropolitan one, if only there were more people, more restaurants, more bars, more transit options, and more public space with benches upon which to sit.

“The goal of all of our projects is to attract people who embrace an urban lifestyle. They want to be able to walk out their door, walk down the street, go to a restaurant, go to the movies, come home, ride the elevator, look at the Hollywood Sign from their apartment, go to sleep,” says Philip Aarons, the Founding Partner of Millennium Partners.

Roschen and Handel Architects are collaborating with James Corner Field Operations, landscape architects of New York’s High Line (a bastion of successful urban public development), on the design of the Millenium's open space, comprised of street-level plazas enhanced with retail and shopping.

Again, all of this sounds wonderful, aside from the hideous tower renders.  I will hope that project can be kept to scale with the current Hollywood skyline, so as to provide housing without adding significant congestion. (50 stories and nearly a thousand apartments and hotel rooms means twice as many thousands of cars - let's not forget, that even with a nearby metro station, this is still LA, and people need cars. You still can't get to Santa Monica from Hollywood without one, or without at least incurring a suicidal headache.)  I will also hope that the Millennium Partners are sincere in and capable of providing the pedestrian-friendly experience to which they allude.  Other developments have promised this, but have failed at delivering. Take, for example, California Plaza. It is nice when you're inside it, but it's above sidewalk level, so if you're walking down Grand or Olive Avenues, you have no idea that there's a large open space just up these stairs here or down these ones here or behind this building or this hotel. The same goes for the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. Lovely on the inside, but from sidewalk level, it's a big secret. By contrast, Lincoln Center in New York City can't be missed by a passer-by. You see the plaza from Broadway, you see the lights inside the Metropolitan Opera house and the intermission audiences gathering outside, you see the fountain dancing, and the New York ballet students lounging around it and you want to go in and discover it for yourself.

Due to an unchecked scale, and previous LA mishaps in providing a pedestrian-friendly experience (my eyes ache from the rolling they've been doing each time I hear a proponent mention Hollywood/Highland as an example of good mixed-use development) , I am skeptical of the Millennium Hollywood.

I would love to hear your thoughts. What do you think of the plans? What would you like to see developed on these parcels of parking lot? What do you think would best help usher Hollywood into being a more urban center? Do you care for it to be such?

Sound off, please.

Monday, February 4, 2013

We're Home!



This is our home. We own it. And it's in Hollywood, where we've said we'd like to stay forever. We're so happy to be home.  Now, let's take a walk down memory lane: our house hunting experience that lasted three years and caused our hearts to ache and our eyes to swell with tears. I'm not exaggerating.  We looked at hundreds of homes, and bid on about a dozen. Here are the ones that stand out.

This was the first house we bid on. It was in a neighborhood we'd never heard of before: Glassell Park. It was up in the hills, with a gorgeous view of Mt. Washington. The house was tiny. But the yard! And the finished back house/studio/office!  And the jacuzzi!  It was an oasis. In East LA.  It sold for $60,000 over listing price.








Next, we bid on this house just off of Beverly. Two stories. A real home. Little yard, but big enough. I loved this house; my husband not so much.  But he didn't have to worry. It also sold for $60,000 more than listing price.










This was our dream house. In the heart of Hollywood, in walking distance to Hollywood and Vine, to our gym, to the farmer's market. Sure, the house needed serious work: new floors, a new kitchen, a new bathroom. But we were willing to slum it over time, to create our dream home with our bare hands.  Although we were the top bidder, we were passed up for a cash buyer.






We really thought we were going to get this one. We wrote a cover letter to the owners, they seemed to really like us - they were like the forty-something versions of us. But, they went with a cash buyer. This is when Joseph coined the term "cash holes".


This was almost our dream house. It wasn't in Hollywood, but it was in a super cute neighborhood (Baldwin Hills), walking distance to the Expo line, and was BIG. Two bedroom/two bath, big front yard, huge back yard, huge back house. We were the top bidder. We went into escrow. The house appraised low. The selling bank wanted us to pay the difference in cash. We said no. They canceled our contract.  Our hearts broke and we became angry at the whole damn system.





State of the art, this was. Gorgeous. Like Tuscany. It was in Highland Park, LA's hottest 'hood for young home buyers. We didn't have a chance in hell.











In Frogtown, almost my favorite neighborhood outside of Hollywood. Tiny, but super cute. A million bidders entered the game. We had a little bit of a chance on this one, but not enough.










Also in Frogtown, on the same street as the one above. At this point, we were desperate to find a home in Frogtown. Near Echo Park! Right off of the LA River bike path! So quiet! So cute! Yeah, us and everyone else.


Again, in Frogtown, right off of the river. With a gorgeous, landscaped backyard. Oh, it was beautiful. Again, like Tuscany. Again, we didn't have a chance.











This is not all of them. Just the ones that we really, really wanted. After three years, hundreds of viewing, dozens of bids, we wound up staying in Hollywood, which is what we wanted all along.





Hollywood forever.