February 24, 2012
Blade Runner has been called “the official nightmare of Los Angeles”, yet this dystopian vision is in many ways a city planner’s dream come true. Finally, a vibrant street life. A downtown crowded with nighttime strollers. Neon beyond our wildest dreams. Only a Unabomber could find this totally repellant.
The streets are littered with electronic parking meters, but there are no cars parked next to them. The VTOL has replaced the SUV, but there are no traffic jams in the sky. The hero, Deckard, drives his car home from his job downtown, yet when he pulls into the grounds of the hundred-story apartment building where he lives, he finds a parking place right next to the front door. Apparently, he is the only tenant with a car. 
Blade Runner is easy to criticize […] yet Blade Runner continues to fascinate. Perhaps it expresses a nostalgia for a dystopian vision of the future that has become outdated. This vision offered some consolation, because it was at least sublime. Now the future looks brighter, hotter, and blander. Buffalo will become Miami, and Los Angeles will become Death Valley, at least until the rising ocean tides wash it away.
Computers will get faster, and we will get slower. There will be plenty of progress, but few of us will be any better off or happier for it. Robots won’t be sexy and dangerous, they’ll be dull and efficient, and they’ll take our jobs.
— Thom Andersen, Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)

Blade Runner has been called “the official nightmare of Los Angeles”, yet this dystopian vision is in many ways a city planner’s dream come true. Finally, a vibrant street life. A downtown crowded with nighttime strollers. Neon beyond our wildest dreams. Only a Unabomber could find this totally repellant.

The streets are littered with electronic parking meters, but there are no cars parked next to them. The VTOL has replaced the SUV, but there are no traffic jams in the sky. The hero, Deckard, drives his car home from his job downtown, yet when he pulls into the grounds of the hundred-story apartment building where he lives, he finds a parking place right next to the front door. Apparently, he is the only tenant with a car. 

Blade Runner is easy to criticize […] yet Blade Runner continues to fascinate. Perhaps it expresses a nostalgia for a dystopian vision of the future that has become outdated. This vision offered some consolation, because it was at least sublime. Now the future looks brighter, hotter, and blander. Buffalo will become Miami, and Los Angeles will become Death Valley, at least until the rising ocean tides wash it away.

Computers will get faster, and we will get slower. There will be plenty of progress, but few of us will be any better off or happier for it. Robots won’t be sexy and dangerous, they’ll be dull and efficient, and they’ll take our jobs.

— Thom Andersen, Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)

January 21, 2012
justinbobbyy:

tennashuss:

djphatrick:

home.

born n raised.

HIGHLAND PARK!

Would live.
Oh, missed opportunity not labeling Frogtown! “Elysian Valley,” pfft.

justinbobbyy:

tennashuss:

djphatrick:

home.

born n raised.

HIGHLAND PARK!

Would live.

Oh, missed opportunity not labeling Frogtown! “Elysian Valley,” pfft.

(Source: andrescuervo, via tumblangeles)

October 19, 2011
lacmtalibrary:

subwaymaps:

Los Angeles 2020.  Since my last map of Los Angeles was posted, LA Mayor Villaraigosa and the Los Angeles MTA have decided to accelerate their subway construction timetable.  A lot.  For comparison, this is what the system looks like now. By 2020, LA should have the second-largest subway system in the U.S., after New York.

lacmtalibrary:

subwaymaps:

Los Angeles 2020.  Since my last map of Los Angeles was posted, LA Mayor Villaraigosa and the Los Angeles MTA have decided to accelerate their subway construction timetable.  A lot.  For comparison, this is what the system looks like now. By 2020, LA should have the second-largest subway system in the U.S., after New York.

September 29, 2011
tumblangeles:

HEY LOS ANGELES, COME TO THIS TOMORROW TONIGHT IF YOU LIKE LAUGHING OR WHATEVER

tumblangeles:

HEY LOS ANGELES, COME TO THIS TOMORROW TONIGHT IF YOU LIKE LAUGHING OR WHATEVER

(via laurataylor)

September 22, 2011
“junkspace”
latimes:

“Drive” tours an L.A. that isn’t on postcards: The cityscape seen in director Nicolas Winding Refn’s film is drab, standoffish and true to life.

Just don’t expect glamour shots of Walt Disney Concert Hall, Griffith Observatory and other postcard landmarks; what you see through the windshield of the cars in “Drive” is largely the drab, closed-off and forgettable cityscape of the Southern California commercial strip.

Photo:  “Drive,” starring Ryan Gosling, shows the gritty side of Los Angeles. Credit: Richrd Foreman Jr. /  FilmDistrict

“junkspace”

latimes:

“Drive” tours an L.A. that isn’t on postcards: The cityscape seen in director Nicolas Winding Refn’s film is drab, standoffish and true to life.

Just don’t expect glamour shots of Walt Disney Concert Hall, Griffith Observatory and other postcard landmarks; what you see through the windshield of the cars in “Drive” is largely the drab, closed-off and forgettable cityscape of the Southern California commercial strip.

Photo: “Drive,” starring Ryan Gosling, shows the gritty side of Los Angeles. Credit: Richrd Foreman Jr. / FilmDistrict

(Source: Los Angeles Times)

September 7, 2011

WETSHIRTS

(Source: ianbroyles)

September 2, 2011
farfiction:

Construction photo of Los Angeles International Airport Theme Building and maintenance garages ca. 1960. Photo courtesy of Richard Bradshaw. Photographer unknown.
src: socalarchhistory.blogspot.com

farfiction:

Construction photo of Los Angeles International Airport Theme Building and maintenance garages ca. 1960. Photo courtesy of Richard Bradshaw. Photographer unknown.

src: socalarchhistory.blogspot.com

(via tumblangeles)

April 29, 2011
YES I! YES KING! YES BIGGEST BOOK FESTIVAL IN THE US!
I’ll be signing all manner of Fraggle Rock things at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books this weekend at USC. 
Saturday, April 30: 12n - 2p
Sunday, May 1: 1:30p - 3:30p
I will be at Archaia, booth number 834.
As always, I will be employing the “phrase that pays” this weekend. The first person to come up to me and say OUR LOVE IS REAL will get preview editions of my next two books — unreleased, not for sale, only thirty in existence. If any of my comics will help you put your kids through braces, it’s these two!
Come on down! If you don’t like Fraggle Rock, there’s only a billion more books and authors at the festival, and if you don’t like books or authors, just…unfollow me now.

YES I! YES KING! YES BIGGEST BOOK FESTIVAL IN THE US!

I’ll be signing all manner of Fraggle Rock things at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books this weekend at USC. 

  • Saturday, April 30: 12n - 2p
  • Sunday, May 1: 1:30p - 3:30p

I will be at Archaia, booth number 834.

    As always, I will be employing the “phrase that pays” this weekend. The first person to come up to me and say OUR LOVE IS REAL will get preview editions of my next two books — unreleased, not for sale, only thirty in existence. If any of my comics will help you put your kids through braces, it’s these two!

    Come on down! If you don’t like Fraggle Rock, there’s only a billion more books and authors at the festival, and if you don’t like books or authors, just…unfollow me now.

    March 30, 2011
    Los Angeles: Go outside and look at this

    Los Angeles: Go outside and look at this

    March 9, 2011

    (Source: Wikipedia)

    October 17, 2010
    This is a perfect photo but it’s also the corner where Biggie Smalls got shot. RIP.

    This is a perfect photo but it’s also the corner where Biggie Smalls got shot. RIP.

    (via tumblangeles)

    August 25, 2010
    OK I’ll take a barbecue pork sandwich with cheese, a barbecue beef sandwich, a side of chili and beans, a Canada Dry, a “churned buttermilk” (wha?), and one of each of the pies…all for under five dollars??
SUNSET AND VINE. 1926. LET’S GO!

    OK I’ll take a barbecue pork sandwich with cheese, a barbecue beef sandwich, a side of chili and beans, a Canada Dry, a “churned buttermilk” (wha?), and one of each of the pies…all for under five dollars??

    SUNSET AND VINE. 1926. LET’S GO!

    August 24, 2010
    I am in love with this photo. First of all, that’s what Grauman’s Theater, in the heart of Hollywood, looked like in 1929. THINGS DONE CHANGED.
Secondly, it’s a composite photo/artist rendering of a HEIST!
“Photo-diagram of yesterday’s holdup at Grauman’s Chinese Theater, in which robbers escaped with two days’ receipts of $15,000. Officer Crowley is shown firing at the trio, who return the fusillade, wounding James P. Thorpe, a bystander.”
THE NIGHT THEY BURGLED THE CHINESE THEATER!

    I am in love with this photo. First of all, that’s what Grauman’s Theater, in the heart of Hollywood, looked like in 1929. THINGS DONE CHANGED.

    Secondly, it’s a composite photo/artist rendering of a HEIST!

    “Photo-diagram of yesterday’s holdup at Grauman’s Chinese Theater, in which robbers escaped with two days’ receipts of $15,000. Officer Crowley is shown firing at the trio, who return the fusillade, wounding James P. Thorpe, a bystander.”

    THE NIGHT THEY BURGLED THE CHINESE THEATER!

    August 24, 2010
    1950

    1950

    May 31, 2010
    (via divination)
Los Angeles!
That’s the Getty Museum in the upper left.

    (via divination)

    Los Angeles!

    That’s the Getty Museum in the upper left.