
Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category
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Thursday, August 12th, 2010“Everyone will be famous for 15 minutes.” -Andy Warhol
Monday, August 2nd, 2010NO PHOTOS! a celebrity-themed party
Friday, July 30th, 2010This is too good for a title
Tuesday, July 20th, 2010Dear friends, if you’ve been following along then you know I’ve been on all sorts of adventures during which I’ve uncovered all sorts of truths about our universe. Initially, many of these adventures included The 99 Cent Store, but as you know, I’ve moved up in the world of confused mid-twenty-ness.
At the advice of friends, I’ve begun buying my produce (Well, first of all, I began buying produce, as in food that is neither frozen nor packaged nor prepared) at local farmers’ markets, which I sure hope are actually conceptual art pieces about the divide between race and class. En route to Sunday’s market at Larchmont Village (yes, yes….), I saw the most curiously arranged yard sale at one of the houses on a corner at Third. I promised myself to return after buying my shopping if I had any cash leftover.
If you look at the photo below, you will see why I was so drawn to this particular yard sale.

As a devotee of all things kitsch and camp, I could not resist this bewilderingly odd and yet so comfortably Los Angeles scene. The yard sale’s purveyors were three women and most of their wares were upper end clothes and shoes often with the tags still on them, as if someone with just too much money bought just too much stuff and was trying to get rid of it with profit.
I was delighted to find an entire table of shoes within my size range. This is special because I have small feet and such large offerings are few and far between. After trying on a pair of ridiculous heels and despite the zealous encouragement of the attending saleswomen, I settled for something far more practical: gold canvas sneakers, of which I was told that I “better not leave without.” They are made in Italy and according to the tags that were still attached to them, a real bargain at the $10 I picked them up for. They are my new favorite things.

As I handed over my cash and one of the women bagged my shoes, she slipped a CD from a stack in with my purchase. “Take this, it’s free,” she said. “Thanks,” I thought, “For giving me your garbage to throw away.”
But I held onto the CD knowing that my partner, T, has an affinity for music and experimentation. He will listen to anything at least once. Even if it looks like this.

Not only does T have a penchant for music, he is also tremendously devoted to the Church of Google, believing with absolute faith that the internet knows all (I would tend to agree with him). So he Googled “Norwood,” and after an initial sweep rendered nothing, added more keywords. “norwood young stand up for something”
Jackpot! No – seriously.
Norwood Young is an R&B singer who became famous for his temporary membership as a singer in the jazz/R&B/fusion group Pieces of a Dream. One of the albums Young sang on went gold and I reckon that’s how he financed the house that would be a Hancock Park cult classic.
[ A visit to Norwood's official site ] offers a harrowing personal account of childhood sexual abuse, mutilation, healing, and reconciliation…along with video of a reverse plastic surgery procedure to correct the Michael Jackson-esque transformation he underwent in order to detach himself from the person who was hurt as a kid. Some pretty deep shit.
Further investigation yielded the video for the single I’d received for free – which T and I were dutifully listening to throughout our search – and it turns out that “Stand Up For Something” is a response to the neighborhood backlash he received after furnishing his front lawn with an army of classical Greek styled statues. The music video features real news footage covering the incident, which occurred sometime in the late 90s. A soundbite from an older woman hints that the neighborhood’s objection may not have been based on taste alone. Prior to stumbling across the video – which upon discovery T said, “I think I may have a treat for you” – I was inspired by Young’s call to “Stand up for somethin’…I live by the Golden Rule / Never hurting my fellow man / So what you put me through / I’d never do it to you.” But when it was revealed that this was, in fact, an anthem for individuality – as tacky as it may be – in a stodgy world, T and I became instant fans. This is a man we can get behind.
I mean, just look at this!
Norwood – Stand Up For Something
Norwood | MySpace Music Videos
Let me make it clear that I absolutely respect this man…he embodies everything I love about people, about LA, and about the weird culture of celebrity. Norwood Young, I salute you. When I bought my magic gold shoes, I had no idea what glory I was treading on.
June Gloom has gone, leaving tiny worlds in its wake
Friday, July 2nd, 2010
I saw this while I was walking back to my car from the Santa Monica College campus at a gloomy 10am.
Along that street there are several large trees, with gnarled roots breaking the lawns and distorting the sidewalks. The roots of the trees seem to be embracing tiny worlds within them. Next time I’m going to build a universe.
Musings on feminism, the instinct to do right, and our parents’ role in developing it
Thursday, July 1st, 2010I don’t know if you know this, but I am taking a Women’s Studies class this summer and despite having to wake at 6am four days a week to attend, it has been a truly inspirational and enlightening class. This morning, however, class was abruptly canceled (For reasons unknown to me), which found me ten miles from home with my bicycle and nothing to do. My instinct was to ride out to Venice Beach for an impromptu breakfast on the boardwalk. I asked my dad for a breakfast loan (It’s come to that. Luckily, I have fantastic parents who have spoiled me in all the right ways) and went to my favorite restaurant. Breakfast after a bike ride has been the backdrop to many bursts of inspiration, and this morning was no different.

Can you find all the bicycles in this scene?
Learning about feminism in an organized academic way has helped correct the misinformation which mired my understanding of it in stereotypes and distrust and dislike (Of men). Now I sort of feel like I have to help everyone realize their feminism.
I am practicing with my father right now…who’s a feminist but doesn’t know it. Like myself in a much more naive time, he feels that aligning himself with a movement will limit his identity. What he doesn’t know is that it can be empowering, and whether he likes it or not, others, strangers, have already labeled him…so he might as well reclaim control over it. His very life is a political statement, a refugee from a country which took everything from him. By working, earning money, buying German luxury cars, he’s protesting, even if he’s an ocean away. Maybe that’s why he won’t take on the name feminist, because he’s grateful for the freedom that we do have in the US. What he needs to realize is that a lot of that freedom is afforded only to a certain few, a certain few who would see him as less than equal. To those few, I am even less equal than he. I know he’ll come around. Especially after reading this.
I was one of those weird kids who liked to read, enchanted by the magic of organized shapes to convey thoughts, stories, and art. I did – and I still do – ready anything and everything.
So one day I found myself reading one of my parent’s books about how to raise a son around the time my brother was born. I must have been six or seven or eight. I suppose I saw the book on a table somewhere and the subject intrigued me.
My parents were and are still not really religious, but they attempted it out of what I believe was an effort to assimilate and socialize. We stopped going to church because my siblings and I would complain and misbehave, and anyway, my mother always told me that the Bible was “written by men to control women.” Which is why it puzzles me that this book about boys seemed to come from some sort of religious or conservative viewpoint, advocating a couple of profoundly homophobic and sexist mindsets to boy-rearing. Even at that age, I was incensed by what I perceived to be – and rightly so – a condoner of injustice, and with a black marker I made some edits. If my brother turned out gay, so be it, and as his big sister he could never be better, bigger, stronger, or smarter than me just cause he’s a boy. I had changed his diaper, for fuck’s sake, and held him in my arms when he’d been so tiny I could have crushed his skull in my hands. I was and I still am his protector.
In my immigrant parents’ household, acts of dissent may not have always been celebrated, but they were always revered. So even though my mother was pissed about the book, I was not punished. “And anyway,” my mom added, “I wasn’t really going to read it.” She argued that, moreover, I had committed an act of vandalism, because the book was her property. My dad said that if I had issues with the book it was more productive to raise those concerns in discussion.
My kid brother is now an intelligent, articulate, feminist, and justice-conscious young man, who, when heckled by male classmates for refusing to name which girls he found “hot,” responded that he respects women and therefore will not reduce them to objects.
My parents have done a magnificent job, and though we may not have always known the words or the names, our hearts have always known when something is amiss, and we have always acted on it. I don’t know if that’s the exceptional privilege of being raised by parents not born with the liberties of this country, but it’s certainly a good instinct. The instinct of fair is intrinsic to civilization. The problem is that we’ve been lulled into apathy or socialized to mistrust our gut.
One of the most important lessons my father taught me – amusingly through the words of Yoda – is to “trust your feelings.” Even more amusing, the event which solidified this lesson was when I’d let my ice skating coach talk me out of choreographing a program to the Star Wars soundtrack. Skating to E.T.’s flying bicycle theme instead, I forgot my routine in the middle of the rink during a competition, and after crying to the judges, I was allowed to fumble my way through the rest into last place. The girl who won in my category had come out strong to – guess what – John Williams’ famously triumphant and epic brass fanfare, the one that is etched upon our modern collective conscious.
When my instincts tell me to do something, I do it. When something feels wrong, when I feel some injustice has been committed, I correct it. That book about raising boys into proper heterosexual figures of domination didn’t jive with my sensibilities, so I rewrote it to my mother’s exasperation. Trust your gut…whether it’s the song you want to dance to or the destiny you want to fulfill. Like the lioness who stalks her prey, my instincts have been honed through practice and encouragement from my parents.
The good news is it’s really that easy.
Writing July 1 2010
Ranting & Raving & Riding
Monday, June 28th, 2010So on the heels of my proposed correlation between the overturning of Prop 8 to revive California’s economy so that the LAPD will receive the funds it needs to operate as the noble organization we all know it to be (Sarcasm?), some of the Boys in Blue participated in an event that, at least for now, begins to redeem their name in my book (Not that my book has any significance, but that’s how the saying goes).
Though I’ve placed some physical distance between myself and the Los Angeles bike scene, I still keep a virtual eye on its movement, and last week my feeds buzzed with the whispers of seemingly secret talks between the appointed leaders of LA Critical Mass and the LAPD.
On Friday – a month since the heinous misconduct of police during CM’s route through Hollywood – cyclists from all over gathered to celebrate, protest, and socialize at the sacred Wilshire and Western meet up. And among them were some unlikely guests.
According to Alex Thompson’s Bikeside LA, members of the LAPD came to ride with June’s Critical Mass. One of them even mounted a certain famed tall bike and rode around, much to everyone’s delight.
Whether or not this was a true passing of the olive branch – or handlebars – between former enemies still remains to be seen, and of course, I have my doubts. Nor does a friendly jaunt with the other side correct any of the graver concerns of cycling in Los Angeles, but I imagine that to the witness driver, the presence of authority legitimizes Critical Mass’ cause, and maybe – just maybe – inspires him to break the bike out of the garage.
From an activist point of view, it seems a step in the right direction, for cooperation can forge the path to understanding and community. But from a feminist cyclist point of view, it seems to be only a distraction from the problems that still exist within the cycling community. The problems that drove me (Perhaps literally!) away from it.
Those problems are partly my fault, for abandoning the community as a lost cause.
But I’m ready to take responsibility now.
Let’s talk about wedding cakes & prom dresses
Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010People, we have to overturn Proposition 8, like, soon, and this is the reason why:
The state of California is miserably broke broke broke. Probably more broke than I am – and I’m a starving artist.
In fact, the state of California is sooo broke, that LAPD’s Vice Department decided to crash GET LUCKY 2010 just so they can cite and fine someone who is probably even more broke than I am. When I can’t afford something, I pay with my credit card, placing myself in even more debt. Now, isn’t that how we ended up here?
“The vice squad?!” you say.
At the time it was frustrating. In retrospect, it’s a little glamorous, don’t you think? “The vice squad crashed my prom party.” This is now part of the landscape of my legend.
And don’t you worry – it’s not over yet.
I digress, however, and the issue at hand is California’s woeful financial situation (Spending money to bust…a prom party? This is your tax money at work, folks, I sure hope it’s what you asked for). Regardless, it’s wedding season right now, but there are hundreds of weddings that will not happen because thousands of people have been denied their rights. That’s hundreds of caterers, photographers (Myself included), venues, renters, DJs, tailors, cooks, bakers, etc etc etc out of work.
Obviously California is in such financial trouble that it’s of utmost importance to shut down underground parties and collect fines on building code citations…fines from people who are more broke than California is, perhaps even receiving unemployment from the state. It’s a vicious cycle. We need gay people to get married to revive our economy – and fast.
So when the issue appears on the ballot again, please vote to overturn Prop 8. The state is so broke it’s picking on young people in prom attire – prom attire! Don’t get me wrong, I love the LAPD – they’ve been great help when Lakers’ fans riot in the streets. Oh wait….
I hate to sound like cyclists’ rights advocate Stephen Box, who’s dedication I deeply admire but who’s sarcastic written criticism of LADOT brings a roll to my eyes, but I guess there’s something about witnessing something unjust – or just plain stupid – that makes one a little cynical.
A while back a woman in a BMW attempted to assault me on my bicycle by honking wildly behind me and then driving around and brake checking right in front of me. I came within inches of her bumper, and had I hit her, I would have smashed my head in, and as I yelled that I was calling the cops, she overtook the car in front of her to make an illegal right turn and disappear forever. I called the LAPD to file a report and when officers Santiago and Farlia arrived, they talked me out of the report, telling me a long story about LAPD’s own corruption. They told me I didn’t have enough information, that nothing would come of the report if I filed one, I had only a partial plate and I wouldn’t be able to identify the woman. There was an attempted assault on my life and the LAPD did nothing.
Some kids throw a prom-themed party. They send in a snitch with a walkie-talkie.
There’s something deeply wrong with this picture.
So guys, please let the gays get married. Can you imagine all the lavish weddings? All the dollars spent?
The LAPD can’t afford to even take a report on an unsafe, malicious driver, they need to collect fines in order to pay the bills. For the sake of the LAPD, vote to repeal Prop 8!
When I can finally have my bachelorette party, make sure to send a stripper in a cop uniform.
Get ready to GET LUCKY
Wednesday, June 16th, 2010


Wow I took a lot of photos
Monday, June 14th, 2010I’m not kidding.
Look for yourself!
First I greeted summer at LAF’s first ever event.

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Then my sister taught me the art of bunny whispering. The little bunnies are looking for homes…my sister found them abandoned in a park. Email me at Happy.Land.2007@gmail.com if you are interested.

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I heard a moving rendition of The Little Mermaid’s “Part of Your World” (Which made me reconsider my entire understanding of that film as a poignant story about the transformations we all desire).

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I got my Heart On all right.

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My heart for hip hop, that is.

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Because we all know I’d have to strap it on otherwise (I’d do so with pride any old day!).

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No wonder I am so tired!




