You are browsing the archive for culver city.

Moby’s Photos to “destroy” Culver City starting September 10

2:33 pm in Art, culver city, Events, Photography by Matt Mason

When shaved-headed synthesized symphonist Moby released a book of photographs to accompany his album destroyed last May, a number of the photos were sent on a worldwide yet very limited tour of art galleries. Moby’s photo tour hits Culver City’s Kopeikin Gallery this Saturday, September 10, through October 22.

Sayeth Moby’s website:

Destroyed introduces us to a side of touring that is often unexposed; secluded time spent in artificial spaces like hotel rooms and backstage waiting areas. The combined album and photo book provides an intimate look at Moby’s world and his creative process as an artist, both the music and photos were created in the same period and draw inspiration from the strange and sublime world of touring.

So … Linda McCartney meets Lost In Translation? Could be very interesting.

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Fiesta La Ballona in Culver City August 26-28

6:18 pm in culver city, Entertainment, Events, History by Matt Mason

Culver City

View of Culver City & environs from the infamous steps of the Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook

If, like me, you desire a small-town feel from our giant metro area every now and then, Culver City‘s Fiesta La Ballona, which takes place August 26-28, may be just the ticket. The Fiesta, which occupies Veteran’s Park at the intersection of Culver Blvd. and Overland Ave., is part cultural heritage festival and part small-town carnival.
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Sometimes it Starts With a Facebook Page

5:11 pm in culver city, LAX, Long Beach, Mass Transit, The Valley, West Side by Jason Burns

Valley-Westside Rail

You Should Like This

Before The Event That Never Was, I wrote about the need for a rail line along the 405 corridor. I exchanged a few emails with Bart Reed of the Transit Coalition, who shared some insight as to how to get such an important piece of the transit puzzle off the ground (or rather, under.) He said they have been in talks with Los Angeles Council Districts 6 and 11, and that they would begin promoting through social media sites.

The Valley-Westside Rail project is now up on Facebook. You should like it.

I asked Bart how people could get more involved. He said that we need to start by garnering support from neighborhood councils. So, that’s where I began, with a few emails of my own:

This past weekend, the closure of the 405 and the media attention it received resulted in a ripple effect on the entire freeway system. Drivers got lucky. Businesses did not. This further illustrates the need for viable transportation alternatives. Specifically, a more comprehensive regional rail network.

As a contributing author for Blogging.LA, I wanted to get your input on a newly envisioned Metro rail line from the Valley to the Westside, by way of the 405 corridor.

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If it Does Not Fit, You Must Ticket?

11:35 am in culver city, Driving, ICME, Law Enforcement, Parking Tards by Matt Mason

 

MINI parking d-bag?Not only is this MINI parked in the handicap spot closest to the entrance of B&B Hardware in Culver City with no visible handicap parking tag, it also has the license plate “FIT2FIT”. Irony alert, or just coincidence?

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by Burns!

Air Force One Drops In To L.A.

9:08 pm in culver city, West Side by Burns!

Air Force One returns to LAX Thursday afternoon.

As I’ve previously mentioned, it’s pretty exciting when Air Force One is at LAX. It is, after all, probably the most recognizable 747 in the country, if not the world. In addition to being exciting to see, it can also be a tremendous pain in the ass. If Air Force One is here, that means the President is, too. And that likely means especially bad traffic on L.A.’s streets.

If you’re a fan of plane spotting, I’m here to give you the hot tip. Pick your spot on the lawn next to In-N-Out on Sepulveda on Thursday afternoon. If all goes according to schedule, Air Force One will cross directly in front of you as it comes in to land at 2:45pm. I always recommend getting there at least 30-60 minutes early, as this flight sometimes runs ahead of schedule.

If you’re not a fan of plane spotting (or heavy traffic,) I’m here to give you the hot tip. Stay the hell away from West L.A. on Thursday afternoon! President Obama arrives in mid-afternoon and will be heading to Sony Studios in Culver City to appear at a fundraiser for his reelection campaign. The Secret Service has worked closely with LAPD and LADOT to mitigate the traffic caused by the presidential motorcade, but seriously, how much can they do? Traffic in that area is typically bad anyway. Add the President to the mix, and things could get ugly.

President Obama will spend the night in southern California, then depart on Friday morning. Scheduled departure is 8:55am, if you plane spotters would like to see AFO in flight again. Remember to set up at the opposite end of the airport, as departing flights head out over the ocean.

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by ruth666

Where am I gonna live?

2:42 pm in culver city, Real Estate, West Side by ruth666

Hey Y’all!

I’m looking to move, likely somewhere that’s a 20-minute drive from Santa Monica, but I’ve lived in “Los Angeles” since 1982 and know that just a block or two in any direction can mean the difference between Just Fine and Oh No You Di-Int.

So, Peeps, anyone care to give a little info? Mar Vista? Culver City? Museum Row?

Elsewhere?

Looking for the Try Heres as well as the Stay The Hell Away Froms.

Need 2 bedrooms and secure parking.

Eager to hear ~

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Favorite L.A. Area Spots: Culver City Park & Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook

6:58 pm in culver city, environment by Matt Mason

I was driving West on Jefferson Blvd. in Culver City recently, when a steep hill and sign touting the Baldwin Hills Scenic Overlook caught my eye.  I quickly turned in, followed the winding road uphill, passed several hikers huffing and puffing in the roadway, then turned around before reaching the top when I saw the sign: “Parking $6″.

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A-Frame: Uncivilizing Civilized Dining

10:48 am in culver city, Food & Drink, LA by Queequeg

Tomorrow is opening night for A-Frame, a collaborative effort between Roy Choi (the chef who brought you Kogi and Chego) and David Reiss (the restaurateur who brought you The Brig and worked with Chef Choi to bring Kogi to his Alibi Room).  A-Frame is a hop, skip, and jump down from Waterloo & City in Culver City, if that helps.  If your “frame” of reference (ha ha) is more along the lines of Bob Villa, Tim “The Toolman” Taylor, and/or Martha Stewart, it might be more helpful if I say that the name defines its structure: a giant A-frame.  If This Old House wasn’t your idea of Saturday morning public channel fun, but going to 24 hour diners in the middle night was, you not only had a better high school experience than I did, but also would immediately recognize the restaurant as a converted IHOP.  Once inside, though, images of all-you-can-eat pancakes dissipate, and you’ll instead spot This Old House‘s blueprints all over it.  As the Los Angeles Times wrote last week, the walls are sanded, bare, naked.  We’re going back to the basics, people, starting with the foundation.

While Roy Choi isn’t A-Frame’s official chef (Jonas Curameng, sous chef at Kogi and Chego, is), he had a heavy hand in creating and curating the menu.  The current trend in dining continues to be science non-fiction in the kitchen: liquid nitrogen once used to freeze and safely store alien-human hybrid embryos in The X-Files is now used to fashion cocktails.  Chef Choi eschews all that; instead of HAL 2000 boxed in a sanitized hospital-white spaceship, he went a few hours/ice ages back to the apes, nature, and fire.  He’s aiming to bring you back to that primordial place, when we ate with our hands and tore with our teeth.  Almost everything on his menu is designed to be eaten this way, messily, with lots of napkins and, when you’ve run out of napkins, your shirt.  This is what food under fire used to taste like, remember?

None of the dishes I tasted were finalized when I tried them, so I’m a little hesitant about giving too many details.  That said, even in their semifinal stages, they were delicious.  Unlike the the predominantly Korean flavors of Kogi and Chego, the dishes here explicitly pull flavors from all over Asia: in addition to Korea, you’ll taste Thailand, Japan, Vietnam, China, the Philippines.  And, because this is all brought to you by the team who thought to put kimchi in a burrito, Mexico represents.  Take those flavors, im-/emigrate them into a building with architecture popularized by an American, and you have A-Frame’s version of Los Angeles, California, USA.  Eat your heart out, Tea Party.

Tomorrow, when you go, start with the fresh kettle popcorn sprinkled liberally with furikake, a Japanese condiment comprised of dry fish and seawood.  Seriously, you can eat this all day.  If you don’t believe me, believe one of the kings of molecular gastronomy, Michael Voltaggio:

Besides the kettle popcorn, get the fried chicken.  Mashing the Peking duck process with the beer can one, the chicken is brined, rotisserie’d, then fried.  Overall, it’s a 24+ hour process that results in juicy meat and a crackling, uber-crispy skin.  Alongside the chicken is their version of the 1,000 year old egg, so you have the poultry version of Dave Bowman in 2001 in that you’re literally going from beginning to end.  The chicken is served with two sauces, one red, one green.  My favorite is the green, a smooth salsa verde.  As it happens, the salsa verde is the Jane Lynch of the menu: it makes frequent appearances in the background, all of them memorable.  Try the salsa with the cocktail shrimp (seasoned and tossed haphazardly in a bowl instead of dancing daintily around a martini glass).  Others: lamb shanks that are beautifully charred and are meaty without being gamey; sweet crab cakes that are to be tucked inside lettuce leaves; and a tofu salad deemed amazing, even amongst the most ardent of meat eaters.

Even the desserts can be eaten with your hands.  I know you will be stuffed to the gills, but try at least one of pastry chef’s Beth Kellerhals’s creations.  If only one, the churros dipped in chocolate are the best thing sitting on the scale between Salina’s Churro Truck and Lucques‘s Churros y Chocolate.  Apparently, there also will be an apple pie with cheddar ice cream.  I’ll tweet all about it when I try it tomorrow.

Everything is served family-style, so get whomever you consider family together so you can try as many things as possible.  Oh, eating together at a communal table.  And sharing food and stories.  Remember when we used to that?

A-Frame is at 12565 Washington Blvd in Culver City. Starting tomorrow, the kitchen’s regular hours will be 5pm – midnight.  The fully stocked bar will be open until 2am, every day of the week.

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What Books Press at the Rumor Mill

7:37 pm in Books, culver city by Travis Koplow

one of Gronk's many amazing images for What Books Press

Wednesday night I had the good fortune to hear several What Books Press/Glass Table Collective writers read at the Wanted: Writers! series at the Rumor Mill. I’ve been meaning to send a shout out about the Rumor Mill for a while after meeting Joe Staats, the master of ceremonies in line to get books signed at the Central Library. This was the third time I’ve been to a Wanted: Writers! reading at the Rumor Mill and each time I leave entertained and feeling part of a community of writers and readers.

Last Wednesday’s reading was particularly special since Katherine Haake, Chuck Rosenthal, and Karen Kervorkian are all part of a collective of “poets and fiction writers, essayists, political activists, a painter, a film-maker [who] . . .  have come together to create, promote, and celebrate new books of literary writing and astounding art.”  The work read Wednesday ranged from tales of space aliens, poems constructed from the landscapes of New Mexico and Texas, and a romp of  a story featuring no less a protagonist than Robert Altman Sr.’s chicken (I would say cock, but that might give the wrong idea–it wasn’t *that* kind of reading). Gronk does all of the cover art for the press and has his own book, A Giant Claw.

For $70 you can subscribe for a year to What Books Press and receive new releases signed by the authors. You can expect to hear more from me about WBP and Wanted: Writers! in the future.

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Pocket Parks: Culver West-Alexander in Culver City

5:32 pm in culver city, FEATURED, LA, Maps, Sports by Julia Frey

If you look at a map of Culver City, you’ll see there is an arm that reaches to the Pacific Ocean. This is “Culver West” and it’s nestled between Mar Vista and Marina Del Rey.

There is a sweet gem in that arm called Culver West-Alexander Park and if you are in the neighborhood and looking for a great spot to spend an afternoon, you will love this one.

I remember this park from the very early 90′s as I used to work in the Marina. The big field seen here used to have a baseball diamond and one year I spent many an early morning practicing softball with our company team. (Go Hurlers!) Even without a baseball diamond, you can NOT get bored at this park. I dare you!

There are basketball and tennis courts, BBQ pits and picnic tables, tons of jungle gyms and swings and even a community center. If you are a Westsider, check this spot out, bring the kids and grandparents and a big picnic. You never know what you’ll see here.

How to get there (click on the image to go to the Google Map):

You want sports? We got sports!  One tennis and two paddle tennis courts (this is where my honey and I play a lot.)

Here’s a close up of the mural at the end of the tennis court. It’s like being inside Wii Tennis!

In case you were wondering:

And also:

This happy mural greets  you when you park on Moore street. Handball courts (three) are here on the backside of the tennis court.

Wider shot of Basketball and handball courts with informal running path in front.

Close on the Mural at the Basketball court:

Plenty of stuff for the kids to clamber over and around:

And when it’s time to eat, there are plenty of shady spots to spread out and grill up some yummy picnic food.

There is plenty of parking on Moore Street and also in a small lot near the jungle gym/tennis court side of the park.

Alas, Fido will need to stay on the designated path. But it’s a sweet path!

And if you need to just chill in a grassy, shady spot, there is plenty of that too.

Read more about Richard Alexander, after whom the park was named. (Click picture for bigger version.)

Stop by some time! It’s a gorgeous little park and it’s all yours.

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Vintage Expo + Pop Up Shop this Saturday

11:59 pm in Announcements, culver city, Fashion, Shopping, Uncategorized by Travis Koplow

Michael Stahl's Helms photo used through Creative Commons license

Get dad a sharkskin suit or a vintage tie for Father’s Day–head to the Helms Bakery building for what sounds like a damned cool event. Billed as “part ‘Pop-Up Shop,’ part vintage expo, part art opening,” this one day event should be good shopping and people watching. If you’ve ever been to the clothing and textile show in Burbank, you know that there promise to be plenty of Rockabilly and Bettys at the Helms Saturday.  I met the event organizer, Dave from Clever Vintage Clothing, at a Hidden LA meet-up and then I saw him at the Burbank show, and I can tell you the man will find you what you’re looking for. If you’ve got a vintage itch, he’ll help you scratch it. For this event, he’s gathered 12 of his favorite dealers.

The details:
Saturday, June 19, 2010
10:00am – 4:00pm
At the LightSpace Studio at the Historic Helm’s Bakery Building
8755 Washington Blvd.
Culver City, CA

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To Paraphrase Jack Nicholson, Chego! Makes Me Want to be a Better (Wo)Man

9:14 am in culver city, Food & Drink, West Side by Queequeg

Chego is the Korean equivalent of umami; I think the rough English translation of both words is bomb ass.  Because that is what Korean rice bowl joint Chego! is, from the food prepared with heart to the service sprinkled with TLC to the décor filled with kitsch.  We will take each of those high points in order.

Heart in a Bowl.

Roy Choi is known as Papi to some, better known as the Kogi guy to all.  Chef Roy is the guy whose food started the food truck revolution in this city with the pretty damned awesome Kogi BBQ truck.  From there, a food truck explosion.  Yet, I bet that after the smoggy dust is settled in a few years, Kogi will be the only one of a very few with gas left in its tank.  Why?  Simple: the food is delicious, you can’t really get what they’re selling anywhere else, and Roy’s not trying to rip you off.   A fat short rib burrito is $5; some of the best sliders in this city are paired and offered at $5.  Affordable sophistication for masses – that’s how the Kogi truck rolls.

I mention all this to say that Chego is at once the same and very different from Kogi.  The same because Chef Roy is still aiming towards affordable sophistication – Chego’s tagline, after all, is “Chillax peasant food for the soul.”  And yet, different, because where Kogi mashes Korean staples with Mexican street cuisine, Chef Roy focuses on Korean comfort food, period.  These are rice bowls, pure and (somewhat) simple.  The flavors are unabashedly bold, multilayered, and, where appropriate, hot.  The menu amusingly states that dishes are rated “PG13” for spiciness.  Don’t say they didn’t warn you.

On to the food, after the jump.

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What do Howard Hughes, James Ellroy, and James Cameron Have in Common?

9:15 am in culver city, Entertainment, Fictional LA, Filmmaking/Filmmakers, History, Movies, Real Estate, West Side by Matt Mason

Apparently,  a lot.  I was making my way through James Ellroy‘s “The Big Nowhere,” and, not too far in, Howard Hughes appears, along with his head of security, a crooked retired cop named Turner “Buzz” Meeks.  Meeks works at Hughes Aircraft, and it takes him an hour to drive to Studio City for some dirty work in pre-405 1950.  Trying to do the math, I recalled the giant Playa Vista residential development just a few miles from my house.

A couple of years ago, I took some dogs walking down the Westchester Bluffs on the South side of the Playa Vista property.  There were a couple of long drab buildings at the base of the bluffs, as well as a narrow service road.  Someone told me the buildings were film studios.  Another person told me they were part of Hughes Aircraft.

So I did some research and found this amazing website.  The gist of it is, this property was not only the headquarters for Hughes Aircraft, it was also Howard Hughes’ private airport. Howard Hughes buys our backyard, after the jump

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Two things to do this week

9:35 am in Comedy, culver city, Events by Sean Bonner

If you are currently sitting at your office behind your desk contemplating suicide by stapler because you are so bored and have nothing to do in the evenings this week, feel free to consider Metblogs your own personal saviour because we have your plan.

Wednesday! Johannes Grenzfurthner from the Austrian artist/prankster collective monochrom will be speaking at Crash Space, a hackerspace in Culver City (of which I’m a member). His talk, “Of Drunken Machines and Horny Relays” will be something of a workshop about building DIY hedonistic machines. Starts at 8pm, free for members $10 suggested donation for the general public. More info can be found on crashspace.org and you can RSVP on this Facebook event page. Crash Space is located at 10526 Venice Blvd, Culver City.

Thursday! Laugh Night: A Benefit for Art Share Los Angeles! We’re told this will be immensely funny. Half a dozen headlining comics (including Greg Behrendt, Donald Glover, Karen Kilgariff, etc) will be taping standup sets for The Sound of Young America, and 100% of ticket proceeds benefit Art Share LA, which provides free arts instruction to Los Angeles students. Tickets are $8 or $6 if you can prove you live downtown somehow. More info on Maximum Fun Dot Org. Art Share is located at 801 E. 4th Place, Downtown.

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Fox Hills mall Undergoes Major Expansion

9:15 am in culver city, Food & Drink, Shopping, West Side by Matt Mason

IMG_1739The old Fox Hills mall in Culver City, where I have been many times, was a somewhat sleepy place.  Not any more.  In time for this past Christmas, the expanded and renamed Westfield Culver City shopping center unveiled itself to huge crowds.  The mall appears to be doubled in size, and now includes Target, Best Buy, H&M, Coach, BJ’s Restaurant & Brewhouse, Manna Korean Barbeque, and a completely redone food court, er, “dining terrace.”  And it now has room for key elements of any good shopping mall: a giant Christmas tree, and new cars on display.

take a tour, after the jump

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