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Notebook on Cities and Culture season four begins August 1st

Once again, thanks very much indeed to all you listeners who  backed Notebook on Cities and Culture‘s fourth season on Kickstarter. The planning begun as soon as the drive ended, and now it pleases me to announce that the season will premiere on Thursday, August 1st. We’ll start off in Los Angeles, then move on to Copenhagen and London in the fall, and then to Toronto in the spring. If you have any suggestions of cultural creators, internationalists, and observers of the urban scene whom you’d like to hear interviewed in those cities, please do let ’em rip (to colinjmarshall at gmail, specifically). Make sure you don’t miss an episode by subscribing on iTunes.

In the meantime, consider tiding yourself over with the interviews I’ve hosted and produced for the Los Angeles Review of Books podcast, including most recently literary historian Loren Glass on Grove Press, Tosh Berman on Sparks, David Shook on translating Mexican novelist Mario Bellatin, and Jeff Weiss with Evan McGarvey on Biggie and 2pac.

A Los Angeles Primer: The Arts District

Call it cynicism if you must, but if I went to someplace called the “Arts District” in most North American cities, I wouldn’t necessarily expect to find art; in most cases, I’d expect to find nothing at all. The name smacks of official desperation, bringing to mind last-ditch efforts to rebrand blocks you’d never even walk through with an absolute minimum outlay of money or effort. You can envision the meetings: what revitalizes tired, dangerous industrial areas? Why, artists. And what do artists do? Arts, of course. And up go the signs. That an influx of artists in the sixties and seventies actually did bring Manhattan’s Lower East Side back from the brink of more or less literal destruction has put ideas into the head of other cities across the continent ever since. It brings to mind the Melanesian “cargo cult,” whose members supposedly built imitation airstrips out of wood and radios out of coconuts in hopes of therefore receiving the same deliveries of goods as did their departed World War II occupiers. The cargo cultists staffed their bamboo control towers and waved their semaphore leaves as imitatively as they could, so the story goes, but nothing ever happened.

It thus comes as a surprise that, in Los Angeles’ Arts District, something has actually happened, and, more to the point, continues to happen. Yet for quite some time, it seemed unclear whether it had or would. “Downtown was doomed,” says the narrator of Thom Andersen’s documentary “Los Angeles Plays Itself” of the city’s faltering core in the immediate postwar era. “In the eighties, it went vertical, and there was an attempt to promote loft living on its eastern margins, an effort advertised in a few films, but even artists found the new urbanism daunting.” We now know this area, between downtown proper and the Los Angeles River’s west bank, as the Arts District. Back in 2004, when Andersen’s film came out, the neighborhood already had its name, but evidently it still lacked its current regard. Less than a decade before that, the Arts District didn’t even merit an entry in Leonard and Dale Pitt’s encyclopedia “Los Angeles A to Z”, though the law that put artists’ residences in formerly industrial buildings above-board goes back to 1981. You may even now venture into the Arts District and find yourself unimpressed, but bear in mind the way we’ve framed so much of Los Angeles today: don’t look at what it is; look at what it’s becoming.

Read the whole thing at KCET Departures.

Los Angeles Review of Books Podcast: Loren Glass

On the latest Los Angeles Review of Books podcast, I have a conversation with literary historian Loren Glass, author of Counter-Culture Colophon: Grove Press, the Evergreen Review, and the Incorporation of the Avant-Garde. You can listen to the conversation on the LARB’s site, or download it on iTunes.

A Los Angeles Primer: Silver Lake

Just last weekend, I found myself in Silver Lake attending the closing party of Brightwell, my friend (and fellow KCET Departures columnist) Eric’s gentlemen’s shop. He may have opened the first such business in modern Silver Lake, but I guarantee you he won’t have opened the last. The neighborhood has over the past couple of decades grown only more dense with the relatively young, and thus with that great current fascination of America’s relatively young, artisanal retail. Then again, Japan’s twenty- and thirty-somethings have joined both the shop-small and neo-gentleman movements with even greater zeal; scouts from the Tokyo-basedPopeye, “the Magazine for City Boys,” dropped in on Brightwell while researching their Los Angeles issue. From foreign style journalists to shoppers in need of a respectable aftershave or tie clip, we act like Renaissance scholars poring over ancient Greek texts, deliberately and almost desperately attempting reconstruct the old aesthetics and practices of true manhood. Though Eric’s shop may have gone, I imagine the streets of Silver Lake will remain an advantageous place to set out on your own quest for this lost wisdom.

Recent years have so strengthened the area’s association with creative, style-conscious, do-it-yourselfism that, when I first moved to Los Angeles as a twenty-six-year-old without any particular prospects for a traditional job, friends simply assumed I would land in Silver Lake. They did so for understandable reasons, but they assumed wrong; I chose Koreatown instead, barely giving “the Portland of Los Angeles” consideration at all, mostly because of the bewildering thinness of its connection to the rest of the city. How, I wondered, did Silver Lake become such a center of “cool” when rail doesn’t even reach it? When the buses keep you waiting for ten minutes at a stretch? When even walking from one end of the neighborhood to the other can feel, on a sufficiently hot day, like a grueling ordeal? The journey from Brightwell to the local library comes to almost a mile, and heaven help he who then wants to stop for lunch in the fashionable Sunset Junction — named, ironically, for its convergence of two streetcar lines in the early 20th century — which necessitates two miles’ further schlep.

Read the whole thing at KCET Departures.

Podthoughts: Lexicon Valley

Vital stats:
Format: a “podcast about language, from pet peeves, syntax, and etymology to neurolinguistics and the death of languages”
Episode duration: 25-30m
Frequency: 1-2 per month, with gaps

I grew up with a reputation as a “smart kid.” Given your presence here, maybe you did too. If so, I do hope you handled it better than I did. Po Bronson explained a large part of my own burden in New York Times Magazine article a few years ago: hearing myself called smart, I set about protecting the image by avoiding any task, intellectual or otherwise, at which I might not easily succeed, a condition that persisted into my twenties. Worse, I gained this aura of intelligence to some extent illegitimately, by learning to read early and from then on cargo-cultishly employing whichever words and phrases I thought might impress adults. So I spent my childhood ever more fearfully performing what amounted to smoke-and-mirrors act, but at least it kept me off drugs. It also taught me about the power of language, and, ultimately, the importance of using that power productively. One example of unproductive use: compulsively correcting grammar and usage aloud.

Most kids lead such boring lives here in America that, if we’ve received the mixed blessing of stronger-than-usual verbal ability, we can’t resist passing the time by ridiculing mismatched tenses, split infinitives, and even grocer’s apostrophes. We become what, in his review of Bryan Garner’s A Dictionary of Modern American Usage, David Foster Wallace memorably called SNOOTs, “just about the last remaining kind of truly elitist nerd,” “the sorts of people who feel that special blend of wincing despair and sneering superiority when they see EXPRESS LANE — 10 ITEMS OR LESS or hear dialogue used as a verb or realize that the founders of the Super 8 motel chain must surely have been ignorant of the meaning of suppurate.” SNOOTs and only SNOOTs, you might assume, make up the audience for Lexicon Valley [iTunes], Slate’s “podcast about language, from pet peeves, syntax, and etymology to neurolinguistics and the death of languages,” but the show turns out to take a broader view of the subject. I report this with great relief, having spent the past five years listening to foreign-language podcasts and broadening my own linguistic Weltanschauung thereby.

Read the whole thing at Maximum Fun.

Los Angeles Review of Books Podcast: Tosh Berman

On the latest Los Angeles Review of Books podcast, I have a conversation with Tosh Berman, founder of TamTam Books, former longtime book buyer at Book Soup on the Sunset Strip, and author of Sparks-Tastic: Twenty-One Nights with Sparks in London. You can listen to the conversation on the LARB’s site, or download it on iTunes.

Jeffrey Banks and Doria de la Chapelle: Preppy

Most Americans I know hesitate to embrace all of “American culture.” This makes sense, considering the broadness of any such umbrella, one that would have to cover a population of 300 million with origins across the entire world. So we pick and choose from this country’s bulging social, political, cultural, and aesthetic grab bag, taking what we want and leaving (when not insistently repudiating) the rest. You might follow baseball but dismiss football, dream of your own car but not your own house, or hold one opinion about country music and its polar opposite about rap. This goes as well for the clothing styles we think of as distinctively American. To divide us, just start a debate about the influence of athletic wear on our national dress. The clothes of surfing, skating, and tennis, among other sports, have all since the Second World War greatly influenced everyday wear here — not, I would think, to the approval of every Put This On reader.

For a richer object of study, consider preppy, as Jeffrey Banks and Doria de la Chapelle do in Preppy: Cultivating Ivy Style, which examines the eponymous style of dress from its origins in the twenties through its adaptive evolution in each subsequent era. But how to define it without pinning it down too squarely? The authors quote Dierdre Clemente in the Journal of American Culture as astutely calling it an “ironic blend of rumpled and conservative.” Preppy, at its most viable, strikes me a rakish hybrid of the primly traditional and insouciantly athletic. This sounds like the stuff of mere trend, but the book marshals a quote on the contrary from social critic John Sedgwick arguing that “fashion has no place in the Ivy League wardrobe. The Ivy Leaguer is really buying an ethic in his clothing choices [ … ] a puritanical anti-fashion conviction that classic garments should continue in the contemporary wardrobe like a college’s well-established and unquestioned curriculum.” The doctrinaire preppy wears the correct navy blazer and khakis, naturally, but only when correctly weatherbeaten.

Read the whole thing at Put This On.

A Los Angeles Primer: MacArthur Park

“It’s hard to screw up a pupusa,” a friend replied when I suggested he have one for lunch. The thick, cheese-filled Salvadoran tortillas, topped generously with shredded cabbage and hot sauce, available across Los Angeles, do give their preparers little chance for grievous error. But the location of my friend’s office places him especially well to enjoy a fresh one on the cheap: from the very spot where we stood, nine stories above MacArthur Park, we could see the ladies with their shopping cart-mounted griddles parked on Alvarado making them fresh. This welcoming sight hardly seems to agree with the threatening image the area spent many of the past forty years cultivating, but it contrasts even more starkly against the visions of the park’s late nineteenth-century builders. A onetime high-profile vacation destination and one of the city’s many formerly wealthy neighborhoods, MacArthur Park and the surrounding Westlake area has since become the second-densest (after neighboring Koreatown), and one of the poorest — but one of the most delicious.

“MacArthur Park is melting in the dark,” sang Richard Harris on his immortal 1968 recording of the song “MacArthur Park”. “Jurassic Park is frightening in the dark,” sang Weird Al Yankovic on his parody, capitalizing on the mid-nineties popularity of Steven Spielberg’s scary-dinosaur movie. Strictly speaking, MacArthur Park must also, in that era, been pretty frightening in the dark. Legend has it that, by then, the place had become, effectively, an open-air market of vice: drugs, sex — human souls, no doubt. I’ve heard “Permanent Midnight” author Jerry Stahl tell some serious MacArthur Park stories. Despite sensing little of that former menace today, I can assure you that the neighborhood retains its robust trade in fake identification documents. Walk down certain side streets, and you hear the same short question over and over again — “IDs? IDs? IDs?” — no matter whether you look like you have indeed just endured a trying illegal border-crossing, or whether you look like, well, me. (After turning down yet another fake ID, my friend with the office remarked that the slouchy entrepreneur offering it must have mistaken him for “the world’s baldest sixteen-year-old, non-chemotherapy division.”)

Read the whole thing at KCET Departures.

Less than half an hour to go. Will Notebook on Cities & Culture survive?

Just a reminder that the Kickstarter drive for Notebook on Cities and Culture‘s fourth season has 25 minutes to go before closing. We just need $1200 or so before that time expires, and the show can continue on to Toronto, Copenhagen, London — and, in future seasons, beyond. If you need to adjust your backing amount or reward, or if you want to inform anyone else about the drive, this is your last chance. Thanks very much indeed for your generous contributions!

Under four hours to go, and just $2500 needed, for Notebook on Cities and Culture to continue

We’ve roamed cities like Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland, Vancouver, Mexico City, Kyoto, Nara, and Osaka. We’ve talked to writers, broadcasters, critics, comedians, designers, bloggers, academics, journalists, artists, editors, and monologists. We’ve planned a fourth season that will reach such fascinating world cities as Toronto, Copenhagen, and London. But Notebook on Cities and Culture’s latest Kickstarter drive hasn’t quite hit its mark yet, and time has run short. We only need to raise almost $2500 more to meet the season’s funding goal, but we need to do it in under four hours from now.

If you’ve planned to back the show, the best possible time has come to do it. And if you know anyone else who’d intended to back it, the best possible time has come to remind them! 68 listeners have backed Notebook on Cities and Culture season four so far, but these words reach many more, so we certainly have the potential to close this small funding gap quickly. You, or anyone else, can back the show here on its Kickstarter page and receive backer rewards like mentions of your project or message on the show, postcards from the cities visited, or even you as a guest. But only if we reach $8000 by noon Pacific time today will the show go on. Thanks.