Saturday, July 07, 2007

Muffler Monsters

Auto related industries dominate commercial uses along many of L.A.'s service corridors. Examples include salvage yards, auto parts stores, sales lots, mechanics garages, tire and rim joints, and muffler shops.

The muffler shops, at least, spare a little public art now and again.


Some of these businesses, objectionably, occupy a grey area between typical commercial use and light manufacturing, owing to their characteristics: site design, outdoor storage (and subsequent fortification), environmental impacts, and noise.

Where there's a welder, there's a way.

I learned to weld once (maybe just solder?), as a high school student in a metal shop class. When the instructor was called to the office, we the welded the metal door shut.

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Thursday, May 24, 2007

Barrio Services

As wholesale sections of Los Angeles continue to undergo demographic change, from chiefly African-American to chiefly Hispano-American, commercial corridors are transformed.

Panaderias emerge, wig/braid/curl shops vanish, and Party Suppliers proliferate. Si, fiestas! The Mexican Bureau of Popular Cultures has identified at least 10,000 fiestas that are celebrated by different communities in Mexico. Many are now celebrated here, along with other Latin American festivities, and near-universal social-gatherings like birthdays, sporting events, and religious occasions.










Jumpers or Bouncers (inflatable play structures) are very popular. The word "jumper" hasn't a spanish language equivalent evidently, whereas other items--sillas, mesas, pelotas, are often billed in Spanish.










So prevalent are party rental stores, that more than one may occupy the same block (Vermont and 30th). Some, like the all-purpose pharmacia or versatile cafeteria, reject the specialty model, and operate as a defacto florist or confectionery.

The Pinata, which probably derives from Pre-Columbian Aztec ritual clay pots, is another staple (and one of Mexico's greatest cultural cross-overs). Pinatas, filled with toys and candy--traditionally sugar cane--accompany more than just kiddie fests. In the Mexican Catholic celebration of Christmas a seven-pointed star is featured, representing the seven deadly sins. That which the devil is witholding--the contents of the pinata--are released by striking blindfolded, a display of faith. Neighborhood food markets, like Mercado Uno, sell pinatas as well.



Ellen's Party Supplies operates a virtual compound on King Boulevard with dual storefronts. Ellen's offers vending machines of all kinds, floral materials, and audio gear. An employee said the business depends most on theme-based birthday parties for boys and Quinceaneras, which celebrate a young woman's fifteenth birthday, or coming of age. Because Quinceaneras are such a large event, the celebrant holds a court composed of fourteeen girls (damas) and fifteen boys (chambelanes), with dancing, and props (the throwing of the quince doll), they tend to be the most profitable.

Growing up in Oakland California, I attended plenty of birthday parties, luaus (I have family from Hawaii), and Bar Mitzvahs, but never a Quinceanera. I kind of feel like I missed out on something.

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

The 10th Wonder of the World



The sign says it all. A front yard art project, part folk genius, part busybody construction, part badass mysticism.



Lew, a former truck driver, began the ever-evolving installation in 1982, aided by his sister Dianne. Surf-board sized chunks of acrylic encircle mountains of metal painted black and race car red. A zebra surveys all.



The Harris's are friendly, go take a look, and drop a quarter in their donations tube:
1145 W. 62nd St.
(Two blocks West of Vermont)

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Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Door flyers



I am annoyed by door flyers. Can't we pass a city resolution to ban them?! I understand that advertising is expensive and that the ol' USPS doesn't give many breaks, but I am being flyer-ed to death. Pizza delivery, month-to-month auto insurance, gardening services, home remodeling, you name it--I get it, slipped beneath my wiper blade, my welcome mat, rubber banded to my door handle, or just left to lie in the walk.

Funny how the flyer 'handers-outers' never come back by, to pick up the discards, those blown by the wind, soaked by the rain, tossed in the gutter.

I want redemption values attached to flyers, just like used-up drink bottles. I wouldn't mind at all if a guy came by on Saturday mornings pushing a cart full of crumpled pizza chain door knockers, hittin' me up for my rug cleaning notices. "Hey man, I'm on the way to the recycling center, you got any of those green slips I can take off you--you know the ones that say 'Alfombras'?"

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