You're not really supposed to love Los Angeles. Or if you do, you're
supposed to do it ironically: you can love L.A., but only in a Randy Newman
kind of way.
Part
of the problem is that nobody really knows what anyone's talking about when
they say "Los Angeles." "Los Angeles" could mean anything
from south of the Grapevine to north of San Diego. It could mean any spot in
the counties of Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, Riverside, or Ventura--an
enormous expanse of land that is home to over 17 million people. Your actual,
physical experience of Los Angeles depends largely on your immediate neighborhood
and the places you're able to travel by car. Forget the bus or the train; the
chances you'll be able to get where you need to go with public transportation
are slim. Jeff and I once shared an airport shuttle from LAX with a Danish family
who came to do a quick Orange County theme park circuit and wanted to know how
they might be able to get to downtown Los Angeles to do some sightseeing.
"Rent a car," we advised.
"There's no shuttle that goes that way?" the mother asked.
"Well, you could take an airport shuttle back to LAX and then take a cab
to wherever you wanted to go from there," I answered, "but that would
end up costing more than just getting a rental car."
"Could I take the train?" the father wanted to know.
I shook my head. "You could catch a cab, have them take you to the train
station--which is about 20 minutes away--and then take a cab or buses to wherever
you wanted to go, but that wouldn't be cheap, either. And you could spend all
day just getting there and back."
I've lived here long enough to need periodic reminders of just how terrifying
the prospect of driving in LA can seem to visitors. I forget how many people
get that deer-in-headlights look when you give directions involving four different
freeways. I forget what it's like to be truly afraid when nobody seems to be
going slower than 80, or when someone who wants to go faster than that--there's
always someone who wants to go faster--gains on you so quickly and menacingly
that you mentally replay old hunting scenes from Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom.
I actually like switching freeways: it breaks up the monotony of a
trip, makes things more interesting. My former smoking patterns no doubt reinforced
this. I went from smoking a pack a day to a pack and a half a day when I began
commuting between Huntington Beach and Claremont four days a week. The trip
was about 45 miles each way; I spent ten hours a week or so on the freeway (and
considered it a reasonable, albeit longish commute). Stuck in traffic? Have
a cigarette! Running late? Have a cigarette! Sick of all your tapes? Have a
cigarette!
Eventually, the frequency of my responses to nicotine's siren song left my lungs feeling
like they had ventured into waters sullied by a drunken oil rig captain, so
I made an arbitrary rule: my commute took me along three freeways, and I could
smoke one cigarette on each of them. Changing freeways suddenly seemed much
more psychologically rewarding. If I needed pampering on a harrowing day, perhaps
I would have an extra smoke when I reached the interchange from the 57 to the
22--a spot referred to as the "Orange Crush." Then, I would think
about how I wanted a soda, because I can be ridiculously susceptible to the
power of suggestion. Truth ads on the radio didn't make me want to quit smoking;
they reminded me that I'd like to be lighting up again, especially at this point
in my drive. After all, I'd come a long way, baby!
As for the freeway culture--and it is a type of culture, with its own sets
of norms; indeed, the freeway culture is one of the few things that nearly all
residents of the greater Los Angeles area have in common--once you're in, that's
that. Gooble gobble, &tc. You might not be particularly fond of the Caltrans
nation, but its natives rarely rattle you in any serious way. Yes, yes, I almost
got killed today. What are we going to do about dinner?
A couple visiting from Denmark with their three children could hardly be expected
to head over to the Hertz office with casual alacrity. Some might be happy to
do so, but these tourists were not. It's just as well: you don't simply hop in a car and
go sightseeing in downtown LA. You don't go downtown unless you have something
to do there, something specific. Maybe you're seeing a play or visiting a museum.
Being goal-oriented is the only thing that will give you the fortitude necessary
to endure the labyrinthine freeway structure leading in and out of that particular
area, where the signs are rarely posted with information as simple and helpful
as "101 N." Instead, they say something like "Harbor Freeway"
and then, in lieu of an actual direction, they give the name of a city you may
or may not have heard of. Moreover, some of the freeways have more than one
name. The 10, for example, could be the Santa Monica Freeway or the San Bernardino
Freeway. Depends on where you are. Were you given directions that list numbers
but no names? Are you unfamiliar with the geography of the Southland? Fabulous!
Have fun going too far north and ending up in the parking lot at Dodger stadium!
A word on this "Southland" business: yes, that's what people call
it here. Or rather, people on TV call it that. Heather
Havrilesky, a television critic for Salon, refers to it as the Southland!
(with exclamation point). I assume she does so because local newscasters--especially
Paul Moyer--seem to take inordinate delight in pronouncing the word, which most
people outside the Southland! would never, ever consider using in reference
to the West Coast. The Southland is sun tea and biscuits with gravy and Flannery
O'Connor and rocking chairs on porches. It's Alabama. It's Mississippi. It's
Louisiana. It's not California. The exclamation point perfectly conveys the
Hollywood touch people here give an otherwise normal word. The emphasis is so
self-important that it's almost charming, like Jon Lovitz's "acting!"
It's absurd, of course, but absurdity is always penciled in for lunch here in
the Southland!
But back to your downtown excursion. Let's see how it went: you got confused,
and you didn't know whether you were going north or south. Eventually, you tried
exiting the freeway and getting back on again going the opposite direction,
only to find you were going the right way in the first place. You fought your
way across four crowded lanes of traffic at least three times, and you checked
out the parking lot at Dodger Stadium. What did you manage to see when you eventually
got downtown? Or, if you were on your way out of the downtown area--getting
out is way harder than getting in; I blame the Eagles--what did you see while
you were there?
Probably not much: some 99-cent stores, a couple of El Pollo Locos, some small
establishments with signs in Spanish that advertise forged passports and driver's
licenses. Some bars where you'll see the same faces at 2:00 pm and 2:00 am,
features blurred with drink and smoke. (Blatant disregard of the state-wide
smoking ban is a dive bar specialty). A handful of tall buildings. If you did
enough wandering, you might have seen some scattered examples of more unusual
architecture. Many of them are interesting, and some are quite beautiful, but
few seem to fit with their surroundings: they are the Best Actor, not the outstanding
ensemble cast. And, like the Best Actor, these standouts seem rather removed,
perhaps even a bit unreal.
Let
me give an example. You might have heard of the Westin Bonaventure; I
had heard of it before I ever saw it in person. Amusingly enough, the source
of my introduction to the Bonaventure was Fredric Jameson's Postmodernism:
Or, The Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism. I read selections from it
for one of my grad seminars at Claremont, and I later returned to it when it
appeared on the syllabus of one of my History & Theory classes at UC Irvine.
It was slotted for the last week of classes, a time when my classmates and I were
staring deadlines for all of our seminar papers right in the face. I chose to
write on Postmodernism, and I honestly suspect I got an A on the paper
simply because it was evident to the professor that I had actually finished
the book. Completing your reading isn't generally considered noteworthy in graduate
classes, but this is a decidedly big book, and the timing was bad, and Fredric Jameson's
writing style is at best dense. Some of his harsher critics actually dismiss
him as being altogether "unreadable." It's a mistake, because much
of what he has to say is truly interesting. Of the four shiny towers that comprise
the Bonaventure, he says this:
... with a certain number of other buildings, such as the Beaubourg in Paris
or the Eaton Centre in Toronto, the Bonaventure aspires to being a total space,
a complete world, a kind of miniature city; to this new total space, meanwhile,
corresponds a new collective practice, a new mode in which individuals move
and congregate, something like the practice of a new and historically originally
kind of hypercrowd. In this sense, then, ideally the minicity of [architect
John] Portman's Bonaventure ought not to have entrances at all, since the
entryway is always the seam that links the building to the rest of the city
that surrounds it: for it does not wish to be a part of the city but rather
its equivalent and replacement or substitute. That is obviously not possible,
whence the downplaying of the entrance to its bare minimum.
It sounds ridiculous, this idea that the Bonaventure is essentially a building
that aspires to inaccessibility--until you go there. When you go there, you
match up the address you had scribbled down with what you see in front of you,
and then you drive around the building wondering how the hell you get inside.
You might have to circle the block a second time before you realize that an
opening in back of the building is actually the entrance to the hotel's parking
garage. You descend a steep ramp, disappearing into the belly of the Bonaventure
beast, and then you hand your keys to a valet who makes your car disappear.
Once inside, you find yourself in a lavish lobby with clear-glass elevators
for each tower. Curiously, doing so doesn't seem to help you figure out where
you need to go. Back to Jameson on this, who remarks on the ways in which the
lobby seems intentionally disorienting:
What happens when you get there... can only be characterized as milling confusion,
something like the vengeance this space takes on those who still seek to walk
through it. Given the absolute symmetry of the four towers, it is quite impossible
to get your bearings in this lobby; recently, color coding and directional
signals have been added in a pitiful and revealing, rather desperate, attempt
to restore the coordinates of an older space. I will take as the most dramatic
practical result of this spatial mutation the notorious dilemma of the shopkeepers
on the various balconies: it has been obvious since the opening of the hotel
in 1977 that nobody could ever find any of these stores, and even if you once
located the appropriate boutique, you would be most unlikely to be as fortunate
a second time; as a consequence, the commercial tenants are in despair and
all the merchandise is marked down to bargain prices.
I'm not so much interested in whether or not Jameson's description of the Bonaventure
still holds true--or whether my own description of it still holds true, for
that matter. The hotel might have changed since I last visited. If it has, the
change is of no import. That's because what I'm getting at is not a singular
description of what it's like to visit this particular hotel. What does interest
me are the ways in which Jameson's impressions (and my own) of the Bonaventure
capture an experience of space that is repeated elsewhere in downtown Los Angeles,
and which, on a larger scale, is characteristic of the downtown LA area more
generally. It's the experience of getting where you need to go and still not
knowing where you are, of finally stepping into the center and discovering it's
not the center at all--or if it is, being there isn't actually "centering,"
because the space somehow resists the bounding that would make it easy for you
to translate your physical experience into a coherent conceptual map.
You probably won't be surprised to learn that I think this is crucial to understanding
how "Los Angeles" can come to mean an expanse of several thousand
square miles that contain more than 30 cities with populations of over 100,000
people. What do you do when your city doesn't have a center? You recenter, and
then you recenter again, and again. None of these new spots is THE center of
course, because there isn't one. But they continue to multiply as more people
are drawn to the area, and this process of growth--the proliferation of urban
simulacra--tends to happen along horizontal axes. The space spreads outward,
not upward, sprawling in in a manner that has achieved its closest architectural
realization in the strip malls so ubiquitous in these parts. They are links
on a massive daisy chain.
I have all sorts of thoughts on what this might actually mean, and I might
take up the train of thought later on. If I do, the cars on that train will
look something like this: 1) LA: Not At All Chicago; 2) Some connections between
sprawl, architecture, and individualism; and/or 3) The film industry and its
function as the default conceptual "center" of LA. But now, I have
to make some phone calls. There's a big storm, you see, and a good deal of water
is leaking in through my chimney. I'm no seasoned homeowner, but I'm pretty
sure that's not good.