New 9-minute feature “Oil of L.A.” worth checking out went up on VBS.tv today. Directed by Joseph Patel and hosted by Nate Harrington, and sharply shot and tightly edited, it’s a great quick look at current and former oil wells that are hidden in plain sight right around town, including spots such as Beverly Hills H.S. (who knew?), the Farmer’s Market and the Beverly Center. The film doesn’t really aim to delve into the implications of its findings beyond just acknowledging the wells’ existences, but packs a lot in its 9-minutes–definitely a compelling pitch for some funding to support a longer piece on the subject.
Bruins go down in 2OT to CSU Fullerton at Pauley last night. I didn’t catch most of the game. How bad did the Bruins look in this season opener? Forget it, don’t answer that. I see Roll and Lee put up some numbers. But even Lavin never lost to CSU Fullerton. This does not bode well for the season to come. Next up are Bakersfield and Pepperdine, usually two automatic W’s to pencil in, but, now, maybe not so automatic.
The festival, which was to have featured Bad Religion, Suicidal Tendancies and many others, this Saturday, November 21, has been postponed and will be rescheduled for “early 2010.”
“As organizers, we are committed to presenting only the finest event possible for this important movement. Due to ongoing economic challenges, we decided our best option was to move the event to a later date to insure these standards are maintained for the benefit of our important, loyal audience.”
Refunds are available for those who have already purchased tickets via their point of purchase.
Following up on covering The Velvet Underground & Nico and Songs of Leonard Cohen, Beck’s Record Club takes on Skip Spence’s classic Oar along with Wilco, Feist and Jamie Lidell. The first fruit from the sessions, album opener “Little Hands,” is up on Vimeo now:
1) Them Crooked Vultures (Grohl, J.P.J., Homme & co.) will perform tonight, Monday, November 16 @ The Roxy.
2) Tickets @ the door, night of show, non-transferable, no ins-&-outs.
2a) No lineups before 2 pm.
3) Doors @ 8:30.
4) 2 hours of drinking.
5) Them Crooked Vultures @ 10:30.
Julian Plenti
(Paul Banks of Interpol)
w/ I’m In You
Thursday, November 19
El Rey Theater Info
THIS WEEK’S TICKET GIVEAWAYSRambling Boy: Charlie Haden
Family & Friends
w/ The Haden triplets, Josh Haden, Sam Bush, Dan Tyminski & Jerry Douglas
& Special Guest Jack Black
Tuesday, November 17
Walt Disney Concert Hall Info | [ENTER TO WIN]
Royksopp
w/ Jon Hopkins
Wednesday, November 18
Club Nokia Info
[ENTER TO WIN]
Snoop Dogg
w/ DJ Quik and Nipsey Hussle
Thursday, November 19
Club Nokia Info
[ENTER TO WIN]
Eureka! West Coast, Left Coast
Festival Opening Event with
Kronos Quartet, Terry Riley, Matmos, & Mike Einziger
Saturday, November 21
Walt Disney Concert Hall Info | [ENTER TO WIN]
Peter Bjorn & John
w/ El Pedro Del Mar
Saturday, November 21
Club Nokia Info
[ENTER TO WIN]
The Juan MacLean DJ Set
w/ Parallels
Saturday, November 21
Echoplex Info
[ENTER TO WIN]
Julian Casablancas
w/ The Strange Boys & The Growlers
Friday, November 20 | Palace Theater November Residency through 11/27 Info | [ENTER TO WIN]
The Getty has a pair of great British cinema double-bills this Saturday and next in their Four Angry Young Men film series. Tomorrow, November 14, screens Look Back In Anger and Satuday Night and Sunday Morning (starring Albert Finney, above). Next Saturday, November 21 features This Sporting Life and The Loneliness of the Middle Distance Runner.
Any self-respecting Smiths, Decemberists, Belle and Sebastian or Arctic Monkeys fan no doubt knows these influential films well (or should) but it’s always nice to see them on a big screen in the dark with similarly minded, tastefully dressed fans. I only wish they would have dug a bit deeper and thrown in a film or two from this era that is a bit harder to catch, such as not-on-DVD The L-Shaped Room.
The series is free but you must to make reservations individually for each film online at the above link.
Three days in advance of Monday’s Los Angeles premiere screening of the highly anticipated, cumbersomely titled The Twilight Saga: New Moon at the Westwood Village Fox theater, a line of fans camping out in hopes of red carpet bleacher seats has begun. The obsessive, predominantly female fans, known as TwilightHeads, number about 100 as of press time, and have a line of full of folding chairs, sleeping bags, board games, Elmer’s glue, glitter, posterboards, battered books and laptops dotting Le Conte Avenue. The head of the line is anchored by some kind of Twilight sukkot, the ironic religious connotations of which, in this context, fairly appropriate given these fans’ fervor. While security is on hand, the many unintentionally homeless denizens of Westwood Village can be counted on to keep them company over the next three nights.
Because Christmas/Chanukah/Kwanzaa shopping for my mother can never start too early, I headed all the way down to the South Coast Plaza Williams-Sonoma on Thursday to get Chef Thomas Keller to sign a copy of his newest cookbook, Ad Hoc at Home.
I’ll admit to some butterflies in my stomach anticipating what I would say to the man behind French Laundry and the Beverly Hills Bouchon opening this Wednesday, November 18.
After a three hour wait (no joke) I finally got Chef Keller to scribble his name illegibly, so “Nancy” will be all impressed and shit. I said some stupid things that I don’t remember. He smiled.