Let’s take a photo tour through Los Angeles. We hung out there for three-ish days, equal parts apartment hunting, general sight seeing, and eating some phenomenal food.
There’s also plenty of stuff I didn’t take pictures of. The camera I was using was from about 2006 and didn’t take great pictures. Also, I hate looking like a tourist, even if I am in fact a tourist. Last but not least, sometimes it’s important to soak in an experience instead of seeing it through an LCD screen.
Like I said in my previous #govinbhaigoestoLA post, Adam’s house was one of the coolest living spaces I’ve ever been in. It seemed to be a mansion, built into the side of a mountain, that was converted into a few units.
Adam’s was at the top and had a balcony with a wonderful view of northeast Los Angeles.
Yeah, it’s some freeways and warehouses in the foreground but having this perspective right outside your window (and 70° weather) is pretty fucking rad. Later on I’d snuck down onto Adam’s lower neighbor’s front porch (kind of by accident but not really) and got this slightly cooler shot.
Adam had asked me to avoid his downstairs neighbor because he’s a crabapple. Part of my mind told me not to go onto his porch but this picture was worth it. As I was leaving he came out and gave me a dirty look (asshole).
Adam’s landlord was working on a garden nearby and tells me “the people that move this far out want to get away from the noise and the people”. Speaking of the garden, it was chill as fuck.
Adam’s yard may be bigger than Fairmount Park.
And just a short drive away from Adam’s place was a scenic overlook of the city.

I think we went to Venice Beach first. It was pretty touristy with a boardwalk not unlike the shore out here (except more homeless people, more attractive women in less clothing, and doctors who could prescribe medicinal marijuana). Didn’t take pictures of that shit because like I said, “I’m not a tourist”.



Whereas Venice Beach is the trashy part of the coast, Santa Monica was super ritzy (also where Three’s Company took place). Fancy restaurants and cars, Jamba Juice, a big open-air shopping center. It was disgusting in it’s own special way. We went to the pier and got some shitty, overpriced souveniers. I don’t have any pictures of Santa Monica but there’s a shocking number of homeless people. If I had to be homeless, this would definitely be the place to be.
Another day when Anthony was putting in some paperwork for his apartment, I went for a hike up Runyon Canyon. It’s pretty well known and the views of the city were spectacular.
So that was most of the pictures I took in LA. Other highlights include:
- Adam took us to “Cowboys and Turbans”, a Mexican-Indian fusion restaurant. This is a bajillion dollar idea, because there’s so much similarity between the cuisines and also I love Mexican food.
- The food was actually kind of disappointing (I got a fish masala burrito).
- I’d bet the rent that an Indian person did not cook it.
- The restaurant itself was very cool, open-air seating with fireplaces and shit – not possible in the Northeast.
- Adam, an insider in the comedy entertainment industry (not kidding about this) brought to our attention to the Meltdown, a comic book store by day, and a stand-up comedy venue by night.
- When the store closes down you get a number on your wrist and you’re funneled into a very intimate, non-airconditioned venue in the back of the store.
- They get big comedians practicing new stuff and lesser-known comedians who are on the cusp of making it big.
- It was really fucking cool.
- There was a hoagie (you read that right) truck outside of the place. Close but no cigar – the bread was too soft, that’s just not right.
- On the way home we stopped by Adam’s favorite Mexican food truck. Possibly the best burrito I’ve ever eaten.
- The weather is perfect everyday.
- Adam and all of his roommates are in the entertainment business. Anthony moved out there to join them. Some of them have more standard, “9-5” production/desk jobs whereas others bounce from freelance gig to freelance gig. (Actually, one of his roommates worked at a zoo IIRC but that’s equally cool.) Hollywood runs this town.
- Most everyone in Los Angeles is attractive/in very good shape, has tattoos, and seem to live out of their cars (by necessity).
- THERE IS TOO MUCH TRAFFIC AND TOO MUCH DRIVING IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
- SoCal is where urban planning goes to die.
- Freeways are twice as wide as they are in PA but crawl along at a snail’s pace because there’s a single person per car.
- Public transit is abysmal, very few parts of the town are walkable.
- Parking is a pain in the ass.
- This was by-far my least favorite part of Los Angeles. I fucking hate cars.
Finally it came time to head back home. The chubby, awkward Jewish kid I’d met at college orientation a few years ago had moved across the country and was living the dream in Los Angeles (generally ballin’ hard and in great shape). I’m really proud of him. I’m hoping the chubby Puerto Rican kid I met in first grade can accomplish the same thing out here.
I flew back home and started figuring out how I’d move to California.
Hoping to make a post in the future about my vacation in SF and LA with my parents. They have most of the pictures though so it may be a while. Thanks for reading about my trip to Los Angeles.











































