L.A. through the rear view
Mercedes #1: When driving in L.A. one is ever harrowed by the relentless tailgating black Mercedes hovering like a tow car in one’s rear view. Such tailgaters are especially menacing when careening down hills of a certain Beverly persuasion, exceeding 55 mph on oily roads after rain, high on the thrill (assumedly) of chasing a lunchbox-packed economy car with cranking windows and no power locks out of posh neighborhoods, where such plebian automotives apparently don’t belong.
Mercedes #2: One must ignore ominous admonitions such as “NO ACCESS to Hollywood sign” and “NOT A THROUGH STREET” whilst winding up and around the perilously narrow, designed-for-mules-only inches of “road” in the residential areas just beneath the Hollywood sign. Keeping the foot on the gas, deftly dodging monstrous rubbish bins, and whipping around uphill hairpin turns like a resident Mercedes will get one there in one piece for a stellar photo, albeit with shattered nerves.
Mercedes #3: As local angels of the Los are quick to point out, freeways are called “THE 10,” “THE 5,” “THE 110,” never I-10. The “THE” craze even extends to streets, such as Figueroa Street is known as “THE Fig.” However, this system is rather problematic. If one walked up to a handful of people on the street asking, “Where can I find THE One?,” oh the variety of responses one is bound to receive.
Mercedes #4: In light of the United Nations-like ethnic territorial delineation in L.A., which even includes such obscurities as “Little Armenia” and “Little Ethiopia,” the sizeable Jewish population seems to lack a designated neighborhood, resulting in having to trudge past world-famous Pink’s hot dog stand, where a scruffy gentleman holding a baby bunny condemns the 50-deep queue for eating hot dogs stuffed with mixed meats. Bon appetit.
Mercedes #5: After a night out in Hollywood and packing away those olfactory clothes, try explaining to one’s grandmother upon return home why the laundry reeks of a scent none too medicinal.
Mercedes #6: Due to the recent alcohol ban on California beaches, enforcement officers have upgraded the proverbial red Baywatch beach jeep to an entire fleet of patrolling vehicles, leaving Malibu beachgoers sunbathing on lockdown as four-wheelers, tugboats, helicopters, patrol cars, and barges patrol for alcohol, oneth by land, twoeth by sea, and three-eth by sky, in the highly suspect code red terror of the unassuming beach cooler.
Mercedes #7: However, the beach fleet has yet to adequately police public nudity, as some men feel it is acceptable to drop their trousers and slip into swim trunks not quite fast enough to ruin more than one beachgoer’s luncheon respite.
Mercedes #8: Motorbikes should be A-listed in “Lonely Planet’s” ‘Dangers and Annoyances’ section for L.A. travel. However, their deafening arrogance may be eliminated by an opportunistically-timed, accidental fist pump out the car window as they try to slide by in between lanes of traffic, thereby preventing hearing loss and heart attack for everyone within a 10-mile radius.
Mercedes #9: Blaring Alabama’s “Southern Star” with the windows down at midnight on Hollywood Blvd is in every way mortifying and inappropriate. Even “Angels Among Us” would have at least been remotely topical.
Mercedes #10: Driving the segment of “THE One,” stretching from Santa Monica through Malibu lives up to every iota of “scenic” as parked cars line both sides of the coastal highway, giving passersby a fascinating study into the people that make this little slice of Monte Carlo a California beach scene. The contemplative surfers lean against their hoods surveying the sea, paying homage to Helios and Poseidon. The narcissistic Ray-Bans teen snaps a photo of himself against a backdrop of parking lot. A naked child, well exceeding the diaper age appropriate for public nudity, bares all to the highway of passing cars. The clunker mini-van spills out a doublewide’s contents of rusty beach chairs, coolers, (TVs?!), tents, buckets, surf boards, and mayonnaise-based potato salad. And many a black Mercedes lurks menacingly, nightmarishly, waiting for sweating, jay-sprinter valets to return them to the twitching toes of the accelerating fiends.
Most Wanted List: Egg-based brownie mix
Peace out, Brussels sprouts. And may it be known that this adventure was made possible in part by Kyler Post and Kelli Stansell of the Academy of Parallel Parking and Offensive Driving Instruction, of which I am a recent graduate.
la casa de huespedes
9 years ago
This is quite the collaboration of oh so fortunate events in Los Angeles =)
ReplyDeleteLove it. Love you. Got your post card and it made my day!