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The found family making history out of a K-town strip mall

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The found family making history out of a K-town strip mall

The Korean diaspora has a complex relationship with the word “gyopo.” In the most literal sense, it refers to Koreans living in another country as immigrants. David Kang, former USC Korean studies director, once told The Times that the word carries this ancestral view of “Koreans as our blood overseas, almost.”

In a cultural sense, gyopo is an insult.

Think of it as the Korean “no sabo”: a derogatory term for a person living outside of the motherland and thus disconnected from their culture.

Despite and because of these definitions, in 2017, a group of L.A. Koreans lovingly named their new organization Gyopo.

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“We started Gyopo because we all knew that this way of convening was missing from our lives,” says co-founding member Yoon Ju Ellie Lee.

At its heart, Gyopo is exactly that — a convening. It’s getting together to talk about historic Korean protest movements, the cultural significance of the chili pepper in Korean food, the meteoric rise of K-pop, anti-Asian racism in 2020, representation of transgender Koreans in film and anything and everything that affects L.A.’s Korean American community.

Following the 2016 presidential election, Lee was searching for this community. As a Korean American growing up in L.A., she felt most understood when surrounded by fellow first- or second-generation Koreans, who knew the “not-quite-fitting-in” and the desire to reconnect with their roots. Soon, she and a group of friends found themselves organizing impromptu events.

Koreans began immigrating to Los Angeles in the early 1900s as Korea lost independence to Japan, with a formal subjugation in 1910. In search of freedom, Koreans left for farming communities in the Imperial Valley, city life in San Francisco and eventually, Los Angeles. Koreatown came to life and blossomed in the late ’60s as a new immigration act permitted thousands of Koreans to immigrate and join their families in L.A.

Sign at a Korean Shopping Mall.

In this history of pursuing independence and building up community from scratch, Gyopo is following a long legacy of diasporic Koreans gathering and restoring their relationships to identity.

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“Using [Gyopo] as our organization’s name is definitely a reclamation of the term,” Lee says. “The reason why ‘Gyopo’ was a derogatory word is because there’s an overall kind of weight, complexity and even grief around the diaspora because of things like Japanese occupation and the Korean War. Just a decade ago, it was hard to find Korean things, so we had to define our own relationship to Korean culture.”

Today, Gyopo organizes and invites Korean Americans, and anyone curious, to panels, screenings, art galleries and other cross-cultural programs that highlight the diverse art of the Korean diasporic community. Some call it a “found family.”

In the style of traditional family photos, Gyopo’s board of directors and community members gathered one recent weekend morning in the parking lot of their historic Koreatown strip mall headquarters. Strip malls have played a nostalgic role in the Korean community, serving as places of communion, feast, work and dialogue. For the photo, the members joyously held up pieces of cloth from their charye table, a customary shrine that Gyopo and partner program Ssi Ya Gi set up at their most recent Chuseok benefit to remember ancestors.

Chuseok is one of Gyopo’s consistent annual gatherings in celebration of the traditional Korean autumn harvest holiday. On this year’s Chuseok, Gyopo honored “Beef” and “The Walking Dead” actor and producer Steven Yeun. As he stepped onstage, Yeun recognized Gyopo’s contributions to L.A.’s Korean arts scene.

“I feel like our community has come a long way,” Yeun said. “I thought about that a lot over the course of my personal career, over the course of the past decade, and as wonderful organizations like Gyopo have been made. I see, and I wish for, and I’m hopeful for and I’m emboldened to see everyone here and the way that we show up for the next generation.”

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As Gyopo continues to bring the best of Angeleno Korean art and scholarship together, the people who make it possible reflect on the history of Gyopo. Their memories document Gyopo’s growth from backyard sketch to cultural mover.

2016–2017: ‘It felt like there was an opportunity’

Ann Soh Woods, Gyopo board of directors: “It was after the 2016 election that we first started talking about coming together in this way. It was a tough time. We were internalizing a lot of the negativity in the world and we wanted a place to open up and share. There wasn’t an organization like Gyopo. I’ve never been part of something like that, so shaped by the community with arts and enthusiasm and need. That’s what I always liked — it wasn’t hierarchical but about finding space to belong.”

Yoon Ju Ellie Lee, founding member of Gyopo: “During the earlier years, we were just a bunch of volunteers with a vision for a place for our diaspora to gather. (Former steering committee member) Nancy Lee and I sat in my backyard and sketched out the Gyopo logo. We sent it to our friend Jeanha Park, who was working at the Hammer Museum, and asked if she could make it into a vector. It’s our same logo today. That’s just an example of how scrappy and interdependent we were back then.”

Cat Yang, Gyopo steering committee member: “There is this moment in time, in the 2016 era, when Asian Americans had [greater visibility] in the wider art landscape in Los Angeles and nationally. It felt like there was an opportunity to galvanize our creative communities. It was in this that Gyopo was starting out, specifically made for Korean folks and diaspora in L.A., in a time when it felt like there weren’t many museum exhibitions or galleries that were considering Asian Americans as much.”

Ju Hui Judy Han, UCLA professor and Gyopo panelist: “I first met Gyopo, which was Ellie and a couple of other folks, right around the time they were deciding on the name. Gyopo, as you know, means a Korean American or a member of the Korean diaspora, and it’s a word that has some negative connotations. So I remember being a little bit hesitant about it and talking to them about the group. I knew that they were artists and curators and people in the art world, but I really wasn’t sure what to expect.”

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Lee: “We always worked with the intention that this would grow. I think that everyone always knew and believed that Gyopo would go somewhere. The only reason we exist now is because of the goodwill of the community back then. Everyone just chipped in for art galleries, aquarium trips and fried chicken.”

2018: ‘We laid the groundwork and expectations that we wouldn’t shy away’

Woods: “I first heard about Gyopo before I even knew their name. My friend said, come to this New Year’s event, be part of this group, we’re gonna eat Korean food and watch K-dramas and make kimchi and practice Korean. It has certainly evolved from there, but at its core I think it’s still just a group of like-minded people trying to connect.”

Lee: “At our first Lunar New Year event, people talked about issues they wanted to deal with in the future, sharing space with each other, and for me in 2018, I hadn’t previously paid much attention to the Lunar New Year. It was the first time that I spent it surrounded by friends.”

Anicka Yi, Gyopo board of directors and artist: “I remember thinking that it seemed totally natural and organic that L.A. would have an organization like this, especially at this time, because there’s such a high concentration of immigrant communities. It was just really positive to see something uplifting and galvanizing. It wasn’t always so positive among these communities in L.A., remembering the L.A. riots, there was a lot of strife and conflict with marginalized communities. This felt like a positive direction.”

Lee: “Looking back at these archived programs, like our first collaboration with LACMA on understanding K-pop’s crossover success, I feel like it is totally relevant now. Early on, we were interested in all forms of art and issues that we are still dealing with. We laid the groundwork and expectations that we wouldn’t shy away from difficult issues.”

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UCLA professor and educator Judy Han, left, moderates a queer film screening of "Coming to You."

UCLA professor and educator Judy Han, left, moderated a queer film screening of “Coming to You,” a documentary about mothers and their queer kids with director Byun Gyu-ri, second to right. At the screening, Han says the sense of connection was emotional.

(Ruthie Brownfield)

Han: “The lecture that I gave with Gyopo, ‘Resistance in Precarious Times,’ was on protest cultures in South Korea. I’m used to lecturing, like, I plug in my computer, I have some visuals and I mostly read and speak. But then in consultation with Gyopo, I threw a question out there, ‘What might constitute an immersive lecture, something that would actually give the people in the room a feeling of actually being in a protest?’ And Gyopo had all these crazy ideas; they’re like, ‘Oh, we can do three screens, give people candles, have them sit on the floor.’ I’m like, ‘What?’”

Kayla Tange, artist and Gyopo volunteer: “I loved this book “This Is Where I Learned of Love” by Jennifer Moon and she did a talk with Gyopo. I went and ran into so many Korean artists. I remember thinking, “Wow, there’s this whole community out there.” I was following the work they did right before the pandemic and loved the people they would highlight. Celine Song did a talk with them, this amazing LACMA curator walked us through a Korean calligraphy exhibit. It was really unique.”

Han: “We did a queer film screening with a Q&A at the end. I remember there was an audience member who kind of choked up as they spoke and said that they’ve felt like an oddity, a sort of unicorn in their life, being a trans person and in the Korean American community. And then in that space, they looked around, and it was like a roomful of unicorns. That just really struck me because that’s exactly the spirit of the community that Gyopo fosters. It’s not just a normative idea of Korean Americans, but we’re actually trying to come up with a different vision altogether.”

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Woods: “Around this time we got 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization status. This was a big step in helping to legitimize us. We also hosted Chuseok at my house this year, which was such a full-circle moment because I remember at the first one, we had people from various generations in attendance, which is wonderful to see, and we had a musician who played the song ‘Arirang,’ which is a traditional Korean folk song. Anyone that grew up Korean would know the song. So the older generation were all singing along, and by the end we were in tears. I think that was just such a moving moment and made me want to keep going with what Gyopo had to offer.”

2020: ‘I think there was a lot of division, which made connection even more impactful’

Cat Yang, Gyopo steering committee member: “2020 was a big racial reckoning and a time that called for community. There was solidarity from Gyopo in seeing how anti-Asian and anti-Black racism has historically been intertwined. In our programs, which included Zoom panels and supporting demonstrations, we set out to discover how these historic struggles have shaped us and how in this moment we could respond with more togetherness.

We were thinking about a program series about the racism we were seeing and it was called ‘Racism is a Public Health Issue,’ and it was like a two-part program also co-presented with LACMA. That was a way of working across many different industries of health experts to artists, think about how this is kind of rippling across many different marginalized groups. I think there was a lot of division during that time because there was just so much pain, violence, disconnection and isolation, which made connection even more impactful.”

Lisa Kwon, Gyopo volunteer and journalist: “At the height of the pandemic, I was writing for local outlets and I was covering various groups across L.A. that were organizing around the intersection of what’s happening around the pandemic and public health issues. So the story on Gyopo that I was working on for LA Taco began when I heard that Gyopo was doing the ‘Racism Is a Public Health Issue’ series of virtual programming.

Members of GYOPO stare up at the camera holding sentimental items.

Gathered in their headquarter’s strip mall parking lot, members of Gyopo’s steering committee and executive board hold up fabrics from Charye shrines, a knot scupture by Gyopo artist Nancy Lee, and batons from volunteer self defense workshops.

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They had great speakers, talking about something that was really hitting all of us at home. That was when I met Ellie. I really enjoyed my conversation with Ellie as I was interviewing her for the story. I told her after the story was published that I’d love to learn more about Gyopo because I was looking for a space to meet other ‘gyopos’ and it just seemed perfect.”

Yi: “As someone who’s an artist, I saw that this was a very specific demographic that they were trying to address through culture and conversation. They asked me to be part of their 2020 series on racism along with writer Cathy Park Hong, [San Francisco State chair of Asian American studies] Russell Jeung, and even actor-comedian Bowen Yang was there. It felt completely organic and needed at the time.”

Kibum Kim, Gyopo steering committee member and moderator of “Racism Is a Public Health Issue” series: “We had thousands of folks tuning in. It felt like a really exigent conversation to have at the time. And so I felt that the way we were able to build that bridge among different folks working across art and academia, and to be able to have a large platform like LACMA, it stuck out to me as an example of how a largely volunteer-led effort can also amplify our efforts and voices.”

2021: ‘Those lockdown years were really all about building bridges’

Merle Dandridge, Gyopo volunteer and Broadway and “The Last of Us” actor: “Right before the pandemic, I had gone to Korea with my mom, who had always told me, you really shouldn’t go to Korea, they’re not going to really embrace you because of the way you look [Dandridge is mixed-race]. When I really got to meet them, I found this connectivity that I never expected. It was tearful and beautiful.

We went to Bulguksa Temple, which is at the top of this mountain near the Air Force base where my parents met. My mom stayed the night there when she was pregnant and had a dream about my life and knew it would be a good one. Fast forward, I go to this Gyopo exhibit years later, and there is this massive negative ink work, the size of an entire wall, of Bulguksa Temple. I almost fell to my knees.”

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Kim: “Those lockdown years were really all about building bridges. In the middle of COVID, a bunch of us in Gyopo came together and did a weekly Zoom. In many ways, it was a group therapy session, sharing stories and feelings and talking about Cathy Park Hong’s ‘Minor Feelings,’ for example, which really struck a chord with people because it discussed the racism Asian people were facing at this time. Things got heated sometimes too — we would disagree. But having this safe space to engage felt really special.”

Dandridge: “As an artist myself, what a lesson to be fully present in your work, and the authenticity of their programs really resonated with me. Being Black and Korean is a very interesting mix; it’s exoticized now, but back when I was growing up it was an abomination. Gyopo’s use of gathering around art and conversation has been a great help in helping me make that shift to accepting my representation and connection to being Korean.”

2022: ‘There was something magical about having created this’

Gyopo's volunteer picnic is an annual family-friendly gathering in L.A. Historic Park.

Gyopo’s volunteer picnic is an annual family-friendly gathering in L.A. Historic Park that creates community among Gyopo’s expansive volunteer base through food and play.

(GYOPO)

Kwon: “I only really started attending in 2022, but I had always liked what Gyopo did since writing a story on them. I went to a picnic they hosted and a few of us who met there realized we’re all writing about different things, but we’re all doing it alone. We formed a writing group within Gyopo and I met so many friends through it who keep me honest in my work.”

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Ginny Hwang, Gyopo volunteer: “In 2022, Gyopo collaborated with this organization I was part of called Si Ya Gi for a program basically about interviewing and collecting oral histories from Korean American elders. The oral histories revolved around food, recipes and nostalgic things.

At our first event, we visited an elder community and interviewed several who wanted to participate and collected stories about where they were born, their hometowns and what recipes reminded them of home. What we did at the end was create those dishes that they talked about and put on an event where we presented those dishes to the elders as a meal and had a story sharing session. There was something magical about having created this whole program and the elders were so gracious and grateful, and I couldn’t believe that my first community experience was so rewarding and nourishing in that way.”

Kwon: “Another cool moment was when Alex Paik [Gyopo steering committee member] started providing self-defense workshops for local volunteers and friends and family of volunteers. I had been wanting to try mixed martial arts with someone I trust for a while and wasn’t ready for how much I connected with it. He’s my martial arts teacher now and I go to him once a week to learn Filipino martial arts and Muay Thai and it’s the highlight of my week. I’ve learned so much history and gained confidence in a new hobby which I still love today.”

2023: ‘I had this moment looking around when I realized that Gyopo is so intergenerational’

At the annual volunteer picnic, kids play a childhood parachute game.

The annual volunteer picnic is one that made Joann Ahn realize Gyopo’s “intergenerational” identity. Surrounded by Gyopo’s community of elders and adults while kids played with a parachute, Gyopo felt special.

(GYOPO)

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Joann Ahn, Gyopo operations manager: “I was hired on to Gyopo that year, and I just remember coming in with the mindset to reflect the work that had been happening and keep an open mind. The way Gyopo ran was very different from other nonprofits I had worked with. I helped renovate the Gyopo space and once that was done, it was conversations about, “How do we get the community we want to serve in here, and how can we keep this work going past when Ellie and I are here?””

Yang: “Gyopo got really popular and was really resonating with so many people. So everyone was really excited to become a volunteer, but I think by having this space it’s all about the small moments of lingering and catching up with someone or meeting someone that you’ve never met before. I don’t think I would have met all these people if not through Gyopo.

The way that we operate guides people into underrepresented ways of being or thinking, especially as our programs dove into queerness or multiracial identity or adoptees in the Korean community.”

Ahn: “At our annual picnic in L.A. State Historic Park, I had this moment looking around where I realized that Gyopo is so intergenerational. It’s not just the audience, but the members and volunteers that make it gratifying. I was just hearing babies laughing and parents and family and all the volunteers gathering together. It made my work feel gratifying.”

2024: ‘Giving me context is like giving me a part of my culture and my heritage’

An audience sits to watch a presentation on pepper plants.

“The Pepper: Migration and Metaphor,” was a cross cultural examination of the pepper plant and its significance to Korean and Mexican heritage and history with colonization.

(GYOPO)

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Hwang: “One program that really sticks out to me is this whole presentation we did on the chile pepper plant and how it has migrated through generations and through countries. We discussed what it means to the Korean community and what it means to the Latino community, especially in L.A., because we share a lot of that produce and we share similar stories of losing sight of native species and of colonization through agricultural history. It seems unusual, but so many people related to it and told stories.”

Dandridge: “Gyopo’s symposium on the chile took me back to these flavors of my upbringing, and giving me context is like giving me a part of my culture and my heritage.”

Yi: “Last Chuseok (2024), I was talking to friends about how when we were growing up, you were marginalized and there was a lot of pressure to assimilate and abandon your cultural roots, especially because your parents didn’t teach you their culture. My parents never celebrated Chuseok at home. I didn’t know what that was until Gyopo introduced it to me as an adult. I just thought, what is this wonderful holiday?

So many people I talked to in Gyopo had had the same experience, and had grown up detached from Chuseok and other traditions. When I started to have a relationship with Korea itself, the country, the people and the culture, I realized how much I was oblivious to that I reconnected with through friends here.”

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2025: ‘I can’t think of a more important time’

Gyopo's Diasporic Refractions performance artist Kayla Tange dances in a metallic costume.

For Gyopo’s Diasporic Refractions, Kayla Tange performed modern dance as protests and unrest continued nearby.

(Halline)

Hannah Joo, Gyopo instructor and volunteer: “This year has been an important moment for me as I started a movement workshop with Gyopo. I have been studying Korean traditional dance and music the past few years and wanted to also share some of my learnings from my teacher back to our cultural community. I wanted to call it Moim, which means ‘gathering,’ because I feel like it’s just a simple term but it’s one of the most powerful things we can do.

Ever since starting the movement workshops, it’s really been such a space where we can access our grief, where we can process together so much of the violence that is happening all around us, to us directly. For me as a dance artist, I always believe that our body is such a portal to things that are bigger than just ourselves.”

Kim: “In many ways, this current moment feels like a full-circle moment, like a callback to when we began after Trump’s first election. That election was what really catalyzed this need for this community to come together and create space for dialogue, for community, for solidarity, for activism. I think that’s so foundational to what Gyopo is.”

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Joo: I co-curated Diasporic Refractions, our collaboration with the L.A. Philharmonic, which was a performance that blended music, talks and dance with themes of resistance. What was very poignant about the timing of this programming was that it was when the ICE raids really started to pick up. The day of our performances in the garden, because it’s an outdoor space, we could hear people protesting. The concert hall is not too far from City Hall so we could hear the helicopters surveying the area. A lot of folks kind of just walked over to the protest after our programming. It was a hard day to see our people and the people of L.A. under attack like that. We just very openly acknowledged the reality of it and we spoke a lot about how actually it’s so important that we were together at that specific time.”

Tange, performer at the program: “I can’t think of a more important time to have art than in a moment like that.”

Photography assistant Jeremy Aquino

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Participants of GYOPO cleaning up.

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‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ remembers every Nintendo moment ever : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ remembers every Nintendo moment ever : Pop Culture Happy Hour

Mario (Chris Pratt) in The Super Mario Galaxy Movie.

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The Super Mario Galaxy Movie is the ultimate piece of Nintendo fan service. Mario (Chris Pratt), Luigi (Charlie Day), Princess Peach (Anya Taylor-Joy) are on an outer space adventure to save Princess Rosalina (Brie Larson). The film features other beloved Nintendo characters like Bowser (Jack Black)  and Yoshi (Donald Glover) – and a few surprises. It’s a sequel to The Super Mario Bros. Movie, which made more than a billion dollars worldwide.

Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopculture

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Inside Kid Cudi’s new podcast, where he offers ‘Big Bro’ advice and good vibes

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Inside Kid Cudi’s new podcast, where he offers ‘Big Bro’ advice and good vibes

Kid Cudi is lounging in a colorful attic much like the one in his childhood home in Cleveland.

He’s surrounded by treasures of his childhood: movie posters of “The Last Dragon” and “The Truman Show” (the latter inspired artwork for his latest album, “Free”), a Nintendo 64 game console, a vintage house phone with a long cord, posters of Outkast and Nirvana, a green lava lamp and at least a dozen Pokémon figures. A makeshift window on the back wall opens onto what looks like a portal to outer space.

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Kid Cudi gives a tour of his “Big Bro with Kid Cudi” podcast studio.

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“It’s kind of like the world outside of this attic,” the Grammy-winning and multihyphenate artist says, reaching toward the window as if he could leap through and enter another dimension. “It’s like you’re traveling through the cosmos.”

The ’90s-themed attic, which he says is a metaphor for his mind, serves as the backdrop for his latest project: a podcast called “Big Bro With Kid Cudi,” premiering Wednesday via Wave Sports and Entertainment.

The idea to launch a podcast began during the pandemic, when touring — and the world — came to a screeching halt. By then, Cudi, born Scott Mescudi, had already logged 20 years of a successful emo rap career, launched a clothing line, forged an acting career and created an animated film. Still, he was eager to explore a fresh frontier.

Kid Cudi inside of his podcast studio.

(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

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“I was really hyped on the idea of having a weekly show where I’m kind of like shooting the s— with my friends and having real positive conversations,” says Cudi, 42. “I want it to be a light in people’s lives. Something they can just put on, tune out the world and have a good time.”

He named it “Big Bro” because that’s exactly how he’s been seen by fans and peers throughout his career.

“I realized that’s who I am,” says Cudi. “I’m the one that’s meant to show you what not to do in life and how to avoid the same mistakes that I’ve fallen for in my life.” Big Bro is also the name of his mental health foundation for youth that he launched earlier this year.

Artifacts inside of Kid Cudi's podcast studio.

Inside Kid Cudi’s studio are posters of Wu Tang Clan and Nirvana, an Ohio license plate, a Polaroid camera, a Nintendo 64 and more.

(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

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Now in his 40s, married and fully independent from a record label (hence the album title “Free”), Cudi is in a different place in life.

“I’m just so f— happy,” he says, flashing a luminous smile. His outfit, an Off White hoodie and a fleece bucket hat with a tortoise on the front, is just as uplifting and whimsical as his attitude. “People are going to see the joy on my face when they see the episodes. I think my fans really enjoy seeing me happy and that’s the most beautiful thing about my career — it’s that these fans really care about me.”

After years of opening up about his struggles with addiction, loneliness and depression through his music (on tracks like “Soundtrack 2 My Life,” “Trapped in My Mind” and “The Void”), in the press and in his 2025-released memoir. Despite being so vocal, Cudi still retains a mystique quality that fascinates fans. The podcast, he says, is a space for him to open up more than he already has.

“He’s a larger-than-life figure,” says John Fontanelli, director of original content at Wave and the lead producer on “Big Bro.” “He has a lot of different aliases and personas. He’s a very funny and relatable person and I think that comes through with him as a host.”

Kid Cudi poses for a portrait.

“I was really hyped on the idea of having a weekly show where I’m kind of like shooting the s— with my friends and having real positive conversations,” says Kid Cudi, 42.

(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

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To bring his vision to life, Cudi teamed up with Wave Sports and Entertainment, which is home to shows like “7pm in Brooklyn” with NBA Hall of Famer Carmelo Anthony, “Straight to Cam” with hosts WNBA star Cameron Brink and NBA wife Sydel Curry-Lee and “So True” with comedian Caleb Hearon. Wave was the only company that was “gung-ho” about his show idea and building out the production set of his dreams, he says. Inspired by the set design for Big Tigger’s “Rap City: The Basement” show on BET, Cudi wanted to fill his podcast set with items that reflect his personality and energy.

“I love that set,” he says. “There was this theme where all the guests kind played along like they were really coming to his mom’s house and it was so cool,” he says.

Before filming his first episode, Cudi binged several podcasts and tapped people like writer, producer and actor Lena Waithe, whose guidance helped him navigate hosting and connect authentically with his guests. And of course, he created the catchy jingle for the show himself, which includes the lyrics “Big bro / chillin with big bro” in his signature flow.

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Each week, Cudi will sit down with a mix of unexpected guests for wide-ranging, playful conversations that uncover new sides of both his guests and himself. The premiere episode features entrepreneur and reality TV star Kylie Jenner, who rarely does podcasts or sit-down interviews.

“I think it will shed a lot of light on the sides of her life that she doesn’t normally talk about like motherhood, being a businesswoman and juggling both things,” says Cudi. “I was asking her very thoughtful questions and she was being very upfront and transparent, so I felt like this was like a really great episode to start with.”

Artifacts in Kid Cudi's podcast studio.

Each Wednesday, Kid Cudi will sit down with a guest to talk about life, creativity and more.

(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

Though fans may be expecting the show to tackle mental health and other difficult topics, Cudi plans to keep the conversations lighthearted and fun. “I feel like when we get into the mental health stuff, it can get really heavy and at least right now, I don’t want that to be the tone for the show,” he says. “This podcast, for me, needs to be really positive. The conversation needs to be fun, like no stress and not triggering for anyone.”

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The podcast is just one piece of a much larger creative surge unfolding in Cudi’s orbit. Later this month, he will kick off the Rebel Ragers tour along with guests including M.I.A., A-Trak, me n ü, Big Boi and Cudi’s longtime producer, collaborator and friend, Dot Da Genius.

Under the artistic alias Scotty Ramon, he also hosted his first solo art exhibit, “Echoes of the Past,” at Ruttkowski;68 gallery in Paris. “I went years not knowing if I could paint and not only could I do it all along, there’s people in the world that are going to f— with it,” he says. He’s already finished with his next art collection, which he plans to showcase in New York next year.

With short films like “Mr. Miracle” and “Neverland” already under his belt, he’s been digging deeper into his director bag as well.

Kid Cudi poses for photo.

“I’m just so f— happy,” says Kid Cudi. “People are going to see the joy on my face when they see the episodes. I think my fans really enjoy seeing me happy and that’s the most beautiful thing about my career— it’s that these fans really care about me.”

(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

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“I’m somebody who was raised watching the Wayans,” he says. “Some mother— who came in here and were like ‘We’re gonna do it like this.’ People like Robert Townsend and I just know what’s hot. I know what’s funny. I know what’s cool and I know what stories we haven’t seen.”

With his Mad Solar production and music management company, he is the star of an upcoming film called “God Backwards,” which he says will be released later this year. On top of all of that, he recently began streaming on Twitch (“Someone Cooked Here”), where he showcases his music making process including his four-track EP “Have U Bn 2 Heaven @ Nite?” which released in March.

As he continues to dive into different mediums, Cudi says the mission remains the same: to continue evolving, challenging himself artistically and inspiring people along the way.

“[It] makes me feel so good as an artist that I can take this leap into another realm and I’ll still have support,” he says. “There’s people who are like ‘Cudi painting now? Right now. What else you got, kid?’ I love it.”

“Big Bro With Kid Cudi” will drop new episodes every Wednesday starting April 1 on YouTube and other streaming platforms.

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A propaganda war on the National Mall pits Trump against satirical statues and posters

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A propaganda war on the National Mall pits Trump against satirical statues and posters

A satirical statue of President Trump and the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein went up in front of the U.S. Capitol in February. The temporary statue drew huge crowds that amplified the image by posting it on social media. The statue is a play on the iconic scene from the film Titanic and is called “King of the World.”

Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images


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Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

WASHINGTON — There’s a propaganda war playing out on the National Mall between the Trump administration and its critics. The administration has hung giant banners bearing President Trump’s face from several federal buildings. His name now adorns both the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the United States Institute of Peace.

Meanwhile, an anonymous group called the Secret Handshake has put up satirical statues of Trump and artworks that emphasize everything from the president’s friendship with the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to Trump’s taste for marble and gold leaf.

Another group, the Save America Movement, has plastered posters on fences and walls mocking members of Trump’s Cabinet. One shows a photo of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller and says, “Fascism Ain’t Pretty.” Another shows Attorney General Pam Bondi and reads, “Epstein Queen.”

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Posters of Pam Bondi are seen with the words "Epstein Queen" and "Clown" in Washington, D.C.

The Save America Movement, a nonprofit, has plastered posters around Washington, D.C. This one mocks Attorney General Pam Bondi for her handling of the Epstein files.

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A man poses for photograph with a gold-painted, faux-marble toilet sculpture titled "A Throne Fit For a King," installed near the Lincoln Memorial. The statue, depicting an elaborate toilet throne, appears to mock President Trump's renovation of the bathroom attached to the Lincoln Bedroom a project that drew criticism for taking place during a government shutdown.

A man poses for a photograph with a gold-painted, faux-marble toilet sculpture titled “A Throne Fit For a King” that was installed March 31 near the Lincoln Memorial. The Secret Handshake, an artist collective, put up the statue, which mocks President Trump’s renovation of the White House bathroom attached to the Lincoln Bedroom, a project that drew criticism for taking place during a government shutdown.

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“We think that ridicule is a really important tool in an opposition toolbox to fight authoritarianism,” said Mary Corcoran, who runs the Save America Movement, a nonprofit.

Corcoran adds that she doesn’t see this as a fair fight “because they’re using taxpayer dollars to fund their propaganda, and we’re not.”

The White House rejects criticisms that the president is recasting the National Mall in his own image and using federal buildings for self-aggrandizement.

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Workers on an aerial lift unfurl a new banner featuring President Donald Trump as it is installed on the façade of the US Department of Justice headquarters, Washington, DC, February 19.

Workers hung this banner in February from the Department of Justice headquarters. Visitors and scholars liken it to the political iconography seen in authoritarian states such as China and the former Soviet Union.

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“President Trump is focused on saving our country — not garnering recognition,” White House spokesman Davis Ingle told NPR by email. “A variety of organizations are free to share their opinions publicly, even when they lack any basis in reality.”

The National Mall is known as America’s front yard, and includes monuments and museums designed to unify the nation and celebrate democracy.

Last month, a gold-painted statue depicting Trump holding Epstein’s outstretched arms on the prow of a ship as though they were Jack and Rose on the Titanic drew a steady stream of people who laughed and posed in front of it for photos.

Not everyone was amused.

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“It’s a gross interpretation of our president,” said Andi Lynn Helmy, a high school senior from Jacksonville, Fla. “Even if you don’t agree with his policies … I think it’s just an incredibly disrespectful thing.”

The anonymous group Secret Handshake erected a new golden Trump Epstein statue titled "King of the World" along with banners on the National Mall in Washington on March 10. The banners read Make America Safe Again featuring a photo of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein. In the background hangs ithe Department of Labor's Trump banner.

The battle of images playing out on the National Mall has yielded remarkable juxtapositions. They include this giant banner of President Trump, which hangs from the Department of Labor. In the foreground are banners put up by the anonymous group the Secret Handshake, which read “Make America Safe Again” and emphasize the president’s friendship with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. The Epstein banners are a rebuttal to a Trump banner that hangs from the Department of Justice and also reads “Make America Safe Again.”

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Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Other visitors took exception to the president’s face staring down from those banners on the Department of Labor, the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Justice. They likened it to the images of personalized rule seen in the People’s Republic of China during the Chairman Mao Tse-Tung era and the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin.

“I just feel like he’s sort of painting himself as the king of America,” said Luke Price, a freshman at the University of Vermont. “I just don’t think that’s what we’re about. America is a democracy, not a dictatorship.”

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