Lifestyle
A ‘floating’ tennis club with good vibes and a pinch of country club swagger? These Angelenos created it
Across the six players on the tennis court at noon on a Friday in Beverly Hills, I clock two Cartier watches and one Rolex. There’s tennis skirts paired with chunky cable-knit sweaters and white sneakers and tote bags with collegiate embroidery. From behind sunglasses and baseball caps, members appear to be in their mid-twenties to early thirties. But no matter how much the scene may resemble a legacy country club at first glance, this meetup exists almost in opposition to the city’s handful of expensive clubs with yearslong wait-lists and lengthy membership requirements.
Kacper Owsian greets someone to his Tennis Clinic in Beverly Hills.
(Emil Ravelo / For The Times)
This is Sunset Tennis Club, a membership-based tennis club that operates on a series of courts in upscale neighborhoods of Los Angeles. Founded in early 2023 by Anna and Kacper Owsian, the organization thinks of itself as a “floating tennis club,” said Anna, only without the barriers to entry that keep out many millennials and zoomers.
Once a couple, now business partners, Anna and Kacper immigrated to Los Angeles from Poland in late 2022. The pair met over a decade ago playing tennis in the city of Poznań, where Kacper, a former tennis pro, followed in his family’s footsteps coaching at a tennis club and Anna, who plays for fun, worked in the fashion and wellness industries. When the two moved to Los Angeles, they, like many recent transplants, struggled to find community. They used their mutual love of tennis as a way to make friends, setting a once-a-week date to play, followed by nights out for dinner and drinks. From there, the idea to start the club as a business was born.
Living in affluent Brentwood at the time, they were inspired by the aesthetics of country club life, even if they were unable to actually participate. Anna wanted to lend her experience in fashion to branding a tennis club that was “more than just a place to play, but the sport we love, reimagined for the new generation.” Kacper could teach. The first official Sunset Tennis Club started once a week in Beverly Hills, attended by a small group of friends of friends.
Sunset Tennis Club sells one-off clinics, or small group lessons separated by level. Kacper still teaches, but they also employ a handful of coaches. Despite its lack of a single brick-and-mortar location, the club runs on a membership model. Anyone who can afford to invest a few hundred dollars in their game is welcome to join instantly via the brand’s website. Membership is tiered, based on how often one wants to participate in clinics. Four beginner clinics a month runs $200, while attending 12 ranges from $480-540 depending on the member’s experience level. Add-on private lessons are available.
The club plays across six locations — including Beverly Hills, Hancock Park, and Brentwood — all of which are on private properties, accessed through the founders’ personal relationships.
Sunset Tennis Club has arrived in L.A. at a moment where racket sports are surging in popularity. According to a 2024 study by RacquetX, a conference for racket sport professionals, the category — which includes tennis, pickleball, squash, badminton and table tennis — has grown 30% since 2021. Tennis players in the U.S. jumped from 1.9 million players to 25.7 million players in 2024, its fifth consecutive year of growth according to the United States Tennis Association. The founders say that thus far in 2025, Sunset Tennis Club has hosted 1,000 players across its 25 weekly clinics and rotating events monthly.
Anna and Kacper Owsian host a Tennis Clinic in Beverly Hills.
(Emil Ravelo / For The Times)
Its growing membership may have as much to do with the sport of tennis as it does the fashion associated with it. Amanda Greeley, owner of racket sports fashion brand Spence, argues tennis’ increased popularity is a result of the photogenic nature, but also society’s desire for connection.
“Tennis looks good on Instagram, but I also believe it taps into something deeper: Tennis is social. In a world where so much fitness has become solitary — spin bikes, boot camps, apps — tennis offers real, in-person connection. It’s active and communal.”
Even if anyone can join Sunset Tennis Clubs, that doesn’t mean their events are entirely devoid of the old-money swagger often spotted on L.A. tennis courts. The organization operates “in the in between public courts and country clubs … something that’s approachable for people but at the same time a little bit more exclusive and more unique,” said Anna.
Anna Owsian at her Tennis Clinic
(Emil Ravelo / For The Times)
Outside of access to private courts, the feeling of exclusivity comes from the Sunset Tennis Club’s branding and membership, which tends to share an affinity for crisp tennis whites and beautiful watches. Sunset Tennis Club’s Instagram feed resembles that of a fashion brand. Influencers like Song of Style’s Aimee Song and Kardashian makeup artist Mary Phillips are known to frequent clinics. Beyond tennis lessons, membership includes access to social events that range from watch parties at boutique hotels to invites to private boxes at tennis tournaments. Recently, the club partnered with the apparel company FILA to gift members a tennis outfit and an invite to their private box suite at the high-profile BNP Paribas Open in the La Quinta desert, providing members with otherwise everyday lives a taste of the L.A. influencer life. Chelsea Ma, a 28-year-old producer who discovered Sunset Tennis Club through an Instagram ad, attends a clinic with the group once a week. She says she’s also made close friends through the club, some of whom she’s traveled with.
“I was already playing tennis once or twice a week, but I knew I wanted to get better,” Ma said. “It was difficult to find friends who wanted to play tennis on a regular basis [before joining] … The club is one of a kind. It taps into a lifestyle their members already live by but through the foundation of tennis.”
Much like your typical country club, there is a dress code at Sunset Tennis Club clinics: Tennis whites or all-black attire is required. At most courts, the group’s logo is displayed on nets and can be seen in the background of members’ carefully posed Instagram photos on the court. On the Friday that I visited in Beverly Hills, house music by Rufus du Sol played softly from a speaker as we practiced drills. Even with all those small details, the experience wasn’t exactly the Ritz. Members parked on the street, bathroom access varied court by court and there was no spot to grab a cobb salad afterwards. But aesthetically and tonally, whiffs of affluence are in reach for those who want a taste.
Lifestyle
Terry Tempest Williams on why women with big ideas get labeled ‘crazy’ : Wild Card with Rachel Martin
A note from Wild Card host Rachel Martin: I met Terry Tempest Williams about 25 years ago at a writer’s conference in Yosemite Valley. I was a young reporter who was there to do a story about how literature was addressing climate change and she made such a huge impression on me. I had never heard someone talk about the natural world the way Terry did and she had a spiritual depth I hadn’t encountered in my life at that point.
To this day, Terry’s writing always reorients me towards what is good, what is beautiful, and what is true. Her newest book is called “The Glorians.”
Lifestyle
Meow Wolf taps famed L.A. animation house for its new Los Angeles venue
For its upcoming Los Angeles venue, experiential art firm Meow Wolf will focus on the art of storytelling, with a specific eye toward skewering our city’s moviemaking magic. To help bring that vision to life, Meow Wolf has entered into a creative partnership with Titmouse, one of L.A.’s most renowned independent animation houses.
The Hollywood-based studio behind popular series such as “Big Mouth” and “Star Trek: Lower Decks” will create animation that will be shown throughout the West L.A. venue, which is on target for a late 2026 opening at the Howard Hughes entertainment complex.
It’s a move that represents a shift for Santa Fe, N.M.-based Meow Wolf. Over the last decade-plus, the art collective has grown beyond its anything-goes, punk-meets-psychedelic roots into an organization with full-scale, maximalist installations in its hometown, Denver, Las Vegas, Houston and the Dallas suburbs. In the past, Meow Wolf kept most of its media in-house.
As part of its larger-than-life participatory art installations, Meow Wolf L.A. will feature a mix of live action and animation, the former filmed by Meow Wolf in its Santa Fe studio. Meow Wolf’s James Stephenson, a senior VP with the company and its creative director of emerging media, said the degree to which the L.A. exhibition will lean into various animation styles necessitated an outside partner. Titmouse’s work, in development by a number of directors with contrasting tones, will be shown on a variety of formats, ranging from cinema screens to full-room projections.
“I really believe in animation as an art form, and I know the Titmouse folks do too,” Stephenson says. “Animation is made by artists. It’s made by artists with their own hands. It’s something that is still very rooted in craft.”
Meow Wolf’s L.A. space is set in a former cinema complex, and will champion its location, taking guests on a journey through a converted movie house and beyond, into a sci-fi-inspired fantasyland with sentient spaceships and a 30-foot-tall mushroom tower. Meow Wolf creatives have spoken of the fantastical movie theater as one that will feature animated, self-aware candy before attendees enter the main exhibition space, making Titmouse’s work some of the first art guests will encounter. Titmouse co-founder Chris Prynoski has said the studio has lined up at least six directors for the exhibit.
An in-progress art installation destined for Meow Wolf L.A. at the art collective’s Santa Fe, N.M., headquarters. The L.A. exhibition will feature animation from Titmouse.
(Gabriela Campos / For The Times)
Titmouse, says Stephenson, is the right partner because “they’re known less for a house style, and more for a house vibe.” Over the years, Titmouse has been behind such diverse shows as “Scavengers Reign,” owning a Jean Giraud influence rooted in French and Spanish surrealism, the lively “Jentry Chau vs. the Underworld,” with an unique color palette that took inspiration from anime and Chinese mythology, the exaggerated comic book feel of Adult Swim’s “Metalocalypse,” and the approachable yet expressive tone of “Star Trek: Lower Decks.”
“Meow Wolf’s vibe is similar to Titmouse’s vibe,” Stephenson says. “It’s artist-first, artist-driven, independent and kinda edgy. They are always trying to find the edge of what’s possible. They try to see how far they can go, and it’s done for fun and in the spirit of taking risks.”
Prynoski says working with Meow Wolf will give Titmouse a sense of artistic freedom it doesn’t always have when delivering content for more traditional Hollywood partners. He says the multi-director approach is a callback to the early days of Warner Bros. Animation, when individual creators put their own stamp on Looney Tunes material.
“I use Bugs Bunny as an example,” Prynoski says. “You’ve got a Friz Freleng Bugs Bunny short. You’ve got a Chuck Jones Bugs Bunny short. You’ve got a Tex Avery Bugs Bunny short. They’re all different versions of Bugs Bunny, and people who are really paying attention can tell which director directed each one. Even though to the layman, these are all Bugs Bunny, but if you lined them up, they are drawing in different styles, sensibilities and techniques.”
Prynoski says that was a centerpiece of his pitch to Meow Wolf, noting that characters will reappear in multiple installations, each handled by a different artist. Meow Wolf L.A., in fact, will be the firm’s most character-driven exhibition, as guests will follow the storylines of three main protagonists throughout the space.
In announcing the partnership, Meow Wolf and Titmouse released an image from an animated work directed by Luca Vitale. It features a key character having a moment with a hummingbird and it’s done in an elegant, slightly anime-influenced style. It’s an image full of movement, reflecting a character in transition with inviting pastels and bold dashes.
“I like that image because I think it captures some of the sense of wonder that we want people to feel,” Stephenson says. “The character is having an encounter with the elusive nature of creativity and reality in a way that makes them have a different perspective of what’s possible.”
Other contributing animation directors to Meow Wolf L.A. include Space Dawg, Felix Colgrave, Alexander Vanderplank and Phimémon Martin, and Jun Ioneda.
Titmouse’s partnership with Meow Wolf will extend beyond the L.A. exhibition. The two will be working on the development of Meow Wolf New York, which is slated to open some time after Los Angeles, and are collaborating on a planned animated series, which Prynoski is spearheading.
Meow Wolf exhibits are the result of sometimes hundreds of disparate artists coming together in a shared space. Distilling that into a signature, singular style for a series could be a challenge. Stephenson pinpoints some guiding principles.
“You really need to feel the hand of the artist,” he says. “You need to feel a DIY aesthetic. You need to feel the materiality. Those are very specific to what we are.”
Lifestyle
Appeals court denies Trump’s request to halt removal of his name from the Kennedy Center
The Kennedy Center on June 28, with its facade signage still covered by a tarp and scaffolding.
Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images
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Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images
On Wednesday, a federal appeals court denied President Trump’s request to stop the removal of his name from Washington, D.C.’s Kennedy Center. The signage on the building has been covered with tarp and scaffolding since June 13, but in a court filing last month, the center’s current executive director said that Trump’s name has been removed.
In their decision, three judges from the U.S. District Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit said that the president had failed to prove that the arts center would be “irreparably injured” without Trump’s name attached to it.

NPR requested comment from the Kennedy Center, but did not receive an immediate reply.
This latest round of court decisions is part of the ongoing litigation filed by Rep. Joyce Beatty, D-Ohio, against President Trump and the board of the Kennedy Center. In a statement emailed Wednesday to NPR, Beatty said: “Today’s ruling again affirms that this administration’s efforts to rename the Kennedy Center were unlawful. His name no longer desecrates this sacred memorial, which belongs to the American people. Now it is time for the Trump administration to accept this, comply with the law, and take the tarps down.”
In previous court filings, Trump’s legal team had asserted that removing the president’s name from the arts complex, both on the physical building and in its digital materials, would inflict irreparable harm in both time and money already spent. In the denial, the three judges — Patricia Millett, Robert Wilkins and Gregory Katsas — wrote that since Trump’s name has already been removed, “a stay would not avert those harms.”
Furthermore, Trump had claimed that without his name attached, future fundraising would be threatened “and [will] contribute to the financial decline of the Center.” In response, the appeals judges wrote: “Appellants, however, have failed to support this assertion with any specific facts or evidence. They offer only the conclusory assertions of the Kennedy Center’s Executive Director that were made in a factually unsupported declaration.” The center’s current executive director, Matt Floca, specializes in physical plant management.

The presiding judge in the case, Christopher R. Cooper, has ordered that the center provide him a status report on the center’s operation and programming before the end of this month. As of Wednesday, the center’s calendar lists a small roster of programs, including outdoor free movie screenings, workshops for children, and five free live performances in July on its Millennium Stage. In the past, the Kennedy Center presented over 2,000 arts and education events each year, including free daily Millennium Stage performances.

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