Connect with us

Lifestyle

Koreatown’s Wi Spa ups its game with a head spa, AI robot masseuse and more

Published

on

Koreatown’s Wi Spa ups its game with a head spa, AI robot masseuse and more

Wi Spa, with its hot and cold tubs, specialty saunas and napping nooks, has long been a beloved L.A. destination for rest and rejuvenation. Now Koreatown’s most popular spa is kicking up its wellness offerings, getting ahead of the self-care trend. Or a head of it.

Wi Spa is opening a head spa. It’s more than halfway through construction of Root Head Spa, slated to debut within the next two months. It will be located on the lobby level, in the space that formerly housed a gym, with seven individual treatment rooms.

The idea for this new edition began before the head spa trend became so popular in Los Angeles, says Min Jung, a Wi Spa manager. After researching the various types of head spas, Wi Spa decided to create theirs “in the Japanese Yume Head Spa-style,” she says. Treatments will clean, exfoliate and moisturize the scalp, and they will include a gentle head massage. (“Yume” means “dream” in Japanese, a nod to the sleepy state the treatment leaves guests in.)

“But this is not a massage, this is not a head wash, it is actually a scalp treatment,” Jung says.

Videos of Chinese and Japanese-inspired head spa treatments started popping up on social media in 2022 — the arc-shaped “waterfall bath” is especially visually intriguing. We chronicled the rise of the trend, which first began proliferating in Asian communities such as Arcadia, San Gabriel, Temple City and Rosemead, in 2024 and 2025 — now there are head spas across the city.

Advertisement

Scrubbing the scalp aids circulation, strengthens hair follicles and helps to prevent dandruff, itchiness and inflammation, among other benefits, practitioners and dermatologists say. In our coverage, we said it “might be the most relaxing spa service in L.A.”

Wi Spa’s Himalayan Salt Sauna, a visitor favorite.

(Wi Spa)

An hourlong Wi Spa head spa treatment will cost about $150 to $200, Jung says, adding that prices are not yet set. That’s the upper end of average in L.A. for the treatment. Wi Spa’s $40 entry fee (which includes access to spa amenities) will not be waived with purchase of the head spa treatment, as it is with other Wi Spa services, such as a body scrub or massage, which typically exceeds $160.

Advertisement

Also in the works: Wi Spa is planning to build a wellness center on its third floor, in what’s now a skincare area. The new offering will likely include an infrared sauna and a red light therapy bed, among other things. This past summer Wi Spa also opened a salon for blowouts, called Root Style Bar, adjacent to its women’s dressing room. So (cue the violins) guests no longer have to trek out to their car with wet hair or attend post-spa events with a DIY blowout.

Next up: a spa-wide renovation to freshen up existing areas.

In the meantime, visitors may not know: Wi Spa has an “Aescape” AI-powered massage robot on its premises.

Aescape massage robot at Pause Wellness Studio.

Reporter Deborah Vankin tries out the Aescape massage robot at Pause Wellness Studio in 2024.

(Christina House / Los Angeles Times)

Advertisement

We wrote about Aescape when it debuted at Pause, a wellness center in Studio City — it performs a 3D scan of your body to deliver custom robot massages. (Cyborg butt massages are not to be underestimated.) There are now several Aescapes around L.A., including at Equinox gyms. Wi Spa leased theirs this past summer. Guests can book robot massages for 15 minutes, 30 minutes, 45 minutes or an hour for $1 a minute, making it more affordable than Wi Spa’s manual massage offerings.

We’re partial to the most affordable massage option at Wi Spa, however: the plush, blue-lighted massage chairs scattered throughout the spa. Bring cash. It’s just $10 for a 30-minute “luxury” full body massage — and it’s surprisingly effective.

Lifestyle

Our 15 Favorite Looks at the 2026 Met Gala

Published

on

Our 15 Favorite Looks at the 2026 Met Gala

The Met Gala steps are a stage where celebrities strive not merely to look pretty, but to create indelible, avant-garde fashion moments. The most memorable looks tend to commit to the often abstract theme and take risks not typically seen on award show red carpets. Sometimes that works; other times it ends in disaster.

This year, guests stepped onto a mossy-looking, trompe l’oeil cobblestone carpet surrounded by a backdrop that recalled a Monet canvas. It was fitting for the evening’s brief: “Fashion is art.” It may be a bit on the nose for an event whose raison d’être is to raise money for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s fashion-focused Costume Institute.

There were fake nipples and molded torsos; flowers and feathers; dripping jewels and one delightful burst of bubbles.

For close followers of our past most stylish lists, what follows is a shift in approach. Typically, we bring you a distillation of the looks that got people talking — the good, the bad and the most interesting. This year, since we now give you a chance to vote on your favorite looks, we’re saying, unequivocally, that these were ours (presented in no particular order).


In this Robert Wun gown, spurts of blood — in the form of delicate feathers — spring from incisions in the fabric.

Advertisement

No other garment had quite the same movement as this frosty, fringed frock by Tom Ford that shimmied whenever Taylor struck a pose.


Inspired by the “Venus de Milo,” this primary-colored Thom Browne gown is a no-naked take on naked dressing.


In a sea of sequins and other opulent baubles, what at least presented as a pair of distressed denim trousers — by Prada — was like a palate cleanser.

If Vermeer’s “Girl With a Pearl Earring” made a meal of her signature accessory.


A look that was worth the decade-long wait for the star’s reappearance at the Met Gala.

Advertisement

Gold adornments and jewel accents made Abrams look completely Klimtian in this peachy Chanel gown.

It’s goth meets grande dame. No engagement ring needed to get the people talking.


For the real heads: the Yves Klein Blue body-print dress from spring 2017, one of Phoebe Philo’s last collections at Celine.


Other men on the carpet looked as if they had tried needlessly hard when Martens, the creative director of Maison Margiela, appeared in this undeniable tuxedo. This is how every man should dress.

A profusion of bubbles continuously spouting from this teacup dress brought some joie de vivre to the carpet.

Advertisement

It should be illegal to look so good for so long on so many red carpets.


Many tried corsets; several donned sheer skirts. But none managed to look quite so delicate, elegant and demure as Aboah did, in custom Simone Rocha.


More Yves Klein Blue, in whimsical curlicues by Valentino.

Stella Bugbee, Jacob Gallagher and Marie Solis contributed reporting.

Continue Reading

Lifestyle

Vote for Your Favorite Met Gala Looks

Published

on

Vote for Your Favorite Met Gala Looks

Vote for your favorite looks from the 53 below.

This page will order itself based on votes. Return to see how the race is shaking out before it closes.

Advertisement

The poll closes May 5 at 6 p.m. ET.

  1. 1
    Advertisement

    Beyoncé in Olivier Rousteing.

    Beyoncé

    Advertisement

  2. 2
  3. 3

    Rihanna in Maison Margiela.

    Advertisement

    Rihanna

  4. 4
    Advertisement

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Sam Smith

  5. Advertisement
  6. 5
  7. 6
  8. 7
  9. 8
  10. 9

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Rebecca Hall

    Advertisement

  11. 10

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Advertisement

    Zoe Kravitz

  12. 11
    Advertisement

    Doja Cat in Saint Laurent.

    Doja Cat

    Advertisement

  13. 12
  14. 13

    Jon Batiste in ERL Artisanal.

    Advertisement

    Jon Batiste

  15. 14
    Advertisement

    Eileen Gu Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Eileen Gu

  16. Advertisement
  17. 15
  18. 16

    Suleika Jaouad in Christian Siriano.

    Suleika Jaouad

    Advertisement

  19. 17
  20. 18

    Janelle Monae in Christian Siriano.

    Advertisement

    Janelle Monáe

  21. 19
    Advertisement

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Lisa

    Advertisement

  22. 20
  23. 21
  24. 22

    Patrick Schwarzenegger in Public School.

    Advertisement

    Patrick Schwarzenegger

  25. 23
    Advertisement

    Colman Domingo in Valentino.

    Colman Domingo

  26. Advertisement
  27. 24

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Skepta

    Advertisement

  28. 25

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Advertisement

    Kylie Jenner

  29. 26
  30. 27
    Advertisement

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Sombr

    Advertisement

  31. 28

    Sabrina Carpenter in Dior.

    Advertisement

    Sabrina Carpenter

  32. 29
  33. 30
    Advertisement

    Connor Storrie in Saint Laurent.

    Connor Storrie

  34. Advertisement
  35. 31
  36. 32

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Chase Infiniti

    Advertisement

  37. 33
  38. 34

    Hudson Williams in Balenciaga.

    Advertisement

    Hudson Williams

  39. 35
  40. 36
  41. 37
    Advertisement

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Kim Kardashian

    Advertisement

  42. 38

    Madonna in Saint Laurent.

    Advertisement

    Madonna

  43. 39
  44. 40
  45. 41
  46. 42
    Advertisement

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Cher

  47. Advertisement
  48. 43
  49. 44
  50. 45
  51. 46
  52. 47
  53. 48
  54. 49

    Nina Westervelt for The New York Times

    Alysa Liu

    Advertisement

  55. 50
  56. 51

    Stevie Nicks in Zara by John Galliano

    Advertisement

    Stevie Nicks

  57. 52
    Advertisement

    Rachel Sennott in Marc Jacobs.

    Rachel Sennott

    Advertisement

  58. 53

    Simone Ashley in Stella McCartney.

    Advertisement

    Simone Ashley

Continue Reading

Lifestyle

Inside the elaborate, competitive L.A. book club taking immersion to the extreme

Published

on

Inside the elaborate, competitive L.A. book club taking immersion to the extreme

They call themselves the Booked Babes. Tonight, the women are gathered in Anna Sokol’s kitchen, surrounding an oven-roasted duck stuffed with apples. The dish is a Ukrainian delicacy from Sokol’s home country, where she was once a fashion designer and influencer. Now, she’s in Venice Beach. Sunlight bleeds in from the window where the sun is setting over the Venice Canals. At the women’s feet, a mini Bernedoodle, Zipper, paces nervously, barking at arriving guests. Screams echo from the upstairs bedrooms, where two husbands are in exile, watching a Green Bay Packers game with a newborn baby.

Tonight’s book club is Eastern European-themed, prompting the women to wear red cardigans and dresses. The book under discussion is “The New Rules” by Russian-born TikTok influencer Margarita Nazarenko, who prescribes gender roles that Sokol recognizes as distinctly Eastern European. Nazarenko is a best-selling author with more than 600,000 followers on Instagram, known for offering practical, blunt dating advice to women. “Her methodology feels very Eastern European in male and female relationships and dynamics,” Sokol explains as her guests pick at deviled eggs and brie cheese with manicured nails.

The guest list for the Booked Babes is small — only six women, with one of them commuting remotely from Miami; this time, she joins over FaceTime. The Booked Babes was founded more than two years ago at a holiday party as a New Year’s resolution to read more and forge new friendships. Since then, the women have become best friends, and the book club meetings they host have taken on a life of their own —becoming more spectacular and competitive with each meeting.

The Booked Babes journeyed to a gothic mansion in La Jolla and dressed as Marie Antoinette in extravagant rococo dresses.

(Anna Sokol)

Advertisement

“It started off very normal in the beginning, very casual,” book club member Cassandra Leisz explains. “I don’t really know when the switch happened.”

With each passing month, the book club became more elaborate and more involved — including vacations in coastal towns, costuming, pickleball tournaments and monogrammed custom merch.

Take the historical literary fiction novel “Perfume: The Story of a Murderer” by Patrick Süskind, for example, set in the 18th century. The group journeyed to a gothic mansion in La Jolla and dressed as Marie Antoinette in extravagant rococo dresses. Eighteenth century activities included croquet and designing a custom perfume, all accompanied by fashion photography. Sokol chose the novel for its cult status in Ukraine: “Everyone read it, even though it’s a really weird book.”

For the book club members, the spectacle is part of the fun. “It gives us all a chance to be creative and come together. You get to make it whatever you want it to be. There’s the element of: how do I want to express myself in this time period?” says Leisz.

Advertisement
The "Booked Babes" book club

For the book club pick “Flawless” by Elsie Silver, Ashley Goldsmith planned a cowboy picnic in Franklin Canyon, complete with her mother’s vintage Chevy pickup truck.

(Anna Sokol)

For her turn hosting, Leisz rented a boat — not quite a yacht, she clarifies — in Marina del Rey, paired with lobster rolls and champagne. The novel was “The Wedding People” by Alison Espach, set in a hotel in Newport, R.I. Leisz leaned into the snobby, blue-blood aesthetic described in the book for her outing.

“It is a financial commitment. We put a lot of money into it between the decor, the gifts and the activity,” says Leisz.

Opinions and literary taste often vary among the women. The book club enjoys sparring over polarizing books, but the point is always friendship. “There are a lot of times I don’t like the book, but I love having an opportunity to spend time with girlfriends,” says Ashley Goldsmith.

Advertisement
The "Booked Babes" book club

Custom merch like personalized sweatshirts, elaborate gifting and travel have become a tradition for this book club.

(Anna Sokol)

For her book club on “Flawless” by Elsie Silver, Goldsmith planned a cowboy picnic in Franklin Canyon, complete with her mother’s vintage Chevy pickup truck for photo ops. The meal was followed by a mechanical bull-riding competition at Saddle Ranch. Goldsmith even hired a security guard to secure the public picnic bench beginning at 7 a.m.

The Booked Babes have attracted attention on the members’ social media with eager requests to join. The book club always politely declines, given its specific chemistry. “The second we started posting about this and talking about it, people were like, ‘Oh my God, how do I join?’” says Leisz. Since schedules are already tricky to maneuver, the club does not accept new members.

The Booked Babes raise their glasses.

The Booked Babes raise their glasses.

(Carlin Stiehl / For The Times)

Advertisement

In curating a book club, the members insist that diversity of opinion is key. “We’re all quite different from each other. We have very different backgrounds. Some of us come from different countries,” says Leisz. Alanna O’Reilly, who joined over Facetime, immigrated from Dublin and is currently living in Miami.

For the record:

10:40 a.m. May 4, 2026An earlier version of this article misspelled Alanna O’Reilly’s name as Illana O’Reiley.

At dinner, the book club sits down for the Ukrainian meal to discuss “The New Rules.” On the table are elaborate rose arrangements and settings draped in red ribbon. Amanda Ghaffari slyly streams the Green Bay Packers game on her iPhone. O’Reiley jokes via Facetime she is eating popcorn and watching the hit gay drama “Heated Rivalry.”

Advertisement

1 A flower arrangement is set for a themed book club.

2 A cheese plate.

3 Book club members wear red and pink dresses for their meeting.

1. A flower arrangement is set for a themed book club. 2. A cheese plate. 3. Book club members wear red and pink dresses for their meeting. (Carlin Stiehl / For The Times)

The conversation includes some light teasing about each other’s attachment styles — the intimate banter of close friends. Victoria Frenner, who is a therapist, expresses skepticism about the book’s punchy tone. “When someone is speaking on something with a lot of conviction, like, there always has to be some kind of caveat,” Frenner says.

“This is why I wanted you to read it. It’s very Eastern European-focused.” Sokol says. “American girls are a little more on the independent side. She doesn’t say ‘don’t be independent,’ but she talks a lot about femininity.” Sokol recounts the dizzying story of meeting her husband at a wedding in Moscow, which begins with her husband attending a nightclub in Dubai.

Advertisement
Ashley Goldsmith reads her individualized star chart.

Ashley Goldsmith reads her individualized star chart.

(Carlin Stiehl / For The Times)

For the activity planned, Sokol, who is eight months pregnant and wearing a dazzling candy-pink dress that matches the chosen book’s cover, presents the members with their own custom Slavic astrology reading, one she procured from a Ukrainian astrologer she visited when she was 19. Fortune telling and mysticism are common in Eastern Europe, she explains. The custom readings are bound in booklets, each featuring a spirit animal, such as a panda, and suggested habits.

“Avoid fast cars and motorcycles. Avoid countries with active war,” one of the booklets read.

Ghaffari explains that ever since she was 3 years old in Milwaukee, her mother has been in a decades-long book club. “She flies back for it, and she’ll recommend books that they just read,” Ghaffari says. Three weeks ago, Ghaffari had her first baby, who is in attendance, whom she jokes is the “book club heir.”

Advertisement

The Booked Babes fall quiet as they thumb through their astrology booklets, reading about destiny, transfixed by the mesmerizing promise of inevitable fate.

Connors is a writer living in Los Angeles. She hosts the literary reading event Unreliable Narrators at Nico’s Wines in Atwater Village every month.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending