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These 10 pop-ups, drops and events in L.A. can add some heat to your winter calendar

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This story is a part of Picture subject 8, “Abandoned,” a supercharged expertise of turning into and non secular renewal. Benefit from the journey! (Wink, wink.) See the complete package deal right here.

1. The Underground Museum returns

The folks’s museum is again! After what felt like an everlasting hiatus for art-loving Angelenos who discovered a house within the Arlington Heights house, the Underground Museum is reopening with an exhibition by its late founder, artist Noah Davis, on Jan. 12. Preserve your eyes peeled within the coming weeks for ticket info at theunderground.museum.

2. Deciem X Good Good Good pop-up

Magnificence large Deciem is collaborating with good-news-only firm Good Good Good for its L.A. debut, internet hosting a pop-up on the Authentic Farmers Market from Dec. 14-19. The Deciem Good Newsstand will characteristic merchandise from manufacturers underneath the corporate’s umbrella together with the Atypical, the Chemistry Model and Hylamide. 6333 W. third St.. Los Angeles, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. day by day, deciem.com

3. Market X Rimowa

Streetwear model Market brings its smiley motif to a collaboration with baggage firm Rimowa in good thing about the UNICEF-funded COVAX Facility, an operation aiming to get the world vaccinated in opposition to COVID-19 via equitable distribution and entry. The gathering consists of Rimowa’s Vol. 1 Private Aluminum cross-body bag in black ($2,303), Rimowa’s Vol. 1 unique trunk XL in silver ($3999) and Rimowa’s Vol. 1 By no means Nonetheless backpack in saffron ($1033). HBX.com.

A sculpture of a hand on a blue background

Maria Maea, “Mano Poderosa,” 2021; 17 x 7 x 3 inches, corn husk, palm leaves, artichoke flower, celosia flower

(Monica Orozco / LaPau Gallery)

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Don’t miss Lengthy Seashore-born artist Maria Maea’s exhibition, “Ours,” at LaPau Gallery. The work “investigates life cycles via Maea’s harvesting of vegetation and weaving of household histories,” says the gallery. “Over a span of two years, Maea has stored a backyard, cultivating it and bearing the fruits of her harvest, primarily the Three Sisters — squash, beans, maize — as bodily sustenance for herself and her artwork apply.” 3006 W. seventh St., Suite 208, Los Angeles, midday to five p.m., Thursday to Saturday, via Dec. 18, lapaugallery.com

5. Prada Vacation 2021

A shiny black sequined hoodie with the word "Prada" in white

If the marketing campaign for Prada’s Vacation 2021 assortment — a brief movie by Glen Luchford that includes Julia Garner, Shira Haas, Louis Partridge and Taylor Russell, huddled up in nylon bucket hats and embroidered chiffon as they trek via a hauntingly lovely wintery scene later revealing itself to be L.A. — isn’t sufficient to entrance you, the garments certainly will. The gathering is “designed for celebration, impressed by joyous gatherings and winter scenes unfolding in frozen terrains,” based on the model. prada.com

6. Gabriella Sanchez, ‘Partial Photos’ at MOLAA

A colorful piece of art depicts a person and the word "Open"

Gabriella Sanchez, “Open,” 2017, 72 x 48 inches; acrylic, Sharpie, spray paint, beaded and embroidered appliques on paper

(Michael Underwood / Charlie James Gallery)

Gabriella Sanchez’s first solo exhibition, “Partial Photos,” is a must-see on the Museum of Latin American Artwork, curated by MOLAA chief curator Gabriela Urtiaga. Bridging the ability of phrases with images — which the artist treats as fragments of actuality — the present mixes Sanchez’s “considerations about social and political psychology with the binary definitions surrounding gender, race and migration.” 628 Alamitos Ave., Lengthy Seashore, via January, molaa.org

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7. Glossier Alley

A metal globe under a dome ceiling.

Glossier opened its shiny new flagship retailer in West Hollywood final month, and it continues its IRL takeover of L.A. this month with the disclosing of Glossier Alley — the model’s first out of doors house, sitting adjoining to the shop. The house contains a photo-ready fountain and to-go cafe. 8523 Melrose Ave., West Hollywood, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday via Saturday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday, glossier.com

8. Zen Operating Membership’s ZR 01

A pair of white running shoes

The discharge of Zen Operating Membership’s ZR 01 operating shoe proves that smooth, fashionable and efficient efficiency gear could be eco-friendly and vegan too. The kicks ($139) are available in a minimalist design and wearable colorways, constructed from sustainable sugarcane and tree fibers. They’ve a rocker midsole, versatile sufficient to propel you ahead as you run along with your membership on the weekdays or run errands on the weekends. zenrunningclub.com

9. ‘Since Unveiling: Chosen Acquisitions of a Decade’ on the Broad

A collage portrait of a person

Nathaniel Mary Quinn, “Pure Insecurity,” 2019; oil paint, paint stick, gouache, tender pastel on linen canvas.

(Robert McKeever / Broad Artwork Basis; © Nathaniel Mary Quinn)

There’s an enormous assortment exhibition on the Broad proper now, highlighting a number of the work the museum has acquired inside the final decade. Fifty-three works, 27 artists, themes as numerous as place, identification and narrative — “Since Unveiling: Chosen Acquisitions of a Decade” options work from Kara Walker, Cindy Sherman, Kerry James Marshall, Catherine Opie and extra. 221 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, via April 3, thebroad.org

10. Saint Laurent Rive Droite X Ok-Approach

A bare-chested man puts on a black jacket.

(Saint Laurent Rive Droite X Ok-Approach)

Saint Laurent Rive Droite has collaborated with clothes model Ok-Approach on a limited-edition waterproof and windproof bomber jacket that’s out there IRL completely at Saint Laurent Rive Droite areas in L.A. and Paris (in addition to on-line). The unisex jacket ($800) contains a tiger-print aptitude and colour blocks, with sensible thermo internal seams good for shielding your self in opposition to the weather this winter season (and each one after). 469 N. Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills. saintlaurentrivedroite.com

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Lifestyle

The debate over “LatinX” and how words get adopted — or not

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The debate over “LatinX” and how words get adopted — or not


Word Wars: Wokeism and the Battle Over Language – John McWhorter
YouTube

Part 2 of the TED Radio Hour episode The History Behind Three Words

New terms — like LatinX — are often pushed by activists to promote a more equitable world. But linguist John McWhorter says trying to enforce new words to speed up social change tends to backfire.

About John McWhorter

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John McWhorter is an associate professor in the Slavic Department at Columbia University. He is the host of the podcast Lexicon Valley and New York Times columnist.

McWhorter has written more than twenty books including The Power of Babel: A Natural History of Language, Words on the Move: Why English Won’t – and Can’t – Sit Still (Like, Literally) and Nine Nasty Words. He earned his B.A. from Rutgers, his M.A. from New York University, and his Ph.D. in linguistics from Stanford.

This segment of the TED Radio Hour was produced by James Delahoussaye and edited by Sanaz Meshkinpour. You can follow us on Facebook @TEDRadioHour and email us at TEDRadioHour@npr.org.

Web Resources

Related TED Bio: John McWhorter

Related TED Talk: 4 reasons to learn a new language

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Related TED Talk: Txtng is killing language. JK!!!

Related NPR Links

Latinx Is A Term Many Still Can’t Embrace

Why the trope of the ‘outside agitator’ persists

Next U.S. census will have new boxes for ‘Middle Eastern or North African,’ ‘Latino’

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Modern death cafes are very much alive in L.A. Inside the radical movement

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Modern death cafes are very much alive in L.A. Inside the radical movement

In a second-story room in Los Feliz’s Philosophical Research Society, about a dozen people sit in a circle. Many of them are here for the first time and not entirely sure what to expect. The sandwich board sign in the courtyard below offers only a cryptic hint: “Welcome! Death cafe meeting upstairs.”

As the group settles in on this Thursday afternoon in May, organizer Elizabeth Gill Lui lays out the only two directives: “have tea and cake, and talk about death.”

Lui, a 73-year-old artist who wears chunky jewelry and bold glasses, starts by reading a passage from the musician Nick Cave’s recent memoir. It’s about how, in the face of staggering grief, speaking and listening can be a form of healing — which is ultimately what Lui hopes will transpire over the next couple of hours, in this room decorated with patterned carpets and tall bookcases.

“The tradition in Southern California has long been about the journey. Making the most of the journey creatively, playfully, intellectually. That’s what I also like about the death cafe.”

— Elizabeth Lui, artist and organizer of a twice-monthly death cafe at the Philosophical Research Society

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To initiate the exchange, she instructs the group to “go around in a circle and say what brought you to death cafe.” It’s a simple enough question, but one that elicits complex, deeply personal responses. Some attendees say they’ve come because they’re struggling with how to care for aging parents, or because they lost a loved one during the pandemic. Others have recently been through a life transition — a move back home, a college graduation, recovery from an illness. Or they’re wrestling with anxieties about their mortality. No matter the reason, everyone seems to be seeking some form of comfort, connection and community.

Reading material suggested by Elizabeth Lui, who hosted a death cafe at the Philosophical Research Society.

“The tradition in Southern California has long been about the journey. Making the most of the journey creatively, playfully, intellectually,” Lui tells me in the Philosophical Research Society’s regal library. “That’s what I also like about the death cafe. It has this edge of humor to it. If you’re at a dinner party and it’s boring, you can just say, ‘Have I told you about the death cafe I go to?’ and everybody just laughs. It’s such a great entree to the conversation.”

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Lui’s twice-monthly gathering is one of several death cafes that have sprung up over the past two years in Los Angeles. Heavy Manners Library, an art space and lending library specializing in independent books and zines, holds one every other month. Its organizer, Emily Yacina, has made a habit of bringing donuts for the mostly 20- and-30-something tattooed crowd. Artist Ailene deVries held a death cafe in April at Gorky, an Eastside feminist collective that hosts workshops and pop-up events. North Figueroa Bookshop in Highland Park announced its first death cafe last summer, led by death doula Hazel Angell. A collaged flier for the meeting showed a skeleton hand clutching a butterfly above a succinct description written in gothic font: “A group discussion of death with no agenda, objectives or themes.”

The agenda-less ethos of the death cafe was developed in 2011 by Jon Underwood. The then 38-year-old Buddhist student and former government worker is widely credited for hosting the first modern death cafe at his home in East London. He was inspired to organize it after reading about Swiss “cafe mortels,” gatherings designed by the late sociologist Bernard Crettaz in 2004 to break the stigma around talking about death.

Underwood died unexpectedly in 2017 due to complications from leukemia, but the movement he kickstarted remains very much alive. A website maintained by Underwood’s mother and sister includes a how-to guide for those looking to start their own death cafe, and a directory that lists more than 18,000 death cafes around the world.

Greg Golden, 73, center, shares his experience beside fellow death cafe participants.

Greg Golden, 73, center, shares his experience beside fellow death cafe participants Danielle Tyas, 23, left, and Haley Twist, 32, right, at the Philosophical Research Society.

Megan Mooney, a clinical and medical social worker who serves as a volunteer spokesperson for Underwood’s umbrella organization, says she’s seen an increase in death cafe listings since 2020.

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“COVID really made people have to face their own mortality,” she said in a Facebook message. “There was no escaping it …There was a huge demand for people wanting to talk about death for the first time.”

That was certainly true for Lui, who says the “pervasiveness of death” during the first couple years of the pandemic led her to get certified as an end-of-life doula in March 2022.

“I really was alarmed by the fact that we couldn’t form a consensus on how to deal with the pandemic and deal with the widespread phenomenon of this many deaths,” she said. “I don’t think the seriousness of it was something that we were even able to grasp because we avoid this topic at all costs.”

Though Lui’s death cafe may be the most frequently held one in Los Angeles, it’s not the county’s first. Hospice social worker Betsy Trapasso claims that distinction, after having launched a death cafe from her home in Topanga Canyon in 2013.

“It’s not a support group. It’s not a grief group,” Trapasso told The Times that year. “My whole thing is to get people talking about [death] so they’re not afraid when the time comes.”

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During the event, Trapasso asked the group of aging professionals to inhale some lavender oil to relax at the start of the session. (Though she no longer hosts a death cafe, she maintains a Facebook page where she posts articles and events related to aging, grief and end-of-life care.)

Participants sit in a circle at the death cafe.

Participants sit in a circle at the death cafe.

More than a decade later, there are no bongos or essential oils at L.A.’s latest wave of death cafes and, most noticeably, their attendees skew younger. At the Thursday and Saturday sessions I attended at the Philosophical Research Society, most people were in their 20s, 30s and early 40s. At Heavy Manners Library on a Tuesday night, the group would not have looked out of place at a music show at the Echoplex down the street.

Lui sees the attendance of the millennials and zoomers at her death cafes as evidence of an unfortunate reality: that younger generations are experiencing the loss of loved ones. Some of them have cited suicide, alcoholism and drug overdoses as the cause.

“Young people are being exposed to friends dying, and more often than I think people realize,” she said.

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Yacina, who leads the death cafe at Heavy Manners Library, is one of them. The 28-year-old indie rock musician says a good friend of hers died during her sophomore year of college, and she found the experience isolating, profound and “identity-forming.” Then, in 2021, she mourned the death of yet another friend, whom she later wrote a song about. Yacina said she realized “there’s no escape to people dying, and in fact, it’s actually the one true thing that we all can count on.” It led her to wonder: “Why don’t we talk about it more?”

Upcoming L.A. death cafes

She organized the Echo Park death cafe in June 2022, just a few months before Lui started one in Los Feliz. Like Lui, Yacina had recently gotten certified as an end-of-life doula, and the pandemic had planted the idea of death more firmly in her consciousness. In a phone interview, she recalled worrying that she could lose her parents to COVID-19.

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“It was such a scary feeling, but the truth is, you could lose anyone at any time,” she said.

It’s a truth that deVries, the 27-year-old artist who recently held a death cafe at Gorky and plans to hold another in Long Beach this summer, had to learn the hard way.

“When I was 18, my partner just suddenly passed in a very traumatic way, so I wasn’t really sure where to put the conversation,” she said. “I think the death cafe was the first time that I felt I had a container to express my interest.”

Reading material suggested by Elizabeth Lui.

Reading material suggested by Elizabeth Lui.

Sara Alessandrini, 35, listens closely as another participant shares during the death cafe.

Sara Alessandrini, 35, listens closely as another participant shares during the death cafe.

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Not everyone who attends these events has experienced a death in their family or community. Some attendees instead see death as a potent metaphor for life’s big changes and all the grief that comes along with them.

“It also helped me with living life in the moment and letting go of certain things,” said Sara Alessandrini, a 35-year-old filmmaker who attends Lui’s death cafe at the Philosophical Research Society.

When it’s her turn to share her reason for coming to the Thursday afternoon group, Alessandrini announces to the group that she wants to reflect not on the death of a person, but of her childhood. She talks about boundaries and healing. It prompts others to chime in, openly sharing stories about their upbringings. When the conversation comes to a pause, Lui offers some warm advice to Alessandrini: “I think you need to protect yourself even better than you think you’re protecting yourself.”

Lui often takes on a maternal role in the group. During one of my visits, she asks for an attendee’s phone number so she can text them a message of support on a day they say they’re dreading. At a separate session, she gets up from her chair to console someone in emotional distress. After the meetings, she emails death-themed book and movie recommendations to newcomers, who often comprise the majority of attendees. Timothy Leary’s “Design for Dying,” the Oscar-winning Japanese drama “Departures,” and the Sundance-winning documentary “How to Die in Oregon,” are all on her list.

Since many of her attendees are artists themselves, she sends out invites to their events, which often intersect with ideas about death. Recent examples include an online radio program featuring songs for funerals and a solo show about grief debuting at the Hollywood Fringe festival this month.

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Lui sometimes signs her emails: “Hope to see you when it fits.” She wants attendees to know there’s no obligation to return to her death cafe. Even still, the group can sometimes get large and unwieldy. At one recent death cafe, Lui recalled, there were 30 people, “and that was a little too much.”

Michael Allison, 62, laughs a little while sharing with the group of participants in the death cafe.

Michael Allison, 62, laughs a little while sharing with the group of participants in the death cafe.

The death cafe can sometimes feel like group therapy. But Lui makes no claims of being a therapist. “I think in a good way, we’re not therapists,” she told me. “Because we’re not just nodding and listening and letting them figure out their own truth. We actually have some ideas about where you find meaning in your life.”

At the Thursday afternoon death cafe at the Philosophical Research Society, everyone has so much to say that the conversation stretches for hours. Toward the end, it becomes loose and playful, resembling a late-night heart-to-heart. Between bouts of tears and laughter, someone asks: Do you think you know that you’re dead after you’ve died? Another poses a question: Is it just me, or has anyone else ever wondered if your dead parent can see you when you’re having sex? The room giggles, and it reminds one attendee to share her own story about her deceased mother.

At some point, Lui asks whether anyone knows the time. It’s 6 p.m. — meaning the death cafe has stretched on for four hours, twice as long as scheduled. Lui frantically apologizes, but nobody seems to mind. They hang around, talking and eating cupcakes.

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“Maybe we need a weekend retreat or something?” Lui suggests. But even a few days wouldn’t be enough to contain everyone’s questions about one of life’s greatest mysteries. For now, her cafe will have to suffice.

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'We Are Lady Parts' rocks with bracing honesty and nuance : Pop Culture Happy Hour

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'We Are Lady Parts' rocks with bracing honesty and nuance : Pop Culture Happy Hour
The Peacock series We Are Lady Parts is a bold and very funny comedy about an up-and-coming London punk band called Lady Parts. The members of Lady Parts, and its manager, are all young Muslim women, from various racial and ethnic backgrounds. Over the course of its first season, each member experiences triumphs and setbacks – including its lead guitarist, who strives to overcome stage fright. The show is about to return for a new season, so today, we are revisiting our conversation about it.
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