The Ultimate Turf War
A Westsider and an Eastsider go 12 rounds to see
which area can claim supremacy.
April 18, 2002
BY CHRISTOPHER NOXON AND LESLEE KOMAIKO
There are more splits in the city of Los Angeles than
at an Olympic gymnastic competition. There are rich and
poor. City folks and Valley dwellers. Those who work in
entertainment and those the trade papers call
"non-pros." And, of course, there are enough ethnicities
and religions to make the L.A. County census look like a
work of theoretical physics.
There's also a much blurrier, but equally
contentious, divide: between Westside and Eastside. It's
a tricky split to define. Everyone draws his own
boundaries. And the points of contention can seem
downright silly to those who live in South-Central,
Northridge or San Pedro. But to many who live in places
such as Los Feliz or Santa Monica, the distinctions
prompt raging debate. Westsiders gripe about the smog
and cooler-than-thou attitude east of La Brea Avenue.
Eastsiders moan about the superficiality and SUV traffic
jams near the ocean. Such opinions typically are
expressed privately, in the company of like-minded
neighbors.
It's time to get this out in the open. It's time to
take off the gloves. It's time for a smackdown.
Taking our cue from those masters of rhetoric at the
World Wrestling Federation, we present a 12-round grudge
match between a die-hard Eastsider and an equally
impassioned Westsider. Christopher "Boom Boom" Noxon
lives a few blocks from his childhood home in Los Feliz
and feels like a stranger in a strange land when he goes
west of Robertson Boulevard. Leslee "The Terminator"
Komaiko was raised in Westwood, lives in Santa Monica
and says the Eastside is a whole lot of hype.
Round 1: Identity
Is the Eastside an ugly stepsister?
Leslee: Let's start with this: The Westside is Los
Angeles. It is the public face of our city, and it is
why people come here. Not that tourists are the ultimate
arbiters of taste, but it's worth noting that most of
them stay on the Westside. Sun, surf, palm trees--this
is the California dream. What you guys have on the
Eastside is wannabe New York. And what's up with the
vintage clothing, tattoos and sullen 'tude? Are they
mandatory Eastside issue? Your cool is so practiced and
cultivated. Ours is effortless. It's as simple as jeans
and a tee and flip-flops. No wonder Westsiders are a
generally happier bunch. Life is good over here. Life,
in fact, is better.
Christopher: First off, thanks for so succinctly
articulating why all the sullen, sun-starved Eastsiders
choose to live where we do: to get away from the deluded
likes of you. Your sun-and-surf Baywatch fantasy
may excite clueless out-of-towners, but over here it
sounds like a whole lot of bland, bubble-headed hooey.
And what's this about effortless cool? All the Beverly
Hills cosmetic surgeons and Brentwood exercise mills
tell a very different story. While you're all madly
scrambling to realize your precious California dream, we
Eastsiders are busy living our real lives, thanks very
much.
Round 2: Neighborhoods
Is the Westside a sea of sameness?
Christopher: When it comes to neighborhoods, we
Eastsiders have you begging for mercy under the heels of
our boots. You've heard of neighborhoods, haven't you?
Despite a few pockets of difference, the Westside is a
vast grid of the similar. Over here, you'll find dozens
of thriving communities, each with its own flavor. One
day tooling around the Eastside might take you to
Koreatown, Little Armenia or Thai Town or down avenues
of neon-topped townhouses or through districts where all
the ethnicities, classes and styles of architecture get
lost in a fantastic jumble. We celebrate those
differences. You Westsiders like your hometown like you
like your fast food--dependable but flavorless.
Leslee: Apparently your perceptive abilities come to
a screeching halt at La Brea. Last I checked, Culver
City, the Pacific Palisades, Beverly Hills and Venice
weren't easily confused, not to mention Sawtelle's Japan
Town and Westwood Boulevard's Little Persia. Might I
suggest you invest in a Thomas Guide? Or a brain? Or run
for office. Seems your "we are the world" speech is
already written. P.S. May you choke on your next Tito's
taco. Flavorless my all-natural, non-enhanced C cups.
Round 3: Outdoors
Are Eastsiders nature-starved urbanites?
Leslee: You've got Griffith Park, a decent enough
patch of grass with its impressive observatory. Wait.
That's closed. There's also charming MacArthur Park. (At
our parks the only transactions going on are between the
kids and the ice cream truck driver.) I'll even toss you
Runyon Canyon. But none of this compares to the Pacific
and all its attendant goodness: miles of bike paths,
outrageous sunsets, endless views from Santa Monica
Mountains hiking trails, sandcastle opportunities, the
Venice canals, beautiful tanned and shirtless boys
showing off their ripped abs. Ever try to surf Silver
Lake? Good luck, sucka. Buy yourself a conch shell and
take a bath, 'cause that's as close as you're gonna get.
Christopher: That patch of grass you so quickly
dismiss happens to be 4,100 acres, the largest urban
park in America. And I think you're forgetting something
in your rosy view of the Pacific's blessings:
pollution-related illnesses like dysentery and diarrhea.
We'll stick to Echo Park, nearby Angeles National Forest
and perhaps the best outdoor venue in all Los Angeles:
Dodger Stadium. Have fun ogling the sweaty abs (ick, by
the way); we'll be in the bleachers with a beer and a
Dodger Dog.
Round 4: Culture
Are Westsiders cultural heathens?
Christopher: Save us both some trouble and curl up
right now and cry like the baby you are, because we
Eastsiders have got you beat bad here. I understand
you're proud of that big beige museum on the hill--you
know the one, where tourists go to check out the view
instead of the art--but unless you count breast
enhancements or those airbrush murals they put on
surfboards, fine art just ain't a Westside specialty.
Out East, we've got the major museums (LACMA, MOCA),
stellar music venues (the Hollywood Bowl, the Music
Center), world-class live theater (the Ahmanson, the
L.A. Theater Center) and countless more cultural hot
spots (the American Cinematheque, the Central Library,
galleries in Echo Park and on Chung King Road). While
you Westsiders may equate culture with the new-releases
section at Blockbuster, we Eastsiders enjoy a cultural
diet rich in the finer things.
Leslee: Get over yourself. To most Eastsiders,
culture means having a Corona at Spaceland. Sure, you
have some primo cultural institutions, but we're not
exactly hurting in that department. In addition to the
Getty, which you were kind enough to mention, there's
the Santa Monica Museum of Art, the Geffen Playhouse,
the Wadsworth Theater, the Skirball Center, plus
sleepers like Beyond Baroque, the Museum of Jurassic
Technology and Highways. In sum, we have more culture
than Yoplait.
Round 5: Dining
Do Eastsiders know the meaning of haute
cuisine?
Leslee: Why did the Westsider cross the road? For dim
sum. That's about it. The most recent Zagat survey
(notably by the people, for the people) puts the city's
best American, best brunch, best breakfast, best
Japanese, best Italian, best French, best Greek, best
Indian, best Middle Eastern, best pizza, best
steakhouse, best vegetarian--need I continue?--all on
the Westside.
You can't touch Josie's quiche, Nate 'n Al's lima
bean soup, Bay Cities' submarine sandwiches, Stan's
doughnuts or the perfect elegance of a patio table at
the Hotel Bel-Air, not to mention the cheese at the
Beverly Hills Cheese Shop and the fish at Santa Monica
Seafood. In sum, we have better restaurants, better
chefs and better food purveyors. Tell that to your king
of weird meats and unpronounceable comestibles, Jonathan
Gold. He can wave his pompoms all he likes. We still
pack more flavor.
Christopher: Put that flimsy Zagat away, girl. Every
self-respecting foodie knows that Zagat is about as
important to food as Cliffs Notes are to great
literature. Don't kid yourself--most Westside joints
dish out overpriced knockoffs of food you can get better
and with much less attitude here. You want fancy eats?
Try Patina, Musso & Frank, Ciudad, Vida, Les Deux
Cafe or Water Grill. And another thing: Say what you
want about weird meats, but don't mess with Jonathan
Gold. You are but a slobbering jester in his culinary
court.
Round 6: Getting Around
Are Westsiders ocean-locked losers without a
clue?
Christopher: Gridlock has got us both in a
stranglehold. But getting around the Eastside does have
its advantages. For one thing, we've got a subway so
fast and spiffy that it almost makes us forget its utter
impracticality for day-to-day travel. More important,
however, is the fact that we're simply closer to more of
what makes L.A. special. From here you can make a
relatively quick trip to the Huntington Botanical
Gardens or Watts Towers or the Burbank Bob's Big Boy
without breaking a sweat. Any one of those trips would
prompt nervous twitches and the installation of a global
positioning system for a typical Westsider. Because we
don't have that big blue barrier hemming us in on one
side (I think you call it an ocean), we're never too far
from what makes Los Angeles so vibrant and fascinating.
Leslee: Oh yes, Burbank Bob's Big Boy: Isn't that one
of the seven wonders of the world? Gimme a break. And
that subway? Drew Carey's treadmill probably sees more
use. Over here there's Highway 1, the most awesome drive
in the city, as well as Sunset Boulevard from the Strip
to the ocean, the second-most awesome drive. Figure in a
few bike paths and clearly you're the sorry one.
Round 7: Shopping
Is "Eastside shopping" an oxymoron?
Leslee: Remember on "Let's Make a Deal" when the
contestant would pick curtain No. 3 hoping for the shiny
new car and instead get a goat? That's Eastside
shopping. Call us materialistic, but we've got the
goods. In addition to a handful of malls and department
stores ranging from Neiman's to Target where they
actually sell stuff one needs--you have to commute to
buy your tighty whities!--the Westside is home to the
city's reigning shopping streets: Montana Avenue for
linens and housewares, Main Street for beach gear,
Robertson Boulevard for designer duds, Melrose Avenue
for art and shoes, Abbot Kinney Boulevard for
mid-century furniture, Rodeo Drive for bejeweled
baubles. Destination bookshops like Hennessey &
Ingalls and Heritage are also on our side. I challenge
you to name something we can't buy over here, something
anyone would want, that is. (I'll pass on the Los
Angeles Zoo souvenir cap, thank you.)
Christopher: Remember on "Let's Make a Deal" when
Monty Hall's evil twin Melvin locked all the doors and
everyone was trapped with piles of crappy appliances and
an unruly goat? That's Westside shopping. Over here
we're happy the retail goliaths are close enough to
visit but far enough away that they don't devour our
souls. Instead we've got the best local clothing
designers (Sirens & Sailors, Andrew Dibbens), great
flea markets and botanicas and entire districts devoted
to jewelry, toys, flowers and fabric.
Round 8: Night Life
Is the Westside a black hole after dark?
Christopher: Yet again, your feeble attempts to
measure up barely merit mention. Night life on the
Westside? After you've lapped up a lite beer at a
seaside sports bar, the picking is thin, which is why so
many of you flee 310 when night falls. Hollywood's
Cahuenga Corridor alone contains a city's worth of great
spots (Daddy's, Deep, Star Shoes). Meanwhile there are
plenty more great bars (the Red Lion, the Bigfoot
Lodge), superior venues for concerts and plays (the El
Rey, the Wiltern, the Pantages), a wide selection of
comedy clubs (the Groundlings, the Laugh Factory, the
Hollywood Improv) and a teeming dance scene that
includes everything from flashy flamenco at the Mayan to
ecstatic electronic at Circus Disco. Bottom line? The
only sure-fire way to have a great night on the Westside
is to spend the first part of it driving east.
Leslee: I'm going to teach you some respect. We don't
wanna drive east, and we don't have to. Why bother when
the Troubadour, the Viper Room, the Roxy, the Mint,
Harvelle's, McCabe's, the Jazz Bakery, Circle Bar,
Largo, Sugar, plus all the boys' clubs are over here?
There's also all sorts of free, fun p.m. activities like
the Santa Monica Pier summer music series, grunion
watching and the Friday night skate through Santa
Monica. As for those three comedy clubs you mentioned,
I'd say they belong to us. Nice try, Boom Boom.
Round 9: Air
How do Eastsiders breathe?
Leslee: You want to lay claim to something? How about
being the birthplace of smog, 60-plus years ago.
Congratulations. And you're still--cough--going strong.
Might as well enjoy a celebratory smoke. The damage is
already done.
Christopher: To hear Westsiders tell it, perfumed
breezes west of the 405 Freeway carry magic fairy dust
and the Eastside is an industrial ghetto downwind from
Chernobyl. Try to get this into your sun-scorched head:
Our air is not that bad. And yours is not that good.
Round 10: Public Radio
Is Westside public radio more than the bloated pet
of moneyed liberals?
Christopher: There's no better example of the vast
chasm between the East- and Westsides than the
difference between our public radio stations.
Admittedly, most of us listen to Santa Monica-based
KCRW-FM (89.9) as much as we do to Pasadena-based
KPCC-FM (89.3). But we're constantly reminded of--and
deeply irritated by--how much KCRW exemplifies the
Westside.
Slick, calculated and stinking of liberal
entitlement, KCRW feels less like a public resource than
a lifestyle accessory for the Range Rover mommies
sipping Starbucks on Montana Avenue before spinning
class. Sure, none of our public radio stations can touch
KCRW when it comes to funding or original programming.
But we much prefer KPCC's earnest "Air Talk" over more
insufferable nagging from KCRW station manager Ruth
Seymour, endless cheesy promos for lavish trips we'll
never take or yet another awkward interview with a
French "turntablist" or some such on "Morning Becomes
Eclectic."
Leslee: First off, those Range Rover mommies aren't
listening to the radio. They're talking on their cell
phones, stupid. Now that that's cleared up, back to
battle. No doubt Seymour could never find work as a 976
operator. The silken purr eludes her. But she has
managed to assemble a mighty team of smart hosts such as
Warren Olney and dope DJs like Garth Trinidad, making
KCRW the best-known public radio station in the country.
Besides, her voice is seldom heard. Alas, the same can't
be said about Kitty Felde--whose name is "Kitty,"
anyway?--KPCC's interminably cheery afternoon host with
the irrepressible giggle. Larry Mantle of "Air Talk" is
another matter. He just might be the Eastside's best
feature. And that's all the love you're getting.
Round 11: Basics
When it comes to important services like medical
care and schools, is the Eastside lacking?
Leslee: Ready for a face full of mat? 'Cause you're
going down. And when you do, you'll be needing an M.D.
Who you gonna call? Your Westside doc. You know the
one--he's right down the street from your Westside
dentist, at places likes UCLA, Cedars-Sinai, St. John's.
You have Kaiser. Our schools are also superior. In Santa
Monica, Beverly Hills, Malibu, the Pacific Palisades,
Topanga and parts of West Los Angeles, the public
schools are actually draws. With few exceptions, your
dilapidated mills of lowest-common-denominator learning
simply can't compete. And we're not even talking about
the Brentwoods and Crossroads, Harvard-Westlakes and
Marymounts. When it comes to the stuff that really
matters, your 'hood is about as attractive as a
half-used bar of soap in a gas station john.
Christopher: Overexposure to the sun has apparently
done more than add years to your face. That's the expert
opinion of physicians from all over the Eastside, from
Childrens Hospital to Good Samaritan (where Westside
heroine Madonna delivered her last baby, by the way).
And while you seem certain the only good education is an
expensive one, students at excellent public and private
Eastside schools like Ivanhoe, 3rd Street Elementary,
the Oaks and Temple Israel know better.
Round 12: Housing
Do Westsiders pay more for less?
Christopher: There's one main reason why the Westside
is so completely outclassed by the East: housing.
Checked out any open houses in Santa Monica lately? The
idea of a million-dollar stucco bungalow built for
factory-floor aerospace workers would be laughable if it
wasn't so depressing. For about half that fortune you
can buy a Victorian mansion in Highland Park, a spacious
Spanish in Eagle Rock or a landmark modern in Silver
Lake. And while West L.A. working stiffs don't think
twice forking over a third of their income in rent, less
affluent Eastsiders live like royalty in grand Wilshire
district townhouses or Los Feliz duplexes. The variety
and affordability mean a broader range of people live
and work here, which makes life far more interesting for
all of us.
Leslee: You know why people pay a premium to live on
the Westside? Because it's worth it. I'm sorry your envy
has made you so angry. I think there's a place for rent
down the street. You can call me for the details. I
promise I won't tell a soul.