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Jeremy Rosenberg

Jeremy Rosenberg is a Los Angeles-based writer, editor, and consultant whose work has appeared in various books, magazines, newspapers, and online.

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"It thrills me to know that I'm part Apache, part Irish, part Ukrainian-Russian, part Mexican, and part American." Cal State L.A. student Lucas Benitez traces his family's varied history.
"My trip to LA was a mix of moving to the U.S., going on an adventure, a long vacation, pursuing music, getting lost and everything in between. In many ways, I still feel the same."
Sign over New Chinatown
In any urban setting, it's hard not to notice the presence of signs.
Conceptual artist Marjan Vayghan describes the joys and difficulties in living in two different cities at once - Tehran and Los Angeles.
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After feeling ignored for decades by the more civilized art world, Los Angeles-based and other nearby cultural institutions have embarked on a much-anticipated, monumental, quasi-collaborative sorta self-retrospective.
Writer and educator Ruben Mendoza shares his Los Angeles arrival story.
Every day should be Park(ing) Day.
"Within my family's circle of friends alone, I knew of three different families that had the same model home within a 2-mile radius - no need to tell me where the bathroom is, because I already know the full layout of your house."
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Many memorials can be found throughout Los Angeles, each with a unique story and history.
"My dad was a city rat, skinny dipping in the dirty blue river, and smoking in the cold gray alleys, but he was a dreamer. He ran away at seventeen to come to Los Angeles and become an engineer."
Chinatown, Los Angeles
The post-war years brought an entirely new set of paradigms for Chinese in America, a shift reflected in the community of Chinatown in Los Angeles.
"During our escuela secundaria years along with a couple of friends we decided to put together a music band, that later on became very popular, under the name Arco Iris. It was a sort of South American Pink Floyd."
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