Skip to main content

Up Next

Back to Show
Lost LA

Venice

Season 3 Episode 5

From its origins as a themed seaside trolley resort to its international fame as a countercultural hub, Venice Beach has been in a state of perpetual renaissance, boasting a rich, multilayered history. This episode explores evolution of Abbot Kinney’s original Venice of America development, and how the commercial renaissance along Abbot Kinney Boulevard has impacted the historically African American neighborhood of Oakwood. We also look at the Beat poet community who called Venice home.

We start this episode featuring Edward Biberman’s mural of Abbot Kinney, founder of Venice of America, and a conversation with KCRW’s Frances Anderton about the Venice Canals. Historian Eric Dugdale shares Kinney’s entrepreneurial and inclusionary vision for venice, leading us to talk to heirs of Arthur Reese and Irvin Tabor, who held important roles in early Venice from within the African American community. We talk to Beyond Baroque founder George Drury Smith about what led to the 1930s Venice West Beat scene and discuss the works of photographer Charles Brittin and Beat poet Lawrence Lipton.

Support Provided By
Season
coded geographies
25:06
See how the many restrictions many Angelenos had to navigate, exposing Los Angeles as a place of coded segregation and resistance.
press image for lost la season 2
23:50
Los Angeles is often identified with Hollywood, but there's more to the entertainment industry than its facade of movie stars and blockbuster films.
Steel frame of building being erected
25:32
Wood, iron, steel, concrete -- these are the materials that gave form to Los Angeles and shaped its identity in the national imagination. This episode also questions the cultural legacy and environmental costs of the city's relentless growth.
Calle de los Negros, Los Angeles, 1871
26:12
Long before Hollywood imagined the Wild West, Los Angeles was a real frontier town of gunslingers, lynch mobs, and smoke-belching locomotives.
Pio Pico
26:50
American history has long been told as a triumphant march westward from the Atlantic coast, but in southern California, our history stretches back further in time.
Reshaping L.A.
28:32
In this episode, "Lost LA" examines how the modern metropolis has reshaped its own topography. The program explores downtown L.A.'s lost hills and tunnels, as well as the vanished canals of Venice Beach.
Before the Dodgers
20:57
In this episode, "Lost LA" explores the various ways Southern California's inhabitants have used the hills around Dodger Stadium.
Wild L.A.
23:28
In this episode, Lost L.A. explores the complicated relationship between the city and its natural environment.
Active loading indicator