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, an Echo Park storefront specializing in VHS tapes, has been providing a place for enthusiasts and newcomers to embrace the antiquated format.Whammy hosts their first quarterly VHS swap meet of the year this weekend.
Peruse VHS classics and rarities at this event in Echo Park.: Whammy owner Erik Varho never stopped collecting VHS tapes. With an abundance of tapes in his possession he started selling them online in 2020, and in 2022 he opened a storefront to cater to the needs of all VHS enthusiasts., an Echo Park storefront specializing in VHS tapes, has been providing a place for enthusiasts and newcomers to embrace the antiquated format.Whammy founder Erik Varho always wanted to open his own store — he just didn’t have a clue as what it would be. A die-hard videotape-lover, Varho never stopped collecting them even after major releases ceased printing in 2006.In 2020, fresh out of work and with VHS tapes lining the walls of his studio apartment, he started selling his tapes via Instagram.With the success of his online sales Varho was able to open a brick and mortar store in 2022. Varho intended it to just be a retail store, but the space, he thought, was perfect for an indoor screen.Whammy’s been hosting events celebrating that grainy quality of the Video Home System — or VHS — ever since.“It's just kind of a place for people to display their craziest, weirdest, rarest finds and just have a place to talk about them and hang out,” Varho said . the third installment in a Christian apocalyptic thriller series about the rise of the antichrist and an evil A.I.Besides an entire store, Varho also owns a storage unit filled to the brim with VHS tapes. Those who RSVP to Sunday's swap meet get a free mystery VHS tape upon entry. He says the most frequent question he gets is if they sell VCR players. They do, but they run out pretty quickly."People who didn't even grow up with VHS who are just interested in exploring movies in that way. It's a fun time to be into VHS for sure,” Varho said.“I can’t reveal what we’re playing, but it’s always stuff that is going to be attention grabbing and usually pretty silly,” Varho said .Nearly 280 filmmakers entered the Internet Archive's Public Domain Film Remix Contest this year. Above, a still from the 1930 film King of Jazz.The annual competition invites filmmakers from around the world to reimagine often long-forgotten literary classics, films, cartoons, music, and visual art that are now in the public domain.'s surreal quality: Cookie-cutter rows of musicians, showgirls, office workers and random furniture cascade across the screen as influential bandleader Paul Whiteman's winking face looks on.. The plotless, experimental 1930 musical film shot in early Technicolor centers on influential bandleader Paul Whiteman, nicknamed"The King of Jazz." In one memorable scene, the portly, mustachioed Whiteman opens a small bag and winks at the camera as miniature musicians file out one after another like a colony of ants and take their places on an ornate, table-top bandstand.— an annual competition that invites filmmakers from around the world to reimagine often long-forgotten literary classics, films, cartoons, music, and visual art that are now in the public domain. This means creators can use these materials freely, without copyright restrictions. In 2026, works created in 1930's surreal quality: Cookie-cutter rows of musicians, showgirls, office workers and random furniture cascade across the screen as Whiteman's winking face looks on. "I wanted to transform the figures and bodies into more dream-like shapes through collage and looping and repetition," said Seattle-based filmmaker Andrea Hale, who created the piece in collaboration with composer Greg Hardgrave. For video artists, Hale said discovering what's new in the public domain each January is a thrill."We're always looking for things to draw from," Hale said."Opening that up to a bigger spread of materials is amazing. That's the dream.", the San Francisco-based nonprofit library behind the contest, digitizes and provides public access to a massive repository of content, including many materials used by contest participants."These materials have often just been in film canisters for decades," said digital librarian Brewster Kahle, who founded the Internet Archive in 1996.Kahle said the Internet Archive received nearly 280 entries this time around, the highest number since the competition launched six years ago."Things are not just musty, old archival documentation of the past," Kahle said."People are bringing them to life in new and different ways, without fear of being sued."Lawsuits have become a growing concern for artists and copyright holders, especially with the rise of generative AI. Recent years have seen alate last year, to introduce a service allowing users to create short videos based on copyrighted characters, including Cinderella and Darth Vader., director of the Center for the Study of the Public Domain at Duke Law School."But what's exciting about the public domain is that material, after a long, robust 95-year copyright term, is just simply free for anyone — without a team of lawyers, without a licensing agreement, without having to work for Disney or OpenAI — to just put online," Jenkins said. Jenkins also pointed out an interesting twist for people who create new works using materials from the public domain."You actually get a copyright in your remix," she said."Just like Disney has copyrights in all of its remakes of wonderful public domain works likeHowever, this only applies to works created by humans — U.S. copyright law currently doesn't recognize works authored by AI. And Jenkins further cautioned that creators only get a copyright in their new creative contributions to the remix, and not the underlying material.. This means the filmmaker retains the copyright to her work but grants permissions that allow other people to freely use, share, and build upon it."I'm keeping with the spirit of the public domain," Hale said.Man with traditional Scottish tartan holds a book with Robert Burns face on it at Burns Night Jan. 24, 2004, in London, England.Every January 25 — on Sunday this year — is Burns Night, a global celebration of the life and legacy of the Scottish poet and lyricist Robert Burns.His name might not be familiar, but every New Year’s Eve — or Hogmanay, as it is called in Burns's native home Scotland — millions of people sing Auld Lang Syne, a poem he wrote in 1788.The name of Robert Burns might not be familiar, but every New Year’s Eve — or Hogmanay, as it is called in his native home Scotland — millions of people singEvery Jan. 25 — on Sunday this year — is Burns Night, a global celebration of the life and legacy of the Scottish poet and lyricist. Several events are happening in Los Angeles, too, which I can attest are rather zany affairs — if only because of the sheer number of tartan kilts in sight, the haunting, piercing but tuneful drone of bagpipes, which can only bring to mind a windswept mountain top, and a generous dash of whiskys . More on that later. People enjoy a Burns supper in the red room at Burns Cottage Pavilion on Jan. 23, 2014, in Alloway, Scotland.Some 30,000 square miles in size and home to around 5.5 million people today, Scotland was officially united with England in 1707 when their two parliaments became one and created Great Britain., a streak of fierce independence has run through Scotland for centuries, so don’t make the mistake of assuming that, just because the countries are joined geographically, that English and Scottish people are more or less the same. Besides historical rebels, beautiful countryside and world-class golf courses, Scotland has always punched well above its weight: penicillin, television, the telephone, artificial refrigeration, and the raincoat — “the mac” — were all invented by Scots. Naturalist John Muir, the Father of the National Parks,” was born in Dunbar, and Nessie is perhaps the most legendary of all cryptids.But it’s Robert Burns — often known as Rabbie — whose name and work has lasted centuries as Scotland’s National Poet.In 1796, Burns died at just 37 — on the same day his son Maxwell was born — and he had worked almost exclusively on traditional Scottish songs during the latter stages of his life, which ensured that several hundred folk songs, likeBurns Night is a tradition that was begun by some of his friends in 1801. Scottish people and any other admirers and friends of Scotland will gather together for poetry readings, music, dancing, and of course a meal of haggis. For those who don’t know what it is, it’s rather an odd-looking meal, and rather an acquired taste. A bagpiper will lead the haggis, the traditional centerpiece, into the dining room, where a poem written by Burns calledis read aloud before the haggis is dramatically cut into pieces for everyone to share. Members of the public gather at the Robert Burns statue, as part of events taking place to celebrate the birth of poet Robert Burn on Jan. 25, 2012, in Dumfries, Scotland.When I was a child, I was told that haggises were small, furry creatures that lived in the Scottish Highlands and were too clever to be caught, hence you rarely saw them on the dinner plate. Buttock size was not mentioned. That’s not true of course, and this might be why: haggis is made from minced sheep’s heart, liver and lungs mixed with oatmeal, suet, onions and spices then traditionally boiled inside the sheep’s stomach. It’s savory and earthy, somewhat rich and a little gamey. Maybe not something you eat slice after slice, perhaps.Over dinner and helpings of haggis, raucous toasts are celebrated with “drams” or small glasses of whisky — surely Scotland’s most famous export — and there are recitations of some of Burns’s other poems, likeThe latter was the name of a drunken farmer who taunts the devil and is chased by witches in a poem written by Burns in 1791. He wears a tam o’shanter, a flat woolen cap with a pom-pom in the center.I went to my first Burns Night in L.A. last year, and I must say, that despite being an Englishman I was heartily welcomed, and I did enjoy my taste of the famous dish — though the bagpipes, also an acquired taste for this “sassenach” are yet to be something on my regular playlist.is one of the venues that will be hosting its 41st Burns Nights on Jan. 27 and 28, with two seatings each night.— named in honor of the Scottish patron saint - will host their sold-out Burns Night on January 24 at the Four Seasons Hotel in Beverly Hills. It’s their 96th event, and singing for his supper as the winner of their annual Robert Burns Award is Dundee-born actor Brian Cox, who played the ruthless Logan Roy in HBO’shere in L.A. is also celebrating a day early, on Jan. 24, 6 - 9 p.m. at MacLeod’s Brewery in Van Nuys.It’s the very first Burns Night celebration organized by Sammy Ginsberg, a self-described, home-grown “Valley Girl” who left L.A. in 2012 to study at St. Andrews, a venerable institution founded in 1413. It’s where Prince William met his wife-to-be, Kate Middleton.As an aspiring writer and poet, Ginsberg was especially inspired by the reverence for literature that she found. “Scotland is a rich place filled with imagination that truly loves writers and I think we can learn a lot from them,” Ginsberg said, adding that was one reason why she co-started the Los Feliz Writers Festival. Alongside the neeps, tatties and haggis there will be haggis pizza — surely a new culinary innovation — as well as Scottish beer and music from bagpiper John McLelan Allan, who has appeared in many movies, TV shows and has worked with performers such as Korn, The Chieftains, and Michael Flatley. Though Ginsberg developed a taste for fish and chips when she was in Scotland. “That was my stress food when I was in the library on a deadline crunch,” she said.Nearly 680,000 people with a Scottish or Ulster-Scots background call Southern California home, according to the 2020 census, so “slàinte” to all of you, and try to get hold of a bottle of Irn-Bru — an electric orange-colored soda from Scotland — as it’s said to be the best cure for a hangover.If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.Steven McDonald was 12 when he and his slightly older brother Jeff started performing as Redd Kross, becoming a part of the burgeoning punk scene in ‘80s Los Angeles.As Redd Kross, the then tween and his older brother Jeff were part of the L.A. punk rock scene that spawned groups like Black Flag and Adolescents.Punk rose up in L.A.'s Hollywood in the 1970s with groups like X, the Germs and The Go-Go's. Just a handful of years later, disaffected kids from the ‘burbs picked up guitars and an attitude and took punk hardcore with bands such as Adolescents, Black Flag and Social Distortion. Steven McDonald, then 12, had a front row seat to all that noise, angst and swagger as one of the core members, along with his slightly older brother Jeff, of the Hawthorne-based punk group, Redd Kross. The younger McDonald had just picked up the bass — the instrument he plays in Redd Kross — and the guitar a year or so before. In no time, the brothers found themselves in the thick of a thriving scene. Steven McDonald of Red Kross recently dropped by the LAist studio to perform live, ahead of a benefit concert for Eaton Fire musicians he's headlining on Sunday.“ It's a unique thing that I got to experience,” McDonald told LAist. “We got to play the punk clubs like in Chinatown at the Hong Kong Cafe, and then later on the Whisky a Go Go. It was a really magical moment around 1979, 1980 — when I was 12 or 11.” Redd Kross, known briefly as the Tourists before, opened for an early incarnation of Black Flag. New York art punk gods, Sonic Youth, frequently performed with the group. Social Distortion, McDonald said, opened for them when he was around 13. “It was just this super creative, supportive environment. Most of these people were older than me in their early 20s,” McDonald said, adding that many of them were art school kids open to groovy new things. “I'd get a lot of CalArts people and people that had kind of been around for the glitter scene in Los Angeles and it kind of was morphing into this new punk rock thing and had a very independent spirit.”“People thought like, ‘Oh, if you've got something to say, then don't get weighed down with, like, refining anything. Just go say it.’” Bass player Steven McDonald of Off! and Redd Kross performs onstage during the Its Not Dead 2 Festival at Glen Helen Amphitheatre on Aug. 26, 2017 in San Bernardino.The brothers soaked in L.A. punk lore watching legends from The Runaways to The Go-Go’s perform on stage. And knocked on doors on their own until local clubs and venues let them play. They were persistent, but McDonald said they couldn’t have done it without the support of their parents.In fact, their father is a welder who's still running the same small business with their mom. “They just could recognize that their kids had some kind of intense interest and even if they didn't share it or understand it, they could recognize that,” he said. Jeff McDonald and Steve McDonald of Redd Kross attend Reel To Reel: Born Innocent: The Redd Kross Story at GRAMMY Museum L.A. Live on Feb. 18, 2025 in Los Angeles.That meant pick-ups and drop-offs — the usual stuff, in a way, for parents. “They would actually drive us to the Whisky a Go Go and they would sit in the parking lot at the gas station across the street,” he said. As Redd Kross gained success with their pop punk sound, the band became elder statesmen looking over the next generation of bands that were coming up. Last year, McDonald attended the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, where grunge group Soundgarden was inducted.Singers Jeff McDonald and Steve McDonald of the band Redd Kross perform onstage during the Autism Think Tank benefit at The Alex Theatre on Feb. 23, 2019 in Glendale, Calif.It was a moment that brought into relief the many decades that Redd Kross has been making music. And they’re still at it — working on a new album this year and going on tour abroad and locally.On Sunday, McDonald will headline a benefit show at the record shop, Healing Force of the Universe, in Pasadena to help musicians replace equipment and gear they lost in the Eaton Fire. He’ll play an acoustic set of Redd Kross songs, including “Annie’s Gone,” which he previewed in a performance at the LAist studios.The role was played by Cherie Currie, the lead singer of one of McDonald’s favorite bands, The Runaways. He first saw them played at the Whisky in 1979. “ I just really worshiped them and they inspired me because they were teenagers and they were bridging that gap between punk and hard rock. They were just out there doing it,” he said. Performing solo is something of a first for him. At Sunday's show , McDonald will include"Annie's Gone" in his acoustic set — a song normally sung by his lead singer brother Jeff.The records of more than 3,000 patients at CHLA’s former Center for Transyouth Health and Development will now be protected from federal subpoenas until at least February 2029 under a settlement.The DOJ wanted to pull a wide swath of information from CHLA’s records related to hormone therapy prescriptions, including the identities and social security numbers of the people it was prescribed to.“This is a massive victory for every family that refused to be intimidated into backing down,” said Khadijah Silver, Director of Gender Justice & Health Equity at Lawyers for Good Government. “The government's attempt to rifle through children's medical records was unconstitutional from the start.”, the federal government has withdrawn its requests for personal information like social security numbers, records and “documents relating to the clinical indications, diagnoses or assessments that formed the basis for prescribing puberty blockers or hormone therapy.”The subpoenas were issued on or about June 11, 2025, according to the settlement. They were made public in July, though many patient families remained in the dark about whether they were affected. CHLA announced it planned to close its clinic for trans youth June 12.After the Department of Justice issued a wide-ranging subpoena to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles last June, the records of more than 3,000 patients now will be protected until at least February 2029 under a settlement reached between patient families and the federal government.The DOJ wanted to pull a wide swath of information from CHLA’s records related to hormone therapy prescriptions, including the identities and social security numbers of the people they were prescribed to. Lawyers for CHLA patient families said the broad request included details of patients’ sexual health data and records of their mental health and said the inquiry violated their constitutional rights.“This is a massive victory for every family that refused to be intimidated into backing down,” said Khadijah Silver, director of gender justice and health equity at Lawyers for Good Government, in a statement. “The government's attempt to rifle through children's medical records was unconstitutional from the start.” Silver also noted that DOJ confirmed it had not received any sensitive patient data under the parts of the subpoena that had been struck down., the federal government has withdrawn its requests for personal information like social security numbers, prescription records and “documents relating to the clinical indications, diagnoses or assessments that formed the basis for prescribing puberty blockers or hormone therapy.” The government cannot make new requests of this type to CHLA until February 2029. The settlement also establishes a process for the DOJ to continue to pursue seeking some limited redacted medical records from CHLA.In the aftermath of the subpoenas, many advocates were worried that families would face federal prosecution for seeking gender-affirming care for their children. However, according to the settlement, the DOJ said it “is not currently aware of information that would support the federal prosecution of parents or guardians who have sought and consented to receiving gender-related care for their children at Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles.”According to the settlement, the subpoena to CHLA was issued on or about June 11, 2025, the day before CHLA announced itThe DOJ announced the existence of over 20 subpoenas issued to providers of gender-affirming care nationwide in July, though many CHLA patient families remained in the dark about whether they were affected. Judges have ruled against similar requests and struck down subpoenas seeking records from other hospitals, like Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Boston Children’s Hospital. CHLA's gender-affirming care center was the second-oldest clinic of its kind in the country after Boston Children's. Over the course of over three decades in operation, it became a pioneer in the development of best practices for gender-affirming care for youth. At the time of its closure, it was the largest clinic of its kind in the world.
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