logo
L.A. Affairs: Men who don't understand L.A. won't understand me. What's a city girl to do?

L.A. Affairs: Men who don't understand L.A. won't understand me. What's a city girl to do?

Yahoo16-05-2025
'I just hate L.A.,' Yassir said. Enveloped in the arms of the man I loved who valued monogamy and proudly introduced me as his girlfriend to every acquaintance, I felt an uneasiness. The statement felt personal — as if he meant to say 'you' and swapped it for 'L.A.' at the last moment.
We're both transplants. Pre-pandemic, he lived in Hollywood for a couple of years, made the typical person-in-entertainment move to New York and returned to L.A. for work in late 2023. I arrived in January 2021 and started referring to Los Feliz as home about two weeks later, although I sometimes kept that fact to myself.
Back then, I was quite apologetic in my love for L.A. I worried about appearing a certain way to fellow transplants, my parent's friends who'd only seen Santa Monica and any New Yorker I came across.
Read more: L.A. Affairs: Nothing scared me more than intimacy — except L.A. freeways. But I had to face them both
I wanted to dodge all the stereotypical perceptions about L.A. despite identifying with them. I didn't want to come off as image-driven, although I find solace in a stroll through the stores at the Americana at Brand, where I zip up skirts in the dressing rooms and spritz perfumes at the makeup counters.
I also didn't want to be viewed as health-obsessed — I quite literally buy into Pilates classes and performance running shoes. Or be labeled a workaholic — I don't relax easily and often conflate my worth to my productivity. Or be accused of being a film snob — I'll skip a party in favor of a 35mm screening of a movie I've already seen.
Early in our courtship, Yassir spoke romantically of New York's late-night diners and constant goings-on. I felt jealous, as if he were reminiscing about an ex.
After we swapped college grievances and grocery shopping habits, a text exchange between us pivoted to his adoration for New York and his contempt for L.A.
Instead of skating over the topic or conceding to his opinion, I texted, 'I understand L.A. has many faults, but I love it. And this is something you need to know about me, I am very good at loving and figuring out how to love.'
Read more: L.A. Affairs: I was over dating in L.A. Then a charming co-worker came along
It was a conclusion I had been circling for quite some time. As a 27-year-old, I'm still learning who I am and how I go about the world, but I'm improving. This was one of those personal truths that after voicing it to someone else solidifies its verity — and all in the name of Los Angeles.
He responded, 'Huge green flag." Just like my friends, my family and Los Angeles, Yassir benefited from this trait of mine.
I found him incredibly gorgeous. My industrious demeanor ceased on the mornings I spent with him. I just wanted to run my hands through his dark, curly hair and explain what the words of Los Angeles champion Eve Babitz meant to me. But I also looked up to him. Yassir spoke with cadence and clarity, enunciating all the syllables of 'definitely,' a word he said quite often. And he was definite about the world, especially Los Angeles. As a television writer, the city gave him much more opportunity and money than it ever offered me, and he still hated it.
I felt like a child showing off an art project whenever I introduced him to my favorite places in L.A. Over eggs and waffles, I'd say, 'Isn't this restaurant amazing?' Or gesturing with my arms wide on a hilltop, 'This view of Griffith Observatory is pretty spectacular, right?' I said these things as if I were asking, 'Aren't I amazing?' and 'Isn't looking at me next to a bougainvillea spectacular?'
His answers were always courteous smiles. I should have known.
Read more: L.A. Affairs: I didn't know how to love. Then I came eye to eye with a majestic gray whale
He broke up with me last fall after several months of dating, citing differences regarding our outlook on life. He specifically said I see the world with too much sunshine. Definitely too L.A.
I partook in my usual breakup agenda. I made my heartbreak Beachwood Canyon's problem, walking and weeping to Amy Winehouse's ballad, 'Tears Dry (Original Version),' on the streetlamp-lined sidewalks. I went to my friend's couches in Highland Park, Los Feliz and Palms to cry a bit more. And I sat on my own couch, another 'Sex and the City' rewatch before me.
But it was the words of a New Yorker, albeit a fictional one, that indicated my romantic path going forward.
Episode 1 of Season 5 of 'Sex and the City' is titled "Anchors Away." It's the first in the series in a post-9/11 world. In a nod to the show's fifth main character, New York City, Carrie Bradshaw spends the day reckoning with her love for a city that often tests her spirit. However, after a potential love interest dismisses New York, Carrie catches a taxi away and muses: 'If … you only get one great love, New York may just be mine. And I can't have nobody talking s— about my boyfriend. … Maybe the past is like an anchor holding us back. Maybe you have to let go of who you were to become who you will be.'
With the devastating L.A. County fires following shortly after my breakup and the "city as a great love" breakthrough, I decided to love Los Angeles more openly, especially in my dating life.
As is expected in the who/what/when/where of first dates, the question 'How do you like L.A.?' always arises. After Yassir, the men I've encountered often shrug their shoulders in a 'whatever' manner. Brunettes, blonds, mustached, clean-shaven, my patio-bar dates don't seem to get it, and their answers have alarmed me — their apathy almost as alarming as outright hate.
Read more: L.A. Affairs submission guidelines
How could a person feel indifferent toward a place so dynamic, so capable, so beautiful and so funny in its ways? A place with a history so lush it would take a lifetime to learn how we got here? Perhaps my similarities to L.A. don't end with the city's stereotypes.
Men who don't understand Los Angeles will never understand me, and for that, they're unworthy of my deftness at loving.
That's quite all right. I have a boyfriend anyway.
This author is a freelance culture and lifestyle writer. She has written for The Times, A Rabbit's Foot, Little White Lies and other publications. She proudly lives in Los Angeles, and Franklin Avenue is her favorite street. She also runs a Substack: babydancer.substack.com.
L.A. Affairs chronicles the search for romantic love in all its glorious expressions in the L.A. area, and we want to hear your true story. We pay $400 for a published essay. Email LAAffairs@latimes.com. You can find submission guidelines here. You can find past columns here.
Sign up for The Wild newsletter to get weekly insider tips on the best of our beaches, trails, parks, deserts, forests and mountains.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tyson Beckford took a break from his dating show to hold ‘Court' in Miami
Tyson Beckford took a break from his dating show to hold ‘Court' in Miami

Miami Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Tyson Beckford took a break from his dating show to hold ‘Court' in Miami

Don't ever feel sorry for Tyson Beckford even if you see him crying on TV. The legendary '90s supermodel is doing just fine in his search for the one on the new Bravo reality show, 'Kings Court.' The Sunday night dating series follows Beckford and two other single hunks — NBA All-Star Carlos Boozer and WWE legend Thaddeus 'Titus O'Neil' Bullard — in the search for their queen. Though filming is done primarily in Atlanta, Beckford made some time for some fun over the weekend back home in Miami. The native New Yorker, 54, was a special guest Saturday night at a Sonrisa Rum party at Shiso rooftop bar in Wynwood. The 'Zoolander' star sipped on cocktails while, um, holding court. Something else we don't worry about? Beckford's famous physique taking a hit from a night out on the town. On Instagram Tuesday, Beckford dropped a clip talking to Bravo about his daily workout routine. 'I have a tendency to overdrink too much water,' said the fitness buff, who does an average of 300 to 500 ab crunches first thing in the morning, depending on his schedule. 'From there, 300 to 500 pushups before I go to the gym.' Yes, he said 'before.' It's unclear if the erstwhile ladies man, who coparents a grown son Jordan with celebrity stylist April Roomet, found love on the show, and of course, Bravo can never tell. What we do know is the type of woman Beckford is looking for: he told UsWeekly for last month's cover story. 'She's got to be like me — she can't take herself too seriously,' the runway vet told the outlet. '[She] definitely has to have a sense of humor because I'm a practical joker. I'm probably going to get a picture of her sleeping some way and post it on Instagram, and she can't be mad. If she's wearing her mask, I definitely got to get a picture of that.' What you see is what you get with this guy. After a bunch of breakups, Beckford felt finally ready to dip his toe back into the pool again, despite cameras being on them basically 24/7. 'Maybe this is the therapy I need? Maybe I do need to get back out there?' he told Us. 'I went in and decided not to hold back. We're just going to be our genuine self — that person who is emotional, the mama's boy. We're going to show that side.'

Julia Fox Defends Her Polarizing Style as 'Normal': 'You've Never Opened an Art Book?'
Julia Fox Defends Her Polarizing Style as 'Normal': 'You've Never Opened an Art Book?'

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Julia Fox Defends Her Polarizing Style as 'Normal': 'You've Never Opened an Art Book?'

The actress tells 'Allure' that people's criticism of her fashion "says more about them than it does about me" NEED TO KNOW Julia Fox responded to critics of her over-the-top fashion looks The actress told Allure that to some, her style is "normal" Fox also explained that "art is supposed to be polarizing" Julia Fox has some words for her fashion critics. In a profile for Allure published on Tuesday, Aug. 19, the 35-year-old actress defended her polarizing looks, claiming that, to some, her outfits are nothing out of the ordinary. 'To a New Yorker, [my style] is normal," she told the outlet. "But I could see how someone who's not used to that would be like, 'What's wrong with her? What drugs is she on? What an attention-seeking whore. Oh my God, the makeup is ugly.'" Fox continued: "To me, that says more about them than it does about me, because, like, damn, you've never gone to the theater? You've never gone to a show, a museum, a fashion show? You've never opened an art book?' The Uncut Gems actress explained that each of her outfits "has to have some kind of meaning" that allow her to "play that character," adding that "art is supposed to be polarizing." Either way, Fox isn't letting people's comments get to her. "The way people identify you is very much based on their perception of themselves, and people are going to look at you and take whatever they will," she shared. Fox emerged as a fashion disrupter amid her brief relationship with Kanye West that ended in February 2022. The couple made their red carpet debut at Paris Fashion Week that year, sporting matching denim ensembles with black gloves. Fox made a splash with dramatic winged eyeliner. Related: "Every single part of my outfit was intentional and had a purpose," the star told Vogue at the time about her Schiaparelli look. "They curated my outfit to fit not just my body, but also my personality and my essence." Now, Fox says that de-centering men has spawned a new era of freedom and expression (in 2024, she revealed that she had been celibate for over two years). 'I don't have to entertain men anymore," she told Allure. Fox has also opened up about cosmetic procedures she's had and champions the recent wave of transparency around plastic surgery among celebrities. She tells Allure that she finds this type of honesty "super important" for public figures. Previously, she's spoken about undergoing liposuction and a rhinoplasty and getting veneers.'Now, when I see someone and I can tell they've never done anything…I wish I could go back and be that person," she shared. "I was so hung up on this idea that I needed to be attractive to men so that I could survive. ' "I love it. I think we should be honest," the actress told PEOPLE at the North American premiere of her new film The Trainer at the Tribeca Festival in New York on June 7. "Women set the bar for each other and I feel like if you're setting an unrealistic bar [if you're not honest]. That's really great for you, but what about all the girls that are so impressionable and feeling like 'Wait, why don't I look like that and what's wrong with me?'" Fox continued, "It's like, girl, none of us look like this, you know what I mean? Like we all look really different without the surgery and without the fillers and without the makeup and all the things we do and the face tapes and the wigs and the tanning creams. The list goes on. On and on and on." Read the original article on People

Stuffed Bagels From the Hudson Valley Are Coming to NYC
Stuffed Bagels From the Hudson Valley Are Coming to NYC

Eater

time9 hours ago

  • Eater

Stuffed Bagels From the Hudson Valley Are Coming to NYC

is a born-and-raised New Yorker who is an editor for Eater's Northeast region and Eater New York, was the former Eater Austin editor for 10 years, and often writes about food and pop culture. A Hudson Valley bakery is bringing its stuffed bagels to New York City this year. Moonrise Bagels will open in Greenwich Village at 58 West Eighth Street, near Sixth Avenue, in the fall. The star of Moonrise's menu is its stuffed bagel, where the circle-shaped carb is jam-packed with ingredients — it's a heftier version than those little round bagel balls. Its bagel options are plain or everything, with fillings such as eggplant Parm, Buffalo chicken, pastrami, bacon-egg-cheese (with a vegan sausage iteration), and more. There are schmears, too, for dipping (a la the rip-and-dip style popularized by PopUp Bagels now), plus espresso drinks. Out on Long Island, there's also a similar stuffed bagel concoction at Long Island bakery the Everything Bagel, which adds toppings to its bagels and cuts in into pull-apart pieces. Co-owners and married couple Jeremy Rhodes and Ali Chetkof Rhodes started making their stuffed bagels and selling them through pickups, pop-ups, and farmers markets in 2021. Later that year, they opened their first Moonrise location in Woodstock, followed by shops in Kingston and Poughkeepsie. More details on Corner Bistro's East Village restaurant The ever-diligent EV Grieve got more details on West Village burger joint Corner Bistro's eventual East Village location — the blog spoke to owner Elizabeth McGrath. The new restaurant will open in September. There will be two entrances, a cherry blossom mural painted by her husband, artist Donald McGrath, and a white oak bar inside. The kitchen will serve that beloved burger, along with new dishes like meatloaf, with coffee by Long Island coffee roaster Aldo's; yes, it'll have late-night hours and cocktails. And speaking of bagels Quickly expanding rip-and-dip bagel chain PopUp Bagels is opening its latest location near Union Square Park. It's located at 20 East 16th Street, between Union Square West and Fifth Avenue, per the New Openings NYC Instagram account, but there is no opening date yet. Eater NY All your essential food and restaurant intel delivered to you Email (required) Sign Up By submitting your email, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Notice . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store