Why Sky’s Tacos Is The Smartest Food Truck In The City

This summer the city of Los Angeles has seen a plethora of events geared toward the new food truck frenzy. From food fests to outdoor cinema and music events, the people in the food truck industry are making money hand over fist, and giving local, non-mobile food businesses a run for their money. But certain areas of the city have seen no love from the food truck craze; their streets remain devoid of the colorful trucks offering up a variety of delectables to choose from. These same areas, like Leimert Park, have a scant selection of food offerings to begin with and a variety of options would be a welcome change to the locals in the area.

Enter in Sky’s Gourmet Tacos. Sky’s, a staple in the Picfair Village area of Los Angeles, has been located at the corner of Pico and Hauser Boulevards for the last 18 years, and hit the streets in June with their first mobile truck. And though you will find Sky’s on Museum Row amid dozens of other trucks at lunch, they have a monopoly on the Crenshaw District weeknights, setting up on the corner of Crenshaw and Coliseum from 4 – 8 pm. No other trucks, no other competition, and plenty of customers. So many customers, in fact, that they rarely make that 8pm deadline.

Now, I don’t know anybody that doesn’t love food, me included. But why run across town chasing different trucks when there is one right here in my own neighborhood? It seems that many of the food truck owners simply follow where other trucks go in hopes of making a name for themselves and haven’t considered the economic power this area has. The Crenshaw District is centrally located with easy access to Leimert Park, View Park, Windsor Hills, and Ladera Heights. These neighborhoods are filled with hard-working (and many affluent), hungry people with limited food options, especially when it comes to take-out. Thank goodness Sky’s is enough of a visionary to think outside the box, and bring a bit of diversity to our neighborhood.

Sky’s, (which happens to be a black-owned and operated business – but when it comes to good food, who cares?), offers up their regular menu and their gourmet tacos, that come in chicken, turkey, steak (filet mignon even), shrimp and lobster varieties, will have you coming back for more. They offer a smaller version than what the restaurant offers on the truck for a mere $2, but if you have a large appetite, ask for the regular size for an extra buck.

Support Sky’s as they are supporting us: they are on the corner of Crenshaw Blvd. and Coliseum St., Monday – Friday from 4 – 8 pm. This upcoming Friday, August 13th, they will not be there due to a private event. Oh yeah – book them for your next party as well. Thanks Sky’s!

LA EVENTS: Los Angeles Black Book Expo

The Los Angeles Black Book Expo (LABBX) will be held August 21, 2010 at the Sheraton Gateway LAX Hotel. This is a full day event and will feature authors, storytellers, spoken word and poetry performances, musicians, exhibitors, children’s book authors, emerging writers, publishers, booksellers, panel discussions, editors, book reviewers, and others.

Support this wonderful event that showcases new and established Black authors! An event like this helps us to keep the issue of literacy at the forefront within the community. This event is free and open to all ages.

LA EVENTS: Kiss-N-Grind Presents…

This Friday KNG is back with the fifth installment to their Young Legends summer series. A tribute to The Neptunes will take place Friday, August 13th from 10pm – 2am. Details are as follows:

Medusa Lounge, 3211 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90057

$10 before midnight, $15 after; 21 and over

This event is profile and list free!

An Anthology on Black Los Angeles

From the LA Times:

When Darnell Hunt and Ana-Christina Ramón tell people that Los Angeles has the second largest black population of any U.S. county, the usual response is raised eyebrows and blank stares.

“They’re shocked,” says Hunt, a sociology professor and director of the Ralph J. Bunche Center for African American Studies at UCLA. “Most people say, ‘No, you’re making that up, that can’t be true.'” In fact, Hunt says, only Cook County in Illinois, which takes in a large swath of metropolitan Chicago, is home to more black Americans.

The list of things that most people, including many Angelenos, don’t know about black L.A. could fill a book. So Hunt and Ramón, the Bunche Center’s assistant director, decided to put one together: “Black Los Angeles: American Dreams and Racial Realities,” just published by New York University Press.
The book brings together the research interests of what Hunt describes as an “all-star team” of contributors, most but not all of them academics with strong California connections. Comprising 17 short to medium-length essays, it pivots from data-rich analyses of how the black community’s 20th century demographic center gradually has shifted from Central Avenue to Leimert Park, to interview-driven, anecdotal accounts of the rise and decline of Venice’s Oakwood neighborhood and a revealing chronicle of the black-owned SOLAR (Sounds of Los Angeles Records), a late ’70s-early ’80s R&B hit-making machine for groups including the Whispers, Shalamar and Klymaxx.

It also includes multidisciplinary, L.A.-centric essays on incarceration’s impact on black families, the relationships between gay African Americans and their religious communities, and the ethnic-minority admissions policies of UCLA, among other thorny topics.

More than half a dozen years in the making, the roughly 430-page volume is believed to be the first such project of its kind. Despite its formidable size, the authors say, L.A.’s black population has been relatively under-analyzed in comparison with New York, Chicago and other northeastern and Midwestern centers of black population..

Part of the reason, Hunt and Ramón say, is that Los Angeles in certain key respects doesn’t fit the nation’s dominant “race” narrative. To begin with, L.A.’s founders were mixed-ethnic Spanish colonial settlers, not white New England Puritans or Southern slaves and slave-holders, so the city’s ethno-demographic profile differed sharply from that of the United States east of the Mississippi River. Just as significantly, the city’s major growth spurts occurred decades after the Civil War. The large numbers of blacks who migrated to Los Angeles after World War II arrived in a city whose ethnic contours were in some ways already well-defined.

“Black people never really threatened to be like a majority or a plurality of the population here, in the same way they do in some of these other American cities that have been studied,” Hunt says.

To some observers, L.A.’s singularity offered blacks a plausible chance at a better life. When the legendary author and civil rights activist W.E.B. DuBois visited the city in the early 1900s, he recommended it to black migrants precisely because he saw it as an anomaly, a rare enclave where African Americans might be relatively free of the economic constraints and racist violence of the Jim Crow South.

“There was always this perception that L.A. was kind of like the oddball,” Hunt says.

Yet “Black Los Angeles” makes the case that, today, L.A.’s black population offers many crucial insights into the lives of African Americans in general.

“Everyone talks about Harlem of course because of the Harlem Renaissance and what was happening during the period,” Hunt says. “But we argue that as the 20th century progressed, L.A. really becomes like the new Harlem in terms of setting the terms on which people talk about black America.”

Gerald Horne, a history professor at the University of Houston, said in an interview that the new book advances an evolving understanding of L.A. “as the northern-most capital of Latin America,” a metropolis whose identity owes a great deal to its ethnically and culturally hybrid origins. Horne, the author of a book about the 1965 Watts riots and a participant in a May 25 UCLA symposium tied to the publication of “Black Los Angeles,” says that the new book points to the need for more works that “give Southern California its due” in the nation’s historical narrative.

One particular focus of “Black Los Angeles” is how Hollywood and the area’s major news media have constructed images and ideas of black Los Angeles that have reverberated around the world. Hunt acknowledges that his own views of black L.A. were heavily molded by Hollywood until he moved here to attend USC as a student in the early 1980s.

One essay, titled “Playing ‘Ghetto,'” by Nancy Wang Yuen, an assistant professor of sociology at Biola University, examines African American actors whose real-life experience as L.A. residents sometimes bears little or no resemblance to Hollywood caricatures of black L.A.

A number of essays also take up, or at least touch on, the role of the Los Angeles Times in perpetrating stereotypical views of the region’s African American populace, culture and institutions. Because of its size and the virtual daily print monopoly it enjoyed for many years, The Times disproportionately swayed the way that black L.A. was depicted and perceived, particularly through such watershed events as the 1992 civil disturbance.

“It [The Times] becomes an actor in the story,” Ramón observes, “so instead of it just reporting, it actually becomes part of the story in a way.”

Ramón and Hunt hope that the book will appeal to general readers as well as scholars. To that end, they solicited input from a wide cross-section of individuals and community groups during the book’s planning stages. They also encouraged non-academics to attend and participate in the May symposium, intending to help foster an ongoing community dialogue.

“Black Los Angeles” ultimately raises the question of what the term “black” will mean in Los Angeles in 20 or 30 years from now, as new waves of Caribbean, African and multiethnic Latino immigrants continue to reshape the region’s ethnic profile.

“We wanted [the book] to be a picture that wasn’t so much about sort of glamorizing black L.A. as much as looking at the faults, as well as the beautiful and wonderful things in black L.A.,” Hunt says, “and to present a realistic portrait that may provide some lessons about where we go next.”

Ron Artest: Crazy or Misunderstood?

We all knew Ron Artest as a crazy, Rodman-like player in his career with the Pacers, Kings and Rockets, with the brawl at the Auburn Palace only solidifying that reputation.

As he made his move to the Lakers, the fans questioned the Lakers front office for letting a working piece, in Ariza, go for a lunatic, in Ron Artest. Critics and analysts said Ron would destroy the chemistry and the Lakers wouldn’t be able to repeat with him on the team.

But in his first year with the Lakers, Ron proved those critics wrong. He has been the exact opposite of what the critics said. He gives out tickets to games, has breakfast with fans and goes bowling with fans. He made appearances on the Jimmy Kimmel show, George Lopez show and he has proven to be funny in those appearances, always seeking to have fun. There is also a rumor that the so-called “bad boy” NBA player is to develop and produce the “They Call Me Crazy” show with E1 Entertainment and Tijuana Entertainment(yes, Tijuana Ent). The series will document the ups and downs of Artest’s life, allowing him to “make amends for past transgressions,” according to E1 Entertainment. Some say he is the most down to earth player. But with that being said, is Ron really crazy or just a misunderstood person?

Watch Ron Artest interview, Ron Artest here, where he answers some questions about himself. This should answer this question.

-Mr. CEO

LA EVENTS: Leimert Park Art Walk

The Leimert Park Art Walk will take place today from 2pm -8pm in Leimert Park Village. This event is free and will include art exhibits, live performances by local artists, a drum circle, and a fashion show. This event is free and open to all ages. See you there!

Is the Magic Johnson Community Deserving?

As you might have heard, they closed the Magic Johnson Theater in the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza officially on June 13th. I don’t know about you but, Magic Johnson is a childhood memory in fact the whole plaza is. Turns out, as reported by a fellow BlackIs blogger, “the theatre will undergo a $10 million renovation thanks to Capri Urban Investors, owners of the mall themselves. The movie theatre renovation is the beginning of a $30 million renovation to the entire mall.” (Click here for that post.) As I was holding a conversation with a few friends, they expressed their feelings towards the renovation of Magic Johnson saying, “I’ll give it 2 months before they fuck it up after it reopens” and “that community doesn’t deserve it.”

The Crenshaw District does not have the best reputation; however they work with what they have and what they know. The community Magic Johnson caters to has suffered long enough with helicopters every night, schools and teachers who have no intention of educating, and a lack of jobs to name a few. Places like Magic Johnson Theater and the mall are places where those people can relax, relieve stress, enjoy themselves, their family, and their community. And if you still think the community doesn’t deserve a remodeled mall and movie theater than think about this: maybe the community is the way it is because no one is willing to give them the time of day. Now that they say they’re worth something, they will cherish it and wish for more.

Brave New Voices Youth Poetry Festival

I had the great fortune of receiving a call this morning that would change the course of my day. A good friend called with a frantic request for me to sit in for a celebrity judge who dropped out of judging a poetry slam that was to take place in an hour. I jumped at the chance to help.

Little did I know that I was entering in the world of Brave New Voices Youth Poetry Festival, where over 500 young poets representing 50 different cities had come to Los Angeles for a week of activities that celebrated their voices, and for a chance to compete in the Grand Slam Finals. Today was the Semi-finals, and I was a judge.

The group that performed for our panel represented the cities of Houston, Phoenix, Austin, Albuquerque and Stockton. What I saw today was the continued growth of an art form that gave voice to those who wanted to make a political and social impact, but often felt powerless to make change. What I learned today is that all of our young folks are not jaded by what this society attempts to blind them with. They see clearly what is taking place in our world, and are more aware of the political climate and social injustice than I was in high school. I was blown away and filled with hope at the same time.

The contest went four rounds, and with each round I was moved by stories of violence, parental drug abuse, homosexuality, date rape, standardized testing, immigration, sexism, and racial hatred. These young people spoke honestly about their experiences growing up on the streets of these cities, and be they in the midst of farms in the San Joaquin Valley or in the hottest of deserts, their experiences across the map mirrored one another. Furthermore, the power behind their words let the entire room know that they weren’t sharing the experiences of others. These stories were their truth, their life, their story.

I held back tears many times through the competition. The story of a young woman watching her mother spiral downward with drug addiction; a young woman who denouncing sex symbols and role models; a group complaining about the systematic racism embedded in standardized testing; two young men struggling with their homosexuality in a society that will only allow them to express interest in women; a young man watching his mother die from breast cancer; and my personal favorite, three chocolate-hued ladies expressing how their complexion is ignored within an American beauty standard.

These young people gave me hope that this world, with all its ills and evils, is moving in the right direction. If these are our leaders of tomorrow, today we can rest easy knowing that our future is in their hands.

Much love to teams Houston, Phoenix, Austin, Albuquerque, and Stockton, and congratulations to team Albuquerque for moving on to the finals!

LA EVENTS: FREE LA Show With Miguel Atwood-Ferguson

On Friday, July 23, 2010, multi-intrumentalist/arranger/composer, Miguel Atwood-Ferguson brings his amazing 15 piece ensemble featuring ground-breaking artists Bilal, Flying Lotus, Chris “Daddy” Dave, and Stephen “Thundercat” Bruner to the the Grand Performances concert series at California Plaza in Downtown LA, 350 South Grand Ave..

The ensemble will be doing 2 sets starting at 8pm featuring new Atwood-Ferguson arrangements written for this historic concert.

If you missed Miguel’s Dilla tribute, “A Suite For Ma Dukes” awhile back, you do not want to miss this one!

On the program will be original material from Miguel, Bilal and Flying Lotus as well tributes to J Dilla, Michael Jackson, Guru and Herbie Hancock among other unique offerings all under Miguel’s direction. Do not miss this incredibly special, FREE and once in a lifetime event!

8pm-11pm
@ Grand Performances, California Plaza
350 S. Grand Ave.
Los Angeles CA 90071

LA EVENTS: Cinesounds Presents Ladies’ Nite

On Wednesday, July 28th Cinesounds presents Ladies Night. Cinesounds is a curated evening of cinema and music combining the vibe of a lounge environment with the energy of an art show. Each event’s chosen films are grouped around a theme and then attended by tunes from DJs that reflect both prepared musical selections and improvised track choices that react to the imagery being projected as well as the energy of the room. Event details are as follows:

Cinesounds: Ladies’ Nite

Wednesday, July 28th at 8pm

Mandrake Bar

2771 W Pico Blvd, Culver City, CA

Music. Flicks. Ladies. What could be better than that?