Mon, 14 October 2024
This episode features an interview with William Deverell about the new podcast series from the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West called "Hidden Pasadena." |
Thu, 10 October 2024
This episode features an interview with Claire Kennedy, Yuri Shimoda, Abraham Ferrer, and Victoria Bernal about the 19th Annual Los Angeles Archives Bazaar on October 19, 2024 at the Doheny Library and USC. |
Wed, 9 October 2024
This episode features an interview with Paul Haddad abour his new book "Inventing Paradise: The Power Brokers Who Created the Dream of Los Angeles." |
Fri, 4 October 2024
This episode features an interview with Danny Jensen about his book "LA Scavenger: The Ultimate Search for Los Angeles's Hidden Treasures." |
Wed, 17 July 2024
This episode tells the story of Guy McAfee, an LAPD police officer turned crime boss turned casino mogul, who played an important role in the development of Las Vegas. |
Wed, 18 October 2023
This episode features an interview with Azalea Camacho, Liza Posas, Jessica Gambling, and Victoria Bernal about the Los Angeles Archives Bazaar on October 28, 2023 at the Doheny LIbrary at USC. |
Tue, 10 October 2023
This episode tells the remarkable and strange story of Jack Parsons, one of the founders of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. |
Sat, 15 July 2023
This episode features an interview with Nelson Johnson about his book "Darrow's Nightmare: The Forgotten Story of America's Most Famous Trial Lawyer." |
Sat, 1 July 2023
In 1910, the famed attorney Clarence Darrow represented two brothers accused of bombing the L.A. Times building before Darrow himself was put on trial for allegedly bribing a juror. |
Thu, 15 June 2023
Randy Newman's "I Love L.A." has become the city's unofficial anthem. But, does Randy Newman really love L.A.? |
Thu, 1 June 2023
This episode features an interview with Nathan Masters about his new book, "Crooked: The Roaring '20s Tale of a Corrupt Attorney General, a Crusading Senator, and the Birth of the American Political Scandal." |
Fri, 26 May 2023
This episode features an interview with Teena Apeles about her new book, "52 Things To Do In Los Angeles."
Direct download: 52_Things_To_Do_In_Los_Angeles_HHLA78.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 2:03pm PDT |
Tue, 21 March 2023
This episode features an interview with Evan Lovett, the creator of L.A. in a Minute. |
Thu, 1 December 2022
This episode is about the Grammy Award winning Los Angeles musical group Ozomatli and features an interview with Ulises Bella. |
Tue, 1 November 2022
This episode is about the time the legendary jazz saxophonist, Charlie Parker, spent in Los Angeles, which included epic jam sessions and recordings, but also drugs, debauchery, a stay at a mental institution, and a "naked" party. |
Fri, 28 October 2022
My friend, Eyvin Hernandez, is being unlawfully detained in Venezuela. Listen to the episode to learn about Eyvin and what we can do to bring him home. Sign the online petition: https://www.change.org/p/bring-eyvin-hernandez-home. Make a donation: https://gofund.me/4117b3cb. Learn more: https://bringeyvinhome.org/. |
Wed, 13 April 2022
This episode features an interview with Natalia Molina about her new book, "A Place at the Nayarit: How a Mexican Restaurant Nourished a Community." |
Thu, 3 February 2022
This episode explores the origin of the name Pico Boulevard. |
Wed, 15 December 2021
This episode features an interview with Paul Haddad regarding his book, "Freewaytopia: How Freeways Shaped Los Angeles." |
Wed, 8 December 2021
In this special crossover episode, I interview, and get interviewed by, Daniel Zafran and Greg Gonzalez from the L.A. Meekly podcast. |
Fri, 15 October 2021
In this episode, guest host Leah Treidler tells the story behind the city's iconic palm trees. |
Tue, 5 October 2021
This episode features an interview with Ken Bernstein about his book, "Preserving Los Angeles: How Historic Places Can Transform America's Cities." |
Sat, 11 September 2021
This episode tells the story behind a grave site in Altadena. |
Wed, 18 August 2021
This episode features an interview with historian William Deverell regarding his latest book, "Kathy Fiscus: A Tragedy That Transfixed The Nation."
Direct download: Kathy_Fiscus_and_Interview_HHLA67_final.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 11:45pm PDT |
Mon, 2 August 2021
Dootsie Williams was a trailblazing black music executive and entrepreneur who left an impact on the music industry and his community. |
Tue, 15 June 2021
This episode features an interview with Catherine Auman about her book "Guide to Spiritual L.A.: The Irreverent, the Awake, and the True." |
Tue, 1 June 2021
This episode features an interview with Martha Gonzalez, lead singer of the L.A. band Quetzal, about her book "Chicana Artivistas: Music, Community, and Transborder Tactics in East Los Angeles." |
Tue, 18 May 2021
This episode features an interview with Andrea Richards and Teena Apeles about their book "We Heart L.A. Parks," a coloring and activity book for all ages. |
Tue, 11 May 2021
This episode features an interview with Jason Horton about his book "Abandoned and Historic Los Angeles: Neon and Beyond." |
Tue, 16 March 2021
This episode features an interview with historian Nathan Marsak regarding his new book "Bunker Hill Los Angeles." |
Wed, 3 February 2021
With a short trip into the mountains near Los Angeles, in Big Santa Anita Canyon, you can step back in time to the Great Hiking Era of the early 20th century. This episode also features an interview with Maggie Moran, owner of Adams Pack Station, regarding the current situation in the canyon after the Bobcat Fire. |
Thu, 26 November 2020
This episode explores the history behind one of L.A.'s most famous streets, Rodeo Drive. |
Sun, 11 October 2020
This episode features an interview with D.J. Waldie about his new book "Becoming Los Angeles: Myth, Memory, and a Sense of Place. |
Wed, 16 September 2020
This episode explores the time Malcolm X spent in Los Angeles, which included a high speed car chase on the freeway, an assassination attempt, and an L.A.P.D. shooting. |
Sat, 1 August 2020
This episode explores the origin of the name Wilshire Boulevard. |
Wed, 15 July 2020
This episode features an interview with Jon Wiener regarding his new book, Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties, which he co-authored with Mike Davis. The book provides a comprehensive history of the civil rights movement in Los Angeles during the 1960s. |
Wed, 1 July 2020
This episode features an interview with Casey Schreiner regarding his new book "Discovering Griffith Park: A Local's Guide." |
Mon, 8 June 2020
Carol Kaye is a Los Angeles musician you have definitely heard, but likely haven't heard of. |
Thu, 23 April 2020
This episode features an interview with Susan Phillips about her book The City Beneath: A Century of Los Angeles Graffiti. |
Sun, 8 March 2020
This episode examines Disney history in Los Angeles and features an interview with Chris Nichols about his book Walt Disney's Disneyland.
Direct download: DIsney_and_Chris_Nichols_Interview_HHLA51.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 12:51am PDT |
Wed, 18 December 2019
What can a country song about driving on Los Angeles freeways tell us about our city? This episode examines Guy Clark's song L.A. Freeway and the city's connection to country music. |
Mon, 2 December 2019
The episode features an interview with Josh Kun about his latest book, The Autograph Book of L.A.
Direct download: The_Autograph_Book_of_L.A._Kun_Interview_HHLA49.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 11:59pm PDT |
Tue, 19 November 2019
Anaheim investigator Julissa Trapp is not like other detectives. She’s the only woman on the homicide squad, and a skilled chameleon: undercover cop in vice stings, crime-scene commander, patient confidante of killers. A master interrogator, she invokes her personal experience – and deepest griefs -- as a tool to elicit confessions. When a young woman’s body is found at a trash-sorting plant, Trapp learns the murder may be linked to the disappearance of three other women in nearby Santa Ana. Trapp embarks on a dark journey that brings her face to face with a man who takes “a little piece of her soul.” Listen now at Wondery.fm/TrappHidden |
Tue, 15 October 2019
The fourth season of KCET's Emmy winning documentary series Lost LA premieres October 15 so I sat down with the show's host, writer and L.A. historian Nathan Masters, to talk about the show and upcoming season. |
Sat, 14 September 2019
On Mills Place in Old Town Pasadena there is a historical plaque which doesn't tell the whole story. |
Thu, 15 August 2019
From the partnership that brought you Dirty John, comes Man in the Window. Pulitzer prize winning reporter Paige St. John investigates The Golden State Killer, and traces his path of devastation through the eyes of his victims. Listen now at wondery.fm/hiddenhistory |
Wed, 31 July 2019
This episode explores the lesser-known Los Angeles movies and features an interview with Phoef Sutton and Mark Jordan Legan of the podcast Film Freaks Forever. |
Wed, 5 June 2019
There are thousands of miles of freeway soundwalls across the United States, but their origin can be traced to Los Angeles. |
Fri, 3 May 2019
Eric Dolphy was a multi-instrumentalist jazz virtuoso who played with the likes of John Coltrane and Charles Mingus. And he grew up in Los Angeles. |
Mon, 25 March 2019
An interview with David Kipen about his book Dear Los Angeles: The City in Diaries and Letters, 1542 to 2018. |
Wed, 12 December 2018
This episode tells the story of three laws that shaped the downtown Los Angeles skyline.
Direct download: 3_Laws_that_Shaped_the_Downtown_Skyline_HHLA42.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 1:32am PDT |
Wed, 7 November 2018
This episode looks into why there are so many Craftsman houses in Pasadena and features an interview with Brian Baker from Pasadena Heritage about their upcoming Craftsman Weekend event.
Direct download: QA_L.A._Why_are_there_so_many_Craftsman_houses_in_Pasadena_HHLA41.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 1:19am PDT |
Wed, 17 October 2018
John Cage was one of the most influential and notorious avant garde music composers of the 20th Century. And he grew up in Los Angeles. |
Fri, 12 October 2018
This episode introduces a new segment of the podcast called, "L.A. Sounds," which will feature lesser known figures from the city's musical history. |
Fri, 12 October 2018
The episode features an interview with Gary Krist about his new book The Mirage Factory: Illusion, Imagination, and the Invention of Los Angeles.
Direct download: The_Mirage_Factory_An_Interview_with_Gary_Krist_HHLA38.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 6:55pm PDT |
Mon, 2 July 2018
What is the proper way to pronounce "Los Angeles?" The episode examines the history of pronouncing the city's name.
Direct download: QA_LA_Pronunciation_of_Los_Angeles_HHLA39.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 1:39pm PDT |
Wed, 28 February 2018
Charlotta Bass was a trailblazing journalist and fierce advocate for civil rights, but few Angelenos have heard of her name. This episode tells the story. |
Sat, 20 January 2018
On a mountain above Los Angeles, a group of astronomers at the Mount Wilson Observatory forever changed our understanding of the Universe. |
Tue, 31 October 2017
John Parkinson is L.A.'s most important, but often forgotten, architect. |
Thu, 14 September 2017
When was the first time a car rode the streets of Los Angeles? This episode tells the story.
Direct download: QA_L.A._What_was_L.A.s_First_Automobile_HHLA34.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 7:47pm PDT |
Fri, 30 June 2017
On the corner of Colorado Boulevard and Holliston Street in Pasadena stands a concrete tablet that looks like a tombstone. Even though it looks out of place, it is probably the oldest thing on that street corner - a long-lost ancestor of the navigation system on your phone. This episode tells the story.
Direct download: The_Ten_Block_System_for_Numbering_Country_Houses_HHLA33.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 9:22pm PDT |
Tue, 30 May 2017
This episode tells the story of one of the most notorious hotels in Los Angeles. |
Sat, 15 April 2017
With its concrete walls and customary meager flow of water, the L.A. River has often been derided as being ugly. So how did this river, which at one point served as the lifeblood of this community, become a glorified storm drain? Find out in the latest episode of Q&A L.A.
Direct download: QA_LA_Why_is_the_L.A._River_so_ugly_HHLA31.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 11:05pm PDT |
Mon, 13 February 2017
How does a well established Los Angeles neighborhood name disappear? This episode tells the story of Pico Heights. |
Mon, 23 January 2017
A quick announcement about the upcoming Discovery Project show at the Blue Whale on January 27 and 28, 2017. |
Wed, 21 December 2016
What is the oldest building that is still standing in the City of Los Angeles? The answer is not as simple as you may think.
Direct download: QA_L.A._What_is_the_oldest_building_in_Los_Angeles_HHLA29.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 10:42pm PDT |
Fri, 28 October 2016
This episode tells the story of Angels Flight, L.A.'s beloved funicular, and the effort to get it re-opened, including an interview with local historian Richard Schave. |
Fri, 19 August 2016
Why are there huge holes in the ground off the 210 and 605 freeways in Irwindale? This episode answers the question while also exploring the history of Irwindale and how these holes are connected to the greater Los Angeles area.
Direct download: QA_L.A._Why_are_there_huge_holes_in_the_ground_in_Irwindale_HHLA27.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 12:11am PDT |
Wed, 22 June 2016
In anticipation of his July 16, 2016 performance at Boston Court in Pasadena with his Discovery Project, a multimedia project which explores the past, present and future of Los Angeles, Robert interviews the piano player and composer Josh Nelson about the show and writing music about Los Angeles.
Direct download: Interview_with_Josh_Nelson_HHLA26_rev.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 9:12am PDT |
Fri, 27 May 2016
Why are there peacocks in Arcadia? To answer the question, we must go back over a hundred years and learn about the founding of the City of Arcadia.
Direct download: QA_LA_Why_are_there_Peacocks_in_Arcardia__HHLA25.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 11:12pm PDT |
Sat, 2 April 2016
This episode tells the story of Mack Robinson, a silver medalist who came in second to Jesse Owens in the 1936 Berlin Olympics, as well as his relationship to his hometown of Pasadena. |
Thu, 11 February 2016
Why does the 2 freeway end abruptly in Echo Park? To answer the question, we must delve into the history of freeway development in Los Angeles and the world of L.A.'s never built freeways.
Direct download: QA_L.A._Why_does_the_2_freeway_end_in_Echo_Park_HHLA23.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 10:26pm PDT |
Thu, 14 January 2016
The Triforium is a six-story, 60-ton public sculpture on the corner of Temple and Main Streets in downtown that was supposed to be a symbol of L.A.'s future. Unfortunately, technical problems plagued the project from the beginning and made it the subject of much ridicule. Now a group of L.A. enthusiasts want to restore the piece and realize the project's ambitious vision. This episode discusses the history of the Triforium and includes an interview with Tom Carroll, the creator and host of the web series "Tom Explores Los Angeles," who is involved in the restoration effort. |
Sun, 8 November 2015
This episode tells the story of California's first Attorney General and L.A.'s seventh District Attorney, Edward Kewen. |
Sun, 13 September 2015
This episode tells the story of Tiburcio Vasquez, a bandit who was active throughout California during the mid-nineteenth century.
Direct download: The_Hunt_for_Tiburcio_Vasquez_HHLA20.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 10:42pm PDT |
Sat, 8 August 2015
This episode tells the story behind L.A.'s first subway which operated between 1925 and 1955. |
Tue, 30 June 2015
Today, terrorism is a major concern in Los Angeles. But many Angelenos would likely be surprised to learn that L.A. has, in decades past, been the target of multiple terrorist attacks. |
Sun, 10 May 2015
This episode explores the story behind the namesake for Griffith Park and Griffith Observatory, Colonel Griffith J. Griffith. |
Tue, 31 March 2015
This episode discusses the oldest and newest freeway in Los Angeles and what they tell us about the city.
Direct download: L.A.s_Oldest_and_Newest_Freeway_HHLA16.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 1:57pm PDT |
Sat, 28 February 2015
This episode discusses an incident in 1855, when Los Angeles Mayor Stephen C. Foster took the law into his own hands. |
Sat, 31 January 2015
This episode explores some of the times where Los Angeles has served as a battlefield.
Direct download: Battlefield_Los_Angeles_HHLA14_final.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 10:08pm PDT |
Fri, 5 December 2014
This episode explores the history of L.A.'s never built freeways. |
Fri, 31 October 2014
During the 1930s, a cafeteria owner named Clifford Clinton began an unlikely crusade against corruption in Los Angeles. This episode tells the story of Clifford Clinton. |
Tue, 23 September 2014
In 1785, a group of Native Americans revolted against the Spanish at Mission San Gabriel. This episode tells the story of one of the members of the rebellion named Toypurina. |
Sun, 10 August 2014
This episode discusses the origin of the names Azusa and Pasadena. |
Wed, 9 July 2014
This episode explores two stories of the California Dream - a murder mystery and a mythical tale.
Direct download: Two_Stories_of_the_California_Dream_HHLA9.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 11:16pm PDT |
Sat, 14 June 2014
This episode tells the story behind a bizarre auction that occurred in downtown Los Angeles during the 1850s. |
Thu, 6 March 2014
In 1870, L.A.'s City Marshall, William Warren, was shot and killed, making him the first regularly employed L.A.P.D. officer to be killed in the line of duty. But Warren wasn't killed tryng to stop a crime. Instead, he was killed by another L.A.P.D. officer in connection with a dispute over a reward for recovering a runaway Chinese prostitute. This podcast tells the story of the shooting of William Warren.
Direct download: The_Shooting_of_William_Warren_HHLA7.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 12:38am PDT |
Sun, 5 January 2014
Echo Park is the name of a park and lake as well as the neighborhood which surrounds it just north of downtown Los Angeles. This edpisode looks into the origin of the name "Echo Park."
Direct download: Origin_of_the_Name__Echo_Park__HHLA6.mp3
Category:general -- posted at: 12:23pm PDT |
Fri, 6 December 2013
Everyone has heard the story of Los Angeles stealing water. But what is lesser known is that a dam that was built to store water from the Owens Valley collapsed in 1928 resulting in the death of at least 600 people. |
Wed, 6 November 2013
Everybody knows that the name Los Angeles is Spanish in origin. But what is lessor known is that there is no agreement as to what the original name given to Los Angeles by its founders was back in 1781. This episode explores the debate over LA's original name. |
Wed, 18 September 2013
In 1871, approximately 500 Los Angeles residents, almost one tenth of the city's population, laid siege to L.A.'s original Chinatown and lynched 18 Chinese immigrants, making it the largest incident of mass lynching in American history. |
Sat, 17 August 2013
Pentacostalism is a movement within Christianity which today has hundreds of millions of followers around the globe. But what is lessor known is that the modern day Pentacostal movement traces its origins back to a street in the Little Tokyo section of Downtown Los Angeles. |