My Weird Experience Couchsurfing in Los Angeles
Last Updated on October 10, 2020 by Adam Watts
I spent two nights couchsurfing in Los Angeles, California, and didn’t even see the Hollywood sign. I did, however, enjoy an evening with an amateur dramatic group in a public library. Yes, friends, that cliché is true. Everyone in LA is an aspiring actor or actress. If anyone tells you different it’s because they want you to drop your guard while they steal your audition for a yoghurt commercial.
Not much actual acting happened at the amateur dramatic group. There was a lot of gossiping about auditions, failed or otherwise (actually, no, now that I think about it, just failed).
There was hyper-critical analysis of headshots — the physical manifestation of these people’s own sense of self-importance — which anyone in LA has to carry around with them at all times. There was lots of excuse-making (“oh, I didn’t bring my script today, but here’s one I love from a scrawny misunderstood independent screenwriter you’ve never heard of”).
And then, right at the end, there was some massive melodramatic monologue-reading which was either compelling or creepy depending on how you feel about war crimes against Bosnians.
But let’s freeze-frame here, with this woman kneeling on the floor outside this public library at midnight, hair flopped over her face, weeping, and let’s rewind a few hours like this is a bad sitcom episode.
I’d just arrived in Union Station (pictured above) from Tucson, Arizona. The sun was shining with the promise of Hollywood megastars and bare-skinned beach babes.
I was picked up at the station by my host, Mia, in her little yellow car that looked like a sports car from a distance but turned into a faded former taxi when she got close. She parked right outside the station, pulled me over, argued for ten seconds with the rule-following parking attendant and then we departed in a hurry.
“Fuck LA,” she said. Her first words to me.
“Yeah?”
“Yeah, fuck LA.” Her second words to me.
It was somewhere between her third words and her thirtieth that I found out she held a prominent position as a public speaker for Amnesty International in Southern California.
Whether talking about falsely imprisoned death row inmates in Georgia or the inability of LA residents to drive in a straight line, Mia oozed so much passion that she had to keep a box of tissues on the dashboard. I might not have agreed with everything she said but I loved Mia. Anyone that passionate about anything, let alone everything, can only be admired.
She even had strong opinion on ales and vegan sausages. We had both in what I, as a Brit, can assure readers was definitely not a pub. It was what might once have been a pub before being taken over by a fabulous gay couple and a hipster.
There were tables-for-two along one wall, a bar along the opposite wall and a chasm of space in between, like they were waiting for more furniture deliveries. It was only later, while in a similarly-designed wine bar, that I realized all the empty space was actually designed that way. It was for these wannabe stars to stand upright while trading witticisms. Apparently sitting down is a sign of weakness in Los Angeles. Standing up makes back-stabbing that much easier I suppose.
After eating Mia drove us a few miles to a public library. I’ll be honest, I was expecting these amateur dramatics groups meetings to be all hush-hush and in basements with candles and shadows, not in a well-lit library courtyard with sweet old ladies pushing book carts down corridors.
After a whole lot of standing around, excuse-making and general thumb-twiddling for a few hours, it was midnight, the library was closed, the car park was empty, and the four of us were standing out front getting ready to say goodbyes (because even the simplest thing in Los Angeles seems to involve a lot of preparation).
“Let’s just read these monologues,” Mia said. Allen went first. Then Madison. Then Mia. She really got into it. It went on for three sheets, a recreation of the climactic soliloquy from a documentary about Bosnian war crimes.
The amount of water on my host’s face grew ever more concerning, her body motions beginning to make me wonder if she hadn’t had a stroke. The others stood with brows furrowed, hands in pockets. Eventually Mia finished, both orally and physically, and quite possibly sexually too (the floor was awfully damp).
In the car, after goodbyes were finally said, Mia asked me, “So, what did you think?”
“I, uh, well, umm, you definitely, err, meant what you said. You’re a passionate woman.”
“Thanks, Adam. I’m glad you said that. The others are all about analysis, analysis, analysis. To them everything is about success. About getting an audition, getting a part, getting famous. I don’t do it for that. I do it because I enjoy it, because I want to tell the world about things happening elsewhere in the world. Horrible things. I think drama and theatre is a great way of disseminating that kind of information in an accessible form.”
I didn’t feel the need to tell her that a 20-minute monologue about the tortures faced by people in a country most Americans have never heard of wouldn’t generally be considered “accessible”. But who knows, maybe she’ll be famous one day and I’ll have to eat my words. Or she’ll gate-crash a Hollywood party with her Amnesty gang and start shrieking that Ryan Gosling has a cold, cold heart because he doesn’t buy fair trade coffee. I’m not sure which is more likely.
Click here to read about more of my time couchsurfing, from Jordan to Paris.
i really enjoy your writing! thanks for the laughs as usual. I like to hope that my writing comes off with a somewhat similar effect but I’m pretty most of the time it’s just awkward humor on my end lol. anyway, love reading about your adventures! oh yeah, and fuck LA.
Am in the process of adding a page to my blog for other “good” light-hearted travel blogs. I think yours will end up on there. 🙂
I like how you bring across that feeling of awkwardness, while at the same time maintaining the kind of awesomeness these kinds of encounters hold.
All I ever hear about LA is how shitty it must be, but somehow it really makes me want to go there and experience it firsthand. Probably I’ll run away screaming after the first day.
That’s all couchsurfing ever is, haha — awkward and awesome at the same time!
Those were usually my first words every morning that I lived in LA! (I’ll tell you, it’s really everyone’s first words about LA!) Definitely an… interesting place to live. And the people are like that. Seriously. 🙂
Now in defense of the cool things LA has: you really can run into stars all over the place (I’ve run into Bill Nye the Science Guy, Bob Barker, Julie Andrews, and Lionel Richie to name a few), there’s loads of Broadway plays and other great acts to see, movie premiers happen all the time (and they’re super fun!), there’s great food everywhere!, and you pretty much can’t have a boring day 🙂
Also: I’m a huge fan of the new renovations to Union Station! It’s much cosier and there’s so much more to eat now! 6 years ago it was definitely not nice like that!
I ended up missing my bus out of there actually, so I got about 6 hours to chill in the building. Was really nice, especially as it was so hot outside!
Seemed to me like most people hated living there yet had no plans to leave. Like they were addicted to the place or something!
Yeah – it’s one of the reasons I left as soon as I finished University. Didn’t want to get stuck (I think there’s just so many job opportunities and such that once you’re there, it IS hard to leave.).
Great post. As someone who just moved to West Hollywood I can tell you that it is very difficult to see the sign unless you know which buildings to look between. Maybe next time you can take a peak 🙂
Brilliant dissection of the strange world which is LA!
Perhaps because I’m a fellow Brit or perhaps because its just funny, I love the humour in your blog. 🙂
British humour is the best. It’s the ‘u’ that makes it. Humor just ain’t funny. :p
I don’t get this hooked on most bloggers’ offerings. Yours are compelling, entertaining and true. Thanks for sharing this gift.
Awww! Man hug?
Standard handshake coupled with pull-in, one-armed pat on the back? Okay. But you gotta let go when it starts to get weird. Usually 2-3 seconds in.
Los Angeles is a place where people come to give up on their dreams. Then they blame HOLLYWOOD. It’s the only city in the world that is a Mecca of television, music & film making. The failure rate is high, their dreams are higher.
It’s also a city where a bartender or a parking attendant can become a movie or tv star.
I have known some.