Over the weekend, LLA3C returned for its second year, with an updated focus on the best of LA’s music, food, and film scenes. The festival unfolded in Dtla’s Historic Core from Friday, November 10, to Sunday, November 12, across four iconic venues: Theatre at the Ace Hotel, Los Angeles Theatre, Orpheum Theatre, and Palace Theatre, as well as various adjacent lots. LA3C brought together a wide range of artists, tastemakers, performers, and vendors to celebrate the uniqueness of LA.
Flying Lotus, the Friday headliner, kicked off the festival at the Ace Hotel with his distinctive visual projections, offering the audience a mesmerizing multisensory experience. A native of Los Angeles, he seamlessly blended elements of electronic, jazz, hip-hop, and experimental music with his unique sound that is defined by intricate beats, ethereal melodies, and unconventional song structures.
Erykah Badu, the Saturday headliner at the Orpheum, captivated the audience with her experimental visuals and influential,...
Flying Lotus, the Friday headliner, kicked off the festival at the Ace Hotel with his distinctive visual projections, offering the audience a mesmerizing multisensory experience. A native of Los Angeles, he seamlessly blended elements of electronic, jazz, hip-hop, and experimental music with his unique sound that is defined by intricate beats, ethereal melodies, and unconventional song structures.
Erykah Badu, the Saturday headliner at the Orpheum, captivated the audience with her experimental visuals and influential,...
- 11/13/2023
- by Robert Lang
- Deadline Film + TV
This post may contain spoilers for "Star Trek: Lower Decks" season 4.
The character of Harcourt Fenton "Harry" Mudd, as played by actor Roger C. Carmel, appeared in two episodes of the original "Star Trek" and one episode of "Star Trek: The Animated Series." In 1966's "Mudd's Women," he served as a seller and transporter of mail-order brides. The women he transports (they all hitch a ride on the Enterprise) happen to be the most attractive women imaginable and are decked out on the finest diaphanous parkas that 1960s sci-fi fashion had to offer. It's later revealed that Mudd is a notorious swindler and smuggler and is wanted for various criminal endeavors throughout the quadrant. It's also revealed that the women he is transporting are made artificially more attractive through the regular ingestion of a miracle pill that temporarily transforms them into models. In an additional, even stupider twist, the...
The character of Harcourt Fenton "Harry" Mudd, as played by actor Roger C. Carmel, appeared in two episodes of the original "Star Trek" and one episode of "Star Trek: The Animated Series." In 1966's "Mudd's Women," he served as a seller and transporter of mail-order brides. The women he transports (they all hitch a ride on the Enterprise) happen to be the most attractive women imaginable and are decked out on the finest diaphanous parkas that 1960s sci-fi fashion had to offer. It's later revealed that Mudd is a notorious swindler and smuggler and is wanted for various criminal endeavors throughout the quadrant. It's also revealed that the women he is transporting are made artificially more attractive through the regular ingestion of a miracle pill that temporarily transforms them into models. In an additional, even stupider twist, the...
- 10/26/2023
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
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