There's definitely jokes to be had on what the shapes of city outlines look like, and whether they reflect the character of the place. If you tilt your head, L.A. kinda looks like a duck spitting a long tongue out. I'm sure someone could make a joke out of that.
“One thing that unites every part of Los Angeles is that no matter where you go there is zero sense of community” is the most accurate description of LA I’ve ever heard
I felt this way as a young person who had just moved here, but I have found Los Angeles to have great community. I know most of my neighbors, love our public school, can't go for coffee or even a pro sporting event without seeing someone I know. In my experience, community depends on how engaged you choose to be.
Bus lanes, separated bike lanes. Converting the central isle of highways to host either LRT or Trams. Underground metro. A combination of any of the above.
But you could connect the sprawl with local centers, that are bike reachable, and also run trams or subways to connect more far appart places. Of course, europe still has cities that are more sprawly and car centric, but from the media and news coming over, it seems like the us really has nyc as a public transport friendly city, and even it's subways are notorious for crime and beind dilapidated. And then Chicago and maybe Philadelphia as sort of oldtimey transport friendlier cities, due to being established when it was all more europe influenced. In any casez I dont know enoug about US cities, but I do know, incentivising walking and biking, and connecting further appart places with trams, trains or subways is a good way to encourage people to leave cars behind for only out of town activities.
Friday night I went the Sparks game at Crypto, and as I was riding back to Little Tokyo station through Skid Row, I encountered a heap of burning trash and two firefighters standing next to it, one wide-eyed, the other one with his head down texting. Definitely no mayor, right?
@@trainwreck420ish Lol, it definitely wasn't like NBA competition, but I gotta say the game itself was really fun. People will get pissed at me for saying this, but it's like a pimped out high school basketball game. Only the lower section of the arena is filled in so it feels really personal, and they have a hype man and a bunch of dancers doing their thing keeping the energy up. Would go back for sure. Them other boys in Cancun every summer anyway
"The LAPD flies a helicopter over every single person's home for 12 to 13 hours a day." I didn't even realize how this hadn't happened since I moved to Oregon until a helicopter buzzed overhead SUPER low and loud and startled the heck out of me here. It used to be such a common part of the general background noise!
In the 80s my mom lived in Santa Monica and grew weed on the roof of her apartment building. Every time she heard a helicopter buzzing low overhead, she would run out and cover her plants just in case…
Lived in LA my whole life. Never met half my neighbors, don’t know any of them on a first name basis, and dress in a t-shirt and basketball shorts and sandals everyday I’m not at work. Life is good.
@@compsigh9275 it ‘can be’, but LA is a town for the independent person and lifestyle. People born in LA understand this. It can be impersonal, but you learn to take care of yourself and be street smart. If people want a great relationship with their neighbors, that’s nice, but then they should probably move back to Ohio before they ruin the culture here.
You can or cannot be close with your neighbors. It's a choice you make wherever you live. No obligations. Angelinos tend not to meet neighbors because of car culture
@@unmoris The map is only the City of Los Angeles, despite all those unique names all those communities are simply the City of Los Angeles. In Hawthorne you have your own mayor and a council members to balance the avg viewpoints of your community. In City of Los Angeles you have a mayor who runs the city with council members that act like little mayors playing Tug of War on what is best for the city without considering how it will negatively impact different communities. Like imagine if El Segundo fixed both Hawthorne's roads and schools, which area would get most of the attention? Generally the wealthy area, they'd take their tax dollars and yours and make their area way better. Fortunately Hawthorne has it's own city so it can control and run it's community independent from others views or wishes. If everyone in the city of LA teams up against Wilmington, then Wilmington gets nothing.... and when visiting that area, you clearly see the disparity. The City of LA is one of the richest in the county 21.6 Billion, could invest 46 million per square mile. That would be very close to Burbank's revenue, but as you see, all those communities are not at the "Burbank" level. Additionally bonds/vendor government manipulation through false promises makes it harder to track, vs Hawthorne if you really want to be involved. Most things going on are at a driving distance that's reasonable. But how many in the Valley go to Harbor Area? How many people from Wilmington go to Sylmar? Yet the city voters apply city wide changes to areas they know nothing about. How can that ever go horribly wrong? Again you might say, that's City of Los Angeles problems, but how many times have those problems leaked over to the county? Lomita and Harbor City? Carson and Harbor Gateway? Palos Verdes murders from people in Panorama City? It's in the best interest of everyone to either break up the city or fix it, but more than 100 years later, and corruption is stronger than ever.
As a Native Angeleno, I don't see how this is that difficult. I mean it should be easy for anyone to remember our 20+ different cities and the cultures that reside within them.
HEY! I resemble that remark! You mean "down behind the orange curtain" don't you? The only reason Angelenos hate Orange County is that the roads are in L.A. are in such bad shape, and choked with so much traffic, that they can't get to Orange County.
In a completely unsurprising turn of events, John has left Gardena, Torrance and the majority of the South Bay unmarked and unacknowledged, much as it is in most media regarding LA.
The most offensive part of this to people from Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, and West Hollywood is the suggestion that they are not their own incorporated cities.
I was really hoping he'd say something like "This is Hollywood, which sounds like a city but is a neighborhood, and this is West Hollywood, which sounds like a neighborhood but is a city."
Former Angelino here. Mulaney nailed it. I have so many mixed emotions about L.A. There is a part of me that's happy that i got out of there, and there's also a part of me that misses it terribly.
"They had cool names and cool branding. But that doesn't mean what they did was right. In fact, it was wrong." That delivery was deadpanning on the level of Norm Macdonald.
"One thing that unites all of la is there's zero sense of community" That's a real Futurama gag. Like "no one drives in New York, there's too much traffic" or "so plausible I can't believe it"
“One thing that unites every part of Los Angeles is that no matter where you go there is zero sense of community” unless you're at a Dodger or Laker game. Other than that, pretty accurate, I say as a native Angeleno
I live in the same area of Santa Monica where my family has lived since like 1940, and any community that my mom and grandparents had has dried up. I’m so lonely!
That's been my experience too. I'm from the midwest, and live in NELA (northeast of downtown). I love the community. I love the families from our dual-language public school. I love LAFC and Angel City games. I can't walk down Figueroa (or go to BMO Stadium) without running into someone I know, and often say "Los Angeles is a small town." John says things that I would say as a young person who had just moved here.
When the show started with the decor and the outfit and the hair, I was like really??? But it was so nice, relaxing and funny. I had no idea I needed this!
I was happy to see his hair and I love his clothes but I also wish I was married to him but I think he is already married and has a child, so bless him and his family.
As a former Angelino.... highly accurate! Right up there with the fact that all freeways in Los Angeles have be prefaced with "The" for some reason. LA is a pretty much where you go if you want to have the life leached out of you.
This was pretty GD funny. The perspective of a New Yorker on Los Angeles. I remember having that weird perspective myself when I moved here. Insane bits of truth hidden in even nuttier fabrications. I work in downtown LA and I love it there. The idea that nobody goes there is kind of silly, hordes of people flow in every evening for entertainment and fun, and when we were looking for a place to buy we couldn't remotely afford any of the new apartments downtown. I also love Los Angeles and have been here for over 20 years (after moving from New York for work) and wouldn't live anywhere else. But this was hysterical. Even if there was only a kernel of truth in some of the jokes or they were based on outdated perceptions. Is it his delivery? Certain things were spot on: the absurd use of helicopters for policing in the middle of the night when you're trying to sleep. The fact that the mayor (and we have a great one right now) can do very little to actually run the place. It's run by the neighborhood representatives. I was surprised that he actually knew a lot about that. He nailed the politics. As for sense of community, that depends on the community you're in. I started sticking to the east side because the neighborhoods are cohesive and supportive and work to address problems. Either way, I'm gonna definitely check out the series.
@@GUITARTIME2024 You may be right, but it’s been there since the beginning of the century and downtown has certainly thrived on and off since then. Right now it’s beginning to boom again. Still, the location makes no sense. It’s mind-boggling that it’s still there.
@@daltongalloway It's technically true; New York City's MTA is HEAVY rail, and the city will always be the undisputed champion of transit in the United States by a wide margin. Los Angeles does (or DID) have the highest light rail ridership in the country. I think San Diego took the title this year. L.A.'s transit has a lot of superlatives...2nd highest bus ridership in the nation, and the LONGEST light rail line in the WORLD. A lower percentage of Los Angelenos (10%) take transit daily to work than cities like Chicago (27%) and New York (55%!!) but overall it's a solid and growing system.
@@yeflynneIt’s relevant because the map of Los Angeles is actually more full of gaps than this map shows. And some of the bougiest areas are not technically part of the city.
@@yeflynne But he left out other parts that make up "greater LA" that are in the county and that people not from Los Angeles would consider as being "in LA" like Burbank and Pasadena.
I had to look up what you're talking about, and it's not much of a "scandal.' (Assuming you're talking about the timing of his relationship with Olivia Munn?)
@@RonReynolds You don't think obsessing over the man's married life is a little parasocial? I mean for 90% of other comedians something like a divorce isn't really going to be a sort of 'scandal' like it was for John Mulaney.
@mmmmmmmmmmmmfood Ah, gotcha. I thought you were referring to my comment specifically and I was quite confused, since I said I had to look up the "scandal" myself. Early morning foggy brain strikes again!
I have never been to L.A. but lots of the crime series I love take place in the areas Mulaney is talking about. His fun tout is helping me locate all the places the heroes and and criminals live. Thanks J.M.
Fun fact, my Dad was born in 1960 in Frogtown LA (also called Elysian Valley) and his best friend’s Dad growing up was one of the two Hillside Stranglers😭✋ The way I WISH I was making this shit up but I am indeed not 🥲✋
John Mullaney has to do Toronto. If he thought L.A. traffic was a nightmarish hellscape, he’s in for a treat. Toronto took what Peter Ustinov said about it being like New York…run by the Swiss as a compliment, when it was anything but. Y’see Peter Ustinov hated being in New York, and he definitely *HATED* the Swiss.
I was so excited to see what he was going to say about us and then I realized that the entire south bay (torrance, gardena, palos verdes, etc) was a big blank space. Lol I forgot that we're not part of LA city limits, just LA County! lololol
as someone who has to look at this map pretty much every day for work, funny bit. My only issue is that Santa Monica, Culver City, Bever Hills, San Fernando, and West Holly Wood are all actual cities that surround and are surrounded by Los Angeles.....so the map looks more like a broken chicken wing with holes in it. Also the fact my neighborhood is actually mentioned is a plus
Fun fact: neither Beverly Hills nor West Hollywood are a part of the city of Los Angeles. They are their own individual cities that are part of the county of Los Angeles.
first time I have ever laughed at anything John Mulaney has said lol. and I dont mean that as a read, His comedy has just never been my taste, but he is clearly good at what he does and now I see it because this was hilarious. Mainly because its all so entirely too true lol
I did not realize how little of L.A. there is east of DTLA. I thought ran to the 710 freeway or something. But gosh, does it cover the Valley and the Foothills!
There is definitely a shortage of map comedy.
More map comedy
There's definitely jokes to be had on what the shapes of city outlines look like, and whether they reflect the character of the place. If you tilt your head, L.A. kinda looks like a duck spitting a long tongue out. I'm sure someone could make a joke out of that.
Jim Gaffigan's Who drew the map of Canada? is good, too.
This is definitely going to put map comedy on the map.
Jay Foreman
“One thing that unites every part of Los Angeles is that no matter where you go there is zero sense of community” is the most accurate description of LA I’ve ever heard
Most diversely segregated city in the world
Yep! A friend of mine once said that LA “is basically just one huge dorm,” and that comment has stuck with me ever since.
@@chrisdongwonborn in LA. That's true ouch.
I’ve lived in Santa Monica for nearly 4 years and I have 1 friend!
I felt this way as a young person who had just moved here, but I have found Los Angeles to have great community. I know most of my neighbors, love our public school, can't go for coffee or even a pro sporting event without seeing someone I know. In my experience, community depends on how engaged you choose to be.
"What a sprawling and ongoing situation this is" 🤣
💯
Show this to any European who complains about our public transit and be like "ok, how would *you* deal with this?"
Bus lanes, separated bike lanes. Converting the central isle of highways to host either LRT or Trams. Underground metro. A combination of any of the above.
@@benji45645 but that’s the point. Sprawl and lack of public transportation go hand in hand. Our cities are absolute garbage.
But you could connect the sprawl with local centers, that are bike reachable, and also run trams or subways to connect more far appart places.
Of course, europe still has cities that are more sprawly and car centric, but from the media and news coming over, it seems like the us really has nyc as a public transport friendly city, and even it's subways are notorious for crime and beind dilapidated. And then Chicago and maybe Philadelphia as sort of oldtimey transport friendlier cities, due to being established when it was all more europe influenced.
In any casez I dont know enoug about US cities, but I do know, incentivising walking and biking, and connecting further appart places with trams, trains or subways is a good way to encourage people to leave cars behind for only out of town activities.
"for no mayor, it's going ok" my god, the joy and ease with which he destroyed LA's leadership was hilarious
Friday night I went the Sparks game at Crypto, and as I was riding back to Little Tokyo station through Skid Row, I encountered a heap of burning trash and two firefighters standing next to it, one wide-eyed, the other one with his head down texting. Definitely no mayor, right?
Lol you didnt pay for that game did you? 😂😂😂😂😂 how was your nap?
@@trainwreck420ish Lol, it definitely wasn't like NBA competition, but I gotta say the game itself was really fun. People will get pissed at me for saying this, but it's like a pimped out high school basketball game. Only the lower section of the arena is filled in so it feels really personal, and they have a hype man and a bunch of dancers doing their thing keeping the energy up. Would go back for sure. Them other boys in Cancun every summer anyway
Makes you wonder what L.A. would be like if it didn't have a mayor
Kudos to john for taking a strong stance against serial killing.
Brave, in todays world.
Street Smarts!
@@typacskI mean WWJJBD (What Would J.J.Bitenbinder Do ?)
Stunning, really.
"What happened to New York in the 70s? It moved to Downtown LA" 😂😂😂
Stupid
That is awesome.
The rats stayed behind.
@@excalibur2024guy LOL. Believe me, LA has plenty of rats too.
That’s a plus for L.A.. NYC in the 70s was amazeballs. DTLA is quite underrated. This is damn funny stuff though 😂😂😂
"The LAPD flies a helicopter over every single person's home for 12 to 13 hours a day." I didn't even realize how this hadn't happened since I moved to Oregon until a helicopter buzzed overhead SUPER low and loud and startled the heck out of me here. It used to be such a common part of the general background noise!
I live in Mid City and it's SO OBNOXIOUS. Intrusive, upsetting, stressful, i can go on.
i kinda miss those ghetto birds 😢
As he was finishing this line I literally heard one passing through my neighborhood
In the 80s my mom lived in Santa Monica and grew weed on the roof of her apartment building. Every time she heard a helicopter buzzing low overhead, she would run out and cover her plants just in case…
This made me realize that I don’t hear them anymore now that I live in a nicer part of LA county. Pretty unfair 😢
Lived in LA my whole life.
Never met half my neighbors, don’t know any of them on a first name basis, and dress in a t-shirt and basketball shorts and sandals everyday I’m not at work.
Life is good.
As someone living here. Not knowing your neighbors is shit 😂
@@compsigh9275 it ‘can be’, but LA is a town for the independent person and lifestyle.
People born in LA understand this. It can be impersonal, but you learn to take care of yourself and be street smart. If people want a great relationship with their neighbors, that’s nice, but then they should probably move back to Ohio before they ruin the culture here.
You can or cannot be close with your neighbors. It's a choice you make wherever you live. No obligations. Angelinos tend not to meet neighbors because of car culture
@@RyanGroe Good observation. Lately the main conversations I have had with my neighbors have been about the two recent car break-ins.
@@compsigh9275 I actually really like it. 🤣
I’m sorry but that Beverly hills/DJ Khalid joke should have gotten a bigger laugh that’s hilarious 😂😂
It was totally accurate!
Best bit...and so on point
It was enlightening.
agreed. Perfectly expressed my lifelong feelings abou Bev Hills
Not enough people know who he is, otherwise it would have.
“What a sprawling and ongoing situation this is!” is truly how I’ve always described this place
All 6 episodes of this- whatever it is-were fantastic. Most likely they were an excuse for Mulaney to carry around a clipboard.
Huh, I read a review that the first one was kind of a mess and didn’t bother until clicking on this.
As long as this is what we get from the vibes of “John with a clipboard” I’m cool with Netflix continuing to throw money at him.
Meh
What kind of car do you drive?
@@geoffoldread7684 ngl that was part of the fun watching it live
4:51 People from Brentwood would be upset if they knew Mulaney was pointing there while talking about Hawthorne 😂
And Hawthorne didn’t even make the map.
@@unmoris I think he got that map because that whole map is LA County not including City of LA (different governing body).
@@JoseMartinez-zo8fq Beverly Hills is its own City …
@@jsalais02so are Santa Monica, Culver City, Inglewood and others! But they are still essentially LA
@@unmoris The map is only the City of Los Angeles, despite all those unique names all those communities are simply the City of Los Angeles.
In Hawthorne you have your own mayor and a council members to balance the avg viewpoints of your community. In City of Los Angeles you have a mayor who runs the city with council members that act like little mayors playing Tug of War on what is best for the city without considering how it will negatively impact different communities.
Like imagine if El Segundo fixed both Hawthorne's roads and schools, which area would get most of the attention? Generally the wealthy area, they'd take their tax dollars and yours and make their area way better. Fortunately Hawthorne has it's own city so it can control and run it's community independent from others views or wishes.
If everyone in the city of LA teams up against Wilmington, then Wilmington gets nothing.... and when visiting that area, you clearly see the disparity. The City of LA is one of the richest in the county 21.6 Billion, could invest 46 million per square mile. That would be very close to Burbank's revenue, but as you see, all those communities are not at the "Burbank" level. Additionally bonds/vendor government manipulation through false promises makes it harder to track, vs Hawthorne if you really want to be involved. Most things going on are at a driving distance that's reasonable.
But how many in the Valley go to Harbor Area? How many people from Wilmington go to Sylmar? Yet the city voters apply city wide changes to areas they know nothing about. How can that ever go horribly wrong?
Again you might say, that's City of Los Angeles problems, but how many times have those problems leaked over to the county? Lomita and Harbor City? Carson and Harbor Gateway? Palos Verdes murders from people in Panorama City? It's in the best interest of everyone to either break up the city or fix it, but more than 100 years later, and corruption is stronger than ever.
As a Native Angeleno, I don't see how this is that difficult. I mean it should be easy for anyone to remember our 20+ different cities and the cultures that reside within them.
HA what culture
And the fact that no, San Fernando isn't *really* LA, despite being surrounded by it XD
@@ianthe2131LA county
@@KillerLettuceSpoken like someone who's never been to LA🤡
"...and the cultures that reside within..."
Culture? What culture?
What really unites Angelenos is hatred of Orange County
Right back at ya
HEY! I resemble that remark! You mean "down behind the orange curtain" don't you? The only reason Angelenos hate Orange County is that the roads are in L.A. are in such bad shape, and choked with so much traffic, that they can't get to Orange County.
@@crosslink1493 no one from LA wants to go to Orange County
Orange County, ruined by all the people from LA that moved there...
We hate OC because its exactly the same place spiritually but looks a little nicer. Damn them!
i like that the only live action title overlay in this whole series was at 2:41 for “DOWG SHIT”
glad to see someone else appreciated this
In a completely unsurprising turn of events, John has left Gardena, Torrance and the majority of the South Bay unmarked and unacknowledged, much as it is in most media regarding LA.
Well at least Joel Kim Booster’s character on Loot made fun of Torrance in the latest episode so we have that
its better that way. the crazies can stay away
@@kerokupo plenty of crazies in torrance and gardena. not as bad as dtla and hollywood, but worse than silverlake or brentwood.
@@kerokupolmao it’s LA homie… the whole place is bananas
The map was for LA city not LA county. Those places are only LA County.
The most offensive part of this to people from Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, and West Hollywood is the suggestion that they are not their own incorporated cities.
and San Fernando
@@derekschinke2512no city named San Fernando
Don't forget Culver City
I was really hoping he'd say something like "This is Hollywood, which sounds like a city but is a neighborhood, and this is West Hollywood, which sounds like a neighborhood but is a city."
I was rather happy that Glendale, Burbank, and Pasadena, didn't make the map. Our own little island of sanity.
That delivery of "..no mayor, right..?" sooo on point
Former Angelino here. Mulaney nailed it. I have so many mixed emotions about L.A. There is a part of me that's happy that i got out of there, and there's also a part of me that misses it terribly.
Lmao 😂Los feliz is in fact filled with unhappy people
5:55 “And…” great place to cut it 😫
The aesthetics of this whole thing are great
"They had cool names and cool branding. But that doesn't mean what they did was right. In fact, it was wrong."
That delivery was deadpanning on the level of Norm Macdonald.
Let's not get crazy.
nevermind i dont like the joke anymore
Norm Macdonald's delivery tends not be deadpan; he tends to say crazy stuff with a little smirk or twinkle in his eye, daring you to laugh at it.
you know, the more I hear about the Hillside Strangler, the less I like him
“Downtown LA - a place we all like and go to often.”
perfect delivery & horrifically accurate
"I, too, am not a fan of murder."
He's so freaking funny.
"One thing that unites all of la is there's zero sense of community"
That's a real Futurama gag. Like "no one drives in New York, there's too much traffic" or "so plausible I can't believe it"
As someone who's never been to Los Angeles, I will be using this as my official tour guide in the future.
As someone who moved there in 2008, it's pretty accurate.
It will serve you well
For no Mayor, it's going ok.
Remember when California was ungovernable? It was more or less the same as when it had a government.
The “I’ll see you in Downtown LA”, said no one ever 😂😂😂
I’m from south central Los Angeles and I love John
Comedy and this is spot on correct about my city
“One thing that unites every part of Los Angeles is that no matter where you go there is zero sense of community” unless you're at a Dodger or Laker game. Other than that, pretty accurate, I say as a native Angeleno
This is quintessential Chicagoan/New Yorker hating on LA and I love it
No, this is exactly how locals feel as well 😂
Painfully correct. - Angeleno
It’s mediocre, I’ve heard much better roasts of LA from native Angelinos. People who know the basic fact that BH and SM are not part of LA 😂😂
God I love Richard Kind
He has always been and will always be immensely lovable.
I'm 80 and a third-generation Angeleno. We, truly Angelenos, have a very high sense of community.
I too am third gen, but almost all my family fled the areas due to no community and too much crime
I live in the same area of Santa Monica where my family has lived since like 1940, and any community that my mom and grandparents had has dried up. I’m so lonely!
That's been my experience too. I'm from the midwest, and live in NELA (northeast of downtown). I love the community. I love the families from our dual-language public school. I love LAFC and Angel City games. I can't walk down Figueroa (or go to BMO Stadium) without running into someone I know, and often say "Los Angeles is a small town." John says things that I would say as a young person who had just moved here.
10th generation here! Yes, 10th. My family came from Spain to LA, or at least what it was then.
its becoming a lost skill
that helicopter joke was a knock oit of the park mulaney
When the show started with the decor and the outfit and the hair, I was like really??? But it was so nice, relaxing and funny. I had no idea I needed this!
I was happy to see his hair and I love his clothes but I also wish I was married to him but I think he is already married and has a child, so bless him and his family.
Baby J is back! 😎👍
This bit could go on for hours.
A little Richard Kind goes a long way!
“Daddy’s Gonna Take Your Fuckin’ Car Away” made me cackle.
As an Angelo, pretty accurate 😂
Map of LA always reminded me of a lamb chop.
I laughed out loud at a couple of these jokes! Will watch!
As a former Angelino.... highly accurate! Right up there with the fact that all freeways in Los Angeles have be prefaced with "The" for some reason. LA is a pretty much where you go if you want to have the life leached out of you.
There should always be an easily accessible Richard Kind in every show…and in real life.
This was pretty GD funny. The perspective of a New Yorker on Los Angeles. I remember having that weird perspective myself when I moved here. Insane bits of truth hidden in even nuttier fabrications.
I work in downtown LA and I love it there. The idea that nobody goes there is kind of silly, hordes of people flow in every evening for entertainment and fun, and when we were looking for a place to buy we couldn't remotely afford any of the new apartments downtown.
I also love Los Angeles and have been here for over 20 years (after moving from New York for work) and wouldn't live anywhere else.
But this was hysterical. Even if there was only a kernel of truth in some of the jokes or they were based on outdated perceptions. Is it his delivery?
Certain things were spot on: the absurd use of helicopters for policing in the middle of the night when you're trying to sleep.
The fact that the mayor (and we have a great one right now) can do very little to actually run the place. It's run by the neighborhood representatives.
I was surprised that he actually knew a lot about that. He nailed the politics.
As for sense of community, that depends on the community you're in. I started sticking to the east side because the neighborhoods are cohesive and supportive and work to address problems.
Either way, I'm gonna definitely check out the series.
Until skid row is closed down, downtown wont properpy thrive.
@@GUITARTIME2024
You may be right, but it’s been there since the beginning of the century and downtown has certainly thrived on and off since then. Right now it’s beginning to boom again. Still, the location makes no sense. It’s mind-boggling that it’s still there.
L.A.: Suburbs in search of a city.
LA Metro has the highest light rail ridership of any system in the nation....
Not even true. New York has more
@@daltongalloway It's technically true; New York City's MTA is HEAVY rail, and the city will always be the undisputed champion of transit in the United States by a wide margin. Los Angeles does (or DID) have the highest light rail ridership in the country. I think San Diego took the title this year. L.A.'s transit has a lot of superlatives...2nd highest bus ridership in the nation, and the LONGEST light rail line in the WORLD. A lower percentage of Los Angelenos (10%) take transit daily to work than cities like Chicago (27%) and New York (55%!!) but overall it's a solid and growing system.
@@ItsScottJonesas soon as they finish the extension connecting the Hawthorne and Inglewood through LAX, it’ll be so much more convenient for me
And the longest, if I'm not mistaken
And half are defacating or screaming.
that Donald Surfing bit got me
I’m here for the comments about how Santa Monica, Culver City, West Hollywood and others on the Map are not part of City Of Los Angeles.
they are in LA county
@@yeflynneIt’s relevant because the map of Los Angeles is actually more full of gaps than this map shows. And some of the bougiest areas are not technically part of the city.
@@yeflynne If we're going by _county,_ tiny Cerritos and others would've been included.
@@yeflynne this is supposed to be a map of LA city, genius. Isn't that obvious?
@@yeflynne But he left out other parts that make up "greater LA" that are in the county and that people not from Los Angeles would consider as being "in LA" like Burbank and Pasadena.
I love maps, so I found this to be very funny!
Finally, someone pronounces Los Feliz correctly 😭 Everytime I hear “Los Feelehz” it makes me wanna shove kitchen shears into my eardrums
L.A to the world 🌎😂
John Mulaney is a genius, consistently fresh and funny!
The brilliant thing about this is that when you picture LA in your mind, its probably not actually LA. Its a different suburb.
Loved this live! Hope it returns.
This show was amazing! Do it again!!!!
If he was gonna include cities like Beverly Hills and Santa Monica might aswell include all of LA County.
I love that John’s whole personality before his scandal was New York and now it’s L.A.
I had to look up what you're talking about, and it's not much of a "scandal.' (Assuming you're talking about the timing of his relationship with Olivia Munn?)
@@RonReynolds mulaney seems to have way more parasocial fans than any other comedian, must suck
@@mmmmmmmmmmmmfoodWhat are you talking about? That has nothing to do with the comments you're replying to.
@@RonReynolds You don't think obsessing over the man's married life is a little parasocial? I mean for 90% of other comedians something like a divorce isn't really going to be a sort of 'scandal' like it was for John Mulaney.
@mmmmmmmmmmmmfood Ah, gotcha. I thought you were referring to my comment specifically and I was quite confused, since I said I had to look up the "scandal" myself.
Early morning foggy brain strikes again!
I have never been to L.A. but lots of the crime series I love take place in the areas Mulaney is talking about. His fun tout is helping me locate all the places the heroes and and criminals live. Thanks J.M.
Fun fact, my Dad was born in 1960 in Frogtown LA (also called Elysian Valley) and his best friend’s Dad growing up was one of the two Hillside Stranglers😭✋ The way I WISH I was making this shit up but I am indeed not 🥲✋
My mom was a teacher and one of her students lost his sister to the Hillside Strangler. She was only 15 and had been shopping at Eagle Rock Plaza.
Classic, ending on ‘and’. Love it.
I love how the SGV is a part of LA county but we're not on the map lol
It’s like South Bay, east los and maybe even oc on top of sgv don’t exist. Some scripted content push by la transplants 😟
We paid him off to stay out of it 😂
This is referring to LA City and the cities that are surrounded by LA City like BH and Santa Monica
This is hilarious. Mulaney has upped his game considerably!
That description of Beverly Hills is so on point.
John Mulaney is a National Treasure🤗
As a native here, we like it as much as we hate it, and it’s as cool as much as it sucks. That makes no sense just like us 😅
4:02 very brave
First I've heard of this L.A.! Sounds like an interesting place 😀
This was fantastic hahaha
I can't imagine the jokes if he expanded this map to cover all of Los Angeles county.
Palmdale getting all the strays
You can tell John is a fairly recent transplant, by the way he pronounces "Los Feliz". 🤣
YES
Get this man in front of some more maps - NYC, Chicago, DC, SF, Paris, London, Tokyo, Moscow… 🌎
John Mullaney has to do Toronto. If he thought L.A. traffic was a nightmarish hellscape, he’s in for a treat. Toronto took what Peter Ustinov said about it being like New York…run by the Swiss as a compliment, when it was anything but. Y’see Peter Ustinov hated being in New York, and he definitely *HATED* the Swiss.
4 of those "neighborhoods" are actually separate cities (Beverly Hills, San Fernando, Santa Monica, and West Hollywood) and are not part of L.A.
Hey yeah, how come they get to be on there when Palos Verdes and Torrance aren't!
@@ashproductions Right, exactly!
Mulaneys comedy in the past never hit with me but this was A+!
I was so excited to see what he was going to say about us and then I realized that the entire south bay (torrance, gardena, palos verdes, etc) was a big blank space. Lol I forgot that we're not part of LA city limits, just LA County! lololol
Please bring this show back!!!!
as someone who has to look at this map pretty much every day for work, funny bit. My only issue is that Santa Monica, Culver City, Bever Hills, San Fernando, and West Holly Wood are all actual cities that surround and are surrounded by Los Angeles.....so the map looks more like a broken chicken wing with holes in it. Also the fact my neighborhood is actually mentioned is a plus
This is why im from LA when people out of state ask and i can say im from gardena if u from la cause most people have NO idea where gardena is
would it be possible to get rid of the echo?
Fun fact: neither Beverly Hills nor West Hollywood are a part of the city of Los Angeles. They are their own individual cities that are part of the county of Los Angeles.
file under basic facts
no one cares, this is comedy, not a documentary
I care. Thanks!
Which rather perfectly speaks to the idea that no one really knows the city boundaries, and lumps the county in with the city all the time.
finally a fuckin map that explains these weird terms LA people use that think it's secondhand for everyone
Haha this is great. I lived in LA for 3 years (Beverly Hills & Santa Monica), this is totally spot-on.
Also, two French-Canadians born men were mayors of L.A. in the XIXth century : Damien Marchesseault and Prudent Beaudry.
You’re probably the only person ever to attempt Roman numerals when not referring to a Super Bowl or Pope
Lots of French speakers use Roman numerals when referring to centuries. La XXth siecle and so forth.
I'd love to hear the map monologue for NYC!
That’s because they slapped some islands together and was like “you gotta see this shit”
😂 so funny, so true.
Weird to see all the other cities in LA metro area not listed. This was a really helpful map. :)
Major Colbert vibes
first time I have ever laughed at anything John Mulaney has said lol. and I dont mean that as a read, His comedy has just never been my taste, but he is clearly good at what he does and now I see it because this was hilarious. Mainly because its all so entirely too true lol
Where’s the San Gabriel Valley? I don’t see it anywhere on the list huh???
Having grown up in North Orange County, so much of this hits and kills me.
And then the Mayor calls in. Amazing.
is that keith from SMOSH laughing so hard??
Only people not from los angeles consider all of that Los Angeles lol
Well that’s La city not La county but yeah whites
The only joke I actually laughed at was the Beach Boys one. "Daddy's gonna take your fucking car away" 😂😂😂
Me too.
I did not realize how little of L.A. there is east of DTLA. I thought ran to the 710 freeway or something. But gosh, does it cover the Valley and the Foothills!
This is very Reminiscent of Kids in the Hall.
Am I hearing Letterman's laugh?
Whoever it is, it is super annoying!
He was a guest on one of the episodes so probably!
@@Jake-iw4buTell me you don’t know who Lettermen is without telling me ;-)
Johns words are soft yet they cut like light sabers
Great stuff.