Localize it, with Jeff Weiss

The Culture Journalist - A podcast by The Culture Journalist - Thursdays

Los Angeles native Jeff Weiss is no stranger to the heartbreak of watching the newspaper the shaped your understanding of the city where you grew up, and the people and institutions within it that are worth fighting for, become a shell of its former self. Three years ago, when a group of Republican-donor investors purchased the LA Weekly and laid off almost the entirety of its editorial staff, the writer and editor was so rattled by the gutting of his favorite alternative weekly that he organized a boycott of the publication. Then he teamed up with a group of local journalists and editors—many of them, like Jeff himself, former contributors of the alternative culture bible—to start a print magazine called The LAnd.Focused on telling local culture and politics stories from a distinctively Los Angeles perspective, the publication is celebrating the release of its third issue this summer. Fittingly with the events that birthed it, the theme this go-around is the future of Los Angeles. Jeff, the magazine’s editor-in-chief, wrote over 6,000 words about how a corrupt and racist police force, vampiric real-estate developers, and a bloated and ineffectual local bureaucracy prevent the city for actually living up to his reputation as one of the most progressive cities in the world; The Culture Journalist’s Andrea Domanick, another former LA Weekly contributor, reported a series of interviews with local venue owners about what a post-pandemic Los Angeles nightlife might look like. And there’s also a great piece about the future of the city’s dim sum scene.Over the past 15 years, Jeff has developed something of a cult following for his imagistic writing style and tireless advocacy of indigenous Los Angeles culture—both through his rap-centric POW site, which he has expanded to include a record label since he started it in 2005, and through writing for places like the Washington Post, Los Angeles Magazine, and The Ringer. On this week’s episode, we talk about the stories that don’t get told when local media disappears, Weiss’ ongoing coverage of rapper Drakeo the Ruler’s legal battle, and why the place where you live will always be a much better source of meaning and inspiration than the Internet. This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit theculturejournalist.substack.com/subscribe