D day

This was LA at its most kinetic: crowded platforms, packed train cars, jammed bike racks

Passengers stream out of the shiny new Wilshire/La Cienega D line station on Friday
Welcome to the future, at the corner of La Cienega and Wilshire

Driving just got even dumber, Los Angeles. On Friday, the D line extension made its very first run from Union Station to the intersection of La Cienega and Wilshire in 21 minutes, a trip impossible to make in a personal vehicle during rush-hour traffic. Instead, you can do what it felt like everyone in the city was doing this weekend: zipping below the cars to emerge, wide-eyed and iPhone-snapping, into three stunning new subway stations deposited like tiny jewel boxes along Wilshire. This is only phase one; by the end of next year, a total of six new stations will be open all the way to Westwood, just in time for UCLA to host 2028’s Olympians and Paralympians. And yes, to answer your most pertinent logistical question: there is now a subway station in Beverly Hills — and a second one will open adjacent to Rodeo Drive next year.

Earlier Friday morning, the VIPs got to ride a special train into the Fairfax station bringing what Julia Wick described as high school reunion energy — from certain angles it looks like Antonio Villaraigosa, Eric Garcetti, and Karen Bass are attempting some kind of mayoral cheerleader pyramid — but many only stayed long enough for the photo op. The true leaders were back underground with the people the moment the subway opened for service at 12:30 p.m. But as they shuffled between local news hits, I did I hear some of Metro’s infamously car-brained board members wondering out loud if they might, in fact, be able to use this very train to get to their afternoon meetings. This, plus this week’s completely coincidental arrival of the last oil shipment from the Middle East, was proof to me that the opening of these three new stations had already started to truly rewire the region.

Popping up at Fairfax

The ribbon cutting was held atop the parking garage of the Petersen Automotive Museum, but don't despair too much about this; as I wrote when the Petersen opened, this was simply marking another milestone towards the moment when all cars will only be found in museums. Endlessly charming emcee Jerry O'Connell — he was in another movie about a train... what were they doing in that one again... oh well, can't remember — talked about riding the 20 bus to Southwestern Law School before he dropped out. He told me he would have taken the D from his home that morning if it had already been operating. Ed Begley Jr. arrived by 217 bus, of course, and Metro superfan Kenny Uong delivered a heartfelt speech introducing CEO Stephanie Wiggins, who I spotted later in the day wearing her Ride the D shirt as she walked into All Season Brewing to a chorus of jubilant Metro employees chanting "Ride the D! Ride the D!"

And the shirts. The shirts. I tried, at various times, to estimate many passengers were wearing Metro's most internationally famous merch. Always at least 5 percent; sometimes closer to 15 percent. And... they're still wearing them! As I took the train downtown Saturday just before a Dodger game I saw just as many people wearing Ride the D shirts as I saw dressed in Dodgers attire.

During the opening, a heavily Instagrammed banner unfurled out a window above the La Brea station reading "Send D pics" — to where? not even a hashtag? — but as I moved back and forth between the three new stations for three hours, I realized the day was impossible to capture in static photos. This was LA at its most kinetic: crowded platforms, packed train cars, jammed bike racks. For my last trip between stations I opted for a Metro Bike from one of the three new bike share hubs. Rolling into Fairfax where Gary Baseman, dressed as a short order cook, was standing outside the Googie-glorious Johnie's, finally reopened as both an art space and actual diner with lines around the block, I had a thought: are these new stations going to be big enough for a city that's finally been set in motion? 🔥

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Art party

The skies above Los Angeles State Historic Park at yesterday's Kite Festival

LA28 finally announced (some) details for the Cultural Olympiad. With no previous mention of the required concurrent arts festival anywhere on its website — aside from the 2024 announcement of chair Maria Arena Bell, who departed last year — LA28 put out a press release this week promising free public performances region-wide and a "digital calendar and mapping tool of events" that would outlast the games. Attendees of a splashy event at Disney Hall's Blue Ribbon Garden on Thursday found the long-awaited launch thin on specifics. "This is the big announcement?" one cultural leader wondered. LA28 chair (still, for now!) Casey Wasserman was there and delivered remarks alongside CEO Reynold Hoover and new Cultural Olympiad SVP Dwayne Jones — a recent leadership shift Torched reported first. Three LA28 board members are now leading a new arts steering committee: Maria Hummer-Tuttle, Marc Stern, and Gene Sykes. Executive director Nora Halpern told Reuters her team has met with 300 cultural institutions to plan programming. While the city and county released a detailed strategic arts plan, LA28 is still lagging with just about two years to go. 🦋

There's still no real human rights strategy for the World Cup, anti-trafficking advocates continue to warn, with only few weeks to go. A document posted by LA's World Cup host committee on May 1 has "no analysis of documented human rights risks, no prevention strategy, no operational planning, and no commitments of resources," reads a statement from the Sunita Jain Anti-Trafficking Initiative. Despite FIFA's requirements that every host city must have a human rights plan in place ahead of next month, most have not released a plan — and none have dedicated funding in place for prevention and outreach efforts.

How are we going to evacuate tourists in an emergency again? Attending this week's UCLA Urban Firestorms: Risk and Resilience summit was eye-opening, to say the least. In his keynote, Alex Hall, director of UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, talked about the urgent need to name severe wind events the way we name hurricanes in order to convey danger and risk. That kind of interagency regional coordination, plus a focus on multilingual emergency alert messaging, should have been key to have in place ahead of our megaevent era. One research paper on car-free evacuation presented Thursday — which Torched has shared before — used a survey conducted through the Transit app to ask riders how they moved around the city during the 2025 fires. Most ended up getting rides from other people, which can't be the plan when millions of tourists are here without vehicle access.

More essential reads

“Today feels hopeful about how we all take care of Los Angeles”
The CIP is really about building a whole new city
The FIFA countdown
Fans seemed to think all LA’s official World Cup fan zones would be free. They’re not
TIME TO PLAY

🆓 LA's 100 free watch parties at city parks have been announced and gathered on a lovely new website. That's the second actually good city website this week!

📆 The Discover LA calendar is another great resource for planning your World Cup adventures all over the region, with more events being added all the time

🏨 In March I reported on soft hotel demand for World Cup host cities. Well, new numbers are out, and they're just as underwhelming. LA is seeing the cancelation of "thousands" of downtown hotel rooms by FIFA with 65 to 70 percent of reporting properties saying rooms are booking "below expectations." Also in video form: the myth of the World Cup tourism boom

📃 Love seeing everyone share this ProPublica story about cities making bad deals with FIFA. I also want to point out (again) that we don't know the deal LA made because the contract is not subject to public records requests 🦋

💸 Liz Chou reports that one third of El Pueblo merchants can't make rent and many blame the city for failing to keep the property clean. This really makes me wonder what the city is planning as this becomes the center of World Cup tourism

🇺🇸 Another LA hospitality house has been announced for the World Cup: U.S. Soccer will set up in Venice June 11 to 26

🏆 Why is LA also having an opening ceremony for the World Cup? On the other hand, Alanis Morrissette. June 12

🚨 FEMA is restoring some jobs in order to staff the World Cup

🤑 Even Donald Trump wouldn't pay $1000 for a World Cup ticket

🪧 SoFi workers threatening to strike have elevated their demands to the state, where they've filed a complaint with Attorney General Rob Bonta

⚽ Nike's been staging nighttime soccer games around the city in their lead up to June, including one under the Sixth Street Bridge. Speaking of: when will the new park under the bridge open?

🏟️ Expo Park creates a new foundation to make much-needed improvements ahead of 2028

✈️ Long Beach Airport is also getting a glow-up ahead of 2028

📝 LA's city council passes a motion requiring the service agreement with LA28 to be settled within 14 days 🦋

🌭 The LA County Fair opened this weekend. As I wrote in 2024, the fair itself was moved to the spring due to heat, yet the Pomona Fairplex will now host Olympic cricket in the middle of the summer in 2028

🚌 Torrance is offering (very limited) bus service to some Dodger games this summer

🌀 A monster El Niño is brewing just in time for us to host the World Cup and Super Bowl

🏁 Save the date for the D Line Dash on Tuesday, May 19 — I'll be waiting at the finish line
I've seen buses advertising the World Cup in LA — Metro is a sponsor, so this makes sense — but there are very few visual signals that we're about to host the world's most-watched sporting event, aside from the signage outside the fan zones I wrote about last week. The host committee shared this image showing two World Cup streetlight banners but I haven't seen these up anywhere in the city. If you spot some evidence we are, in fact, hosting the World Cup, let me know!

What Torched subscribers are reading, D line edition

Let's get rolling

It's time to fix downtown's "ouchies"

As we wait to put the P in CIP, advocates are still trying to draw attention to the deplorable state of our sidewalks, particularly in downtown. Come to Spring Roll, a "bar crawl with a purpose," visiting three DTLA bars to raise money for the important work of the Boo-Boo Bandage Brigade, which I wrote about last year. That's Tuesday, May 19 — here's a flyer to share — and I'll be the roving emcee!

🕶️ Your secrets are safe with me. Email: Simply reply to this one. Text: 323 207 5607‬ — save it in your phone as Torched Tips. Or Signal: awalkerinla.99

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