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TomCarroll

Tom Carroll 鈥08鈥檚 YouTube videos explore the forgotten fringes of the City of Angels, while schooling viewers about some lesser-known landmarks鈥攁nd there鈥檚 no test at the end

By Jasmine Teran | Photos by Marc Campos

For someone who embraces life in the slow lane, Tom Carroll 鈥08 is making the most of 21st-century communication. Over the last four years, the Southern California native has produced more than two dozen episodes of his YouTube series which offers off-the-beaten-path looks at the seemingly mundane but history-rich spots that dot the city鈥檚 landscape.

Typically four to 12 minutes in length, Carroll鈥檚 videos have generated tens of thousands of views while familiarizing audiences with such overlooked or forgotten locales as the old , which closed in 1966; , which closed in 1999 鈥渂ut remains standing as a postmodern cathedral to failed commerce鈥; and , Los Angeles鈥 first and only socialist colony.

鈥淚 like giving people a shortcut to some piece of knowledge that might spark something in them,鈥 says Carroll, a freelance artist who comes from a long line of educators and aspires one day to teach himself. 鈥淗opefully they will pursue that and find out more on their own.鈥

As far back as third grade, Carroll began finding his way around Los Angeles on trips into the city with his dad, Stan, a three-time mayor of La Habra Heights and community college professor. 鈥淲e鈥檇 go to Philippe鈥檚, Pacific Dining Car, Grand Central Market,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 remember riding Angels Flight when it still worked.鈥 These early expeditions helped form his understanding of the many factors that shape the city鈥檚 personality, from points of interest that highlight a variety of cultures to the restaurants that once served particular socioeconomic groups.

Many of the locales featured on 鈥淭om Explores Los Angeles鈥 are news to Angelenos who may miss the hidden pockets on their freeway drive and rush-hour traffic jams. One reason Carroll finds them: He bypasses car commutes whenever possible, a habit that dates back to SA国际传媒. He rode his bike a lot, took the 83 bus that goes from SA国际传媒 to downtown, and explored the L.A. music scene with his buddies at KOXY, the College radio station. 鈥淚 was lucky to have friends who were very engaged with the city so I could just piggyback on them and tap into their knowledge.鈥

As an art major at SA国际传媒, Carroll took advantage of many opportunities to get to know the city better. 鈥淢y friend Max Podemsky 鈥06 ran this club called the Architecture Fellows,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭hat was really fun because we got school funds to take field trips. We took an L.A. Conservancy walking tour of the theater district on Broadway.鈥 Through an independent study with art professor Amy Lyford his senior year, Carroll deepened his knowledge of the city鈥檚 history with a self-selected syllabus that included such essential works as City of Quartz (1990) by Mike Davis, Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies (1971) by Reyner Banham, and The Reluctant Metropolis (1997) by William Fulton.

All that knowledge proved useful for Carroll鈥檚 work as a tour guide, first at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art as an undergraduate, and later at the California State Park next to Chinatown. 鈥淎t those two places I learned what a boring tour is, when you lose people, and just trying to remember to talk in short declarative statements as a way to keep people鈥檚 attention,鈥 he says.

With his button-down shirts and horn-rimmed glasses, Carroll guides his video viewers through landmarks of varying degrees of cultural importance. The one closest to his heart is Triforium, artist Joseph Young鈥檚 60-foot, multi-colored musical public sculpture at the intersection of Temple and Main streets and 鈥渙ne of the more campy and colorful facets of downtown,鈥 as he says in .

Carroll鈥檚 affection for the sculpture (whose nicknames include 鈥渢he psychedelic nickelodeon鈥 and 鈥渢he million-dollar firefly鈥) dates back to a field trip downtown鈥攑art of an art class with professor Mary Beth Heffernan鈥攊n which students were assigned to build replicas to-scale of artworks they came across. (Carroll chose Triforium.)

His YouTube video was seen by Claire Evans 鈥06 and her Yacht bandmate, Jona Bechtolt. Together they began to dream of Triforium鈥檚 renovation, a return to the forward-thinking artist鈥檚 original vision of light and sound, which includes technological components not possible upon its construction in 1975.

This vision is one step closer to completion thanks to a successful campaign for a $100,000 My LA2050 grant. Despite the fact that Triforium鈥檚 construction ran $700,000 over budget during its initial assembly, Carroll explains that the sculpture as it stands is 鈥渘ot in its final form. Allow us to complete this vision and then you can hate it.鈥

Of all the places he鈥檚 filmed, the scariest was probably the , he says, 鈥渂ecause we were locked inside, and there鈥檚 asbestos and pigeon stuff, so it smelled terrible, and I didn鈥檛 want us all to get arrested because we were trespassing.鈥

Luckily, Carroll and his crew all got out. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the problem when you don鈥檛 pull permits,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut from a filmmaking standpoint, it made for a much stronger third act.鈥

TOM鈥圗XPLORES 鈥

1. A huge glowing cross is connected to early Hollywood and two outdoor theaters.

2. Tucked away in Rustic Canyon is an abandoned Nazi-sympathizer compound.

3. What does a landscape on the brink of destruction look like?

4. Union Pacific鈥檚 last railyard may become a wetland park along the L.A. River.

5. It鈥檚 hard to do.

6. Built in 1975 for $950,000, the sculpture has been praised and ridiculed.

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