Downwardly Mobile myturn piece by Francie Brown
Courtesy Francie Brown
L.A. Story: The author and her son.
MY TURN

This Is Hollywood?

In the entertainment industry, we're used to feast or famine. But this time, things are different.

 

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I think of our street as a bellwether in the great sprawl of Los Angeles's middle class, a canary in our collective coal mine—as Santa Lucia goes, so goes the country. An ordinary block of ordinary people, mostly married, with children, well-paying jobs and nothing-special sorts of homes, it's a Gap block, not a Nordstrom block; a Target block more than a Wal-Mart block; a block that likes Starbucks by the cup but buys store brands by the pound.

It's L.A., so nearly everybody works in the entertainment industry and always has. It's one-gig-at-a-time work: a movie in the fall, pilots in spring. When you strike it lucky, a series will go a few seasons or a feature film for six months instead of the usual three. Employment here has always been serial, and the shooting seasons have a rhythm our families have grown up dancing to. While we're accustomed to dealing with feast or famine, things are a little different these days.

My husband, Roger, is in digital effects; I'm a dialect coach. My next-door neighbor teaches acting. Across the street are a set medic and his wife, who works for a big production company. Diagonally across from us is the personal assistant to a filmmaker. Down a few doors is a television technician. Our babysitter is the daughter of a first assistant director. Here you can find a props master, a set decorator, an animator, an art director, an electrician, a grip.

On our narrow street of once-modestly-priced, 1950s cottage homes, there are 23 kids, 16 of them between the ages of 5 and 9. After-school wars are waged in the street on tiny little bikes filled with light-saber-wielding, Nerf-gun-toting speed demons. In the setting sunlight, mothers in their 30s and 40s, home from work, stand guard on the corner, drinking coffee and sometimes $4 wine from Trader Joe's, yelling "Car!" when an unwary commuter approaches. Where I grew up, the moms watched from the front stoops and wine was reserved for the racier sacraments, but otherwise it's a lifestyle familiar to our mothers—albeit a little nicer around the edges.

Most passersby will only see the idyllic scene that is our street. They won't hear that the conversations, more and more, are about how we'll make next month's mortgage payments and, if we can't, whether we could afford to rent somewhere in the neighborhood so the kids could keep going to their good public school.

Gone are the days of planning vacations, plotting tiny additions to our tiny homes, weighing whether tumbled marble in the shower really does raise resale values. Instead, we talk about how many times we can plunge that toilet that keeps getting blocked before we're forced to call a budget-breaking plumber, whether you could really learn to repatch a roof from a book at Home Depot, how long we can keep the family dog going with the price of her medications.

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Member Comments

  • Posted By: dmb12345 @ 04/07/2009 10:08:26 PM

    you buy japanese cars don't you - have no sympathy for the mid-west

  • Posted By: dmb12345 @ 04/07/2009 10:05:27 PM

    you are third world wit or without UHC

  • Posted By: dmb12345 @ 04/07/2009 10:03:36 PM

    He is still right- cali is as artificial as the breast in the women there

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