Lucha VaVOOM
Photograph: Jakob N. Layman | Lucha VaVOOM
Photograph: Jakob N. Layman

The best things to do in Los Angeles this week

Find concerts, screenings, performances and more of our critics’ picks with the best events and things to do in Los Angeles this week

Gillian Glover
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If we could write the rules of living in Los Angeles this would be our No. 1, always at the top of our list: When you live in this city, there’s no excuse for boredom just because it’s a weeknight. There are hundreds of things to do in Los Angeles each week, whether you hit the beach at sunset or go for a morning bike ride, or catch a concert or a comedy show—and that’s really only scratching the surface. Well, we don’t make the rules, but we will provide you with plenty of ideas for your next free weeknight right here. Now go out and tackle these things to do in L.A. this week.

We curate an itinerary of the city’s best concerts, culture and cuisine, every week, just for you. This week, craft your own cheeseburger crawl in Pasadena—we suggest starting with Pie ’n Burger—then get a head start on Mardi Gras at the Original Farmers Market. Meanwhile, Slamdance Film Festival makes L.A. its new home for showcasing independent filmmakers, and Phantogram and Mary J. Blige are our concert picks of the week. Plus, it’s your last chance to see LACMA’s Mapping the Infinite: Cosmologies Across Cultures and CAAM’s World Without End: The George Washington Carver Project before they close this weekend. 

The best events in L.A. this week

  • Things to do

This now-closed, critically acclaimed Laotian cuisine pop-up is back again in Hollywood for a few weeks. (Back in 2023, we gave Yum Sະlut a glowing four-star review.) After decamping back to his hometown of Washington, D.C., chef-owner Tharathip Soulisak is visiting L.A. and serving a menu of familiar favorites like crispy rice salad, sukiyaki and khao soi out of Hollywood’s My Lai Kitchen for two weekends, with his last day of service falling on March 3. Yum Sະlut will be open inside 7501 W Sunset Blvd on Mondays and Fridays (3:30–9pm) and weekends (11am–9:30pm).

  • Music
  • Rock and indie
  • South Park

Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees Heart are stopping at the Crypto.com Arena to perform their classic hits, including catchy “Magic Man” and “Barracuda.” The hard rock band, one of the first of its kind to have a frontwoman, has been going strong for half a century and still puts on a terrific live set. Brit new wave rockers Squeeze (“Cool for Cats,” “Up the Junction”) open the show.

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  • Shopping
  • Pop-up shops
  • Culver City

K-pop fans can get a chance to meet LISA—of superstar girl group BLACKPINK and, now, White Lotus Season 3 fame—at this pop-up celebrating her debut solo album, Alter Ego. Just 50 lucky guests will be selected randomly for an exclusive meet-and-greet with the rapper/actress/model. But even if you don’t make the cut, the pop-up should still be worth a visit, as it brings the new LP to life with immersive visuals, exclusive merchandise (including some only-in-L.A. items) and giveaways.

  • Things to do
  • Pasadena

Artisan doughnut chain Sidecar officially ushers in its new Pasadena location with this community celebration. Swing by the Arroyo Parkway shop on Tuesday, March 4 (4–7pm), to shop from local vendors impacted by the Eaton Fire, pose for a custom caricature and participate in raffles (proceeds benefit fire relief). Of course, you can also stock up on some doughnuts, including Sidecar’s limited-edition strawberry rose flavor (named in honor of the City of Roses); a portion of proceeds from each sale supports fire relief organizations.

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  • Cajun
  • Los Feliz

While we don't have the luxury of indulging in Bourbon Street’s hot mess of a Mardi Gras, we have the next best thing: the Mardi Gras Feast at Little Dom’s. For three nights leading up to Fat Tuesday, chef Brandon Boudet is serving up a sumptuous menu from his native New Orleans with all your favorite Cajun and Creole temptations. Think shrimp, chicken and andouille gumbo, oyster po’boys and jambalaya rice balls with creole mustard. For dessert, indulge in raspberry beignets or a slice of king cake from pastry chef Ann Kirk.

  • Diners
  • West Hollywood

It’s best known here as Mardi Gras, but in many places around the world, Fat Tuesday is better known as Pancake Tuesday. SoCal’s iconic diner chain Norm’s is getting in on the action, offering those who sign up for their rewards program a short stack of signature hotcakes for just $1 all day long at all locations—perfect for getting your fill if you prefer breakfast food to Cajun fare. 

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  • Music
  • Pop
  • Hollywood

Best known as the brother of pop sensation Billie Eilish, Finneas Baird O’Connell is his sister’s most trusted collaborator, serving as a producer and cowriter of much of her music. While he doesn’t have the voice of Eilish, Finneas does have a self-aware music persona that he employs on his solo catalog of jaunty pop anthems and moody ballads. Catch him at the Palladium this week.

  • Things to do
  • Concerts
  • Highland Park

In the weeks since we lost David Lynch, there have been several screenings of his inimitable films at theaters across the city. But almost as integral to Lynch’s work as his trippy visuals are his dreamy, otherworldly soundtracks. To that end, the Lodge Room is hosting a musical tribute where two dozen local performers will take the stage to perform their takes on Lynchian favorites alongside a house band. Expect the eponymous Roy Orbison track “In Dreams” (as heard in Blue Velvet) to be on the setlist, and Twin Peaks’ “Falling” by Julee Cruise is a safe bet as well.

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  • Things to do
  • Literary events
  • Downtown Santa Monica

Did you resolve to read more this year? Enter Reading Rhythms, a happy alternative for the literary-inclined. Billed as a “reading party,” the event series started in NYC and got noticed by The New York Times and Good Morning America for its refreshing spin on book clubs: You bring a book of your own choosing to a central location, then alternate between peaceful reading time and chatting with fellow readers about what you’re reading. Reading Rhythms is popping up again at Espresso Cielo, so bring your current read and head to the popular coffee shop.

  • Things to do
  • Performances
  • South Park
  • Recommended

Now under the stewardship of only one of its cofounders, Liz Fairbairn, the former Lucha VaVoom brings its unique mix of sexo y violencia to the Mayan with this exuberant spectacle. Fill up on tequila and tamales while you watch Aztec dancers and luchadores. This time around, it’s a March Madness edition of masked Mexican wrestling, burlesque stripteasing, amazing aerialists, live music and comedic commentating. 

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  • Breweries
  • Hawthorne

Crack open a cold one for a good cause at Common Space Brewery this week. Over 190 breweries have pitched in to the We Love LA campaign—crafting their own special brews to support the city—with over $275,000 committed so far to the United Way of Greater Los Angeles’ Wildfire Response Fund. Come try Common Space’s new We Love LA Wildfire Relief Lager, which will be available both canned and on draft, as you shop limited-edition merch and bid on exclusive items and L.A. experiences in the silent auction. Live DJs and food trucks will be on hand to keep the both family- and dog-friendly party going.

  • Things to do
  • Late openings
  • Downtown Financial District
  • Recommended

Stay past closing time to see a new side of the Central Library at this after-hours festival presented in part by LAist and the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. The halls will come to life with art, music, storytelling and poetry in the form of live performances, interactive installations and hands-on activities. The art deco landmark will host a dance opera, contemporary dance in the rotunda, a puppet show by Bob Baker Marionette Theater, sound installations by dublab, a photo booth, drawing classes, tarot readings, a screen-printing class, artist talks and more. You can even pick up some books to bring home with you at pop-ups from Angel City Press, Golden Apple Comics, Heavy Manners Library and Braille Institute. All in all, it sounds like a quintessentially L.A. night.

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  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Redondo Beach

Welcome in spring at this traditional Indian festival of colors with an L.A. twist; pelt those around you with colored powder while enjoying the surf and sand (just make sure you’re not attached to what you’re wearing). The event, located at Seaside Lagoon in Redondo Beach, also serves as a fundraiser for the L.A. chapter of the Association for India’s Development, which works on grassroots projects in India.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Redondo Beach

This beautiful, free festival celebrates the history and whimsy of the kite. Watch as hundreds take to the sky—you can buy a kite on the pier or bring your own. There will be contests for biggest kite, longest kite, best handmade kite, youngest kite flyer and youngest at heart. The fest culminates with a group kite-flying session on the sand. There’s also a slew of non-kite-related activities on the pier all day, including a hot-dog-on-a-stick-eating contest, a dance performance, martial arts demo, face painting and live music.

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  • Things to do
  • Chinatown

Participate in a 5K or 10K run or walk, a 2K dog walk, a kiddie run or a 20- or 50-mile bike ride that will take you along the L.A. River and through Griffith Park during this weekend-long Lunar New Year tradition in the heart of historic Chinatown (rescheduled from February). All courses start and end at Chinatown Central Plaza, which will host a concurrent, free family-friendly festival with a beer garden and live entertainment, if you want to celebrate without breaking a sweat. Don’t miss the weekend opening ceremony, with lion dancers and the traditional lighting of 100,000 firecrackers. Check the website for a detailed schedule of events.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Chinatown

In partnership with the Firecracker Run’s Paw’er Dog Walk, this second annual Lunar New Year celebration specifically caters to dogs and their owners. The Blossom Plaza event includes Year of the Snake–themed pet photography sessions and portraits, plus shopping, cultural activities and pet adoptions thanks to the Lovejoy Foundation. Entry is free, but if you opt for a PASS (Pawsitive Action Supporting Shelters), you get a swag bag and can help support local animal rescues.

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  • Art
  • Installation

The desert-spanning biennial is back, with premieres of site-specific works from about a dozen artists. For its fifth iteration, Desert X will once again stage outdoor installations across about 40 miles of the Coachella Valley from March 8 to May 11, 2025.

  • Things to do
  • Festivals
  • Orange County

Mark the annual gray whale migration from the shore with this festival, now in its 54th year, which offers a full weekend of marine-themed activities, educational exhibits, family-friendly entertainment, whale-watching excursions, marine conservation talks and a cardboard-boat-building contest and Dinghy Dash in Dana Point. Things kick off Friday with a sunset welcoming ceremony by members of the local Acjachemen Nation, followed by a reception with live music and food trucks. This year, instead of the traditional Festival of Whales Parade, there will be an inaugural Festival of Whales Carnival, complete with carnival rides, games, food and a beer garden with an ocean view. Park at Dana Hills High School (33333 Golden Lantern) and take a free shuttle to Lantern Bay Park.

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  • Attractions
  • Theme parks
  • Anaheim
  • Recommended

Disneyland’s already the happiest place on earth, but throw in a massive parkwide food festival—and now it’s somehow even happier. Running nearly two full months, the Disney California Adventure Food & Wine Festival takes over the state-themed park with about a dozen different culinary marketplaces with themes such as garlic, local breweries and wineries, peppers and food-truck fare. Just be sure you don’t forget the rides in all of the culinary whirlwind—fan-favorite Soarin’ will temporarily bring back its California-themed version just for the occasion.

  • Nightlife
  • Pop-ups and food events
  • South Park

Level 8’s Miami-meets-Copacabana rooftop bar, Golden Hour, is going all out this month, celebrating the spirit of Brazil through music, dance, cuisine and performances that bring the country’s Carnival celebration to Los Angeles. The poolside carousel bar will be decked out with lights, golden pineapples and chandeliers, and executive chef Richard Archuleta will be serving up a bold menu of flame-grilled steak, pork belly and mushroom skewers, churrasco cheesesteaks and griddled mortadella and picanha. Finish with something sweet: a churro from the interactive station. If you’re coming with a group, you can live large and book a cabana, complete with a pitcher of cocktails, for a 90-minute slot. Stop by for an opening-night party on March 1, where capoeira martial artists, samba and fire dancers, a live band and Brazilian DJs will all make an appearance.

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  • Movies
  • Downtown
  • Recommended

The masters of alfresco movie viewing are keeping outdoor screening season alive with their Fireside Films series, which ensures you’ll stay cozy, with outdoor heaters and a complimentary hot beverage with each ticket. Enjoy a steady stream of modern classics (The Dark KnightInterstellarlocal favorites (La La LandFriday) and recent releases (Wicked, The Substance), as well as The Office and Grey’s Anatomy marathons, screened atop LEVEL DTLA. Our top pick for this week? Newly christened best picture winner Anora, screening March 6, 7 and 8 (International Women’s Day).

  • Shopping
  • Pasadena
  • Recommended

Perhaps the Los Angeles area’s most iconic flea market, this event around the exterior of the Rose Bowl is staggeringly colossal—but what else would you expect from a 90,000-seat stadium? The sheer size and scale of this flea market means that it encompasses multitudes: new and old, handcrafted and salvaged, the cheap and the costly. On the second Sunday of each month, treasure hunt among the odd mix of vendors that populates the loop around the stadium—and don’t miss the rows and rows of old furniture, albums and vintage clothes and accessories that fill the adjacent parking lot.

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  • Things to do
  • Film events
  • Hollywood
  • Recommended

The iconic Hollywood Roosevelt hotel is honoring the spirit of L.A. with poolside screenings of some favorite films featuring the city. Tickets are super reasonable ($12), and all proceeds from sales will go toward wildfire relief efforts, specifically Baby2Baby, which provides essential resources to families in need. And don’t worry if it’s a chilly night: Towels, blankets and heaters are available on a first-come, first-served basis. Find the series running every Thursday night through the end of June.

  • Drama
  • Hollywood
  • Recommended

The Boy Who Lived lives on in a wizardly spectacle. As though it had cast a Shrinking Charm on itself, the formerly two-part epic is now a single magical show, albeit a long one—and one that our New York critic awarded five stars. The Tony winner for best play is finally bringing its touring production to Los Angeles, casting a spell over the Pantages Theatre through June.

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  • Things to do
  • Film events
  • Hollywood

For the Record, a live production company known for transforming the soundtracks of favorite filmmakers into immersive musicals, is back with its most impressive display yet: CineVita, the world’s largest Spiegeltent, will be FTR’s new home in Hollywood Park, next to SoFi Stadium. And it’s kicking things off with Tarantino: Pulp Rock, which celebrates 30 years of Pulp Fiction and re-creates memorable musical moments from the director’s Reservoir Dogs, Kill Bill, Inglourious Basterds and Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

  • Things to do
  • Play spaces
  • Anaheim

After popping up at D23 and Long Beach shopping center 2nd & PCH, themed mini-golf experience Pixar Putt has landed at its most logical home: the Pixar Place Hotel, close to California Adventure and its Pixar Pier. Putt your way through 18 themed holes and step into the stories of Pixar favorites including Toy Story, The Incredibles, Monsters, Inc., Finding Nemo, Coco, A Bug’s Life, Wall-E and Inside Out. Opening weekend is sold out, but don’t worry: The course will remain open through June 1.

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  • Performing arts space
  • Sierra Madre

The historic theater is putting on eight distinct cultural events to mark the Lunar New Year during this multi-week festival. Highlights include a performance of Patsy, a play about the first Asian American congresswoman, on January 25; a screening of the first-known Chinese American film, The Curse of Quon Gwon, on January 31; a live lion dance performance by the East Wind Foundation and a dragon puppet-making workshop by Bob Baker Marionette Theater on February 1; and, that evening, a program of new classical works inspired by the moon called “Lunar Harmonies.” Plus, from February 14 through March 9, Master Class finds Tim Dang directing Terrence McNally’s Tony-winning play about opera icon Maria Callas. See the full lineup of events here.

  • Puppet shows
  • Highland Park

The beloved puppet theater’s new show is actually a throwback to its beginnings. Something to Crow About was first created in 1959 for the Laguna Beach Festival of Art and gave Bob Baker Marionette Theater its signature style before the theater officially opened in 1963. The satirical show, which has been revitalized, uses farm animal characters to tell a story about Broadway. 

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  • Things to do
  • Markets and fairs
  • Downtown Arts District
  • Recommended

Every Sunday, you can find dozens of food vendors at this market at ROW DTLA, a Brooklyn import that boasts a mix of much-loved pop-ups and future foodie stars. Over a dozen new vendors joined the lineup this year: Feast on Afro-Caribbean cuisine from withBee, Lebanese street food from Teta, ice cream tacos from Sad Girl Creamery and more. Wash it all down at the family-friendly beer garden. You’ll also find shopping stalls selling everything from framed vintage ads to jewelry made locally with ethically sourced gemstones. Entry and the first two hours of parking are free.

  • Things to do
  • Rancho Palos Verdes/Rolling Hills Estates
  • Recommended

There’s nothing innately wintry about this hour-long Palos Verdes trail, yet its nine stellar installations are the most cosmically mesmerizing of the budding seasonal after-dark botanical garden shows that’ve come to blanket L.A. Astra Lumina, which debuted in 2022, returns to South Coast Botanic Garden with the same array of celestial-inspired, experiential displays.

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  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Boyle Heights

This exhibition of 21 soundstage-sized installations has floated its way into L.A. Don’t expect mere bundles of birthday balloons: Instead, these pieces range from room-filling ball pits to reflective LED tunnels to giant grabbable bubbles, all inspired by air in some way. The “Let’s Fly” edition of this touring show is a more fun experience than your run-of-the-mill made-for-Instagram attraction: Whether you’re bonking the bouncy “Ginjos,” pushing a charcoal-tipped sphere or getting swept up in a staticky whirlwind of balloons, there are some undeniably entertaining—and yes, very photogenic—hands-on scenes here.

  • Things to do
  • Games and hobbies
  • Century City

Everyone’s favorite murder mystery parody of true crime podcasts makes the jump from TV to IRL with this Only Murders in the Building escape room. Part of the Westfield Century City has flipped into a faux movie set, where you’ll be tasked with tracking down a missing film reel. You can expect hidden bookcase doorways and secret passageways mixed in with easter eggs from the Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez series.

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  • Art
  • Sculpture
  • West Hollywood

Austrian-born Helmut Lang walked away from fashion 20 years ago to focus solely on art. Now, thanks to the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, his first solo institutional exhibition is opening in Los Angeles—in the historic Schindler House, no less. Curated by Desert X founding artistic director and Frieze Projects curator Neville Wakefield, the show consists of a series of fist-like freestanding sculptures made with found or discarded materials that “both imagine the future and materialize the past.”

  • Art
  • Pasadena

On the 50th anniversary of the Norton Simon Museum, look back to when Simon took over management of the Pasadena Art Museum in 1975, then ahead to the museum’s exciting future at this retrospective exhibition. See rare photos from the museum’s archives, and learn about the history of its major acquisitions, exhibitions, building and gardens—which are currently undergoing a transformation.

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  • Art
  • Galleries
  • West Hollywood

The Los Angeles–based conceptual artist and now-retired CalArts educator is back with his first L.A. solo exhibition since 2019, debuting new works from his Numbers and Trees series. The colorful and complex works combine Plexiglas, watercolors and his signature numeric grid systems to depict the baobab trees Gaines photographed on a recent trip to Tanzania. The show opens February 19 with a conversation between the artist and LACMA’s Naima J. Keith, followed by an opening reception (6–8pm). The event is free, but reservations are recommended.

  • Art
  • Photography
  • Los Feliz
  • Recommended

Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House—centerpiece of Barnsdall Art Park and Los Angeles’ only UNESCO World Heritage Site—just might be the most stunning backdrop for an art exhibition. And, in this case, the home is the subject itself, too. L.A.-based photographer Ireland captured the intricate details of the Hollyhock House in 21 photographs on display throughout the onetime residence.

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  • Art
  • Film and video
  • Central LA

After its fall debut at Walt Disney Concert Hall as part of PST ART, artist Doug Aitken’s multimedia collab with the L.A. Phil and L.A. Master Chorale makes the jump to the Marciano Art Foundation. The free museum mounts the multichannel video piece in its massive theater gallery, which you can see during routine opening hours (Tue–Sat 11am–6pm). But look out for separate reservations for weekly (typically on Saturdays) live performances organized by both musical ensembles.

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  • Art
  • Downtown

This first-floor exhibition at the Broad features hundreds of German artist Joseph Beuys’s “multiples,” editioned objects (with a focus here on environmentalism) that stretched the meaning of sculpture. But the most notable aspect of this show extends beyond the gallery walls: Inspired by Beuys’s 7000 Eichen (7000 Oaks), the concurrent Social Forest: Oaks of Tovaangar will plant 100 native trees (primarily coast live oaks) in Elysian Park and at Kuruvungna Village Springs.

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  • Art
  • Installation
  • USC/Exposition Park

The Natural History Museum’s taxidermy dioramas turn a century old this year, and to celebrate the museum is reviving an entire hall of displays that’ve been dark for decades. Expect some fresh approaches to these assembled snapshots of the wilderness, including alebrijes made of recycled materials, a crystalline depiction of pollution and a tech-driven display of the L.A. River.

  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Miracle Mile

“Color in Motion” features close to 150 objects—pieces of technology, costumes, props and film posters—from the 1890s to today. Broken up into six themes, the exhibition looks at the connection between color, music and movement, like in early dance and animated shorts; decades of color technologies, from Technicolor processes and Disney’s women-led Ink & Paint Department to contemporary digital tools; monochrome silent films; the narrative role of color; and experimental works.

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  • Art
  • Installation
  • Little Tokyo
  • Recommended

This spectacular exhibition from the Icelandic–Danish artist brings a new series of optical installations to MOCA’s Little Tokyo location. Don’t let the reflective, colorful pieces fool you into thinking this is some run-of-the-mill “immersive” exhibit: Olafur Eliasson’s works invite you to admire the everyday miracles of physics that shape how we see the world.

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  • Movies
  • Documentary
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended

A story of persistence in Palestine finds voice in a deeply personal documentary, which just won the Oscar for best documentary feature.

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