Fnord wrote:
You can't really get anywhere interesting without your own transportation, unless you want to take more than twice the time on Public Transportation.
True, but to be fair, you're going to spend thrice the time sitting in traffic on the 405 or the 10.

But yes, cars are a necessity, and preferably smaller cars since a lot of parts of LA have rather narrow streets.
Fnord wrote:
Be prepared to be confronted on the street by aggressive people for no particular reason. The tweakers and homeless schizophrenics are especially notorious for this.
I encounter homeless people quite a lot whenever I'm either staying in, working in or just visiting LA, but they're never more aggressive than "hey man, can you spare a dollar?". In Venice Beach the street vendors can get a little pushy, but I encountered far more aggressive street people in NYC than I ever did in LA. Matter of perspective, I guess.
Fnord wrote:
Sirens, gunshots, loud music, and traffic noise are a normal part of L.A. Living. Learn to deal with it.
It's a loud city, so be a little prepared for that. Like NYC, a lot of it has been gentrified over the last couple decades, so don't equate gunshots with being inherently unsafe. I've even been through Compton a few times
Fnord wrote:
"The Happiest Place On Earth" really isn't.
What? Disneyland? In Orange County? But they have pineapple ice cream.

Fnord wrote:
Everybody seems to be on the hustle; shameless self-promotion is common, and not just in Show Business.
It's a business city, of course everyone's on the hustle, but it's nowhere near as bustly as New York. It's much more laid back, but still pretty fast-paced.
Additionally, LA has some of the best clubs, shops, restaurants and nightlife on the West Coast and the arts are still very much thriving. As a musician, there are tons of great venues and buttloads of awesome underground bands. There's no other city in California which has the kind of art scene LA has and that's why I dig it so much, flaws and all.