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Arts & Entertainment

Best things to do this weekend in Los Angeles and Southern California: January 9-11

A person in a polar bear costume runs toward the water from the beach alongside a group of people in bathing suits, ranging from young children to middle-aged adults.
Take the Polar Bear Plunge... if you dare.
(
Courtesy Annenberg Community Beach House
)

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If you’re looking for fire anniversary events (many of which continue through the weekend), check out our roundup here.

We’re continuing with our staff L.A. resolutions, and Associate Editor Anthony Schneck has on his list some old and new adventures for 2026. First, it’s to have a martini at Musso and Frank (despite the touristy rep!), then it’s a trip to a Grand Ole Echo night at The Echo for some country music vibes. Later in the year, he’s excited to watch World Cup matches at the boisterous fan villages.

Senior K-12 education reporter Mariana Dale is trying not to take our beautiful landscape for granted this year; she hopes to spot an octopus at the tidepools after lucking out seeing a bat star and a colorful nudibranch during the last king tide at White Point tidepools in San Pedro. She also plans a valiant return to Eaton Canyon once the damaged trails begin to reopen.

Our friends at Licorice Pizza have tons of new music on their 2026 to-do list; this weekend, Mike Garson wraps up this three-night Bowie tribute residency at the Sun Rose with a rotating cast of all-stars, including Billy Corgan, Chad Smith, Jake Wesley Rogers, Judith Hill, Luke Spiller and Licorice Pizza’s own all-star Carmine Rojas. Friday and Saturday, Galantis play the Hollywood Palladium, and on Saturday there’s another big benefit show at the Shrine, Artists For Aid, to raise funds for those affected by the ongoing crises in Sudan and Palestine. Also on Saturday, you could also check out Unwritten Law at the Teragram Ballroom, or American Idol winner Lee DeWyze at the Hotel Café.

Elsewhere on LAist, you can keep up with anniversary events marking one year since the Eaton and Palisades fires, meet five new species discovered in 2025 and catch up on the new laws that will affect California schools in 2026.

Events

Power Up Altadena!

Sunday, January 11, 11 a.m.
Zorthian Ranch 
3990 N. Fair Oaks Ave., Altadena 
COST: FREE, $10 SUGGESTED DONATION; MORE INFO

A red digital poster listing bands for Power Up Altadena!
(
Courtesy KCRW
)
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Dena United is hosting this all-day festival at Altadena’s historic Zorthian Ranch to celebrate the community’s diverse culture and commemorate one year since the devastating Eaton Fire. Expect to see a wide range of performances from acts including Bobby Bradford, Dwight Trible, Baba Onochie Chukwurah & the Rhythms of the Village Family Band, the Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra, Earthseed Band and the Whispering Giants with MCs Medusa and Myka 9.


Polar Bear Plunge

Saturday, January 10, 10:15 a.m.
Annenberg Community Beach House
415 Pacific Coast Highway, Santa Monica 
COST: FREE, $10 for heated pool admission; MORE INFO

A person in a polar bear costume runs toward the water from the beach alongside a group of people in bathing suits, ranging from young children to middle-aged adults.
(
Courtesy Annenberg Community Beach House
)

Cold plunge, or really cold plunge? Start your year with fellow polar bears at the Annenberg Community Beach House and take a group jump into the Pacific, followed by a 300-yard swim out and back to warm up for those with a little more stamina. Brrr!


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Morton Feldman: Centennial Marathon

Sunday, January 11, 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. 
Wende Museum 
10808 Culver Blvd., Culver City 
COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

A painting of Morton Feldman in reddish hues.
(
Courtesy Wende Museum
)

Two special afternoons of concerts from Piano Spheres at the Wende Museum on Sunday and The Brick on Monday span the masterworks of legendary American composer Morton Feldman. The two days will feature works including Crippled Symmetry, For Bunita Marcus, and Patterns in a Chromatic Field. Special guests like Amy Williams, Conor Hanick and more will perform. On Monday, head to Melrose Hill to art space The Brick (518 N. Western Ave.) from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. for a second set of music.


Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

Saturday, January 10, 8:30 p.m.
Rooftop Cinema Club
888 S. Olive Street, Downtown L.A.
COST: $31; MORE INFO

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A light-skinned man with a light beard has the top part of his head in a strange device.
(
Focus Features
)

The rainy weather seems to be taking a break, so take advantage and enjoy some eternal sunshine of your own at Rooftop Cinema Club’s Fireside Films. The modern classic Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004), starring Kate Winslet and Jim Carrey, is a meditation on memory — and the setting is cozy, with outside heaters and a roaring fire. Tickets include a hot beverage.


Historic Main St. Santa Monica Walk

Saturday, January 10, 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. 
Shotgun House 
2520 2nd. Street, Santa Monica 
COST: FREE; MORE INFO 

A stone street lined with palm trees at night.
(
Piermario Eva
/
Unsplash
)

Santa Monica Conservancy hosts this walk along historic Main Street and through the vibrant Ocean Park neighborhood, led by street historian and author of the award-winning blog The Street Seen, Mark Gorman. Miss this week? The SMC leads tours every second Saturday of each month.

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Two films by Zoe Beloff 

Friday, January 9, 6 p.m. 
Velaslavasay Panorama 
1122 W. 24th Street, West Adams
COST: $18; MORE INFO 

There’s no more unique place in L.A. than the Velaslavasay Panorama, and filmmaker Zoe Beloff will be there in person to debut two new films at the space, Josephine the Singer or The Mouse People and Life Forgotten. The first looks at the history of New York’s Lower East Side through its community gardens, told through the text of a Franz Kafka short story; the second centers on a silent movie theater and storefront cinema in early 20th-century New York City.


CHAOS: Chelsea Peretti, Natasha Leggero, Sabrina Jalees

Sunday, January 11, 7:30 p.m. 
Elysian Theater 
1944 Riverside Drive, Elysian Valley  
COST: FROM $25; MORE INFO

Three women lie on their backs with their heads put together.
(
Courtesy The Elysian
)

Chaos/riotous laughter/who knows what will happen when these three incredibly funny women get together on stage? Chelsea Peretti (Brooklyn Nine-Nine), Natasha Leggero (Chelsea Lately) and Sabrina Jalees (Search Party) take to the Elysian for a night of much-needed antics.


Ukrainian Christmas Dinner

Sunday, January 11, 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. 
Ukrainian Cultural Center 
4315 Melrose Ave., East Hollywood 
COST: FROM $81; MORE INFO 

A poster for a Ukrainian Christmas event on a blue poster with snowflakes.
(
Ukrainian Culture Center of Los Angeles
/
Eventbrite
)

Keep the holiday celebrations going with this Ukrainian Christmas Dinner — the Schedriy Vechir (“generous evening”) Holiday Gala — celebrating the resilience of the Ukrainian people in this challenging time. The fundraising event includes performances from the Kobzar Choir, KOLO Choir of St. Volodymyr’s Church, Blagovist Choir of St. Andrew’s Church, Vova Zi Lvova, Vsudy Svoya, Chervona Kalyna Dance Ensemble and more.


Dry January at Burden of Proof

Various dates 
1012 Mission Street, South Pasadena
COST: VARIES; MORE INFO

The interior of a bottle shop with shelves stacked with bottles and cans of beverages.
(
Courtesy Burden of Proof
)

If drinking less is on your January to-do list, you couldn’t pick a better place to start than Burden of Proof in South Pasadena. While other N.A. bars have closed in the past year (The New Bar, Stay), Burden of Proof is thriving, with a variety of events featuring local producers to help keep you on the straight and narrow for dry January and all year long.

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