6 Fun Trips to Take With Your Best Friend Created for Created for From Marie Claire for Created by Marie Claire for
6 Fun Trips to Take With Your Best Friend
Party islands, desert towns, and everything in between: Try one of these hand-picked destinations for your next girls’ getaway. cdwheatley
Editor s note: As we continue to practice social distancing, we encourage our readers to check the Centers for Disease Control website for up-to-date information on how to safely travel during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The beauty of vacationing with your best friend is that you’re effortlessly on the same wavelength; after all, so much of what makes for an easy trip is that baseline of compatibility. And now that more arms are getting shots and travel restrictions are beginning to ease, it’s a perfect time for the two of you to start plotting your next escape.
Explore Palm Springs, Joshua Tree And Everything In Between
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Can California keep Modernism alive?
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Los Angeles resident Jeffrey Steenberg paid $1.35 million for a Palm Springs retreat where billionaire tycoon and filmmaker Howard Hughes once lived. Steenberg, a hairstylist-designer turned developer, intends to renovate the home, which was previously owned by writer-producer Paul W. Keyes.James Butchart / TNS
Palm Springs isn’t just a great place to spend a weekend. It’s one of our last and most fervent defenders of what California really is not what it pretends to be.
That’s because Palm Springs, like the Golden State, is a modernist project, built by people who broke from old tradition and established cultures and experimented relentlessly to construct new systems that buried the past. Throughout California, modernism has produced freeways that span the state, waterworks through swamps and deserts, culture-dominating industries from Hollywood to Silicon Valley, and brand-new approaches to art, architecture, lit
When Lucerne Valley went punk: How Desolation Center festivals in the 1980s inspired Coachella, Burning Man
Editor s note: This article originally ran in the Palm Springs Desert Sun on Oct. 16, 2019.
In the early 1980s, the music and art scenes in Los Angeles thrived. There were no limits, everything was up for grabs and the underground turned out bands opposite of the mainstream. Thought-provoking performance art would have shocked traditional audiences with nihilistic realism of living during the Cold War. Men, women and people of different racial and cultural backgrounds united to create experimental music ahead of its time. Punk rock anarchy made chaos sexy to suburbanites.
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