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LA: Encounters: Finding Community In A Starbucks

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  • LA: Encounters: Finding Community In A Starbucks

    ENCOUNTERS: FINDING COMMUNITY IN A STARBUCKS
    By Ellen Slezak

    LA Weekly, CA
    Oct 6 2005

    East of Western, North of Hollywood
    I do most of my errands on my bike. Just last week, I rode to the
    Laundromat with three loads of laundry bungee-corded to its basket.

    More often, I travel lighter and with less purpose. I'll pedal
    somewhere and stop for a cup of coffee.

    I like coffee. The stronger, the better. No foam or sugar or half this
    or that. Just black and hot. I'm a stereotypical liberal (and proud
    of it), who often moans and groans about the loss of the mom-and-pop
    storefront, the standardization of towns and cities and suburbs. I've
    never been in a Wal-Mart - on principle. I've never crossed a picket
    line - that's an even bigger principle. But Starbucks - so big,
    so corporate, so the same the same the same everywhere? I count on
    it. Its coffee and service and pervasiveness have been very good to
    me. I have different favorite locations for different times of day,
    days of the week.

    For the past year or so, this has been my Sunday-morning routine. Get
    up at 6. Drink a couple of inches of coffee - enough to jolt me out
    the door. Ride my bike three miles to Fern Dell. Hike up to Mount
    Hollywood. Hike back down. Get back on bike. Stop at the Armenian
    Starbucks at the northeast corner of Hollywood and Western for a
    proper cup.

    This is a good Starbucks. It has a lot of character, though you might
    not think so, driving by. (It's in a development with a Ralphs and a
    Blockbuster and a Ross Dress for Less.) The staff at this Starbucks is
    unexcitable, steady. They don't give the bum's rush to the old lady who
    comes in only to use the bathroom and talk loudly to herself. They
    don't give the bums the bum's rush. The men, dressed in black,
    who sit at the outside tables, smoke with focus. The mentally ill
    homeless guy who drinks leftover coffee cadges cigarettes from them;
    so does the 50-something-crapped-out-in-Hollywood groupie who talks
    loud and fast to a tall, expressionless black guy who nods, but says
    nothing in response to her stories about Jack Nicholson, Mick Jagger
    and various security guards who let her sneak into these superstars'
    orbit. Her voice is wrinkled, and the skin around her eyes is, too. I
    quit smoking 20 years ago, but I love the smell of a cigarette,
    so I sit outside with them all. The open-air eavesdropping is bracing.

    A few weeks ago, when a middle-aged Latino guy, pushing a Ralphs cart
    filled with three 12-packs of Miller and three bags of chicken thighs
    and legs, stopped near our Starbucks tables and began to unload his
    cart, we all assumed he was going to load it into the minivan nearby.

    It took us a beat before we realized we had it wrong. He was on foot.

    The loudmouthed groupie, the black guy, one Armenian smoker and I
    stood up and offered to help him. I pointed at my bike and basket and
    pulled a bungee out of my backpack. He shook his head no. The groupie
    persisted, loudly, but he still refused, waving her off. We watched,
    disbelieving and admiring, as he hoisted and adjusted his bounty and
    walked off, a perfect balance of grace and strength.

    It's another Sunday morning at the Armenian Starbucks, and when I
    leave L.A., as I imagine I one day will, I'm going to miss it.
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