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KJLA (channel 57) is a television station licensed to Ventura, California, United States, serving the Los Angeles area as an affiliate of Visión Latina. The station is owned by Costa de Oro Media, LLC, a company run by Entravision Communications founder, CEO and chairman Walter Ulloa (whose brother, Ronald Ulloa, owns Rancho Palos Verdes–licensed ethnic independent station KXLA (channel 44 ...
59 KNWB-TV Los Angeles (New World Station, Movies, News, Independent Station, Sports, Syndication Reran TV Shows)* 60 KVIC Hollywood/Los Angeles (ViacomCBS Network, Comedies, Paramount Pictures Movies, TV Shows, ViacomCBS News)* 61 KMBS-TV Los Angeles (Motown Station) 62 KRCA Riverside (Estrella TV)* 63 KBEH Garden Grove (Canal de La Fe)
LATV originated in 2001 [9] as a programming format on KJLA (channel 57), an independent television station licensed to Los Angeles suburb of Ventura, California (which signed on in 1990 as KSTV-TV, a Galavisión affiliate), which mainly carried Spanish language programming as well as a limited amount of English language content.
"Teenage Alcoholics: Punk Rock in East Los Angeles" by Jimmy Alvarado, Razorcake #3, August–September 2001 (updated for website January 2007). (Archived at Punk of the 20th Century Archives) Women in LA Punk, interviews by Alice Bag, AliceBag.com, 2006. "Punk Flyers from 1977 Los Angeles" by Mark Vallen, Art-for-a Change, 2006.
The Flesh Eaters were started in the fall of 1977 by punk poet Chris Desjardins, [4] a singer known for morbid lyrical themes, [5] as an experimental side-project featuring temporary performers from other major Los Angeles area bands, including John Curry, Dennis Walsh, and Scott Lasken of the Flyboys, Tito Larriva of the Plugz, Stan Ridgway of Wall of Voodoo, John Doe and drummer D. J ...
Emerging from the 1980s Los Angeles punk scene, Bad Religion has since established itself as one of the most influential bands contributing to the modern pop-punk sound. I recently spoke to ...
The punk subculture has either spawned or inspired television series. These range from coming of age dramas to sitcoms . Pages in category "Punk television series"
Women in the early East Los Angeles punk scene were part of a subcultural movement associated with a brand of feminism that combined the ethics and politics of the Chicano movement, Second-wave feminism, the LGBT community, and punk rock music during the late 1970s and early 1980s.
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