
Vans Warped Tour, the original punk rock circus, returns to Long Beach
'I got arrested because [Warped Tour founder] Kevin Lyman wouldn't let me go see a doctor,' Gaugh jokingly told The Times . 'I was having a hard time breathing, I could not sleep. So, at the Orlando show that we were playing at, I found a girl whose mom was a nurse and she took me home and we raided the medicine cabinet, and I got some Vicodin and some other things to help me sleep. … Unfortunately I was arrested in the parking lot returning with those drugs in zero-tolerant Florida.'
Gaugh was bailed out, and after being on the road for two weeks with broken ribs, Gaugh finally received proper treatment in Massachusetts.
'That was an amazing memory,' he says.
This month, Gaugh returns with Sublime to the Vans Warped Tour for the festival's 30th anniversary, playing with late singer Bradley Nowell's son Jakob on vocals. Sublime was recently revealed to be one of the teased secret bands slated to play the shows in their hometown of Long Beach. Long Beach will be one of the first cities to hear their new song, 'Ensenada,' live.
'Thirty years later — I can't even believe I'm saying that — 30 years later and now we get to do it with Jakob, this is insane … and I just can't wait for Jakob to experience it, we get to live vicariously through his emotions as well as our own, it's incredible, it's such an amazing feeling, I'm such a proud uncle.'
After a six-year hiatus, the Vans festival is being rebooted in partnership with live events production company Insomniac for a three-city tour in Washington, D.C., Long Beach and Orlando. The Long Beach shows take place at the Shoreline Waterfront on July 26 and 27 and includes an eclectic variety of heavyweight acts such as Pennywise, Sublime, 311, Ice-T, Fishbone, All-American Rejects, the Vandals and more. The festival is also featuring its classic extreme sports showcase of skateboarding and BMX stunts, along with art displays, vendors, the 'Gritty Garage' lounge dedicated to uplifting female musicians and an official Vans Warped Tour Museum pop-up celebrating the festival's 30-year legacy.
'Warped Tour is in my heart, I did a lot of brands. I had Mayhem, Taste of Chaos, I had probably like 40 different branded things, those were more business,' Lyman tells The Times. 'If you're going to come back at my age now — I'm 64 and I've been in the music business 45 years, going back to the Goldenvoice days — you're going to do something from the heart.'
Lyman, who is also an associate professor at USC, had been itching to bring back Warped Tour, and the encouragement to revive it largely came from Insomniac founder and CEO Pasquale Rotella. Rotella says that for years, he was 'bugging' Lyman to consider it, and even though Insomniac had previous opportunities to produce other rock events, Pasquale had his sights set on Warped Tour.
'The reason why I went out and asked Kevin is because I knew that there was lots of interest. Everyone wants to be involved with a special event like Warped Tour; it's really in line with what we do,' Rotella says . 'Not only is there a huge crossover with attendees, but I love — we love as a company — community-driven events, and I don't believe that the other brands that are out there, even ones Kevin has been involved with, have as strong a community behind it.'
Insomniac is better known for producing electronic dance music festivals such as Electric Daisy Music Carnival, Hard Summer Music Festival and Beyond Wonderland among others, but Rotella is no stranger to the punk rock world that Warped Tour is rooted in. When Rotella was a teenager, he was a surfer and came up in the skateboard and surf communities in L.A., which he says was full of punk rockers. For him, working on Warped Tour is simply a return to a scene and community that's always been embedded in his background.
'I was part of a lot of different communities — graffiti, skateboarding, surfing … I appreciate so many different kinds of art. I love the culture and community behind these different scenes … it's great to be able to knock those walls down and bring people together, expose people to different things and it's a lot of fun. I think Warped Tour does that well.'
When Lyman started the Warped Tour in 1995, he had already been a promoter and booker in L.A. for years, initially working for the legendary Gary Tovar, founder of Goldenvoice — the company that puts on festivals such as Coachella, Cruel World and Stagecoach. The inspiration for Warped Tour simply came from the diverse shows he was putting on every night in L.A., and the first festival lineup reflected that, featuring bands including No Doubt, Sublime, L7, Deftones, Face to Face, and many other ska, punk, indie and alternative acts.
'It goes back to 1995. I was working in the clubs 320 nights a year, listening to [bands] every night, I was working Roxy, Whisky, Palace, Palladium, a whole bunch of venues that don't exist [anymore], and watching the audiences and going, 'Why are we isolating them into segments? I think there's a lot more here in common,'' Lyman says.
Despite being varied in genre, Warped Tour has always been known as a predominantly punk rock festival. Pennywise guitarist Fletcher Dragge says that when his band first played Warped Tour in 1996, the lineup was mostly punk rock bands and he shared the stage with peers like Rancid, Descendents, Bad Religion and Social Distortion.
'It was like a full-on summer camp for degenerate punk rockers, if you will,' Dragge says. 'We'd done some festivals, we'd done some tours at that time, but nothing like wow, here's all your friends in the same place and eating at the same tables, barbecuing, drinking beers, hanging out, playing dice, playing poker, supporting each other onstage. There was nothing like it. I never went to summer camp, but I imagine this was the craziest summer camp of all time.'
Dragge says that even though Pennywise is playing this year with a slew of younger bands across different genres — an experience he says differs from the old-school days of the Vans festival — Dragge constantly gets 'stoked' about seeing and discovering new bands in the scene, and he's excited to witness the fresh talent at this year's Warped Tour.
'It's inspiring, for me. It makes me feel like there's a future and hope for punk rock in general, it's not going away,' he says.
Warped Tour has significantly evolved since its humble beginnings, becoming one of the longest-running music festivals in the world. Dragge says, 'Warped Tour deserves the ultimate respect of any festival on the planet' because of what it accomplished with its revolutionary idea to take a festival on wheels nationwide, creating a blueprint for other music festivals, which according to Dragge, is now copied by everyone.
'That's all Kevin's doing and he's going to go down in history as the greatest of all great operators for the biggest, craziest punk rock circus of all time that ran around this globe,' Dragge says.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
2 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
The most extravagant things L.A. people do for their dogs
Pet parent. Fur baby. Doggy daycare. Since the mid-2010s, these monikers have adorned myriad T-shirts and tote bags — like quotes from a classic sitcom. But in modern L.A., they're no joke. In Beverly Hills, retirees push their toy poodles in strollers. In Eagle Rock, millennials dine with their lapdogs. When these dog owners speak about their companions, the word 'baby' just rolls off the tongue. The classification of dogs as children has long been controversial. It's even been tested in the legal sphere. While the U.S. does not yet have national laws like the U.K.'s or France's that qualify animals as 'sentient beings,' in California, dogs as of a 2019 law are eligible to have their well-being considered in divorce proceedings. At the time of the bill's signing, its sponsor, former Assembly member Bill Quirk said dogs were more than property: 'They are part of our family.' Such was the consensus among the L.A. dog parents whom The Times recently asked the following question: 'What is something you can't believe you do for your dog?' Here are the 10 over-the-top answers we received. (Be sure to share your own unhinged dog parent behaviors in the comments section below the story.) Becca Nelson and Sadie, the frequent flier Becca Nelson's 12-year-old dog Sadie may have more frequent flier miles than some of L.A.'s finest management consultants combined. For years, Sadie, a Havanese-shih tzu mix, has traveled nearly every weekend with Nelson, who co-owns the production company Big Light Studios. Recently, Nelson and Sadie were in San Francisco filming the city's annual Tap Festival. 'She's just along for the ride,' Nelson said, dubbing Sadie 'the business dog.' At times, finding dog-friendly accommodations can be dicey, Nelson added. She and Sadie tend to have the most trouble in the South, where people aren't as 'dog progressive.' But, according to Nelson, dog-free establishments often cave upon meeting Sadie, who prefers human company to the canine variety. At Bluff Creek Dog Park in early July, the shaggy senior kept to herself, lounging in the shade while other pups zoomed in and out of view. Perhaps a stomach full of Nelson's mother's strawberries-and-cream french toast weighed the dog down. Or maybe it was the crab legs she ate a few days before. 'She has expensive taste,' Nelson laughed, kneeling down to tousle Sadie's fur. Ellena Whitfield and Zero, the demanding 'diva' Ellena Whitfield, a Westchester-based project manager, worked from Bluff Creek Dog Park in early July as her 1-year-old dachshund Zero scampered around with a chew toy dwarfing his snout. The day's outing constituted Zero's daily 'enrichment,' Whitfield said. Other days, the project manager will play with her pup at home or throw a few treats in a snuffle mat. (Whitfield recently read that just 30 minutes of sniffing for a dog is equivalent to around an hour's walk in terms of physical and mental stimulation.) A few days before their park outing, Zero gave Whitfield a scare when he stopped eating his kibble. Turns out, the dog was just being picky, as he later scarfed down a bougie natural formula. 'He's kind of a diva,' Whitfield said. When Zero wants to cuddle, she added, nothing gets in his way. 'If I'm sitting reading a book, he'll come and just lay right here,' she said, gesturing to her chest. Mari Ostendorf and Mika, the shower-sleeper Mari Ostendorf, a 20-plus-year Santa Monica resident, sat on a bench at Bluff Creek Dog Park, her dog Mika perched next to her. Although they'd been at the park for nearly an hour and a half, Mika had yet to interact with another dog. She seemed content beside her mom. The 3-year-old mixed-breed was originally named Myrtle, after the Muggle-born witch of Hogwarts, but Ostendorf often calls her 'Velcro.' Why? 'Because she sticks so close to me,' Ostendorf said. In drastic contrast to her bare-bones rescue puppy life, Mika in her Santa Monica townhouse enjoys full couch privileges, as well as a human-sized dog bed that easily accommodates Ostendorf's husband and two daughters. During last year's Fourth of July fireworks, Mika's owners hauled her dog bed into their tiled shower, which 'insulates her from the noise,' Ostendorf said. There, she sleeps almost as soundly as in Ostendorf's bed. Arielle Bernstein and Jane Doe, the extroverted rescue Jane Doe was alone outside BMO Stadium when Tony Faase found her. He'd been searching for another rescue pup he'd passed earlier when he saw her, shaking in the middle of the street. As Faase drove by, he flung open the passenger-side door, and the dog hopped in — no hesitation. 'Don't be mad at me,' he told his wife Arielle Bernstein when he got home. The couple already had five rescue cats; they scarcely had room for a 40-pound Labrador-pit bull mix on top of that. Weeks later, Bernstein was making the twice-a-day trek to Playa Vista's Bluff Creek Dog Park, where Jane Doe rolled around with a group of mutts in early July. As they nibbled and play-snarled at her, the pup lay on her back, wiggling in glee. Out on the turf, she looked nothing like a rescue. 'I don't know what her story was,' Bernstein said, 'but she's a loving, loving girl.' Tina Khorram and Mini, the hero with a heart murmur When Tina Khorram shelled out almost $4,000 for a pure-bred, toy-sized Maltese, she figured her tidy sum would rule out any possibility of an ailing dog. But when Khorram's husband took Mini the Maltese to get microchipped, the vet broke the news: The pup had a heart murmur. 'Take her back,' the vet told him. 'She's not going to survive.' Khorram didn't want her 5-year-old daughter Valentina to endure the grief of losing a dog so young, so she contacted Mini's Las Vegas breeder about returning her. The breeder told Khorram's family they could exchange Mini for another dog, but suspecting he would put the pup down, they held onto her. Five years later, Mini sat on Khorram's lap, her disability nearly imperceptible — and in any case eclipsed by her purple-dyed tail. While Mimi seemed unaffected by her malady, Khorram's voice was tinged with exhaustion. The summer is the toughest for her, she said, because every vacation comes with the insurmountable task of finding accommodations for Mini. 'That's my problem, because most doggy daycares won't take her,' Khorram said. 'So I have to figure it out.' For Mimi, Khorram even endures the regular embarrassment of being hounded by fellow 'dog-friendly' hotel guests about her yappy pup. Alana Giordano and Philly, the social club member When Alana Giordano's neighbor first told her about Dog Ppl, a members-only dog park in Santa Monica, she found the concept absurd. 'That seems crazy to spend money on,' Giordano thought to herself. But that thought was quickly followed by another: 'Why not sign up and see how it goes?' The application process was streamlined but rigorous. Upon his first visit to the park, Philly, Giordano's Chihuahua-terrier mix, was screened and observed by a team of trained 'rufferees' — tasked with determining whether prospective pups were well-suited for the space. Philly made the cut, and for the last couple years, he and Giordano have made regular trips to the posh pup club. On slower workdays, Giordano brings her laptop to the space, which is equipped with Wi-Fi as well as a coffee and alcohol bar. 'It's a little bit L.A.-ish,' Giordano said. But she maintained that the $80 monthly fee — a discount she was grandfathered into, $40 below the current starting rate of $120 a month — for her is money well spent. 'Once you go here, you never go back,' Giordano said. Dorothy Grillo and Olive, the baby of the family Next to Dorothy Grillo's glass of sangria, whipped cream spilled over the lip of a small paper cup. At first glance, the treat appeared to be a cup of soft serve, soon to be enjoyed by Grillo. But as the Long Beach resident pulled a froth-dipped biscuit stick from the cup, she brought it not up to her mouth but down to her lap, where her Chihuahua mix Olive sat patiently. The dog, who had been calm up until that point, excitedly lunged for her dessert. 'Ooh, I love this! This is fun!' Grillo said, impersonating Olive as the dog licked away. Olive's treat, the pup cup, goes for $3.50 at Monty's Dog Beach & Bar in Long Beach, where Grillo and her husband Chris Ayala stopped in for a drink in early July. Other items on the beachside bar's dog menu included a 'dogtini' (unseasoned ground beef, beef broth and pork chomp sticks) and a 'pupuccino' (frothed milk sprinkled with spirulina, whipped cream, homemade biscuits). Monty's is a favorite spot for Grillo and Ayala, who recently moved to Long Beach after deciding they wanted to spend their 50s in a more 'relaxed' environment than L.A. proper. 'We didn't have kids together,' Grillo said, 'so we're just like, 'This is our baby.'' On top of her pup cups, Olive boasts a complete wardrobe of dog clothes and a full basket of toys at home. Grillo and Ayala had to restock after they tossed their late dogs' things during their move. 'Pretty much every time I go to the store, I get her a new toy,' Grillo said. 'It's been so nice to do that again.' Ashley Parrish and Riley, the 'foodie' Ashley Parrish's Australian shepherd Riley is a dog of taste. That was probably inevitable, with two chefs for parents. Parrish has worked for a decade as a line cook at Disneyland, while her partner Ben Hanson has spent six years as a chef in the wedding industry. Both regularly test new concoctions on Riley. 'She's spoiled rotten,' Parrish said of the young pup, then quickly corrected herself: 'Not spoiled, well-loved.' While other dogs might be content to mooch off kitchen droppings, Riley prefers to eat from her own plate of human food. Her regular order at SteelCraft Long Beach is a steamed rice and chicken bowl, topped with an over-easy egg. (She also accepts fried eggs.) 'She's a foodie for anything but dog food,' Parrish said. 'Greek whole fat yogurt — can't get enough of it. She's licking it right off the spoon.' Alejandra Gonzalez and Franklin Bean, the preschool graduate Just inland from Rosie's Dog Beach, Franklin Bean, a 10-month-old mini dachshund, greeted passersby with tail wags and belly rolls. He used to be an infamous biter, but a few sessions at the Zoom Room, an indoor dog training gym, helped wean him off, said Alejandra Gonzalez, Franklin Bean's owner. 'It was like preschool for pups,' Gonzalez said of the training facility. There, dogs can learn basic commands, how to respond to their name and even how to socialize. Gonzalez paid $300 for the program, which consisted of four months of weekly training sessions. By the time Franklin Bean graduated, he was leagues more regimented — and more confident. At the beach in early July, the dachshund approached dogs 10 times his size with ease. Some of his swagger, it seemed, was drawn from the red baseball cap he sported. (He got that at the SoCal Wienerfest.) 'He just wants to be everyone's friend,' Gonzalez said. Makoto Mizutani and Penny, the senior citizen When Makoto Mizutani and Ben Luddy moved into their second-story unit in San Pedro 10 years ago, their Belgian Malinois Penny was just a puppy. At that time, they were hardly worried about her struggling with the trek upstairs. Now 12 years old, Penny requires leash support to get up and down the steps. So when Mizutani and Luddy received an eviction notice a few months ago, they weren't gutted. It just felt like time to move on. 'Every pet owner thinks, like, 'OK, how can I make my dog's life more comfortable as they get older?'' Mizutani said. In their case, the answer was clear: finding a one-story home that would allow Penny to get around on her own. The couple ended up finding a property in Pomona, which they are planning to move into in late July. At times, Mizutani worries about sounding high-maintenance for basing her choice of a home so heavily on Penny. But ultimately, the dog is family. 'We talk a lot about accommodating design for people,' Mizutani said. 'That totally extends — should, I mean — to pets, especially larger pets,' she said.


Los Angeles Times
4 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
L.A. Times Receives Multiple Honors in NLGJA Excellence in Journalism Awards Contest
The Los Angeles Times has earned six honors in the NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists' annual Excellence in Journalism Awards contest. The awards, which recognize and reward excellence in journalism on issues related to the LGBTQ+ community, were announced on July 23 and will be presented in person at a ceremony next month. Among the top honors, Times staff writer Kevin Rector was named Journalist of the Year, which honors an LGBTQ+ journalist whose exceptional abilities, integrity and distinctive work brought honor to the profession within the last year. Rector joined The Times in 2020, first covering the LAPD, then legal affairs and is currently on the politics beat. In 2024, he wrote extensively on the presidential election, California's Senate race and President Trump's return to power, as well as covered breaking LGBTQ+ news and unique queer stories, including a piece on a San Francisco bookstore's efforts to ship banned queer books to conservative states for free. Rector also spearheaded a major Times project he conceptualized called Our Queerest Century, which highlighted the vast and indelible contributions of LGBTQ+ people since the 1924 founding of the nation's first gay rights organization. Informed by a groundbreaking national poll, the package featured personal essays from queer writers, news analysis, original illustrations, a curated timeline of queer history, a portrait series and more. Times staff won several NLGJA awards for select stories and essays featured in the project, including columnist LZ Granderson's personal essay on the heroes of the AIDs epidemic. 'It was an honor and a privilege to work on Our Queerest Century with Kevin, LZ and our amazing team of writers, artists, editors, photographers, designers and others, all LGBTQ+ staff members and allies,' said Maria L. La Ganga, deputy managing editor for California and Metro. 'The project would never have happened without Kevin, who brings such talent, insight and passion to his work at the Los Angeles Times.' Below is a complete list of The Times' winners and finalists: Journalist of the YearWinner: Kevin Rector Excellence in HIV/AIDS CoverageWinner: LZ Granderson, for his essay about the brave role LGBTQ+ people played in fighting the AIDS epidemic. Excellence in NewswritingWinner: Kevin Rector, Hailey Branson-Potts, Matt Hamilton and Jaweed Kaleem, for a series of stories based on a national poll on LGBTQ+ issues, conducted for The Times by NORC at the University of Chicago with funding from the California Endowment. Excellence in QPOC Coverage Winner: Erika D. Smith, contributor and former Times columnist, for her essay highlighting how queer people of color have led in many important political movements. Excellence in Transgender Coverage AwardWinner: Former Times fellow Jireh Deng for their feature story 'T-Boy Wrestling is a sizzling showcase of trans masculinity — sweat, twerking and all.' Best Packaging, Print or OnlineWinner: Current and former staffers Patrick Hruby, Mary Kate Metivier, Ross May, Allison Hong, Jim Cooke and Taylor Le for the design of the project – both the print special section and online presentation. To learn more about the NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists and see the full list of award recipients, visit


Los Angeles Times
10 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
David Geffen accused of abusing ex in suit alleging paid sex and superyacht drug parties
David Geffen has been sued by his estranged husband, Donovan Michaels, who says that the billionaire film producer preyed on his vulnerabilities as a young gay Black man from the foster system and trapped him in a manipulative and abusive relationship. Geffen, 82, and Michaels, 32, met in 2016 on a dating site where affluent individuals often seek relations with younger singles in return for some form of compensation, according to the complaint. On the night they met, the media mogul allegedly paid Michaels $10,000 to have sex with him. The pair continued their relationship and married in 2023, minus a prenup, according to the complaint. In May of this year, Geffen filed for divorce. Now Michaels, whose legal name is David Armstrong, is suing Geffen for breach of contract, saying that the billionaire promised to take care of him financially but left him near broke and homeless. The lawsuit compares their relationship to the plot of the movie 'Trading Places,' saying Geffen used Michaels as a trophy to show off to his rich and famous friends. 'It was a sick game,' the complaint states. 'Michaels became a prop in Geffen's theater of virtue, paraded around as evidence of Geffen's supposed altruism, while privately used as a sexual commodity.' Geffen's attorney Patty Glaser pushed back on Michaels' allegations. 'There was no contract — express, written, oral, or implied — that has ever existed,' she said in a statement to The Times. 'We will be vigorously and righteously defending against this false, pathetic lawsuit.' The 33-page complaint is packed with explosive claims about the exploits of the richest man in the entertainment industry. Geffen has an estimated net worth of $8.8 billion, according to Forbes. He amassed his wealth as a music and movie producer, signing major artists including the Eagles and Joni Mitchell and co-founding Dreamworks Pictures, which has produced iconic movies such as 'Saving Private Ryan' and 'Shrek.' Michaels entered the Michigan foster-care system at 18 months old and grew up in various foster and group homes where he regularly experienced physical and emotional abuse, according to the complaint. He moved to Florida at 19 and relied on exotic dancing and X-rated videos to get by financially. The lawsuit claims that Geffen expected Michaels to use drugs such as cocaine and molly alongside Geffen's friends on the billionaire's 450-foot superyacht the Rising Sun. The complaint alleges that Geffen enjoyed physically dominating his sexual partners and causing them pain. This type of sexual behavior triggered Michaels' childhood trauma and caused him digestive issues, headaches and the need to isolate, according to the complaint. The suit further alleges that the billionaire 'critiqued every aspect of Michaels' appearance,' and that the mere existence of an ingrown hair would raise Geffen's ire. The media mogul allegedly told Michaels 'where to go, what to wear, what to read, what to watch, and what to say' and required him to submit to extensive painful cosmetic treatments. In addition, Geffen allegedly prevented Michaels from continuing to pursue his modeling career, saying he needed to be constantly available. Michaels says he began reevaluating his life and relationship after entering addiction treatment earlier this year. He then approached his husband and said he 'wanted a new beginning wherein he could stand shoulder to shoulder with Geffen as an equal free from power dynamics that existed.' According to the complaint, Geffen then cut Michaels off, demanded a divorce and denied Michaels financial support 'commensurate with his lifestyle' and his share of assets acquired during their cohabitation. While the media mogul was attending fellow billionaire Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez's wedding in Italy last month, he ordered Michaels to vacate his New York residence, the complaint alleges. Michaels is seeking compensatory damages and a judicial determination of his rights under an alleged oral agreement made with Geffen. His attorneys argue that this should entitle him to having his living expenses covered for the rest of his life and an equal division of all properties subject to the agreement. 'While Geffen holds himself out to the public as an extraordinarily charitable man whose foundation gives millions and millions of dollars to advocacy and support groups for the homeless and disadvantaged populations,' the complaint states, 'he is simultaneously endeavoring to render Michaels impoverished and homeless.'