
Celebrity
Some might say we live in the city of celebrities â the city of Hollywood actors, influencers and larger-than-life personalities. This is a version of the city, but itâs not the version that most everyday Angelenos experience. In the words of Tinashe: âThereâs so much realness and real people and real experience here.â
What is celebrity in 2024 anyway? We no longer follow or idolize the same narrow set of people. On the one hand, we have wider access to more role models; on the other, itâs harder for any one person to stick when we can easily move on to the next best thing. In her conversation with artist Nicole Miller, Harmony Holiday unwaveringly announces âthe end of the classic model of celebrity.â Together, Miller and Holiday imagine what it would be like to ârestore people to their humanityâ instead of idolizing them. What if we brought the people we admire back to the Earth? What if we paused to consider them within their everyday contexts, as âreal peopleâ with âreal experienceâ?
For our Celebrity issue, we sat down with a range of artists we wanted to celebrate, and while honoring their accomplishments, we also asked them: What does it feel like to perform? How do you turn off the performance? How do you draw the line between life and art? In other words, what is it like to be a human going through such creative transformation?
In her conversation with me, actor Laysla De Oliveira shared her lived experience of coming to Hollywood to make it â a cliché idea at this point that is nonetheless still a reality for ambitious actors. And staff writer Julissa James caught Tinashe mid-tour; her reflections on performing for a crowd â how itâs fed and changed her â were especially fresh.
We couldnât have a Celebrity issue without considering the true drivers of culture: the icons of the underground, of subculture. For an epic feature, Babylon L.A.âs Lee Spielman interviewed three skater legendsâ Na-Kel Smith, Junior Gutierrez and Davonte Jolly â as they spent the day in downtown L.A. with photographer Atiba Jefferson. And in Tokyo, the duo behind L.A. fashion brand Freak City found their creative soulmate, rap duo Yurufuwa Gang, and bonded over what it means to make art with your partner.
To close out the issue, Rebekah Pahl talks with L.A.âs own astrology celebrity, Chani Nicholas, to figure out once and for all the meaning of Saturn Return and why so many (including the pop girlies) have identified with it. Whether youâre in your Saturn Return or have one on the horizon, this read might just be a guiding light as we turn the page into an uncertain new year.
Elisa Wouk Almino
Editorial Director
Image logo by Ana Gómez Bernaus For The Times


Tinashe has had a year, and sheâs daring us to meet her on her level
The album released this past summer, âQuantum Baby,â shows an artist most comfortable with the unknown. Read the story ð¤
Itâs a support system. The concrete trust between pro skaters and their videographers
A Sunday afternoon in L.A. with Na-Kel Smith, Junior Gutierrez, Davonte Jolly, Lee Spielman and Atiba Jefferson. Read the story ð¹
Get your copy
Issue 32: Celebrity
Order now
Itâs the end of celebrity as we know it. Will we shift to healthier role models?
Narratives around fame are dated. Harmony Holiday and Nicole Miller propose alternatives. Read the story ð«
L.A. meets Tokyo in a night for freaks and aliens
On a night out in Tokyo, the cult fashion brand Freak City styled the rap duo Yurufuwa Gang and discovered they spoke âthe same language.â Read the story ðï¸
Saturn Return, a coming-of-age framework thatâs resonating everywhere
âItâs not easy, breezy, light, kind or friendly.â L.A. astrologer Chani Nicholas answers my questions around Saturn. Read the story ðª
This holiday season, listen to the Capricorns. Theyâre holding it together for everyone around them
Who bears a burden more elegantly than the 10th sign? Read the story ð
29 gifts for the homebodies, brats and design devotees
Impeccable quality, versatility and design collide in this seasonâs best gifts, from a 1920s wine opener to a cute bow pant. Read the story ð
Feel festive with Decemberâs finest drops, exhibitions and events
From Doug Aitkenâs âLightscapeâ to D.S. & Durgaâs new store in Silver Lake, this list will keep you merrily busy. Read the story ð¼ï¸
Issue 31
Lost & Found
Presenting Image Issue 31: Lost & FoundExplore the issue

Issue 30
Luxury
Presenting Image Issue 30: LuxuryExplore the issue

Issue 29
Image Makers
Presenting Image Issue 29: Image MakersExplore the issue

Issue 28
Lineage
Presenting Image Issue 28: LineageExplore the issue

Issue 27
Homemaking
Presenting Image Issue 27: HomemakingExplore the issue

Issue 26
Reverie
Presenting Image Issue 26: ReverieExplore the issue

Issue 25
Spring
Presenting the Spring Issue: Itâs time to playExplore the issue

Issue 24
Conveyance
Presenting âConveyanceâ: L.A. culture on the moveExplore the issue

Issue 23
Slipping
Presenting âSlippingâ: Style for a sustainable worldExplore the issue

Issue 22
Luxury
Image Magazine issue 22: Where L.A. culture meets âluxuryâExplore the issue

Issue 21
Image Makers
Meet the 2023 âImage Makersâ taking L.A. fashion globalExplore the issue

Issue 20
Discourse
Welcome to the New York-L.A. âDiscourseâExplore the issue

Issue 19
Clearance
Architecture as art: Inside Imageâs design issue âClearanceâExplore the issue

Issue 18
Mission
Presenting âMissionâ: A travel issue without the travelExplore the issue

Issue 17
Offering
Image is givingâ¦Spring. Inside L.A.âs latest trends, cultureExplore the issue

Issue 16
Interiority
Untold stories. Secret histories. A living archive of L.A.Explore the issue

Issue 15
Diaspora
Restaurants, fashion, art: Image explores L.A. food cultureExplore the issue

Issue 14
Elevation
Why is L.A. so tempted by and obsessed with beauty?Explore the issue

Issue 13
Image Makers
A new class of the cityâs luminaries â designers, models, artists â show where clothing and style are going: to the rootExplore the issue

Issue 12
Commitment
Spirituality, faith, belief â Inside L.A. Woo Woo cultureExplore the issue

Issue 11
Renovation
What if we could redesign L.A. from the ground up?Explore the issue

Issue 10
Clarity
L.A. loves an epiphany. Enjoy this moment of âClarityâExplore the issue

Issue 9
Function
Ainât no party like an L.A. partyExplore the issue

Issue 8
Deserted
A journey to the end of the worldExplore the issue

Issue 7
Survival
In this installment, we imagine a sustainable future for the cityExplore the issue

Issue 6
Energy
Celebrate L.A. sports culture, with styleExplore the issue

Issue 5
Reverence
An exploration of how L.A. does beauty.Explore the issue

Issue 4
Image Makers
A celebration of the L.A. luminaries of style pushing fashion culture and streetwear forwardExplore the issue

Issue 3
Parents are cool!
A toast to the myriad ways in which L.A. parents practice the craft of care.Explore the issue

Issue 2
L.A. â We See You!
How to properly remove the blinders? A starting point is sustained looking.Explore the issue

Issue 1
Remembrance
True style, after all, is time travel.Explore the issue