Why The LA River Started California's Water War

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  • Опубликовано: 10 май 2023
  • Discover the Hidden Wonders and Fascinating History of the LA River in this captivating video tour. Explore the surprising tales, untold stories, and the near-war sparked by the LA River. Decipher the reasons behind channelizing the river and uncover the hidden consequences. From past to present, understand the state of the LA River today and its Hollywood connection. Witness the efforts of Friends of the LA River in restoring nature's paradise and envision an exciting future for this iconic landmark. Join us on this unforgettable journey!
    00:48 - Exploring the Hidden Wonders: A Tour of the LA River
    02:52 - Unveiling the Untold Stories: The Fascinating History of the LA River
    04:50 - The Surprising Tale: How the LA River Almost Sparked a War
    06:30 - Decoding the Mystery: The Reasons Behind Channelizing the LA River
    09:29 - Hidden Consequences: Unveiling the Negative Impact of Channelizing the LA River
    11:21 - From Past to Present: Understanding the State of the LA River Today
    12:25 - Hollywood's Love Affair: The LA River in Popular Media
    13:14 - Restoring Nature's Paradise: How LA is Revitalizing Its River (Friends of the LA River)
    14:53 - Envisioning Tomorrow: The Exciting Future of the LA River
    Join this channel to get access to perks:
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    IT’S HISTORY - Weekly tales of American Urban Decay as presented by your host Ryan Socash.
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    » CREDIT
    Scriptwriter - Neve Brown,
    Editor - Karolina Pleskot
    Host - Ryan Socash
    » NOTICE
    Some images may be used for illustrative purposes only - always reflecting the accurate time frame and content. Events of factual error / mispronounced word/spelling mistakes - retractions will be published in this section.

Комментарии • 477

  • @prudencepineapple9448
    @prudencepineapple9448 Год назад +106

    The film 'Chinatown' (1974) with Faye Dunaway and Jack Nicholson, was primarily about the 'water wars' in L.A. during the late 1920s-1930s. Good noir film too!

    • @elizabradley4797
      @elizabradley4797 Год назад +10

      Best film in history ~ it is all true & Muhlholland was one greedy sucker ~ the valley never should have been developed ever ~ Los Angeles is a desert ~ was a sleepy town before politics started r*ping the dream of greed ~ was not meant to grow ~ eastrners also wanted to force this ~ destroyed the orange groves ~ just a real stupid situation of greed ~

    • @Maldoror200
      @Maldoror200 Год назад +4

      @elizabradley4797 ..Good for You, Darlin.., and Very well said..I have to agree ..!!~Peace

    • @oceanhome2023
      @oceanhome2023 11 месяцев назад +5

      Ergo “WISKEY IS FOR DRINKING…..WATER IS FOR FIGHTING !!!

    • @oceanhome2023
      @oceanhome2023 11 месяцев назад +3

      It’s Chinatown Jake ! Chinatown !

    • @CallMeByMyMatingName
      @CallMeByMyMatingName 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@oceanhome2023"Chinatown Jake" sounds like an interesting character...

  • @Savantrovert
    @Savantrovert Год назад +93

    It's not Griffin Park, it's Griffith Park. If you're into LA history you should definitely check out the story of the park's namesake, Griffith J. Griffith. He was a wealthy landowner in the late 19th century, who attempted to donate the land that is now Griffith Park to the city of Los Angeles partly to try and repair his damaged public image due to him attempting to murder his wife. (He shot her in the head, but she somehow survived) At first the city turned him down, but eventually took the land after his death. He also used the title General even though he did not serve in the military.

    • @Tangent360
      @Tangent360 11 месяцев назад +5

      It's also not Milton "Burly", it's "Burl".

    • @408drez
      @408drez 11 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you

    • @aprilboneski4639
      @aprilboneski4639 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Tangent360 I caught that one too.😀

    • @larry4111
      @larry4111 11 месяцев назад +5

      Also Canoga Park, not Canooga lol.

    • @carollinegrace1006
      @carollinegrace1006 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@Tangent360 It's spelled "Milton Berle," which is probably what tripped-up this kid and his writer, who were likely educated in a California public school.

  • @mariusfacktor3597
    @mariusfacktor3597 Год назад +132

    13:07 "removing the concrete would once again expose Los Angeles to the vulnerability of floods"
    No it wouldn't. If tasked with stopping floods today with modern hydrology, we'd have never built these concrete channels. Instead we would build more holding reservoirs to collect water closer to its sources, and we'd make the city more porous with green spaces and less asphalt. The concrete was a primitive 20th century technique that is criticized today by the engineering profession as an example of what not to do.

    • @ldm58427
      @ldm58427 11 месяцев назад +26

      There's a lot of issues with this video

    • @williambrewer1195
      @williambrewer1195 11 месяцев назад

      I feel like it doesn’t pass the bullshit test when you see it. Like there’s no way that makes more sense than whatever the river was before. Freaking damn up a reservoir upstream to control downstream floods if you must, but there’s no way taking out all the wildlife and building an enormous concrete basin is efficient.
      It feels like they had some corrupt concrete and real estate deal or something lol

    • @akshonclip
      @akshonclip 11 месяцев назад

      The flooding comes from extreme localized rainfall. You can’t dam up a flood plain. The problem is the 21st century engineers that fail to look at trends when designing this “green” bullshit.

    • @perkyraid9089
      @perkyraid9089 11 месяцев назад +4

      Even if, after removing the concrete the environmental damage that has done to the soil underneath of it too. No idea the technical aspect behind it but it cant be any good…

    • @2HATE2
      @2HATE2 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@perkyraid9089 it’s best not to remove what was laid down years ago. We would only cause more damage to CA we would have erosion issues then

  • @reddog-ex4dx
    @reddog-ex4dx Год назад +120

    Having been born in 1961 in LA I've seen a lot of the history of the LA river. I grew up in the hills around Los Angeles and I asked my dad why the street gutters were so high compared to other places. I remember him saying just what till it rains. It didn't take much to fill those gutters half way. And when it rained for two or three days or more even those high gutters couldn't contain all that water. That water headed down to the LA river through many of its tributaries. What happened up in the Owens River Valley had nothing to do with the LA river. You could do a whole video on how Mulolland stole the water rights from those farmers up there. You should have said more about the Sepulveda Dam basin and how it and Hansem Dam protect downtown LA from flooding. I've seen the Sepulveda Dam basin fill up so fast many a car was under twenty to thirty feet of water before the drivers even knew what was happening! I've seen the water at the top of the concrete walls going past KNBC and KABC studios, which is down stream of the Sepulveda Dam. It would be flowing at around thirty to forty miles an hour. If anybody falls into it, which happens every time it rains, their chances of coming out alive are slim to none and slim is usually walking out the door. Their bodies usually turned up down in Long Beach. It surprises people when they find out why there is water flowing in the river all the time, especially in the middle of a drought. It's all run off from people watering their lawns up stream! Enjoy your videos! Thanks!

    • @Maldoror200
      @Maldoror200 Год назад +4

      ✌️💀..From Phx.., I totally dug your "comment"..,I did not know this.. itsounds f-ng treacherous..!! Wish I could hear more..Good Luck to you, and, ~Peace..✌️😉

    • @prevaloir5362
      @prevaloir5362 Год назад +1

      liar

    • @michaelwhite2823
      @michaelwhite2823 Год назад +8

      Don't they warn ya it pours. MAN IT POURS.

    • @thawhiteazn
      @thawhiteazn Год назад +9

      @@Maldoror200I recommend the book “Cadillac Desert” if you’re interested in the sordid history of the Owens River aqueduct

    • @rockland2
      @rockland2 Год назад +12

      I was also going to comment that the Owens Valley water conflict had absolutely nothing to do with the LA River. The Owens Valley water is for drinking and watering, the LA River is basically used only for storm runoff, the citizens do not drink from it.

  • @christopherboada7921
    @christopherboada7921 Год назад +29

    I'm quite a fan of your channel, but as you're a historian, I was stunned that you mispronounced the name of Milton Berle. It's not "BER-ly". It's Berle, one syllable that rhymes with pearl. If you haven't heard of him, he had a major career in entertainment that spanned most of the 20th century. He was an important figure in vaudeville, radio, television, film, and to a lesser extent on Broadway.

    • @kmm34
      @kmm34 Год назад +7

      Uncle Milty still getting laughs.

    • @TipzNexAstrum
      @TipzNexAstrum Год назад +4

      At this point I think he's doing it on purpose, I can't remember the last video where he doesn't mispronounce something obvious.

    • @larry4111
      @larry4111 11 месяцев назад +3

      Also it's Canoga Park, not Canooga lol. And Griffith Park, not Griffin (although he says Griffith later in the video).

    • @josecarrillo8569
      @josecarrillo8569 10 месяцев назад

      Lol Milton Berly don’t care about you and doesn’t even know you. But here you are protecting his nuts.

    • @ponyboycurtis007
      @ponyboycurtis007 9 месяцев назад

      Fair point. But I'll say most prominent historians have a team of people working behind them to iron out details like this.
      I don't think it takes away from the video.
      And hey.. all the better.. in this day and age we have a comment section for everyones enlightenment.

  • @potatothorn
    @potatothorn 11 месяцев назад +7

    donut at 10:25 on the left, got to love it. some people noticed / maybe it's in the comments already but there it is again... very thorough documentary, i like it. photos of the river and storm damage in 1938, wow...

  • @OwnYourOwnBus101
    @OwnYourOwnBus101 11 месяцев назад +6

    If I may, I want to offer a little clarity on this: The video insinuates that the aqueduct and the LA River are one in the same. The LA River and the aqueduct are two completely separate projects and conversations. One system (The LA River) is modified to manage flooding and water runoff issues in the area, while a completely different system (the aqueduct) is created to bring fresh water into the same drought prone area.
    I think the key phrase here is “drought prone.” The LA river alone could not supply fresh drinking water on a consistent basis to the then growing population of Los Angeles, much less now. LA is in the desert. That’s why the aqueduct was created. Two separate projects.

    • @DanielinLaTuna
      @DanielinLaTuna 11 месяцев назад +1

      Good points. Also, the LA River could barely support the region even when Wm. Mulholland and Fred Eaton were looking for alternatives to supplement the river and existing groundwater (the river used to go underground sometimes, like desert rivers do.
      Mr. Eaton, an avid outdoorsman, told Mr. Mulholland, the city water engineer, that he’d been camping in a place up north that had beaucoup water. They took a road trip together and Mulholland realized that he could run a pipeline/aqueduct using gravity alone to deliver the water from where it was to where he needed it to be.

  • @Modeltnick
    @Modeltnick Год назад +6

    Lots of movies and television shows were filmed there. Quite an iconic bridge usually in the background.

  • @smalltime0
    @smalltime0 Год назад +15

    When I was 7 my family went on a trip to LA (from Australia). I had seen Grease and didn't know at the time that it was suppose to be a river, I thought they were racing in a storm water drain.
    My Dad pointed it out as we passed and called it the LA River, I didn't believe him.

    • @TheMomseloc
      @TheMomseloc 9 месяцев назад +2

      And you were right. It's THUNDER ROAD!

  • @budshoot6951
    @budshoot6951 Год назад +6

    @6:00 - So our government has been labeling people as "terrorists" to sway public judgement for well over 100 years? These farmers were simply trying to preserve their way of life while feeling like they're being strong armed by a greater power with ulterior motives. So many parallels can be drawn between this story and things that occur today on many scales.

    • @athos1974
      @athos1974 Год назад

      "A government is made up of a group of people that are usually ungoverned".

  • @anonymousm9113
    @anonymousm9113 Год назад +6

    This looks remarkably like the Los Santos River. Many memories there, including good times with Smoke (RIP).

    • @thechief00
      @thechief00 Год назад +5

      all we had to do was follow the damn train!

  • @badkittynomilktonight3334
    @badkittynomilktonight3334 Год назад +48

    Interesting fact. The LA River used to flow into the Santa Monica Bay at the current Balona Creek outlet, this was in recorded history. A series of heavy rains flooding the flood plain across greater Los Angeles the water found or created another path, its current path, to the the sea at San Pedro Bay.

    • @davidortega357
      @davidortega357 3 месяца назад

      I heard that an Earthquake created a crevices from balone creek opened up to long Beach out to Ocean

  • @Alexmay111
    @Alexmay111 Год назад +20

    Anyone else notice the car doing donuts on the left side at 10:28?

    • @phatnum17
      @phatnum17 Год назад +4

      I was gonna comment this 😂

    • @reddog-ex4dx
      @reddog-ex4dx Год назад +3

      Yup!

    • @jasonrackawack9369
      @jasonrackawack9369 Год назад +3

      Good eye Looks like the shop from the Hoonigan youtube channel 😂🤣😂😅😉👍 too funny

  • @christiandevey3898
    @christiandevey3898 Год назад +4

    To Live and Die in L.A. is another great movie with a scene in the L.A. River

  • @DeanStephen
    @DeanStephen Год назад +274

    It’s “Griffith Park”, not Griffin.

    • @BrainFartTheFirst
      @BrainFartTheFirst Год назад +57

      Came here to scream that. Also the second E in Milton Berle is silent.

    • @ryaneads616
      @ryaneads616 Год назад +21

      Okay dan

    • @SwimmingintheDeep
      @SwimmingintheDeep Год назад +20

      Sometimes I wonder if he makes all these mistakes on purpose. His videos have tons of mistakes but yet I keep watching them.

    • @gr0g88
      @gr0g88 Год назад +15

      Its "Get away from my tent" if you visit in person

    • @matthewdoyle6236
      @matthewdoyle6236 Год назад +22

      Also, it’s Can-O-ga Park…

  • @Backroad_Junkie
    @Backroad_Junkie Год назад +27

    Milton Barley? How about Milton Berle. I know he died over 20 years ago, but still...

    • @d.e.b.b5788
      @d.e.b.b5788 Год назад +2

      I believe that Ryan intentionally mispronounces a lot of words, in order to make his videos more likely to appeal to the uneducated, so that they can feel that they are really smart, so they will watch, and hopefully at least absorb some knowledge that they didn't know before. Many of his videos contain these little inconsequential errors, but for the most part, they are accurate.

    • @Backroad_Junkie
      @Backroad_Junkie Год назад +5

      @@d.e.b.b5788 Just the opposite for me.
      Make them look unprofessional. For a channel that's supposed to be educating people on some subject, it makes them look like a fool, with the loss of credibility.
      The channel gets the main thrust of the subject correct, but just drops the ball on what would be a simple job of editing.

    • @wheressteve
      @wheressteve Год назад +2

      His soup is delicious.

    • @Backroad_Junkie
      @Backroad_Junkie Год назад

      @@wheressteve Was gonna bake some chicken today, and it's gonna go down into the 50's with rain.
      A chicken-barley stew might be in order!
      Milton would be proud, lol...

    • @1practicaljoker
      @1practicaljoker Год назад +2

      His mispronunciations make me cringe

  • @MikeBMW
    @MikeBMW Год назад +7

    The movie "China Town" with Jack Nicholson was all about the water wars.
    Great movie!

  • @Kodakcompactdisc
    @Kodakcompactdisc Год назад +1

    Another quality video Ryan, fair play 👍🏼

  • @notpurple
    @notpurple Год назад +4

    loved the route tracing! thanks for that!

  • @DirtyMac5151
    @DirtyMac5151 Год назад +5

    Milton Berle (Burl, not Burr lee) it was funny to hear it that way. Also, idk that history repeats itself. That would be impossible. There can be time periods that are similar but it's never a 100% repeat.

  • @robertnielsen2461
    @robertnielsen2461 Год назад +3

    Interesting ,As a boy I spent many hours playing on the river with my friends and this brought back many childhood memories, thank you!

  • @lamar1423
    @lamar1423 Год назад +8

    I wandered around that river with its concrete walls with my friends in the '60s. Against the urban backdrop, it has a surreal quality to it. What fun and what adventures we had. Always warned to stay away from going down there but wearing out an old pair of shorts"booty sliding" with the late spring run-offs was hard to resist. Lord only knows what toxins we were swimming in.

    • @chormiclestan
      @chormiclestan 10 месяцев назад

      We did the same in the San Gabriel River at the beginning of the concrete portion. If we had only known then, what we know now about that water, we would never have done it!

  • @jantschierschky3461
    @jantschierschky3461 Год назад +16

    I was in LA, about 20 years ago. It was raining cats and dogs, that river swelling up and was running so fast you had white tops, would say it was running 10m/sec or more. Impressive sight.

    • @chormiclestan
      @chormiclestan 10 месяцев назад

      I remember about 30+ years ago, they were doing construction work on the riverbed system near the merge point of the Rio Hondo river and L.A. river. There were dirt hauling trucks and concrete mixers caught in the floods caused by rains farther up river. Drivers had to be airlifted off of the top of the trucks! Was on the news, and can still be seen on RUclips.

  • @brendakrieger7000
    @brendakrieger7000 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing💧💧

  • @Dave49erman
    @Dave49erman 11 месяцев назад

    Very interesting! Lots of details!!

  • @someguy2998
    @someguy2998 Год назад +17

    Who the hell is Miton "Burley"???🤣🤣🤣

  • @donaldlamkin1305
    @donaldlamkin1305 11 месяцев назад

    Very cool video!

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 Год назад +4

    Milton Barley? Do you mean Milton Berle? "Signage" is about signs, not the signing of documents. You could have included the paving of Compton Creek which damaged the community, and there is a restoration project there too.

  • @Leychen
    @Leychen 10 месяцев назад

    Nice video! I like the idea of bringing a little nature back to the river and creating recreational space around that. I mean that's how rivers in most cities are used.

  • @markh3271
    @markh3271 Год назад +3

    You've seen the 6th street bridge and the road underneath it, Santa Fe Avenue, more often than the riverbed in movies and TV shows. 4th Street bridge was another one used quite often. The original 6th Street bridge has been replaced recently but the 4th Street bridge is still there.

  • @mistermena8204
    @mistermena8204 Год назад +22

    You really should do an in-depth video on the Hudson River and it’s crossings. It’s a huge river with some “interesting” crosses!

    • @HappyMuffin
      @HappyMuffin 11 месяцев назад

      He’ll screw it up like he screws up every video he makes, congrats

  • @rkevic
    @rkevic Год назад +2

    Even creeks fill up all the way up to the bridge. I’m glad they are paved since erosion is a big problem, I haven’t heard of any spillage or floods due to the river carrying so much water

  • @DLeadVox
    @DLeadVox Год назад +1

    ❤❤❤ Thanks Ryan!

  • @talanigreywolf7110
    @talanigreywolf7110 Год назад +5

    Not sure if you noted it or just missed it but in 2015 a court order issued to Los Angeles stated that the city had to rewater the Owen's gorge.

  • @bizzz.R
    @bizzz.R 10 месяцев назад

    Used to call it the Wash growing up. Had fun rollerblading / biking up and down that thing!

  • @1babysag
    @1babysag Год назад +3

    You did not mention the SciFi favorite “THEM.” The giant ants used the river and its many culverts as nesting areas.

    • @paulsto6516
      @paulsto6516 8 месяцев назад

      Great thriller of a movie!

  • @michaelwhite2823
    @michaelwhite2823 Год назад +5

    Isn't this the same drainage ditch that is right behind the Brady Bunch house on Dillard in Studio City? Look it up people.

  • @danielsizemore3678
    @danielsizemore3678 2 месяца назад

    Very interesting, great job

  • @Backroad_Junkie
    @Backroad_Junkie Год назад +17

    You should do a video on Mono Lake (and David Gaines.) It's the continuation of this video.
    Los Angeles was going to pull another Owens Valley and milk all the feeder streams. Unlike the farmers who used a lot of dynamite (lol), Gaines found that shopping around for friendly judges proved to be more effective, and forced Los Angeles to start replacing the water in the Lake. Mono Lake is probably the birthplace of the modern environmentalist movement.
    Interesting things about Mono Lake. It's directly East of Yosemite. It's the birthplace of something like 80% of all California Seagulls. It's a basin,which means no water flows out of the lake. Because of this, the lake is something like 3 times the saltiness of the ocean, and has a high-ph level. It's also the reason the tufa (calcium carbonate, I think) forms.
    I won't get into the billions of alkali flies. They won't bother you, but as you walk, they get out of your way. It's like this dark patch parting in front of you, lol.
    It's surrounded by volcanoes, and even the two islands in the lake are volcanoes. It is supposedly North America's oldest continuously existing lake, at something like a million years old.
    (I stayed in Lee Vining, the town on Mono Lake leaving Yosemite, so absorbed all the local trivia. 😁)

    • @Maldoror200
      @Maldoror200 Год назад

      @Backroad_Junkie..💀..That's a very interesting story..!! Surprised Noone has done, at least, a small doc' on it..I'm in Phx, so, never even heard of it b4..So, since it is soo intensely "briny", there's prob'ly no fishes, or anything else, living in it, right..?! ..and, "alkali flies"..??.. (smh)..sumthin new, every day.., And, definitelyscary about the volcanoes.(shudders..),learn sumthin' new, (&scary), every day ., yah ?!..~Peace, Kyl

  • @randellgribben9772
    @randellgribben9772 11 месяцев назад

    it has also become a fly fishing hot spot for the locals.. bass and big carp.. fun to catch and release

  • @malarkey0949
    @malarkey0949 Год назад +1

    Very cool.

  • @jamesmiller4184
    @jamesmiller4184 Год назад +10

    Despite the few little "typos" this was a good, detaied and seemingly complete report!
    Now we need one featuring still-beautiful University Town -- Redlands CA. (A cultural island in a rolling sea of mediocrity and low-life.)

    • @HappyMuffin
      @HappyMuffin 11 месяцев назад +1

      The errors dilute history and is inexcusable.

  • @Mk99987
    @Mk99987 Год назад +6

    How did the water wars and aqueduct construction tie into the LA River?? Maybe Uncle Milty Berley knows.

    • @darrylnelson05
      @darrylnelson05 Месяц назад

      Yeah, the Owen's River watershed and the LA River watershed aren't connected.

  • @nannerz1994
    @nannerz1994 9 месяцев назад +2

    I moved here two and a half years ago from the Midwest and the things that surprised me were
    -When it rains it's winter and it's happens all at once
    -It takes a lot of water for the soil to start actually soaking up water, its so hydrophobic
    -The streets and gutters frequently flood because they don't have a lot of storm drains
    "The river is dry most of the year but when it rains, it's like 15 ft deep And there's always rescue of homeless people who live around there because the water rises so fast.

  • @kendallkahl8725
    @kendallkahl8725 Год назад +6

    What I can't figure out is why the LA River water keeps getting wasted. They could pump it to a holding lake. Preferably two with one being a settling lake where bubbles could oxygenat the water clearing organic waste and then have it sent to a holding lake where it could be used. Fishing and recreation could be allowed at the primary lake. After it goes to the second lake it could go on and be treated for drinking water. During flooding the pumps could operate at full speed. A weird could be built within the concrete chanel creating a pond that could be pumped that would over topped during flooding.

    • @olliemck60
      @olliemck60 10 месяцев назад

      what about using it for groundwater, where it would need less treatment?

  • @oldman975
    @oldman975 Год назад +7

    I had no idea that the Los Angeles River was a natural estuary,I have always thought it an artificial waterway built to handle runoff from metropolitan area. Thanks for the enlightenment..

  • @aicofrena505
    @aicofrena505 Год назад +4

    San Diego almost had a river like that but the people of this city fought to keep the SD river from becoming an LA River

    • @Ignorantintellectual
      @Ignorantintellectual 9 месяцев назад +1

      LA is very greedy, at least we kept the river. They took the clippers and the chargers

  • @user-kh6mk4gg8y
    @user-kh6mk4gg8y 16 дней назад

    Another useful insight...thank you, Ryan and Team...sometimes, California gets it RIGHT!...dgp/uk

  • @Maggies87
    @Maggies87 Год назад +2

    Canoga Park High School at start of L.A. River was loud and full when it used to rain. Good video. Ok, yeah, small errors. But the up side is lots of comments for the channel. 😁

  • @DeBaRe
    @DeBaRe Год назад +1

    10:26 someone is drifting his car on the left (at the parking lot) :D

  • @elizabradley4797
    @elizabradley4797 Год назад

    I volunteered in 2013 for Friends of the River. Difficult to schedule with family. But naivety made me hopeful.

  • @Neverhome365
    @Neverhome365 Год назад +1

    Dude doing donuts at 10:29 lol

  • @myevilplans
    @myevilplans Год назад +3

    I'd like to see something on mulhuland, the destruction of hetch hetchy valley and how it all ties together with the aqueduct system and the reach across the state

  • @rkyat
    @rkyat Год назад +1

    Anybody else see that car doing donuts at 10:30 😂

  • @TheMomseloc
    @TheMomseloc 9 месяцев назад +1

    California is so wonderful. I hope everyone stays there instead of moving to Phoenix.

  • @maxd3028
    @maxd3028 Год назад +1

    Best presentation of Los Angeles river so far 💖👌💯

  • @mbcase
    @mbcase Год назад +1

    Griffith Park...never been to LA? But thanks for calling it a great city!

  • @PeggyAmaya
    @PeggyAmaya 11 месяцев назад

    Could you do a video on the Rio Hondo, San Gabriel River and the Whittier Narrows Dam?

  • @yeoldegunporn
    @yeoldegunporn 10 месяцев назад

    Interesting way of explaining the beginning of the Water Wars. Pretty kind to the LADWP.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +3

    It's stunning how people will think actors are an important part of a flooding.

    • @TheNotverysocial
      @TheNotverysocial 2 месяца назад

      Without their homes being flooded, the hardships of the common folk would be swept under the rug, and treated as a footnote.

  • @glike2
    @glike2 11 месяцев назад

    BMX Bike rides in the river in 70s and 80s was a lot of fun

  • @emmahardesty4330
    @emmahardesty4330 28 дней назад

    Thanks for your video; a tad disturbing to hear several word flubs. Would like to refer anyone to read Cadillac Desert by Marc Reisner. Great read and shows very clearly the tycoon rapaciousness behind the sickly LA River.

  • @RaDeus87
    @RaDeus87 Год назад +5

    Imagine how the climate had been if they had gone with earthen dikes with a floodland around the river, it would have added a lot of moisture to the area around the river.

  • @encinobalboa
    @encinobalboa 3 месяца назад

    It's Feb. 2024. L.A. just had a historic atmospheric river that dropped 10 or more inches across the region. The L.A. river did it's job and there was no damage. Any alteration to the concrete channel must preserve this protection.

  • @ttopero
    @ttopero Год назад +2

    I grew up along the edge of the San Gabriel River in the SE LA suburbs. It’s always been overlooked by the LA River despite its longer stretch and importance to the east side of LA county. I wonder if there’s anything about the river or valley that would also warrant a video. Granted, it doesn’t go through Hollywood, Los Angeles or have prominent recognition, and the valley was developed primarily post-war, but it’s got a lot going for it too, if not as controversially.

    • @eljefefirmee380
      @eljefefirmee380 11 месяцев назад +2

      I grew up in Pico Rivera, the SG river is a hidden gem even though it’s gone through a lot of change

    • @David-um4dy
      @David-um4dy 11 месяцев назад

      @eljefefirmee380 I used to bike ride that river from Downey all the way to seal Beach. It passes by el Dorado park. Very underrated river.

    • @eljefefirmee380
      @eljefefirmee380 11 месяцев назад

      @@David-um4dy it looks awesome rn that we have rain water

  • @wolfsmith2865
    @wolfsmith2865 Год назад +4

    It's Griffith Park. Spent plenty of time there growing up. We used to enter the river in Pasadena or South Pasadena and ride down into L.A.

    • @jeffreyhill8040
      @jeffreyhill8040 Год назад +1

      What did you ride?

    • @wolfsmith2865
      @wolfsmith2865 Год назад +1

      @@jeffreyhill8040 bicycles

    • @jeffreyhill8040
      @jeffreyhill8040 Год назад +2

      @@wolfsmith2865 I can buy that... What you are talking about is the Arroyo Seco, of course. It starts way up in the hills next to JPL, goes down past the Rose Bowl, into Pasadena and eventually follows the Pasadena Freeway right into the LA River. Wouldn't be difficult to get into the channel on a bike and ride all the way to downtown.

    • @wolfsmith2865
      @wolfsmith2865 Год назад

      @Jeffrey Hill yep, we'd go up to Oak Grove Park by Devil's Gate Dam. Then we'd get in near Suicide Bridge or the old National Guard armory, or near the casting ponds and archery ranges in Arroyo Seco Park. Sometimes we'd come up in Highland Park or continue down past the old iron viaduct where the graffiti was. From there it was straight past Heritage Square. I can't recall the paths past the tunnels as it's been 35+ years.

    • @jeffreyhill8040
      @jeffreyhill8040 Год назад +1

      @@wolfsmith2865 I have a close relative that lives just above the Arroyo and I used to walk her dog on the hiking trail that runs along there. Early-2000's. It is also possible to ride horses on those trails. I kept my horse in Burbank and have actually ridden him into that concrete river bottom right where it crosses into Glendale. Only 2 inches of water there, but a lot of slippery moss to be careful of on horseback.

  • @Starphot
    @Starphot Год назад +5

    As I tell my eastern friends, out here in the West, it's all about the water. I remember in the late 1950's playing in the San Gabriel River near Hawaiian Gardens, CA in the dry season with a horse stable nearby. I remember playing in the river one day and there was a downpour the next day. My dad came home and took us out somewhere. When we passed over the river at Carson St, it was a scary tempest. The stable is still there but the river now has a concrete lining. We moved to Denver in 1960 and was taught about western water in elementary school. Not many people east of the Mississippi have heard of a "Water Court". That happens here as the developers get in with the farmers and ranchers over the water rights.

    • @olliemck60
      @olliemck60 10 месяцев назад

      So Cal's population is slowing down, but still way over its water capacity. Always wonder why more attention was not paid to desalination or sending water from the Midwest.

  • @thawhiteazn
    @thawhiteazn Год назад +2

    I don’t understand the connection you’re making to flooding and the aqueduct. The Owens River aqueduct was taking water from a different river to bring to LA, how does that help with periodic flooding of the LA River?
    You also really glossed over the dirty history behind the aqueduct, and I recommend anyone interested check out the book “Cadillac Desert” for more info.

  • @Maldoror200
    @Maldoror200 Год назад +1

    💀..Ryan, You Really do one HELLUVA JOB, Brother.., NO Shit..!!! You TRULY DO..150%, EVERY TIME..THANK YOU.., For Your Hard work.., and Your obvious Commitment..You set the Standard, man..!!! 👍..✌️😉~Peace

  • @rossrreyes
    @rossrreyes Год назад +2

    Amazing how much concrete, river/buildings/streets, have covered up absolutely all the natural ground in the pictures compared to a century ago. It’s concrete purgatory.

  • @ecamp6360
    @ecamp6360 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for highlighting the Friends of the L.A. River. Far too often the work of citizen groups gets ignored or, worse, co-opted by government or politicians. In NYC, Friends groups have restored the Bronx River and are working to "daylight" a stream in Van Cortlandt Park.

  • @brianberthold3118
    @brianberthold3118 Год назад +6

    id say by the look of it its more a creek or stream then a river ..

  • @scotness
    @scotness Год назад +2

    Milton Berle. I love your work just say names right

  • @Rollermonkey1
    @Rollermonkey1 Год назад +2

    When you say 'frequent floods' what feels like 20-30 times in the first 4 minutes maybe a representation of HOW FREQUENT these floods were is worth mentioning? Weekly? Every few years?

    • @MikeP2055
      @MikeP2055 11 месяцев назад

      Storms and floods are extremely erratic in the West. I lived right against the Santa Clara River, which in reality was a four foot wide stream 99% of the time, in St. George, UT (just north of Vegas). Crazy random winter snow in the higher elevations and rainy springtime weather could turn the tiny stream into a raging torrent in a matter of moments. The Santa Clara hadn't drastically flooded in decades, then we got two "100 year floods" in the span of seven or eight years. The second flood washed three of my neighbors' houses away and undercut the river bank in my backyard so drastically that the house almost had to be demolished. We got tons of snow this winter, so the meltoff is wreaking havoc again.
      If you look up "Capitol Reef National Park flash food" on RUclips, there's a bunch of footage of an insane flood that wiped out a creek bed and washed away several vehicles. The Parks service had to rescue hikers by helicopter. It was caused by like 3 hours of random monsoon rain.

  • @TomTerrific-vm3qg
    @TomTerrific-vm3qg 11 месяцев назад +1

    Bike paths have been in the river a long time. We used ride from Whittier Narrows down the San Gabriel river to Long Beach. across town to the L.A. river, then up the L.A. river to the Rio Hondo to connect back to the Whittier Narrows. As the bike paths have a significant portion in the "riverbed" this was not possible when the rivers are actually rivers.

    • @ianwalton284
      @ianwalton284 8 месяцев назад

      No bike path when I was a kid in the 70's. Just jump the fence and keep an eye out for pedo bums or gang bangers.

  • @chrisg8995
    @chrisg8995 Год назад +2

    Great job. Thank you! One recommendation would be to work on your pronunciations given it is a history channel. Otherwise keep up the great work!!

  • @1867Phoenix
    @1867Phoenix Год назад +1

    1:14 Terminator 2 Judgement Day moment T-800 rides a motorcycle into the Los Angeles River, with T-1000 in a tow truck chasing John Connor.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +1

    I don't really understand why they made straight concrete channels, it just makes the water flow faster.
    Should've probably asked us, the Dutch people, how to solve this.
    Could've opted for a much prettier and more effective solution.

  • @c42rlk
    @c42rlk 9 месяцев назад

    When Los Angeles bought the water rights in the Owens Valley, the farmers and ranchers were unaware that the people buying the farms and ranches were representing the city of Los Angeles. A good book regarding water in the western US is called Cadillac Desert.

  • @ToastGhost
    @ToastGhost Год назад

    Interesting to learn about one of my favourite places to visit in GTA V

  • @Tallsasquatchdude
    @Tallsasquatchdude 9 месяцев назад

    In my opinion, after watching a number of videos on the LA river and the LA aqueduct, the two are not connected in any way. The aqueduct was created by Mulholland and Sepulveda to solve Los Angeles' drought problem. The river was built by the army corps of engineers to stop major flooding.
    The video is great, and your fact are all correct. I just feel as if you are talking about 2 separate water systems as if they are the same.

  • @icedwidow
    @icedwidow 15 дней назад

    My grandpa was born in 1929 and spoke of swimming in the LA river as a boy.

  • @mohammedcohen
    @mohammedcohen Год назад +1

    ...first saw this in "Them"!!!

  • @AriessunvirgomoonlightLibraise
    @AriessunvirgomoonlightLibraise 10 месяцев назад

    I grew up in long beach an still a resident. U can ride the bike trail on the LA river straight to shoreline or Queen Mary

  • @bajaboy27
    @bajaboy27 8 месяцев назад

    Gone in 60 seconds also had a scene in the LA river!

  • @freetolook3727
    @freetolook3727 Год назад +2

    @7:44 Isn't it funny how Mother Nature gave a big middle finger to man and said "This river is going where it wants to"!?

  • @Mk99987
    @Mk99987 Год назад

    The best LA River movies- Them and Terminator.

  • @GeneralDragon64
    @GeneralDragon64 10 месяцев назад +1

    how did you forget to mention gone in 60 seconds for films that used it. that iconic scene of Eleanore out running the helicopter

  • @pittyman
    @pittyman 11 месяцев назад

    1:15, The Terminator 2? 😁

  • @TheJuanvisu
    @TheJuanvisu 11 месяцев назад

    10:35 WTF the car in the left XD

  • @SoonGone
    @SoonGone 2 месяца назад

    Its so bizarre how different LA was just 100 years ago. Just in one lifetime.

  • @ab348
    @ab348 Год назад +3

    A good movie that is often overlooked, 1967’s “Point Blank” with Lee Marvin and Angie Dickinson, has a great scene involving the L.A. river.

  • @Deadguy2
    @Deadguy2 Год назад +1

    Dump all that water in the oceans, Truly the most brilliant minds reside there

  • @rickb3288
    @rickb3288 Год назад +1

    "Milton Burley" ... LOL (Berle)

  • @2studmuffin
    @2studmuffin 11 месяцев назад +1

    I live less than 1000 ft from the LA river and they should restore the river to look like a river again. Keep flood measures in place but line the river with rocks, vegetation and trees like how it looks like when it cuts through Glendale. That is the only time it looks like a river.

  • @dandreevans5020
    @dandreevans5020 Год назад +1

    10:28 you can see somebody doing donuts on the left😭

  • @1babysag
    @1babysag Год назад +1

    Another classic, “Chinatown,” used the river extensively in its filming.

  • @thyssaliki
    @thyssaliki Год назад

    Griffin Park? Where's that?

  • @1970sugan
    @1970sugan Год назад +4

    With drought in the horizon, concrete needs to be removed to replenish ground water. We have messed up our own ground water supply…

  • @swimspud
    @swimspud 11 месяцев назад +5

    I think the message of this video makes people think the aquaduct drinking water project (taking water from the owns valley 200 miles north) and the LA River food control project. These are two separate products with two separate objectives.
    As an aside, the LA river could be beneficial to the areas water supply with many retention basins. I toured one in 2008 that was basically a soccer field with a 5 foot berm around it to retain storm water from that area.

    • @chormiclestan
      @chormiclestan 10 месяцев назад

      If you've EVER seen the water in those riverbeds, you DEFINITELY wouldn't even want to think of drinking it. It is algae polluted and dirty!