1992 Los Angeles riots in popular culture

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This article lists examples of the ongoing influence on popular culture of the 1992 Los Angeles riots.

(Chronological, then alphabetical by title)

  • Spike Lee's film Malcolm X (1992) opens with a scene of the Rodney King beating, juxtaposed with a burning American flag that burns down and forms the letter X.[1][2]
  • The documentary film Post No Bills (1992) follows a political poster that was made of LAPD Chief Daryl Gates on an NRA shooting target and glued up on the streets of Los Angeles after the Rodney King beating. Post No Bills also includes an interview with Chief Gates about the poster and documents some of the events surrounding the resignation of Chief Gates from his position as Chief of Police.[3]
  • Dai Sil Kim-Gibson's documentary film Sa-I-Gu (1993) tells the story of Korean women shopkeepers during the LA Civil Unrest.[4]
  • The film Floundering (1994) explores the alienation and disaffection the main character sees in his neighborhood of post-riot Venice Beach.[5]
  • The Brian Springer documentary Spin (1995) uses intercepted raw satellite feeds from commercial television to chronicle 1992 with significant attention to the riots and their treatment by the media, as well as urban conditions more generally.[6]
  • Kathryn Bigelow's film Strange Days (1995) was influenced by the riots and "replays" and condenses the events and images of the Rodney King beating, trial and riots.[7][8]
  • The film Riot (1997) looks at the riots and their effect on the lives of four families: one Chinese, one Hispanic, one White, and one Black.[9][10]
  • In the film American History X (1998), characters argue about the circumstances of Rodney King's arrest.[11][12][13]
  • The final act of Dark Blue (2002) is set during the riots, reenacts several portions of it, as well as shows news footage of the attack on Reginald Denny.[2]
  • Dai Sil Kim-Gibson's film Wet Sand: Voices from LA (2004) criticizes mainstream media for pitting Korean Americans against African Americans in the days preceding the LA Civil Unrest.[14]
  • The film Rize (2005) is a documentary of life and the development of two dancing subcultures, clowning and krumping, in Watts, Los Angeles after the 1992 riots. It features footage of the 1992 riots as well as the 1965 Watts riots.[15][16]
  • The film The L.A. Riot Spectacular (2006), narrated by Snoop Dogg and starring Emilio Estevez, Charles S. Dutton, and George Hamilton, takes a satirical look at the riots.[17][18][19]
  • The film Freedom Writers (2007) stars Hilary Swank as a school teacher in a Long Beach high school two years after the riots. The film opens with scenes of the riots and is set two years afterward, in 1994.[20][21]
  • The film Straight Outta Compton (2015) shows footage from the L.A. riots, which are also discussed.[22][23]
  • The documentary film Let It Fall: Los Angeles 1982–1992 (2017), directed by John Ridley, is about the 10-year period leading up to, and including, the L.A. Riots. Its release coincided with the 25th anniversary of the unrest.[24]
  • Gook is a 2017 American drama film written and directed by Justin Chon that tells the story of two Korean-American brothers and their unlikely friendship with a neighborhood 11 year-old black girl, during the first day of the 1992 Los Angeles riots.[25][26]
  • The documentary film LA 92 chronicles the event on its 25th anniversary.[27] [28]
  • The drama-action film, 1992, depicts the riots being used as a distraction for a group of thieves to pull off a heist at a factory housing catalytic converters.[29][30]

Literature

(Alphabetical by author)

  • Paul Beatty's novel The White Boy Shuffle features the main character's involvement in the riots, including an argument on the way to loot a computer store over the "merits of an IBM-compatible versus an Apple."[31][32]
  • Eve Bunting and David Díaz's Smoky Night is a children's picture book about two neighboring families who lived through the riots, and learn to accept each other despite their ethnicity.[33]
  • The novel All Involved (2016) by Ryan Gattis involves mainly fictional gang members who use the chaos to viciously settle old scores.[34][35][36][37]
  • In The Freedom Writers Diary (1999) by Erin Gruwell, the L.A. Riots had a staggering effect on the diarists.[20][21]
  • Héctor Tobar's novel The Tattooed Soldier (1998) concludes during the riots, which are seen as mirroring the violence and breakdown of civil order that the novel's main characters had experienced in Guatemala before emigrating.[38]

Music

The beating of Rodney King and the Los Angeles riots have influenced multiple musical artists and groups, with some writing music as a direct response to the events. Others have mentioned or referenced King or the riots in their work, as well as other events that are believed to have contributed to the 1992 riots, such as the killing of Latasha Harlins.[39]

Notable songs or albums that reference these events include:

(Alphabetical by artist)

Television

After the riots multiple television shows, particularly those airing in the 1990s, featured episodes that mentioned or directly depicted the impact of the Rodney King beating and the Los Angeles riots. These shows included scripted ones such as Beverly Hills, 90210, Doogie Howser, M.D., and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, as well as talk and reality shows such as The Real World.[65][66] The below shows are ones where the episodes have received particular note. They are listed in alphabetical order:

  • In the 1992-1993 season premiere of the NBC sitcom A Different World, Dwayne and Whitley's Los Angeles honeymoon coincides with the riots.[67][68]
  • The third-season opener of the Fox comedy series In Living Color focused on the L.A. riots, and subsequent third-season episodes featured skits focusing on the L.A. riots (example: "The L.A. Riots Anniversary Special" promo).[68][69][70]
  • The NBC drama L.A. Law seventh-season opener was set on the day of the riots.[71][72]
  • The fifth episode of the second season of the 2022 reboot of Quantum Leap follows protagonist Ben Song as he leaps into the body of a Korean American teenager in order to prevent his father's death during the riots.[73][74]
  • Extensive coverage of the riots was featured on The Arsenio Hall Show. Mayor Tom Bradley appeared on the show and pleaded for calm to the residents of L.A.[75][76]

Theater

Video games

References

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