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Coming Soon
3h away
Tavern Tales Events runs rapid-fire D&D encounters at Little Bird Brewing in North Park — a craft brewery in a neighborhood that was built for exactly this kind of night. The format is built for people who want to find their regular group, not just play once. All materials provided. No experience required. 21+, doors at 5:30 PM. Three and a half hours of short encounters designed so you actually meet the people at your table. If you've been looking for a D&D group in San Diego, this is the room.
Coming Soon
32 days away
Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles is the oldest Japanese American community in the country and on weekend evenings it functions as the unofficial gathering point for LA-area anime and Japanese culture fans. The stretch of 1st and 2nd Street between Central and Alameda runs izakayas, ramen shops, Anime Jungle with dedicated anime merchandise, Kinokuniya Books, and coffee shops where people sit for hours discussing shows. The monthly Anime and Culture Night draws the community that lives here year-round, not just the convention crowd that shows up twice a year. Street performers, pop-up cosplay groups, and informal meetups fill the sidewalks from early evening into the night. Browse Anime Jungle for figures, tapestries, and limited releases. Kinokuniya carries Japanese-language manga, artbooks, and music releases alongside English-language anime. The ramen spots fill up fast. Arriving by 6:30pm avoids the longest waits at Ichiran, Daikokuya, and Shin-Sen-Gumi. The Metro Gold Line stops at Little Tokyo/Arts District station. Street parking is available on surrounding blocks. No ticket or registration required. Monthly on the second Saturday.
Coming Soon
50 days away
Tokyo Love Song is a recurring city pop night hosted at Hello Stranger in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. The format is a DJ set of Japanese city pop, boogie, and yacht soul on vinyl -- the sounds that defined Tokyo's 1980s nightlife and have been experiencing a global resurgence through YouTube, TikTok, and Spotify. At its May 2026 edition, Hello Stranger hosted a vinyl release party featuring DJ sets by XL Middleton and Kaistar -- two key figures connecting SoCal's funk underground with the city pop revival. The crowd that shows up for Tokyo Love Song is specific: record collectors, Japanese film fans, people who discovered ANRI on a late-night YouTube rabbit hole and need to know if anyone else in LA loves this. Hello Stranger is located in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles -- one of the most culturally specific neighborhoods in SoCal. The venue is a bar and event space: small enough that you will definitely talk to a stranger, large enough to have a real dance floor. Tokyo Love Song runs bimonthly -- check the Falkor listing and the venue's Instagram for exact upcoming dates. City pop as a live nightlife format has crossed from a streaming niche into a recurring live circuit. The City Pop Waves concert series brought ANRI and Taeko Onuki to the Wiltern in 2026, both shows selling out. Tokyo Love Song is the bimonthly version for people who want to dance, not just watch. No cover charge has been typical for previous editions. Arrive early -- capacity is limited. Little Tokyo parking is available in the Gateway Center structure on Alameda Street.
Coming Soon
52 days away
The Tanabata Festival at Little Tokyo in Los Angeles celebrates the Japanese star festival — one of the five classical festivals of the Japanese calendar — with the traditional decoration of bamboo branches with colorful paper wishes (tanzaku) and a cultural program that brings the Little Tokyo community together each July. Tanabata (the Star Festival) marks the annual meeting of two stars in the night sky, Vega and Altair, which in Japanese mythology represent the lovers Orihime and Hikoboshi separated by the Milky Way. The festival tradition involves writing wishes on paper strips and hanging them on bamboo branches — a practice that Little Tokyo's Japanese American community has observed since the neighborhood's earliest days. The Little Tokyo Tanabata Festival features the bamboo decoration of the neighborhood's main streets and plazas, traditional music and dance performances, cultural activities, and the community gathering that defines Little Tokyo's role as the cultural center of Japanese American life in Southern California. Little Tokyo is located in downtown Los Angeles near 1st Street between San Pedro and Alameda, accessible via Metro Gold Line (Little Tokyo/Arts District Station). The festival is free to attend. July is typically warm in downtown LA — the evening programming after sunset is the most pleasant time to visit.
Coming Soon
60 days away
Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles is the oldest Japanese American community in the country and on weekend evenings it functions as the unofficial gathering point for LA-area anime and Japanese culture fans. The stretch of 1st and 2nd Street between Central and Alameda runs izakayas, ramen shops, Anime Jungle with dedicated anime merchandise, Kinokuniya Books, and coffee shops where people sit for hours discussing shows. The monthly Anime and Culture Night draws the community that lives here year-round, not just the convention crowd that shows up twice a year. Street performers, pop-up cosplay groups, and informal meetups fill the sidewalks from early evening into the night. Browse Anime Jungle for figures, tapestries, and limited releases. Kinokuniya carries Japanese-language manga, artbooks, and music releases alongside English-language anime. The ramen spots fill up fast. Arriving by 6:30pm avoids the longest waits at Ichiran, Daikokuya, and Shin-Sen-Gumi. The Metro Gold Line stops at Little Tokyo/Arts District station. Street parking is available on surrounding blocks. No ticket or registration required. Monthly on the second Saturday.
Coming Soon
88 days away
Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles is the oldest Japanese American community in the country and on weekend evenings it functions as the unofficial gathering point for LA-area anime and Japanese culture fans. The stretch of 1st and 2nd Street between Central and Alameda runs izakayas, ramen shops, Anime Jungle with dedicated anime merchandise, Kinokuniya Books, and coffee shops where people sit for hours discussing shows. The monthly Anime and Culture Night draws the community that lives here year-round, not just the convention crowd that shows up twice a year. Street performers, pop-up cosplay groups, and informal meetups fill the sidewalks from early evening into the night. Browse Anime Jungle for figures, tapestries, and limited releases. Kinokuniya carries Japanese-language manga, artbooks, and music releases alongside English-language anime. The ramen spots fill up fast. Arriving by 6:30pm avoids the longest waits at Ichiran, Daikokuya, and Shin-Sen-Gumi. The Metro Gold Line stops at Little Tokyo/Arts District station. Street parking is available on surrounding blocks. No ticket or registration required. Monthly on the second Saturday.
Coming Soon
123 days away
Little Tokyo in downtown Los Angeles is the oldest Japanese American community in the country and on weekend evenings it functions as the unofficial gathering point for LA-area anime and Japanese culture fans. The stretch of 1st and 2nd Street between Central and Alameda runs izakayas, ramen shops, Anime Jungle with dedicated anime merchandise, Kinokuniya Books, and coffee shops where people sit for hours discussing shows. The monthly Anime and Culture Night draws the community that lives here year-round, not just the convention crowd that shows up twice a year. Street performers, pop-up cosplay groups, and informal meetups fill the sidewalks from early evening into the night. Browse Anime Jungle for figures, tapestries, and limited releases. Kinokuniya carries Japanese-language manga, artbooks, and music releases alongside English-language anime. The ramen spots fill up fast. Arriving by 6:30pm avoids the longest waits at Ichiran, Daikokuya, and Shin-Sen-Gumi. The Metro Gold Line stops at Little Tokyo/Arts District station. Street parking is available on surrounding blocks. No ticket or registration required. Monthly on the second Saturday.
Coming Soon
157 days away
The Little Italy Festa is San Diego's largest annual street festival and one of the most authentic Italian-American celebrations on the West Coast. Held every October in San Diego's Little Italy neighborhood, the Festa fills India Street and the surrounding blocks with cooking demonstrations, bocce ball tournaments, live Italian folk music, traditional dance performances, and an extraordinary spread of food - from handmade pasta to cannoli to imported cheeses. The festival is organized by the Little Italy Association and draws over 100,000 visitors across the weekend. The neighborhood is one of San Diego's most walkable districts - bounded by the waterfront, lined with bistros and gelato shops. The Festa features the Gesso Italiano, where local artists create chalk art murals on the streets. The cooking competition and wine garden are peak-hour attractions. Neighborhood restaurants offer festival specials throughout. Little Italy Festa 2026 runs in mid-October along India Street and Fir Street, San Diego. The event is free to attend. Parking is limited - the Little Italy trolley stop on the Green Line provides easy access.
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