Leimert Park Village transforms into the cultural center of Black Los Angeles every June 19 — and the 2026 Juneteenth celebration is the fullest expression of what the neighborhood has always been: a place where the African American community in LA comes to be seen, to perform, to buy, and to mark time together.
The festival runs free and open to the public in Leimert Park Village, the historic arts district in South LA that has anchored Black creative life in the city since the 1940s. The day includes drum circles, jazz and DJ performances, spoken word and poetry, wellness programming, and a marketplace of Black-owned vendors selling food, art, clothing, and handmade goods. The Juneteenth Freedom Ride adds a physical dimension — 9, 14, and 19-mile bike routes through the neighborhood — making it one of the few cultural festivals that also moves through the streets it celebrates.
This is the event's natural home. Leimert Park is where John Coltrane played, where Eso Won Books has been selling Black literature since 1988, and where the community gathers when something matters. June 19 is not a performance of celebration here — it is the real thing. Metro's K Line stops at Leimert Park Station. Free admission. Bring cash for vendors.
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In 5 days· Jun 19
Free
Leimert Park, Los Angeles, CA 90008
In Los Angeles, Juneteenth centers on Leimert Park — the cultural heart of Black LA — and radiates outward across the city.
June 19, 2026. The commemorations range from community festivals to museum programming to live music and spoken word, organized around a date that marks not emancipation itself but the end of its concealment: June 19, 1865, when enslaved people in Texas were finally informed. Now a federal holiday.
The city marks this in distributed, neighborhood-level ways. Leimert Park is the anchor — the community festival draws the largest crowd, and the neighborhood's identity as the cultural capital of Black Los Angeles makes June 19 a natural gathering point. Supplementary events run at the California African American Museum, at churches, and at community centers across South LA.
Free to attend. The Leimert Park festival runs all day. Bring cash for vendors. Parking is limited — Metro reaches the area via the E Line.
In 3 days· Jun 17
2200 East Katella Ave., Grove of A…
Grove of Anaheim, 2200 East Katella Ave. June 17th. Airplane! — the 1980 comedy that ran a joke-per-second ratio that no studio comedy has equaled since, delivered in a theater by Julie Hagerty and Robert Hays, the actual stars of the film, who are present for a live screening event that has no equivalent.
Airplane! is the film that trained a generation to expect something funny every five seconds. The straight-faced performances, the background gags, the layered jokes that only land on the third viewing, the Leslie Nielsen deadpan that preceded the Naked Gun era — all of it is in the print that plays at the Grove of Anaheim. And then, after the film, the people who made it are in the room.
Tickets at ticketmaster.com. June 17th. A live Q&A with the stars following a theatrical screening of Airplane! is not an event that happens regularly. The audience that fills the Grove on this night will have quotes memorized and questions ready. Come knowing the film. Come ready to laugh in a room full of people who love it as much as you do. "Don't call me Shirley." — you know the rest.
In 5 days· Jun 19 – Jun 21
From $15
Major theaters nationwide, USA
Pixar built an entire generation's imagination. The Toy Story films taught children how to feel things before they had the vocabulary for it — what it means to be loved, to be left behind, to grow up, to let go. Toy Story 5 opens June 19th, 2026 at theaters nationwide, from $15, and it is arriving into a world where the people who grew up with Woody and Buzz are now the ones buying the tickets.
There is a specific experience that happens in a theater during a Pixar film that doesn't exist anywhere else. Adults who thought they were just bringing their kids find themselves caught completely off guard at the end of act two. The person next to you laughs at the same moment you do. Someone in the back left section cries and makes everyone else feel something too. The shared reaction is part of the film.
Opening weekend is when that energy is fullest. The theater is full of people who waited, who have opinions already, who will want to talk about it immediately after. From $15 at theaters everywhere. See it with someone who will need to process it afterward. That's the right way to watch a Pixar film — not later, not at home, in the room with everyone else while it's still new.
In 6 days· Jun 20
$15-25
4700 Western Heritage Way, The Aut…
Street Food Cinema screens Back to the Future at The Autry Museum in Griffith Park on Saturday, June 20, 2026. Doors open at 6:00 PM; film begins at dusk around 8:30 PM.
The 1985 Robert Zemeckis classic starring Michael J. Fox and Christopher Lloyd holds a particular energy when screened outdoors. The crowd knows every line, every sound effect, every note of the Alan Silvestri score, and they will make themselves heard. It is a communal experience more than a private viewing.
The Autry Museum is at 4700 Western Heritage Way, Los Angeles, CA 90027, in Griffith Park. The event features on-site food vendors, pre-show DJ, and lawn space for blankets and low-back chairs. Parking is available throughout Griffith Park. Tickets are sold through Street Food Cinema's website. This event traditionally sells out, especially in the long June evenings, so booking ahead is essential. Arrive before doors for the best lawn position.
In 7 days· Jun 21
128 S. Palm Canyon Dr., Plaza Thea…
Plaza Theatre, 128 S Palm Canyon Dr, Palm Springs. June 21st. 42nd Street — the 1933 Warner Bros. film that is simultaneously a Depression-era backstage musical and the movie that defined what the film-musical could be — projected at the Plaza Theatre in Palm Springs, which is the venue built for this exact kind of presentation.
42nd Street is the film that coined the phrase "you're going out a youngster, but you've got to come back a star," delivered it like it was written to be delivered by Dick Powell's face at Warner Bros. in 1933, and launched Ruby Keeler's film career simultaneously. The Busby Berkeley choreography is the other thing — the overhead shots, the geometry, the scale of the numbers that no theater stage could produce. On screen, at full size, in a room with real acoustics, this is the film that created the vocabulary.
Tickets at ticketmaster.com. June 21st. The Plaza Theatre is a 1936 Spanish Colonial Revival movie house that has been showing films to Palm Springs audiences for ninety years. Seeing a film from 1933 in a theater from 1936 is the version of cinema history that Palm Springs makes available. Come for the songs. Stay for the Keeler.
Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War has spent three arcs building toward this: The Calamity. In a limited U.S. theatrical run June 25-29, 2026, Fathom Events and VIZ Media are bringing the final arc of the TYBW saga to the big screen before its streaming premiere — three episodes, one screen, the conclusion that Bleach fans have been waiting a decade for.
This is not a home viewing event. The Gotei 13 versus the Quincy Sternritter in a theatrical presentation built for it. Yhwach, Ichigo, the Soul Society in its final stand. For the fan who started Bleach in middle school and is now finishing it as an adult, this is the one.
What to expect: three episodes of the final arc in one theatrical showing, Dolby audio, and a room full of people who have been tracking this since the manga. No spoilers in the lobby — everyone is discovering it together.
When: June 25-29, 2026 (limited run). Specific showtimes vary by theater. Check Fathom Events for your nearest location and book early — these screenings sell out.
Where: Participating AMC, Regal, and Cinemark locations across SoCal. Major markets: Los Angeles, San Diego, Inland Empire, Orange County.
Tickets: Available through Fathom Events and individual theater websites. Advance purchase strongly recommended.
In 13 days· Jun 27
$15-25
4700 Western Heritage Way, The Aut…
Street Food Cinema closes out its June run with Bridesmaids at The Autry Museum in Griffith Park on Saturday, June 27, 2026. Doors open at 6:00 PM; film begins at dusk around 8:30 PM.
The 2011 Paul Feig comedy written by and starring Kristen Wiig remains one of the most rewatchable ensemble comedies of its generation. Outdoors, with food and wine flowing and a crowd that has memorized every scene, it becomes a genuine event rather than a rewatch.
The Autry Museum of the American West is located at 4700 Western Heritage Way, Los Angeles, CA 90027, in Griffith Park. Bring a blanket or low-back chairs and stake out your spot after doors open. On-site food vendors, craft beverages, and a pre-show DJ are all part of the Street Food Cinema experience. Parking is available throughout Griffith Park. Tickets are sold through the Street Food Cinema website and sell out reliably, so advance purchase is strongly recommended.
In 13 days· Jun 27
Free
Ivy Station, 8800 Washington Blvd,…
They believed a summer evening in Culver City could be the kind of night you tell someone about later — and that the right movie could do more work than any designed activation. The Ivy Station outdoor screening series opens June 27 with Ferris Bueller's Day Off, a film that has been arguing for spontaneity for forty years and hasn't lost the thread.
The movie is a case study in taking the day seriously — using a Tuesday like it's the last one you'll get, not something to survive. Watching it outside in summer, when the air is warm and the sun has just gone down, the argument lands differently than it does on a couch in January. You leave wanting to do something with tomorrow.
Ivy Station is a few minutes from the Expo Line on Washington Boulevard, and the plaza has the proportions that make an outdoor screen feel right-sized: close enough that you're in the film, wide enough that the crowd doesn't feel like a packed venue. Come early for good real estate. Bring a blanket or chairs.
Free to attend. Film starts at dusk. June 27, 2026. Ivy Station, 8800 Washington Blvd, Culver City.