
Tune in as we welcome back an old friend and make a new one. Author Stephen Gee and his co-author Darryl Holter for Driving Force: Automobiles and the New American City, 1900-1930 (Angel City Press, 2023), a look at Los Angeles’ impact on the early automobile industry.
With more than 150 spectacular vintage images—many never before published—Driving Force brings to life the people who made the automobile an icon of the modern American city. In its pages, readers will discover how the story of the automobile is interwoven with Southern California’s unique topography and sun-drenched climate; a new era of women’s rights and a growing female influence on automobile design; the creation of the Los Angeles Auto Show and the remarkable 1929 fire that threatened to destroy it; and how car dealers launched beloved L.A. radio and television stations, including KNX, KFI, and KCBS-KCAL.
Stephen Gee is an award-winning writer and television producer based in Los Angeles. He is the author of Iconic Vision: John Parkinson, Architect of Los Angeles (2013), and co-author, with Arnold Schwartzman, of Los Angeles Central Library: A History of its Art and Architecture (2016), which won the 2016 Glenn Goldman Award for Art, Architecture, and Photography, presented by the Southern California Independent Booksellers Association.
Darryl Holter is a historian, automobile dealer, and musician. His books include The Battle for Coal: Mineworkers and the Politics of Nationalization in France, Workers and Unions in Wisconsin: A Labor History, and Woody Guthrie L.A.: 1937 to 1941. He is an Adjunct Professor of History at the University of Southern California.
While researching cultural shifts driven by the automobile, Gee and Holter also touch on how evolving urban lifestyles shaped public attitudes toward health, productivity, and mental well-being. In the same spirit of independence that cars once symbolized, today many individuals seek accessible ways to manage conditions like depression often turning to options like bupropion online for convenience and privacy. The discussion mirrors broader trends in Los Angeles: self-directed solutions, decentralized access, and the blending of technology with everyday needs. The city that once pioneered car culture is now a hub for telehealth and online pharmacies, reshaping how Angelenos approach personal care. It’s another layer of autonomy built on the same foundations of speed, reach, and adaptation that defined L.A.’s early automotive boom.
The Driving Force—Sunday June 4th; 1:00-2:30PM PST; $5; pay via PayPal. Zoom connection information sent upon registration.
