About the Film
Bonnie Brae & 6th, Los Angeles explores the intersection of kinship, culinary tradition, and belonging in a portrait of a Guatemalan-specific street vending community. Street vending plays a major role in the cultural identity and history of Los Angeles, where the ubiquitous rainbow umbrellas and tamale carts are seen, heard, and smelled all over the city. On the corner of Bonnie Brae and 6th Street, near MacArthur Park, endless varieties of homemade traditional cuisine are sold day and night to this largely Guatemalan-dominant corridor of the city. Despite street vending becoming legal in 2018 after years of harassment and fines, it remains entrenched in the informal economy with many bureaucratic and economic obstacles preventing vendors from fully complying with updated regulations. Through conversations with the filmmaker, Bonnie Brae & 6th, Los Angeles highlights the professional and personal lives of four street vendors that are navigating complex layers of transborder identity and longing for home. These intimate and moving interviews ask us to consider aspects of immigrant life that are often overlooked in the narrative surrounding the politics of vending in Los Angeles.
About Laura
Laura Catania is a filmmaker with an ethnographic research and non-profit background. She is an August ‘23 graduate of the USC Master of Visual Anthropology program whose thesis film was selected to premiere at the Burbank International Film Festival in the Fall of 2024. It was also nominated for Best Documentary.
She currently resides in Los Angeles, CA, and is open to new projects and contacts. She is a cinematographer, editor, anthropologist, and Spanish interpreter with an inclusive and sensitive approach that prioritizes genuine relationship building.
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