The Linda Lindas Performance of “Racist, Sexist Boy” Live from the L.A. Public Library Goes Viral

The Linda Lindas aren’t staying quiet at the public library…

The all-girl Asian-American and Latinx punk rock band from Los Angeles have released the video of their epic performance of “Racist, Sexist Boy” live from the L.A. Public Library.

The Linda Lindas

The group, comprised of Bela Salazar (16, guitarist-singer), Eloise Wong (13, bassist-singer), Lucia de la Garza (14, guitarist-singer), and Mila de la Garza (10, drummer-singer), has turned the clip into a cause célèbre that has landed them more than 840,000 views and, reportedly, a deal with legendary punk label Epitaph Records.

In the video for their song “Racist, Sexist Boy” that blew up on YouTube recently, Mila and Eloise talk about how the song was inspired by an experience with racism at their school.

“A little while before we went into lockdown, a boy in my class came up to me and said that his dad told him to stay away from Chinese people,” Mila said in the video. “After I told him that I was Chinese, he backed away from me. Eloise and I wrote this song based on that experience.”

With their ebullient mix of Sleater-Kinney/Bikini Kill power and an obvious homage to punk gods the Ramones in their stage names, the mighty quartet have already made significant waves at a young age, opening for Best Coast and Bikini Kill since forming in 2018.

Their Bandcamp page describes them as “half Asian / half Latinx. Two sisters, a cousin, and their close friend. The Linda Lindas channel the spirit of original punk, power pop, and new wave through today’s ears, eyes, and minds.”

The two singles and EP for sale on the band’s page were produced and mixed by Grammy-winning producer Carlos de la Garza, who also happens to be Mila’s dad. Together for three years, in an interview during the library set, they cited Paramore, Blondie, That Dog, Sleater-Kinney, Jawbreaker, the Buzzcocks, Alice Bag, Phranc, Le Tigre, Best Coast, Snail Mail, Bleached and the Go-Gos, as well as tacos, as their biggest inspirations.

After the video of the performance — as part of the library’s AAPI Heritage Month celebration — blew up, the group earned co-signs from a number of prominent rockers, including Bikini Kill’s Kathleen Hanna, as well as the Silversun Pickups, Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello and former Sonic Youth guitarist Thurston Moore.

 

Check out the full set here, which includes their original songs “Claudia Kishi” (for the 2020 Netflix short doc about the Japanese-American character from The Baby-Sitters Club), a track about missing their friends during the pandemic (“Missing“), as well as the poppy rave-up “Never Say Never,” a song about the guitarist Bela’s cat (“Monica“), the bouncy original “No Clue” and covers of Bikini Kill’s iconic Riot Grrrl anthem “Rebel Girl” and The Muffs‘ “Big Mouth.”

Tom Sandoval Appears in Best Coast’s “Everything Has Changed” Music Video

Tom Sandoval is wiggin’ out…

The part-Latino reality television personality and some of his Vanderpump Rulescast mates appear in the music video for Best Coast’s new single “Everything Has Changed.”

Tom Sandoval, Best Coast, Everything Has Changed, Beth Cosentino, Ryan Baxley, Vanderpump Rules

Best Coast’sBeth Cosentinoplays a grumpy game show host in the clip, while Sandoval dons some 70s-themed gear and a wig as one of the contestants.

The Ryan Baxley-directed clip shows Cosentino wiping off her cheery television face and throwing a backstage fit that she eventually brings on camera by taking her anger out on the contestants. 

But a close listen to the lyrics while watching the clip reveals the catharsis she’s going through. In the first verse, she broods, “I used to cry myself to sleep/ Reading all the names they called me/ Used to say that I was lazy/ The lazy, crazy baby.” Yet in the second verse, she daydreams, “Now I’m sipping on my coffee/ Now I’m walkin’ a little dog on a leash/ Now I live in a big pink house/ I escape to Witch Mountain every day.”

“Everything Has Changed” arrives as part of the duo’s new album Always Tomorrow, which is due February 21 via Concord Records. It’s the first new project from Best Coast since their 2015 LP California Nights.