Twenty-six plans completed this week on WashedUp, with 109 people joining across Los Angeles. Twelve of those plans had a named neighborhood attached. The other fourteen did not, so the table below is a real slice of the week, not the whole thing. Either way, people made plans and people showed up.
what happened this week
Twenty-six plans closed out between June 22 and June 29, with 109 people across all of them. That is the headline. It is not a massive number, and that is fine. This is still early. Every week the city gets a little more legible, a little more connected, and a week where a roller disco in Burbank pulls six people together is a week that counts.
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Twelve of the twenty-six plans had a neighborhood set. The other fourteen completed plans did not have a neighborhood listed, so they show up in the totals but not in the breakdown below. Both sets are real. Both sets matter.
by-neighborhood breakdown
The plans with named neighborhoods ranged from Burbank down to El Segundo, and east to Pasadena. Burbank led the named neighborhoods, with one plan and six people joining. The full picture:
| neighborhood | plans | people |
|---|---|---|
| Burbank | 1 | 6 |
| Culver City | 1 | 4 |
| Angelino Heights | 1 | 4 |
| North Hollywood | 1 | 3 |
| DTLA | 1 | 2 |
| Beverly Grove | 1 | 1 |
| Mid-City | 1 | 1 |
| La Brea | 1 | 1 |
| Koreatown | 1 | 1 |
| El Segundo | 1 | 1 |
| Pasadena | 1 | 1 |
| Beverly Hills | 1 | 0 |
Twelve named neighborhoods, twelve plans, plus 14 plans without a neighborhood listed. Totals across the full week: 26 plans, 109 people.
the plans worth knowing about
The honest truth about LA is that it is not hard to find things to do. It is hard to find people to do them with. You can know about a jazz picnic at LACMA and still end up going alone, or not going at all. That friction is real, and it is exactly what makes a week like this one feel like something.
In Burbank, "Skate Oddity Presents: A Vampire Roller Disco" pulled six people. That is the most of any named neighborhood this week. Six people who did not previously have a plan to go roller skating together found each other and went. That is the whole thing.
Culver City had "yoga @carlson park" with four people joining. Angelino Heights had "Sardonics Anonymous: Now With Alcohol," also four people. Two very different vibes, same outcome: people showed up. Want to find a Saturday morning plan or a low-key evening thing in your neighborhood? find people to go with.
North Hollywood brought three people together for "NoHo Futbol Fest." DTLA had two people joining for the "Kid Cudi Concert." One plan, one concert, two people who otherwise might have gone alone.
Then there is the longer tail: Beverly Grove, Mid-City, La Brea, Koreatown, El Segundo, and Pasadena each had one plan with one person joining. "Jazz at LACMA Picnic" in La Brea. "Los Angeles Critical Mass (Bike Ride)" in Koreatown. "Gundo Comedy and BBQ Festival" in El Segundo. "Speed dating" in Pasadena. Each of these is a real plan that a real person put on WashedUp. Some got traction, some did not, and Beverly Hills had zero people join "Relationship and love" this week. That one stayed quiet.
The fourteen plans without a neighborhood listed account for the rest of the 109 people. We do not have the breakdown, but they are in there.
what a quiet week actually means
Here is the thing about a week with 26 plans and 109 people: it is not a blowout number, and this post is not going to pretend otherwise. LA has four million people. Most of them are not on WashedUp yet. Most of them are still texting the same five contacts and hoping one of them is free.
The week was not quiet because nothing was happening in the city. LA had concerts, park events, bike rides, comedy festivals, and soccer watch parties, all of which showed up in this data. The week was quiet by scale because the platform is still growing. That is honest.
What is also honest: every plan on this list was someone deciding to try. To put a thing on WashedUp and see who shows up. Some of those plans got six people. Some got one. The one-person plans are not failures. They are the start of something. Wondering what is going on in your corner of the city this week? find people to go with.
looking ahead
Next week will have more plans. The week after that, more still. The goal is not to recap a perfect week every time. It is to make the city's social layer visible, week by week, neighborhood by neighborhood, until going out alone because you did not know anyone else was going feels like the old way of doing things.
If you made a plan this week that is not in this recap, it might not have had a neighborhood set. Tag your neighborhood next time. It helps the map fill in.
And if you have a plan coming up and want people to join it, put it on WashedUp. find people to go with.
frequently asked questions
which la neighborhoods were most active on washedup this week
Burbank led the named neighborhoods with six people joining one plan. Culver City and Angelino Heights each had four people across one plan. North Hollywood had three. DTLA had two. Beverly Grove, Mid-City, La Brea, Koreatown, El Segundo, Pasadena, and Beverly Hills each had one plan. Twelve named neighborhoods appeared in the data for the week of June 22 to June 29.
how many washedup plans happened in la this week
Twenty-six plans completed on WashedUp during the week of June 22 to June 29, with 109 people joining across all of them. Twelve of those plans had a specific LA neighborhood attached. The other fourteen completed plans did not have a neighborhood listed, so they appear in the overall totals but not in the neighborhood breakdown.
how do i join a washedup plan
Go to washedup.app, browse plans near you, and tap to join one. You can filter by neighborhood or activity type to find something that fits your week. Plans are posted by people in LA who want company, not solo tickets to an event. When you join, the person who created the plan can see you are in, and you can coordinate from there.
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