"Cadillactus" invites viewers to consider the lifespan of manufactured goods and their impact on the environment through a dialogue about industrial waste and nature.
Many are familiar with the accepted creation myth of Palm Springs: the place where Hollywood stars of the 1930s could escape from Los Angeles and have fun. According to Cahuilla legend, everything began when a sickly leader called Tu-to-meet struck the ground with his staff and a boiling mineral spring emerged.
"We like to refer to it more as a 'restoration' than a renovation," Chris George, the area director of marketing, told Travel + Leisure. "Our goal was to preserve the resort's historic charm..."
The Palm Springs city council's unanimous decision to approve a $5.9m reparations settlement marks a pivotal moment for former residents of the Section 14 neighborhood, acknowledging wrongs done in the 1960s.