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Hunny in Los Angeles

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Hunny
The Wiltern — Los Angeles, CA

Hunny is an indie pop project that emerged from the bedroom pop landscape with a knack for catchy, self-aware songwriting. Their songs deal in the currency of modern anxiety—overthinking relationships, the weight of expectations, the comedy of being perpetually stuck in your own head. Tracks like 'Would You Rather' and 'Talk Too Much' nail that specific flavor of self-deprecation that resonates with people who've spent way too much time analyzing text messages. The project balances vulnerability with a wry sense of humor, never taking itself too seriously but clearly putting real thought into the hooks. Hunny's appeal lies in that intersection where pop sensibility meets genuine emotional transparency, filtered through the lens of someone who's probably made a joke to deflect from something real more times than they can count.

Hunny shows are intimate and a bit understated. Audiences lean in rather than lose their minds, responsive to the subtleties in the songs. There's an air of people recognizing themselves in the lyrics, nodding along to tracks that feel like inside jokes delivered from stage.

Known for Would You Rather, Good Luck, Run, Talk Too Much, Like I Do

Hunny rolled through The Roxy in December 2025 and delivered exactly what you'd expect from a band that's spent years refining their craft. They opened with 'Cry For Me' and spent the next couple hours moving through a carefully constructed setlist that hit the obvious moments—'Saturday Night' and 'Halloween' got the reactions you'd predict—but also made room for deeper material like 'A Slow Death In Pacific Standard Time' and the deliberately weird 'action --> reaction.' The setlist felt almost like a guided tour through their catalog, building toward 'Televised' as a finale that somehow felt both inevitable and earned. 'Good Will Hunting Song' landed somewhere in the middle of the set, a touch of levity among the more introspective material. Twenty-two songs across an evening that suggested a band comfortable enough with their own thing to not overthink it.

Los Angeles has always been a place where indie bands either figure out how to exist in the shadow of the industry or lean into it entirely. Hunny fits into that space of acts who've found an audience by doing their own thing—not flashy, not trying to game the algorithm, just showing up and playing. The city's venues like The Roxy have historically served as important stops for bands building something real rather than chasing hype.

Stay in Los Feliz, where you can walk tree-lined streets and catch views from Griffith Observatory. Dinner at Republique in the Arts District—refined French-inspired food in a restored factory space that feels more Paris than LA. Spend an afternoon at the Huntington Library in San Marino, a world-class art collection that justifies the drive. The city's recording studio history is everywhere; walk through Hollywood and you're literally surrounded by the spaces where hits were made. End the night at a jazz bar like The Fonda Theatre or catch live music on Sunset Boulevard.

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