Zig wasn’t exactly sure what the hell had happened to his life, but it was assuring to hear that some things never changed. It was tradition in high school to catch the midnight screening of Rocky Horror at Nuart on Saturdays when he was free. Sure, the people had changed, but the enthusiasm and spirit were still there. Now that he was an adult, completely independent from his parents’ bullshit, he can do as he please. He waited outside the theatre and called a Lyft. The wait time was a forty-five minutes. Forty-five minutes. So he had time to kill, great. Under the cold air from the Santa Monica breeze, he lingered outside the theatre before catching a look with someone he recognized from high school. “Hey, wait -- you see the movie too, or just passing by? Lyft is being disgusting.” He hardly saw people he knew here and it caught him off guard. In a sea of adulting, it was assuring to see people that were familiar. “Don’t know what you’re doing, but there’s midnight ramen if you’re down.”