instagram

Friday, October 29, 2010

Hoff, Bieber and Seacrest-o-Lanterns: It's The Great Wilshire Pumpkin Contest

Every year, the tenants of 5700 Wilshire and 5750 Wilshire -- collectively known as "Wilshire Courtyard" -- hold a pumpkin carving smackdown, as they search for the most creative Jack-O-Lantern of the year. It's become tradition at Franklin Avenue for us to recount some of the most ambitious... and the ones with the biggest pop culture references.

The entrants, after all, come from E! Entertainment, "Family Guy" and a management firm, among others. That's why Seacrest and Chelsea Handler show up in this year's assortment. Among the best:


I Feel Hofful!
by In House Media/tipstrends


Ryan's Missing
by Comcast Entertainment Group


Bombshell McGee
by E! News Now


Pumpkin Lately
by Comcast Entertainment Group Research and PP&A


Rub a Dub Dub, Guidos/Guidettes in a Tub
by Rebel Entertainment Partners


Meaty GaGa's Bad Romance
by LA Business Journal


Heeby Jeeby Bieby
by Comcast Entertainment Group Business Development


Daft Punkin
by AEG Live


Pulp Fixins (in homage to 'Food Truck Wars')
by Brierley and Partners


The Sacre-Iss Wheel
by Family Guy


The Great Pimpkin
by Kearny


Making Pies
by CEG Security
Yes, I should point out that this, indeed, is a pumpkin taking a big ol' dump in the form of mini pies.


Life is the Pits
by Wilshire Courtyard Security

PREVIOUSLY ON FRANKLIN AVENUE:

2009's contest

2008's contest

2007's contest

2006's contest

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Taste Test: Downtown Roy's New Menu

Having grown up in Hawaii, I have a special place in my heart for local boy done good Roy Yamaguchi. The chef has turned his Honolulu eatery into a global empire... but smartly lets his individual chefs add their own touches, making every location a bit different.

We were invited last week to check out some new menu items from Roy's Downtown Los Angeles chef partner Garrett Mukogawa. Here's what we ate:


"Elaine's" Kabocha Squash Salad (Cinnamon Spiced Pepitas, Cranberry Vinaigrette)


Blackened Rock Shrimp & Red Bean Soup (Portuguese Sausage, Shishito)


Artichoke & Goat Cheese Crusted Salmon (Sundried Tomato Sauce)


Cilantro Grilled Tiger Shrimp (Stewed Curried Lentils & Fall Vegetables)


Tender Braised Beef Short Ribs (Creamy Mashed Potatoes Natural Braising Sauce)


Pumpkin & Ginger Cheese Cake (Pumpkin Anglaise)
Roy's Melting Hot Chocolate Soufflé (Flourless Chocolate Cake with a Molten Hot Center served à la Mode)


And oh yes, the drinks.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

L.A. Times Publisher Downsizes Comics Yet Again


The L.A. Times has added a second ad strip to its comics page -- which means dumping two more strips.

And once again, the Times has opted to drop two newish, contemporary strips ("Brewster Rockit" and "Home and Away") while keeping moldy, legacy strips like "Dennis the Menace," "Blondie" and "Family Circus."

Seriously. On the one hand, the paper knows its aging audience -- 60+ readers that grew up with "Blondie." But at the same time, it's once again sending a message to younger readers: Don't bother.

Here's the interesting part: The decision on which strips to drop came directly from L.A. Times publisher Eddy Hartenstein, who helped make the final call on which strips to dump.

The L.A. Times' Readers Representative explained that "Brewster Rockit" and the recently dropped "Rex Morgan M.D." (the paper's still hearing about that move) are now available on the L.A. Times website:

Because of a reorganization of the section, which included the addition of a second advertisement, two more strips have been removed: “Home and Away” and “Brewster Rockit: Space Guy!” Earlier this month, “Cathy” retired and “Rex Morgan, M.D.” was cut to make room for the addition of the KenKen puzzle.

However, there also has been an addition this week on the comics front. For the first time, a selection of comics is available on latimes.com. “Rex Morgan” and “Brewster Rockit” are among them. So are others that readers ask about, such as “Mary Worth” and “Sally Forth.” (But readers have been disappointed to discover that “Home and Away” is not included in the prebundled package to which The Times subscribes. However, the strip is available on the website of its syndicate.)

As of Tuesday morning, about 15 people, most of them “Brewster Rockit” fans, had e-mailed The Times to protest the cuts.

Hartenstein is now part of a four-member panel now running Tribune in the wake of Randy Michaels' departure -- but still had time to deem "Brewster Rockit" unworthy of print!

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Eight Years Later



We got married the same day as Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson -- yes, we won!

License Plate of the Day: Boba Fett Edition



OK, who's the "Star Wars" fan in Atwater Village?

According to the Village Voice, the Best of New York is in Los Angeles



The Village Voice's annual Best of New York issue went with quite an unusual cover shot: Los Angeles.

In what must have been a big stock photo mistake, the cover's backdrop features Corleone Pizza -- located on 7th Street in Los Angeles' Jewelry District. I've emailed the Village Voice to get details, but haven't heard back.

This isn't the first time Corleone Pizza has doubled as New York; the location was also seen a few seasons back in "Mad Men."

LA Observed reported on the bizarre cover last week via Digital Emunction, which wrote:

See the pizza joint? That’s Cor­leone Pizza. I remem­ber the place. It’s in freak­ing Los Ange­les! Down­town, in the jew­elry dis­trict. I walked passed it the last time I was in town. I guess the ques­tion here is why is there a pic­ture of Los Ange­les on the cover of the Vil­lage Voice’s “Best of NYC 2010” issue? Good one, Voice!


Here's hoping the L.A. Weekly responds next year by using a shot of a taco stand... that turns out to be in Brooklyn!

Monday, October 25, 2010

Why Downtown L.A.'s Street Grid Is At An Angle



It's baffled me for eons: Why is downtown Los Angeles laid out at an angle (36 degrees, to be exact), rather than north-south?

Angelenos know that they're not actually facing north when looking up Broadway, Main or Spring Streets (or any street for that matter). Yet the brain has a way of playing tricks on us; it's still hard to convince yourself that you're actually peering toward the northeast.

But then, suddenly at Hoover, the grid rights itself. To the west of Hoover, L.A. streets are indeed laid out north-south and east-west. What gives?

Local historian and author D.J. Waldie has the answer (it's a Spanish colonial thing), via a lively op-ed piece in Sunday's L.A. Times:

Royal ordinances required that the streets and house lots in the cities of New Spain have a 45-degree disorientation from true north and south to provide, it was said, equal light to every side of a small house throughout the day. Given the way Spanish and then Mexican Los Angeles extended along the bank of its uncertain river, only 36 degrees of compliance was possible.

The 1849 Ord and Hutton survey, which produced the first map of the newly American city, left the puzzle of royal versus republican orientation unresolved. The map pictures a longitudinal city and used facts on the ground — the bed of the Los Angeles River — as an organizing principle. Faint, spidery lines intersecting at the town plaza hint at compass points the map otherwise ignores.

As the city began to sell itself into the future in the 1870s, Ord's map was blended with newer real estate surveys. They too show the city within the grid of its founding. House lots and streets continue to replicate its off-kilter orientation, as they will until the boom times that followed the arrival of the transcontinental railroads at the end of the 19th century.

Waldie wrote the forward to the brand new book Los Angeles in Maps (a great gift for the holidays, hint-hint), from which the map above was taken.

Also in the Sunday L.A. Times: Remembering Sarah Bernhardt's 1913 car accident -- among the first ever reported for an entertainment figure. The crash eventually forced Bernhardt to amputate her leg.

Scenes from a Rock-n-Roll Half Marathon



The very thought of a marathon scares me. How do all of you runners do it? I mean, seriously, 26.2 miles and you're done in five hours? What. The Great Los Angeles Walk, all 16 miles of it, takes all day. (Granted, we take our time looking at the sites during the Walk. And eating.)

But a half-marathon? With live music at every turn? That sounds a tad more doable. (Until you say "13.1 miles." But I digress.) I may have to consider dropping my longtime fear of long-distance running to give the Rock 'n' Roll Los Angeles Half Marathon a try next time.

The inaugural event in L.A. was held this Sunday, and took place near Franklin Avenue HQ. (We actually had to alter our normal Hyperion route to mass at St. Casimir's and our Sunday morning grocery run at the Silver Lake Trader Joe's because of closed streets).

As we exited Trader Joe's, we walked up to the Hyperion/Rowena intersection to watch the taiko drummers perform as runners turned the corner.



The half-marathon began in Griffith Park and went through Atwater Village, Silver Lake and Echo Park on the way to Downtown. It was the first-ever event in L.A., but already takes place in 17 other cities.

Most Horrifying eBay Auction In History?



I'm sure there's someone out there excited about this eBay listing -- actually there are at least four, given the number of bids.

But seriously. A collection of yellowing "Love Is" cartoons, cut out from the L.A. Times in 1971 and pasted into a scrapbook.

This is why Meg Whitman must be stopped. OK, not really (there are other reasons), but this is the most horrifying thing I've ever seen on eBay.

Friday, October 22, 2010

One Month Until the Great Los Angeles Walk -- Shirts Now Available!



Believe it or not, we're now less than a month out from the annual Great Los Angeles Walk -- our annual urban hike from downtown Los Angeles to the ocean.

This year, as we previously announced, we're heading BACK TO WILSHIRE.

**OFFICIAL T-SHIRTS NOW AVAILABLE! ORDER YOURS SOON, SO YOU CAN WEAR IT TO THE WALK!**

The walk takes place on SATURDAY, NOV. 20, 2010. MEET AT 10 A.M. AT PERSHING SQUARE IN DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES.

In 2006, we hiked down Wilshire. In 2007, it was Pico. In 2008, we started at Sunset before walking the entire length of Santa Monica Blvd. And in 2009, we explored L.A.'s historic West Adams district, walking a mix of Adams and Washington all the way to Venice.

The route will take us past some of L.A.'s most iconic and historic features -- MacArthur Park, Bullocks Wilshire, the sites of the late great Ambassador Hotel and Brown Derby, and much much more.

We're working with the L.A. Conservancy, which is updating its guide to all things Wilshire in time for the occasion.

And as usual, we'll celebrate afterward at a location to be named later. If you'd like to host the post-walk event, or at least help organize it, please contact us at our franklin_avenue(at)yahoo(dot)com email address.

For those of you new to our annual event, it's quite simple: We walk. No agenda, no cause, no special reason -- just for love of Los Angeles. It's the Saturday before Thanksgiving, which means you can work off some pounds in preparation for the following Thursday's pigout. And this year's walk is just 15.6 miles -- the shortest of the ones we've done.

Anyone can join in... just email us at greatlawalk@mail.com. (YES, that's "@mail" -- not Gmail.)

T-SHIRT INFO:Time to order your GREAT LOS ANGELES WALK shirt! Like the last few years, we're going through Cafe Press for the shirts. And like always, we're not making a dime. The price you pay is the price that Cafe Press charges.

Shirts, of course, aren't necessary for the walk. But show your Great Los Angeles Walk pride! Go to www.cafepress.com/franklinavenue to order!

And keep checking out the official Great Los Angeles Walk website -- GreatLAWalk.com -- for more details! We'll see you on Nov. 20.

Retro Friday: Silver Lake's Music Box Steps


The Music Box Steps, from Laurel and Hardy's 1932 short


The Music Box Steps today, via LettersFromStan.com.

In honor of this weekend's 16th Annual Music Box Steps Day Film Festival, below is the original 1932 Laurel and Hardy short "The Music Box," uploaded to YouTube in three parts.

The Academy Award-winning short was shot in Silver Lake, at the site of the Music Box Steps public staircase.

The festival, held this Saturday, Oct. 23 from noon to 3 p.m., will screen the short and more. Event takes place at Laurel & Hardy Park, across from the steps (located between 923 and 935 Vendome Street).

And now... "The Music Box."





Thursday, October 21, 2010

License Plate of the Day: Mystery Trump Edition



OK, I definitely need your help with this one. A Donald Trump reference? Or something to do with this driver's "rump"? Place your guesses in the comments!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Our Modest KCET Proposal



The clock is ticking for KCET.

The Southern California public broadcaster is set to part ways with PBS at the end of the year – which, believe it or not, is now just two months away.

In the short run, KCET will have to rely on a lot of acquired programming to fill its schedule – including movies, foreign programming, and syndicated public broadcasting fare from the America’s Public Television distributor.

Get ready for an even heftier diet of Huell Howser and “Fawlty Towers.”

In the long run, KCET is promising much more local-based programming. It’s not going to be easy: Original programming costs money. And KCET, already struggling to make ends meet, is likely to lose more viewer support in the coming year as its PBS programming goes away.

But on the flip side, technology has made it easier to produce programming with high-quality production values on the cheap. And audiences now used to a steady diet of homemade Internet video and small smart phone screens are less picky than they used to be.

Local TV stations managed to produce plenty of cheap, homegrown programming from the 1950s right through to the beginning of the 1980s. The production values weren’t great, and viewers were mostly watching because, honestly, there wasn’t anything else on. But boomers remain nostalgic of that golden age of hyper-local programming, mostly because they felt an ownership with it. Those kids hosts and afternoon talk shows were produced in their own backyards.

Southern California isn’t exactly small town USA. But it’s better than that: It’s a lively, loud, diverse region that happens to also be home to Hollywood. Surely KCET can mine that world in a way no other local TV station has had the time, resources or interest to do.

But again, it’s not going to be cheap. And KCET will have to make strike some strategic partnerships around town to pull it off. The last time I talked to KCET general manager Al Jerome, he mentioned exploratory conversations he’s had with public radio stations KCRW and KPCC about partnerships. That’s a start. I assume he’s holding talks like that with entities all over town.

With all of this in mind, I’ve come up with a few programming ideas that KCET might want to consider in getting its local programming initiative off the ground. None of these ideas are overly ambitious – they’re actually doable, and can be done rather quickly. KCET doesn’t have the time – or resources – to pull off anything overly grand just yet anyway.

Some ideas:

KCET NOW: First and foremost, KCET needs a signature daily program – its own “TRL” or “Daily Show” or “Good Day L.A.” A place where newsmakers can come, debates can be had, L.A. can be featured. Here’s my idea: Partner up with The Grove and the Americana developer Rick Caruso to underwrite the show, which would be shot at one of the two shopping centers. Caruso, of course, has his eye on the L.A. mayoral race and could benefit from the chartiable touch of underwriting a KCET series (which, of course, would also show off his shopping properties). “KCET Now” would feature a small studio audience and might be considered a newsier version of KABC’s old “A.M. Los Angeles.”

LIVE FROM AMOEBA RECORDS: Another recent L.A. institution, Amoeba’s ongoing in-store concert series, mixed in with interviews and music news and recommendations from its staff could easily be cut into a weekly, hour-long program.

L.A. ON THE STREET: Remember E! Entertainment's "The Gossip Show"? It was a simple format: Gossip columnists, in their offices, recounting their most recent stories and scoops. Take that idea and apply it to L.A.'s top bloggers. Reps from L.A. Observed, LAist, Blogging.la, Curbed LA, etc. go on camera, perhaps even from the location they're writing about (Zach Behrens at City Hall?) to recount their latest stories. This gives KCET instant content, and gives bloggers a televised forum to promote their site.

LEFT, RIGHT AND CENTER ON TV: Since we’re mentioning Jerome’s desire to get into business with KCRW, here’s one place to start. KCRW’s weekly half-hour radio show featuring Arianna Huffington, Matt Miller, Tony Blankley and Robert Scheer attempts to tackle so much each week that debates are frequently cut off right when they get lively. My idea: After the quartet tapes their weekly radio show, flip on the camera and get them going for another half hour. And yes, I know most of the time the group is spread out and sometimes have to participate via phone… but that’s where the inexpensive use of Skype comes in.

GOOD FOOD ON TV: Since we’re already tapping KCRW for “Left Right and Center,” let’s do one more: Evan Kleiman’s “Good Food” has turned into quite a franchise that already stretches beyond the radio show. “Good Food” sponsors events, dinners, contests and more. Let’s combine some of that with video takes of Kleiman visiting SoCal restaurants – at least two a week. And perhaps even bring on one of Kleiman’s chef pals to spread the wealth.

AIR TALK ON TV: Let's not leave KPCC out of this. What if Larry Mantle hosted a weekly TV version of his daily radio interview show?

THE LOH DOWN ON SCIENCE: Another KPCC show that could turn into a regular TV program: Sandra Tsing Loh's "Loh Down on Science" features. Give Sandra a camera and send her off to Cal Tech and other locales to give us a weekly look at some of the cool things going on science-wise in Southern California.

FILM SCHOOL: Why let WTTW in Chicago own the public broadcasting film review space? Grab a round table, stick L.A.'s film critics around it and have them debate film. Why KCET doesn't already do this, I don't know.

HIGH SCHOOL QUIZ: Back in the early 1990s in Hawaii, our local Fox station aired a show called “Quizzard” – a locally produced quiz show that pit high schools against one another in a daily game show format. If a tiny Hawaii TV station can find enough sponsor support to mount a show like that, surely KCET can find a way. And there are more than enough high schools in Southern California to make this work – pit rival schools against each other, and you’ll generate some real interest. This is the land of the Academic Decathlon, after all.

TOWN HALL Time for the mayor, police chief, City Council president, the LAUSD superintendent, the L.A. Times editor or the newsmaker of the week to get into the hot seat and answer questions from local citizens. (Think of KPCC's "Ask the Chief" as inspiration.)

All of this sound crazy so far? Let me remind you: KCET does big business with Huell Howser, whose entire M.O. is to walk around California with a microphone and a cameraman. And yet, he’s such a quirky personality – and the places he visits are pretty interesting – that it works.

This is also just a smattering of thoughts. Add your show ideas below.

UPDATED: The only problem with posts like this is you keep coming up with new ideas after you hit "send."

A few more:

THE LOS LOBOS POWER HOUR: OK, Los Lobos: We're giving you an hour each week to stage a homegrown variety show shot in Boyle Heights or somewhere in East L.A. Get to it.

L.A. SHELTER: Partnered with Curbed L.A., we visit open houses and discover more about what's going on in SoCal real estate.

And talks should be going on now with L.A.-centric personalities, such as Gustavo Arellano ("Ask a Mexican"), L.A. mag's Chris Nichols, histo-tainer Charles Phoenix, cartoonist Lalo Alcaraz, L.A.-based group Ozomatli, rocker/radio host/writer/performer Henry Rollins, and many more.

The draw: Your own show, the way you want to do it. No commercial concerns, and no interference.

Really, Effen Vodka? Really?



Stay classy, Effen Vodka! (As spotted on Wilshire near the La Brea Tar Pits.)

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

KOCE Brings "Masterpiece" Back to Sundays



Southern California's PBS switcheroo is already underway.

Weeks after KCET angered viewers by moving Sunday night staple "Masterpiece Mystery!" to Thursday nights, Orange County's KOCE has nabbed first-run rights to the the series -- and is airing it on Sunday nights.

KOCE, which will become SoCal's primary PBS station in January, previously had to wait to run fare like "Masterpiece" until after KCET finished its run. But now that KCET is dropping its PBS affiliation come January, PBS (and Boston's WGBH, which produces "Masterpiece") is making the move now.

"Masterpiece" will join the KOCE lineup on Sunday, Oct. 24 at 9 p.m. with "Sherlock."

"KOCE-TV is delighted to bring 'Masterpiece' to Los Angeles viewers as the show premieres its 21st-century Sherlock Holmes series this coming Sunday," said KOCE President and CEO Mel Rogers. "The iconic 'Masterpiece' series has been a Sunday night mainstay in homes across the country, and we’re delighted to welcome it to its new home in Los Angeles, KOCE-TV."

Rate-A-Restaurant #235: Border Grill



Restaurant: Border Grill

Location: 1445 4th St. (Santa Monica)

Type of restaurant: Mexican

We stipulated: Our Groupon to Border Grill -- $20 for $40 worth of food -- was expiring. We've been to Border Gril plenty of times over the years (I even held our first Great Los Angeles Walk afterparty there in 2006), so it's an old standby. And when that Groupon popped up earlier this year, I didn't hestitate.



They stipulated: "Presenting the bold foods and flavors of Mexico, Border Grill has established a new standard for gourmet Mexican fare. With a menu of complex authentic dishes based on the home cooking of Oaxaca and the Yucatan."



What we ordered: Cochinita Pibil, $19.50 (achiote pork roasted in banana leaves, caramelized onion, orange, cinnamon, roasted plantains, guacamole)

Chile Relleno, $16.50 (roasted poblano chiles; manchego, panela, cotija cheeses; salsa roja; tomatillo salsa)

Kids' quesadilla, $7



High point: The sauce with the cochinita pibil was amazing. And the time we went -- around 5 -- was very kid friendly.

Low point: Service took a suprisingly long time. And as much as I loved the sauce with the cochinita pibil, the pork itself was a bit too fatty for my taste.

Overall impression: I'm surprised we haven't done a Rate-A-Restaurant on Border Grill -- we already did one on the Border Grill Truck, as well as on Ciudad. But the "Two Hot Tamales," Mary Sue Milliken and Susan Feniger, are now turning Ciudad into a downtown outpost of Border Grill -- so the time seemed right to revisit the joint. I'll miss Ciudad, but Border Grill is always a good place to go when you're not sure where to go.

Chance we'll go back: Absolutely, although it will likely be the Downtown location next.

Monday, October 18, 2010

The San Francisco Chronicle's Silly, Lazy Take on Downtown Los Angeles



I remember sitting in a San Francisco sushi resturant several years ago, eavesdropping on a silly conversation between two locals about how L.A. sucked.

It was the usual cliche take on L.A. from two people who had never lived here. And it baffled me: Why expend so much energy for such a silly, misinformed hate? What's with the inferiority complex up in the Bay Area?

I'm wondering that again after reading the silliest piece I've ever seen about L.A. -- penned by a San Francisco Chronicle contributor, of course.

Writer Steve Rubenstein dragged out every cliche and stereotype in the book for his Chronicle piece on downtown L.A.

But his biggest crime may be sheer laziness. There's obviously a real story to be had about the huge transformation taking place downtown -- something even the New York Times has managed to regularly report on -- yet Rubenstein appears to have no idea. Instead, he sticks to what must be a ratty, ten-year-old guide book, writing about the obvious sites like the Biltmore, Pershing Square and Union Station. And finding ways to crack snide about all of them.

Those spots are fine... for a guide book. You're writing for a newspaper, right Steve? In San Francisco, no less? Perhaps you might want to actually clue readers in on locations they didn't see when they visited 20 years ago? I'm a HUGE Philippe's fan -- but seriously, that's your idea of sharing hot L.A. dining information?

Given the sheer number of people milling about Downtown compared to a decade ago, the title of the article is silly -- "L.A.: Walking where few have walked before." And don't get me started on the idea of comparing Angels Flight to the cable cars.

Like I said, lazy reporting, lazy writing. Get over your inferiority complex, Steve, and come discover something new in L.A. the next time you're in town. We'd be happy to give you a few tips. (And then you might have a story that's worth the Chronicle's freelance pay.)

Glendale Gets Some "30 Rock" Love



Call me a small town yokel. When actor Cheyenne Jackson mentioned Glendale in this week's live edition of "30 Rock," I got a tad excited.

The backstory: For the west coast version of the live "30 Rock" episode last Thursday, Jackson sang along to the show's (normally instrumental) opening theme song. His lyrics were tailor-made for the west coast, mentioning sushi and "Portland, Vegas, Glendale." Watch above.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Retro Friday: L.A. Shopping Mall Edition


The Glendale Galleria plays a supporting role in 1984's "Cloak and Dagger"



The "Downtown of the Future" -- the Bonaventure Hotel's shopping center, circa 1977 -- "an experience you'll never forget."


A time-lapse video of the complete reconstruction of the famed Sherman Oaks Galleria.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

We Can Laugh Now Because Everyone Made It Out: Tweeting the Chilean Mine Rescue



In case you haven't been following Franklin Avenue's Twitter feed, here's a rundown of our take on the Chilean mine rescue story:

BP spokesman: "C'mon, everyone, instead of 33 Chilean miners, we just rescued 185 million gallons of oil from another well. You're welcome."

"Im'ma let ya finish rescuing those Chilean miners BUT BABY JESSICA WAS THE BEST WELL RESCUE OF ALL TIMES!" - Kanye

Scene from next week's "LOST CHILEAN MINERS": "The mine shaft wasn't done with us yet, Mario. We have to go back. WE HAVE TO GO BACK!"

So THAT'S what the Chilean miners found 2,000 feet underground: CNN's ratings!

Intrigued by the lack of strong female characters, Fincher and Sorkin announce plans to adapt "The Chilean Mine Network."

Sad news: Chilean miners confirm that the crops in their unharvested Farmville plots have died.

OK, I think I know the answer, but I gotta ask: After the Chilean Miners are all rescued, can we send the cast of "Jersey Shore" down there?

Strange: First question the Chilean miners keep asking: "Is Lindsay Lohan still alive?"
23 hours ago Favorite Reply Delete

Chilean miners: "We kept up spirits over the past week by finding inspiration in America's valiant efforts to stop the Gap's logo change."

Someone take Larry's keys. RT @wittz_end Larry King notes rescued miner Sepulveda is also a street in LA. Why is he retiring? Top of his game!

Overheard among the Chilean miners: "Wait, J-Lo *and* Steven Tyler? That's REAL?!"

Chilean miner: "I'm excited to sit down and enjoy some new American fall TV. We heard great things about 'Lone Star,' when's it on? What?"

L.A. Times Correction of the Day: Mexican Smurfs in Bell?



From today's L.A. Times:

FOR THE RECORD
Bell councilman: An article in Section A on Oct. 13 about Bell Councilman Lorenzo Velez referred to Bell as a city dominated by blue-color Mexican immigrants. It should have said blue-collar.

(Thanks to Jon Weisman for pointing this one out!)

The 'Mad Men' Theme, Reimagined with Nat King Cole's 'Nature Boy'






How do you make the "Mad Men" theme -- "A Beautiful Mine" by RJD2 -- even cooler? You add a vocalist (Allison Williams -- NBC News anchor Brian Williams' daughter!) and the lyrics to the song "Nature Boy," written by Eden Ahbez and made famous by Nat King Cole.

Ralph Arend directed this video, which was shot in one take and performed completely live. This was produced and uploaded by a group that calls itself "VideosRecordedLive" -- their mantra being, "No dubbing...no autotune...just pure vocals with live music and one, continuous camera shot - no cutting. Just a bunch of film/music nerds getting together to do something ambitious."

(First posted over at Variety On The Air.)

Los Angeles Cameo: A Slice of West Hollywood on "The Office"



On last Thursday night's "The Office," the characters travel outside of the Dunder Mifflin office to catch Andy Bernard (Ed Helms) in a local Scranton performance of "Sweeney Todd."

But I got the biggest kick out of the theater where "Sweeney Todd" was being performed. As seen above, the establishing shot was actually of West Hollywood's Macha Theatre (formerly known as the Shakespeare-inspired Globe Theatre).

I lived across the street (Kings Road) from the Globe Theatre for six years, so the building is very familiar.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Arlington West: The Makeshift Memorial in Santa Monica



A project of the group Veterans for Peace, a group of volunteers erect Arlington West, a temporary memorial designed to honor U.S. troops who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan, every Sunday next to the Santa Monica Pier.

Sadly, the toll has risen so high that Arlington West has had to start erecting red crosses, which count for 10 deaths each, instead of the usual one for every fatality. Volunteers also lay flags over makeshift coffins to signify troops killed in the line of duty over the past week; on the week ending this Sunday, 12 people had died.

The exhibit notes that a similar memorial for all Iraqis and Afghans who have died in the wars would cover the entire beach.

The Arlington West display goes up from sunrise to sundown every Sunday.



More info from the Arlington West website:

To take in the full expanse of crosses, one stands breathless at the enormity of what one sees. Each cross, carefully positioned in the sand with a uniformity appropriate a memorial for this purpose, represents all American military personnel who've lost their lives in the US war and occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan. Upon deeper reflection, Arlington West also powerfully represents the path our country has embarked upon.

When one visits the Arlington West Memorial at Santa Monica, one will see mementos placed on some of the crosses, many with fresh cut flowers. Arlington West also represents those who've lost their loved one or close friend.

In celebration of their lives, family and close friends of the fallen write their own heartfelt words and dedicate these to their loved one. A gold star is placed by us on dedications made by those who are family. Those dedications made by a friend or those who served along side an individual, will have a silver star placed on their dedication.

Veterans For Peace and dedicated volunteers of Arlington West are careful stewards of these dedications and currently maintain an archive of over 1600 such mementos.

The group is always in need of volunteers to help lay out the display, starting up at 6 a.m.

L.A. Times Cuts 'Rex Morgan,' Angers More Comics Fans



The L.A. Times took advantage of the end of the "Cathy" comic strip to also ax a second strip, "Rex Morgan, M.D.," and turn the space over to the puzzle "Kenken."

You'd think the LAT would know better by now. The paper has already dramatically reduced its comics count in recent years -- even dropping a page from the daily and two pages from the Sunday edition. And everytime the paper dumps another strip (such as "Sally Forth" last year), it hears an outcry from readers.

This time was no different. Yeah, I had no idea people actually still read the serialized comic strips -- and apparently neither did the LAT, which had cut all of its serialized strips up until "Rex Morgan" -- and now has none. Read some of the reaction here.

Here's reader Kirk McDonald's reaction:

I'm sure I am not the only faithful reader of the LA Times' Comics pages who is disappointed to learn of the sacrifice of two more slots for daily strips to yet another inane puzzle game that appeals to only a handful of readers. Unless I’m grossly mistaken, I find it hard to believe that there was a large segment of the Times’ readership clamoring for the addition of Kenken to the comics pages.

I have been a loyal subscriber to the Los Angeles times for nearly 30 years, and the number one reason I continue to subscribe is for the Comics page. It’s the first thing I read every morning (since the “news” is already stale by the time the paper is delivered, thanks to television and the Internet). But seeing as how the daily strips have been reduced from 43 in 2002 (including Dilbert, in Business, and In the Bleachers, in Sports) down to just 30, and the Sunday format taken from 28 down to 23 (and divided into an ad-infested, ridiculous 2-part travesty), I am seriously reconsidering my continued loyalty.

I gotta admit, I had never heard of the "Kenken" puzzle until the L.A. Times installed it.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Jonathan Gold Hosts L.A.'s Ultimate Cocktail Party



Take some of L.A.'s best restaurants... add in some of L.A.'s best bars and mixologists... stick it inside the beautiful ticket concourse at Union Station... throw in DJ Garth Trinidad... and make it for a good cause.

The one man who could pull off such an event? L.A.'s Pulitzer Prize-winning food critic Jonathan Gold, of course.



Gold threw his second annual Union Station Speakeasy Cocktail Party, a fundraiser for the literary salon Zocalo Public Square, on Saturday night. And thanks to fellow blogger Sarah at The Delicious Life, we scored tix (normally $185/person). Worth finding family members to babysit the boys? Uh, yes.



And the great part: The party lived up to expectations (other than the humidity inside the Union Station ticket concourse). There were no lengthy lines to try the various restaurant eats and bar concoctions; the food was tops (special shout out to Lazy Ox Canteen) and the drinks strong -- literally. And even the music by Garth "Don't Call It Chocolate City" Trinidad was spot on.

A round up of eats:


Lazy Ox Canteen (Chef Josef Centeno): Yellowtail crudo with avocado, creme fraiche, white soy -- easily our favorite of the night. We could have eaten 20 of these.


Providence (Chef Michael Cimarusti): Japanese kanpachi sashimi


Rustic Canyon (Chef Evan Funke): Black mission figs, roasted chestnuts, burrata, saba and toast


Rivera (Chef John Sedlar): Pre-Columbian and post-Columbian gazpacho


First and Hope (Chef Joseph Panarello): Savory butternut panna cotta with crab salad

Other restaurants: Comme Ca (Gougeres, duck rillettes, chanterelle cream); Jar (pork croissant with mustard sauce); Susan Feniger's Street (Burmese melon salad); and Grace (braised pork, squash flan, smoked sage jus). We managed to try everything but Grace, which ran out before we got to their booth.

The drinks:


Seven Grand: Selection of Chivas Regal 12 Yr Scotch Highballs (Chivas Regal, soda water, artisanal bitters, house-made syrup, fresh squeezed citrus over ice)


Cole's Red Car Bar: Pikesville Classic Manhattan (Pikesville Rye, Dolin Sweet Vermouth, Angostura bitters, with luxardo cherry)

Also: Las Perlas (Spiced PaQui Tequila Daisy -- my favorite of the night); Cana Rum Bar (Cruzan Rum Ace of Spades); and The Varnish (The Plymouth Fitzgerald)



The event was also a great way to spend time with some pretty cool folks, including Taster Tots' Jessica Ritz and her husband, Henry; also Los Angeles mag's Mary Melton and bloggers like H.C. from L.A. and O.C. Foodventures and Esther from estarLA.