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Thursday, May 31, 2012

Opening Night at Last Remaining Seats

Last Remaining Seats

On Wednesday night the L.A. Conservancy opened up its annual Last Remaining Seats screening series -- one of our favorite events of the year -- with Peter Bogdanovich's 1973 classic "Paper Moon" at the even-more-classic 1932 Los Angeles Theatre on Broadway. Starring 8-year-old Tatum O'Neal in the role that won her an Oscar, the tale of 1930s scam artist and the even more cunning kid he finds in Kansas still holds up.

Before the screening, Bodganovich opened the evening by telling a few stories (about how "Paper Moon" was made, how the O'Neals were cast, and how the title even came about) and offering a few spot-on impersonations (of Hitchcock, Jimmy Stewart and others).

Of all the movie palaces on Broadway, the Los Angeles remains the most grand -- even though it's still in need of a complete overhaul. You've seen the Los Angeles lobby in countless features and TV shows. It's always a treat to see something in the Los Angeles. And what's great is that after years of mostly talk, the long-awaited Broadway revival is finally starting to take place, thanks to the opening of new spots like the Umamicatessan, the Los Angeles Brewing Company, the renovation of Clifton's, and more.

More pics from our evening:

Last Remaining Seats

Last Remaining Seats

Last Remaining Seats

Last Remaining Seats

Last Remaining Seats

Tickets remain for most of this year's other Last Remaining Seats screenings; go here for more info.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

License Plate of the Day: Jerk Edition

License Plate

"What a jerk." Thanks to Leslie Kolb for this License Plate of the Day! See a strange vanity plate? Send 'em in to franklin_avenue(at)yahoo(dot)com!

Lunch with Vince Vaughn

Vince Vaughn

Vince Vaughn outside the Turner lunch at Del Posto, May 16

One of the highlights of covering the network upfront presentations in New York earlier this month was an annual lunch at Del Posto that Turner Broadcasting throws for the talent, producers and key executives of TNT and TBS. This year, I got to sit at a table with Courteney Cox and Vince Vaughn, among others. Since Vince was right next to me, we struck up a conversation about our kids and about Chicago (where he lives, and where I went to college) and about Los Feliz (and how Maria and I recently watched "Swingers" on Netflix for the first time in years). That got us to chatting about how much Los Feliz (the Derby, R.I.P.) and downtown L.A. has changed -- and we began to talk about Northeast L.A., and some of our favorite spots in Eagle Rock and Highland Park. Vince is the exec producer of the new TBS comedy "Sullivan and Son," but is heading down to Atlanta this summer to star in the new movie "The Internship" with Owen Wilson.



Meanwhile, in what was a total strange coincidence, a few days later I got this email pitch from one of those random P.R. factories that's forever sending me random pitches:

Dear Michael Schneider :

Do you feel frazzled, disconnected, unhappy? Chances are good, either you or someone you know has just lost their zest. Shea Vaughn has discovered the solution – a remarkable blend of wellness training, inspiration and practical advice. For added interest this charismatic personality is also the mother of Vince Vaughn, the award-winning actor and comedian.

We would very much appreciate your help in getting this message out to your audience via your blog. We are sure that many of your readers would greatly benefit from the wealth of knowledge and experience Vaughn shares in her book. Thank you.


If only I had gotten this pitch before lunching with Vince -- it would have been another conversaton, I'm sure.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Rate-A-Restaurant #274: Maximiliano

Maximiliano

Restaurant: Maximiliano

Location: 5930 York Ave. (Highland Park)

Type of restaurant: Italian

Maximiliano

We stipulated: For Maria's birthday, I wanted to take her out to lunch, but we couldn't travel too far away from home (Blogger Kid needed to be picked up from school). As HUGE fans of The Oinkster in Eagle Rock, we've been dying to try chef Andre Guerrero's new Italian joint in Highland Park, Maximiliano, for some time.

Maximiliano

They stipulated: "Kinda Old School Italian." From the website: "Chef Guerrero’s Maximiliano challenges assumptions about Italian American fare, satisfying cravings for quality while remaining affordable. Growing up down the street in Glassell Park, he fine tuned his skills at a number of well respected fine dining locations throughout Los Angeles. Returning to North East L.A. with the celebrated “Slow Fast Food” joint The Oinkster he changed the way Angelenos think about pastrami and pulled pork. He reminded us that a well made burger takes time and thought, and that there is no substitute for a hand scooped milkshake. With Maximiliano, Guerrero continues on his mission to elevate classic dining traditions by doing things the right way; with care, creativity and above all a respect for great food."

Maximiliano

What we ordered: Pizza: Eggplant, roasted peppers, olive tapenade, burrata, basil ($12); Carbonara Pasta, bacon confit, poached egg ($12)

Maximiliano

High point: We loved the crust on the pizza -- having a "red tiled Marsal pizza oven" in the restaurant really makes a difference. The selection of craft beers on tap is also a big draw.

Low point: Maria didn't like the olive tapenade on the pizza; I did -- the saltiness added a punch of flavor. But I'm not sure I like having the brunch menu double as a lunch menu during the week -- I would have liked to try some of the pastas available for dinner.

Maximiliano

Overall impression: Highland Park is dramatically changing, with new restaurants popping up virtually every week. Maximiliano is head and shoulders above all of the others that have come to York. The prices are right, the restaurant looks amazing and the food is top-notch.

Chance we'll go back: Oh yes. We already love Highland Park for spots like Cafe de Leche, The York and Good Girl Dinette. Add Maximilano to that list.

Los Angeles Ad Town: Spider-Man Visits Downtown

Ad Town: Carls Jr.

Don't come between Spider-Man and a Carl's Jr. burger, apparently. As patrons line up outside downtown's Orpheum Theatre -- conveniently (and unusually) playing a current movie ("The Amazing Spider-Man," natch) -- Spider-Man pays a visit. Spider-Man in downtown Los Angeles?

Ad Town: Carls Jr.

Below, Spider-Man even swings away to the Eastern Columbia building. Spotted this Carl's Jr. ad last night during the 11 p.m. news.

Ad Town: Carls Jr.

Friday, May 25, 2012

For Sale: The "American Horror Story" House

images

Got $12 million sitting around? The beautiful house seen in FX's "American Horror Story" is on the block -- and don't worry, a homicidal clown baby doesn't really live in the basement -- that we know of. The house will be featured in an episode of Syfy's "Hollywood Treasure," airing next Tuesday, May 29 at 10 p.m. Here's some detail on the house, which is being marketed by Profiles in History and Beverly Hills' Rodeo Realty:
Construction of the house began in 1904 and was completed in 1908. The Catholic Church added a chapel addition in 1954. The house sits on approximately 3/4 an acre and is around 12,000 square feet. The home was built by renowned architect Alfred Rosenheim and is currently a designated historic monument. The house will be going on the market for $12,000,000.00.
The house is located in the Country Club Park/Arlington Heights section of the city. When Curbed LA wrote about the house back in January 2011, before its superstardom, it was on the market for $4.5 million. That's quite a markup.

Retro Friday: Atari Edition



A 1983 Elizabeth Shue turns you on to a very special Atari deal.



From 1982: Everybody enjoys Atari, because Atari has so many video game cartridges to enjoy!



From 1981: Even aliens love playing Asteroids on their Atari 2600 system!



Target ad from 1981 -- $129.99 for an Atari 2600 system. TV not included.

KABC Continues Local TV Dominance; KCAL Wins 10 p.m.



KABC Channel 7 ended May with another dominant month-long win, leading the L.A. market and winning in every time slot the station produces news. At 11 p.m., on a Monday through Friday basis KABC's "Eyewitness News" led with 381,000 viewers, followed by KCBS Channel 2 (278,000), KNBC Channel 4 (212,000) and KCOP Channel 13 (34,000 -- behind "The Simpsons" on KTTV Channel 11 and "Friends" on KTLA Channel 5).

KABC also won at 6 p.m., with 277,000 viewers, followed by KNBC (116,000), KCBS (97,000) and KTLA (39,000). At 5 p.m., the story was nearly the same: KABC (216,000), then KNBC (102,000), KCBS (96,000) and KTTV's "Studio 11 LA" (34,000).

In the morning, KABC won 5 a.m. (109,000, followed by KTLA at 66,000) and 6 am. (223,000, then KTLA's 162,000).

CBS-owned independent KCAL took home the competitive 10 p.m. news race, with 185,000 viewers, followed by KTTV (170,000) and KTLA (123,000). (KCAL and KTLA don't include the last 15 minutes of their newscasts, however, which are coded as sports coverage and is usually the lowest-rated).

The "KTLA Morning News" (164,000) continued to beat out longtime rival "Good Day LA" on KTTV (112,000), although KABC's "Good Morning America" (221,000) wins the 7 a.m. spot.

It's probably worth repeating: With the advent of local people meters, stations now can get demo info on a daily basis -- making sweeps pretty much a relic of time past. But old habits die hard, and the rush by our local TV news operations to compete in sweeps is still high.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

My Evening with the Teen Wolf

Mike moderating Teen Wolf

Whatta blast I had moderating last night's "Teen Wolf" panel at the Paley Center. The cast were all in great spirits, and we had fun cracking wise about the MTV drama's upcoming season 2. Executive producer Jeff Davis gave a few hints about the new season -- someone dies (natch), the first female werewolf appears, and Allison (played by Crystal Reed) turns into a bit of a bad ass. We even found out that Derek, the newly crowned Alpha werewolf (played by Tyler Hoechlin) doesn't look as big and menacing (compared to season one's Alpha) in CGI because, well, the CGI was too expensive.

Above, that's me with series star Tyler Posey, who plays Scott, the show's Teen Wolf. And below, I moderate with the cast.

Mike moderating Teen Wolf

Here's video of me introducing the panel and cracking wise:



And here's the fan Q&A portion at the end of the panel. Still waiting for someone to post the actual panel -- when they do, I'll include it here.

Memorial Day Flags Return to the Glendale-Hyperion Bridge

Hyperion flags

Just in time for Memorial Day, the flags are back on the Glendale-Hyperion Bridge between Silver Lake and Atwater Village. There was no guarantee they'd be there; The Eastsider LA has the whole back story here.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

"Teen Wolf" Panel at the Paley Center Tonight; Give Me Your Burning Questions

Got questions about MTV's "Teen Wolf"? I'm moderating tonight's panel at the Paley Center kicking off season 2 of the show. (Because, when you think of "Teen Wolf" and teenage heartthrobs, you think of me, right?) More info at the Paley Center site here.

Among the stars and producers set to hit the stage:

Tyler Posey, "Scott McCall"
Crystal Reed, "Allison Argent"
Dylan O'Brien, "Stiles"
Tyler Hoechlin, "Derek Hale"
Holland Roden, "Lydia Martin"
Colton Haynes, "Jackson Whittemore"
Jeff Davis, Executive Producer

Post your questions below, or go to the Paley website. And watch the web stream LIVE here starting at approximately 7:45 p.m. PT.

Chris Nichols' History of Denny's



Interesting history of how Denny's came to be, as reported by our pal and Los Angeles magazine's own Chris Nichols (who recently wrote about the restaurant chain in his "Ask Chris" column).

License Plate of the Day: Latin Spice Edition

license plate

"Latin Spice" on the streets.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Johnny Carson's Final "Tonight Show," 20 Years Later



Has it really been 20 years? Johnny Carson took to the "Tonight Show" stage one last time on May 22, 1992, for a subdued look back at his nearly 30 years hosting the late night franchise. (The big farewell had been the night before, a legendary episode featuring Robin Williams and Bette Midler). Here's the last hurrah. (The show starts 45 seconds into the clip above.)

Below, Johnny closes the show and says farewell.

Last Remaining Seats Starts Next Week; Tickets Still Available



The L.A. Conservancy's 26th Annual Last Remaining Seats event begins next weekend, and good news: There are still some tickets left for most of the screenings.

Here's what's on tap:

Wednesday, May 30 - Paper Moon (1973)
Los Angeles Theatre (1931), 615 S. Broadway, Downtown L.A.
Introduced by director Peter Bogdanovich

Wednesday, June 6 - Tootsie (1982)
Orpheum Theatre (1926), 842 S. Broadway, Downtown L.A.
Former Los Angeles Times film critic Kevin Thomas interviews Geena Davis

Wednesday, June 13 - The Big Sleep (1946) [SOLD OUT]
Los Angeles Theatre
Introduced by Alan Rode, director of the Film Noir Foundation

Wednesday, June 20 - Cantinflas in Los tres mosqueteros (The Three Musketeers) (Mexico, 1942)
Million Dollar Theatre (1918), 307 S. Broadway, Downtown L.A.
co-presented with the Latin American Cinemateca of Los Angeles
Pre-show panel discussion moderated by Laura Isabel Serna, USC Professor of Film and Critical Studies

Wednesday, June 27 - Douglas Fairbanks in Robin Hood (1922)
Orpheum Theatre
Introduced by film critic Leonard Maltin; accompanied live by Robert Israel on the Mighty Wurlitzer organ On display in the Orpheum will be costumes from the 2012 Best Picture Oscar winner The Artist, which was filmed at the Orpheum and whose Oscar-winning Best Actor performance by Jean Dujardin was based on Fairbanks.

Saturday, June 30 - The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Saban Theatre (1930), 8440 Wilshire Boulevard, Beverly Hills
Matinee and evening screenings
Vintage costume show and vintage theatre stage curtains
Special guest Aljean Harmetz, author of The Making of The Wizard of Oz at matinee screening Last Remaining Seats makes its first-ever visit to the Saban Theatre in Beverly Hills, which opened as the Fox Wilshire in 1930 and has been beautifully renovated.

Advance tickets cost $20 ($16 for Conservancy members).

Mike in New York: Final Day in Gotham

High line

After a week of eating and drinking more than my share of New York goodies, I spent my last morning in New York on Saturday jogging. Not a lot, mind you, but enough to get to the High Line from 37th and Madison (where I was staying). I dig the High Line, where you can take a leisurely stroll above the city without fear of being hit by a cab.

High line

More from the High Line.

High line

Art along the High Line -- "Carson," by Japanese artist Tomoaki Suzuki. Read about it below.

High line

High line

More of "Carson."

New York

The Flatiron Building.

New York

Spotted in the window of the Erotic Museum: "Dickchicken Soup."

New York

Empire State Building.

Mike in New York: Upfront Roundup

CBS upfront

And so ends another crazy, non-stop week in New York, as ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox and The CW (plus TBS/TNT, USA, Univision, ESPN and more) pimped their new shows to advertisers. I wrote about some of the presentations last week; here are a few more moments from later in the week. Above, "2 Broke Girls" stars Beth Behrs and Kat Dennings, in their diner costumes, opened the CBS upfront.

CBS upfront

And then, "NCIS: Los Angeles" star LL Cool J -- oh yeah, you might remember his late 80s hip-hop career -- rapped about CBS' dominance ("CBS is a phenomenon... something like a phenomenon") along side an opera singer.

CBS upfront

Possibly the best part of the CBS upfront: A look at what CBS boss Leslie Moonves' Pinterest page might look like. Notice the Julie Chen pics. And lots of cute puppies.

CBS upfront

Billy Gardell and Melissa McCarthy appear on stage at the CBS upfront -- but in character, which is one of my big upfront pet peeves. It never works. Partly because they reference being on a show while acting like they're in character. Turner thankfully stopped doing that this year.

Adult Swim upfront

T.I. performs at the Adult Swim upfront.

CW upfront

The following day, Flo Rida hits the stage at the CW's morning upfront presentation.

CW upfront

The new stars of the CW join the stage with network boss Mark Pedowitz.

CW upfront

The CW's top execs, with the fall 2012 schedule above them.

USA upfront

Erykah Badu and Mark Ronson at the USA Network upfront.

More stories from upfront: ABC To Bring Back TGIF with Tim Allen and Reba McEntire

Network Q&A: TBS/TNT's Michael Wright On Why He Saved Cougar Town And Plans For Next Season

Network Q&A: CBS' Nina Tassler on Her Fall Schedule

New Showrunners to Replace Dan Harmon on Community

Monday, May 21, 2012

A Tale of Two (or More) Downtowns

Downtown Los Angeles

(Flickr pic by Channone Arif.)

The L.A. Times weighed in Sunday with another story about the Downtown Los Angeles renaissance, but the angle was at least fresh: A look at how the Staples Center and L.A. Live have indeed brought life to downtown, yet the halo effect doesn't reach more than a block or two beyond the venues.

But that's OK, the story notes: The growing population downtown has injected its own life into the Historic Core and surrounding areas, triggering the new slew of restaurants and bars in the area. There's just not much cross-pollination, and for the downtown residents who don't want their favorite haunts turned into mini L.A. Live offshoots, that suits them just fine:

In that sense, this is the kind of weekend that boosters have dreamed about: A rare triple playoff at Staples, with the Dodgers playing just to the north in Chavez Ravine, the Amgen Tour of California cycle race rolling through the streets of downtown and "Don Giovanni" being presented at Walt Disney Concert Hall.

But these big-ticket events tell only part of the story. Urban planners and others say that smaller, organic neighborhood forces, the inventive mix of retail shops, restaurants, bars and galleries, have also been an important draw.

"Downtown has some great neighborhoods that have their own specific functions — Little Tokyo, the Arts District, the garment district," said Joel Kotkin, an urban studies fellow at Chapman University. "It happens best when it happens organically. The beauty of the Arts District is that it grew over years. And there's a niche, art types, who like that. There's been a market for that."

Kotkin and others said downtown is really a collection of neighborhoods — not a monolithic whole — each with its own vibe. And they are much less interconnected than many might think.

"Downtown L.A. is like the rest of the city," said Steven Erie, a political science professor at UC San Diego who has written about Los Angeles. "Just like you have a spread-out city, you have nodes in downtown. They're very weakly connected, and that's the way L.A. grew, and that's the way downtown was developed. There's multiple downtown experiences."

The differences are about location but also about culture. Amid the lofts, dive bars and art galleries along Spring and Main streets, some residents said they have little interest in the chain restaurants and mainstream entertainment offered at Staples and L.A. Live.


Read more here.

How I Almost Missed Sunday's Big Eclipse

Eclipse

(Pic taken in Reno by my old Hawaii high school friend Eugene Hopkins.)

This Saturday I flew back to L.A. after a whirlwind of an upfronts week in New York. What was the first thing I did before even heading home? A kids' birthday party for one of Blogger Kid's classmates.

Then, what did I do Sunday? That's right, another kids' birthday party for one of Blogger Kid's classmates.

So you'll have to excuse my idiocy on Sunday at 6:30 when, walking out of Home Depot with more construction supplies for a little home project we're doing, I was taken aback by the strangely dark skies. "Weird sky at the moment. Strangely dark yet light, with no clouds in the sky," I Tweeted.

To which I was immediately reminded: The eclipse. Yep, I had been so out of the loop on everything but TV (I can give you plenty of details on Dan Harmon being fired from "Community") that I hadn't even been paying attention to the eclipse news.

So there you go. We witnessed the big eclipse from the parking lot of the Glendale Home Depot. Could have been worse; I was beginning to suspect an alien invasion. Whew.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Mike in New York: A Brush With Occupy

occupy4

Walking back from ABC's upfront presentation at Lincoln Center, I decided to stroll through Times Square. As I walked past, a decent-sized group of Occupy Wall Street protesters were peacefully demonstrating, a few NYPD cops on horses looking on.

occupy3

occupy2

occupy1

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Lucky We Live L.A.: The New York Trader Joe's Experience

trader joe's NYC

Next time you complain about the ridiculous Silver Lake Trader Joe's parking lot (or any TJ's lot, for that matter, since they're all ridiculous), remember this: At least you're not stuck waiting in line at one of the Manhattan Trader Joe's.

On a quick visit this Sunday, I wound up in line for about 20 minutes. The line snaked through the store, even though about 20 registers were open. This TJ's (in Union Square) even employs workers to stand at the back of the line, holding big "BACK OF LINE" signs. It's also virtually impossible to walk around the store, squeezing around the check-out line and the gobs of people to grab items.

Silver Lake Trader Joe's, all is forgiven!

Mike in New York: TV's Annual Upfronts Week

upfronts

I'm back in New York for the annual TV network dog-and-pony show known as the upfronts. This week the networks show off their fall schedules and new shows to advertisers, and everyone's in a good mood because nothing's been canceled yet.

On Monday, NBC and Fox both hit the stages (NBC at Radio City Music Hall, Fox at the Beacon Theatre) -- and so far, shows that look the most promising include NBC's "Revolution" and Fox's "The Following," "Ben and Kate" and "The Mindy Project."

At NBC, the stars of "Smash" performed two numbers (see below), while at Fox the big reveal was the long-rumored addition of Britney Spears and Demi Lovato as judges on "The X-Factor" (above).

upfronts

Read my coverage for TV Guide Magazine:

Network Q&A: Fox's Kevin Reilly on His Fall Schedule

Network Q&A: NBC's Bob Greenblatt on His Fall Schedule