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Sunday, August 16, 2015

Should School Really Start in Early August? Some Glendale Parents Say No

Glendale Unified School District

The Blogger Kids returned to school on August 10, earlier than just about anyone else in the region. To much relief of Maria... but was it fair to the boys?

Honestly, they didn't protest that much, and we had just about run out of things for them to do this summer, so we saw it as pretty much of a good thing. We did the family trip, they did multiple camps and were starting to get restless.

On the flip side, it seemed like summer had barely scratched the surface, and I had been working most of it, limiting my summer fun with the kids. But given our weather, it's almost always summer in Southern California, so that didn't bother me much either.

It bothered some parents in the Glendale Unified School District, however. According to the Glendale News-Press, they're hoping to push the school start closer to the end of August rather than the beginning:

As Montrose parent Sarah Rush was driving her daughter to Rosemont Middle School on Monday, it was Rush, not her daughter Amanda, who was experiencing a sudden sadness.

The start of the school year on Aug. 10 arrived one week sooner than it did last school year, and Rush felt it had interfered with precious family time with her daughter.

“Summer was over, and it just felt wrong,” Rush said.

Over the past few months, Rush’s daughter attended summer school to refine her math skills, then she spent a week at Camp Fox on Catalina Island.

That left the mother and daughter with only two weeks of summer to spare, Rush said.

Later on Monday, Rush created an online petition dubbed “Save our GUSD Summers.”

I find it interesting that it was the parent, not the kid, driving this! Here's what the petition says:

Please sign the SAVE OUR GUSD SUMMERS petition to have our schools' starting date be extended to much later in August (and as close to Labor Day as possible) for 2016 and subsequent years. This would not affect the mandatory 180 days of instructional teaching. We have only so many years to build summer family memories with our children. By losing a month of the summer vacation, the lives of our children and families are being negatively impacted in many ways. If our children are taking summer school, their summer vacation has been shortened to only 3 weeks. Our children deserve to have time in the summer for camps, sports, recreation, and most importantly, family time. In our society, the stress of our adult workloads are increasing, and our recreational time with our children is being lessened. We are a community who is very committed to the educational lives of our children. When the academic year begins, we are all invested in their well being and educational process. Kids need a break. Families need a break. If a teacher is interested in pursuing educational opportunities to build on their own expertise, those are also affected by the shortened summer hiatus. The stated "pro" for starting our schools earlier is so that our students will have taken their finals before the Christmas break. This goal could be met by adjusting other holiday dates in the calendar year, and still starting school at a later date. There are also parents who feel that their children do fine with the extra time to study and prepare for the exams. There is room for discussion. The GUSD school starting date is one of the earliest in the entire United States. It is affecting our children's internships and summer job opportunities as well. The warm temperatures are miserable for our kids in non air conditioned classrooms and for outdoor Physical Education. I don't know if any of the School Board members have children in our schools at present. Were any parents consulted when the decision was made for August 10th to be the starting date for GUSD? I have not found a single parent who is happy about the school year beginning so early. Next year the starting date is scheduled for August 8th. I know that our School Board leaders are committed to the children of this community, and are driven by their love for education. Let's send them a message that curtailing our summers does not benefit the family and the educational lives of our children, but hurts us all.

This seems more like an emotional debate than perhaps a logistical one. The debate over how long the summer vacation should be has waged for years, and honestly, it's a struggle for kids to return after too long of a break to basically re-learn everything they forgot over the summer months. I think this shorter vacation time is also beneficial to Glendale's growing language immersion program, as kids need to be surrounded by the target language more often for it to stick. Honestly, most schools in the region started a few days, or at most, a week later...

Finally, Clifton's Cafeteria is Set to Re-Open, With an Elaborate Makeover

Cliftons
Los Angeles magazine

We've been waiting for years... and years.. for the re-opening of downtown's iconic Clifton's Cafeteria. Opened in 1935 as Clifton's Brookdale, we visited the forest-themed eatery several times (read our 2006 account here) before new owner Andrew Meieran (who previously created downtown's famed Edison bar) shut it down for what was supposed to be a brief renovation in 2011.

Cut to nearly five years later, and rebuilding Clifton's has become a labor of love for Meieran, who has kept the fun and the kitsch but added so much more to the place. As downtown's Broadway continues its slow pace of revitalization, it sounds like Clifton's will be a true focal point and place of interest.

Los Angeles magazine's Lesley Bargar Suter has the first look at the completely renovated Clifton's. Highlights:
Former customers who visit the new Clifton’s will pass through the double glass doors to find a place both familiar and entirely different. There’s still a bakery—albeit with high-end coffee and house-baked breads—along with the cascading waterfall, the animatronic raccoon, and the original log pillars. Meieran also uncovered a series of small grottoes for kids that Don Clinton, Clifford’s 88-year-old son, vaguely remembers running through in the ’30s.

The cafeteria is inspired by the trend of European-style food halls. The tray line has been divided into a series of “action stations,” not unlike the cafĂ© portion at any Whole Foods, with a few fussed-up versions of Clifton’s classics thrown in.

“I promise you’ll like our mac and cheese even more than the stuff they were serving before,” says Meieran. He’s added a retail shop that focuses on California goods—dates, Ghirardelli chocolate, craft beer, and wine—and kept the faux-stone chapel.

As for the missing neon cross, rather than reading it as another sign of divine interest, Meieran insists that a painter broke it. “Everyone is going to think I took it down,” he says, bracing for the backlash.

His signature design move might be the “aha moment.” At the Edison it’s the grand two-story descent into a turn-of-the-century power plant, with its artful rust and plasma globes. At Clifton’s it’s what visitors encounter up the stairs from the restored ground floor: a 40-foot-tall artificial redwood tree that alludes to the redwoods Clifford Clinton put into the original space.

While the founder was inspired by the Santa Cruz Mountains, Meieran was moved by a part of the California wilderness farther north: Muir Woods, just over the Golden Gate Bridge in Marin County. The faux tree is the centerpiece of an atrium overlooked by four levels of bar, restaurant, and event spaces.

Per the LA Times, Clifton's will soft open starting Sept. 17, with elements phased in over the following two months.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Love Letter to Los Angeles: Watch this Beautifully Shot Video, Taken By Drones

Los Angeles video

Ian Wood's latest video of Los Angeles is a must-watch. Here's how he describes it:

This is the city-wide follow up to my aerial exploration of downtown Los Angeles from last year. And much like with downtown, I continue to be awe struck by how much of this vast city I have partially or completely overlooked before undertaking this video. And like most voyages of discovery, I've realize there’s so much more to find.

Packing it all into one short-form video has been nigh impossible and much didn’t make it for safety, privacy or simply because I couldn't make it 30 minutes long! Notably missing are: LAX Theme Building, both Gettys, some Lautner homes, numerous beautiful buildings, the Gabba gallery, many murals that vanished before I got to them, and much of downtown featured in last year’s video.

A map of the locations is here.

Watch below:

MIKE ON RADIO: Previewing Fall TV on KROQ's Kevin & Bean



I joined Kevin and Bean back at the KROQ studios on Friday to recap the TV Critics Association press tour and talk all things fall TV. We chatted about the good ("Fargo" season 2!) and the not-so-good (um, "Boom"). I also got to meet new sidekick Allie McKay. Listen below!

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

License Plate of the Day: Oh, Bono! Edition

License plate

"Oh, Bono," said with exasperation? "Over Heard Bono"? A tribute to the late Sonny Bono? Ohio native who thinks Bono is "No. 1"?