Andy’s Coffee Shop from the “Cups” Music Video

Andy's Coffee Shop from Cups-28

There is nothing my mom likes better than a greasy spoon-type restaurant.  She is a virtual expert on seeking them out – whether near our home, while on vacation somewhere, or passing through a town.  So imagine my shock when I recently learned about Andy’s Coffee Shop, a small greasy spoon that has been a Pasadena staple for over 80 years!  Somehow my mom had never heard of the place, despite the fact that we lived in Crown City for a decade and a half!  What makes our ignorance of the roadside restaurant even more shocking is that it is a popular filming location and has been featured in several big-name productions.  How neither my mom nor I knew about it is beyond me!  This was a major fail on both our parts!  I discovered Andy’s in mid-October thanks to a Curbed LA commenter who mentioned the eatery’s appearance in an episode of Mad Men.  I immediately added it to my To-Stalk list and the Grim Cheaper and I ran right on over there for breakfast a couple of weeks later.  It turned out to be quite the fortuitous stalk, too!

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Andy’s Coffee Shop was originally established in the late 1930s and does not look like it has been touched since.  And I mean that in the best possible way.

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The current owner, who was nice enough to chat with me and answer all of my silly questions about the various filmings that have taken place there over the years, purchased the property nine years ago.

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With its fabulous retro décor, old school counter seating and vintage signage, Andy’s Coffee Shop is everything you could ever want in a roadside diner.  One look around and it is not hard to see why location scouts return to the place time and time again.

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The food, which is of the down-home variety, was also fabulous!

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As I mentioned above, prior to stalking Andy’s, I knew that the restaurant had been featured in the Season 4 episode of Mad Men titled “Public Relations.”  In the episode, the eatery was where Peggy Olson (Elisabeth Moss) and Pete Campbell (Vincent Kartheiser) met up with two actresses they had hired to fight over a Sugarberry Ham in a public relations stunt.

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An ornamented prop screen was brought in to separate the dining area from the entry for the shoot.  In real life, Andy’s dining area consists of one open room.

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Andy's Coffee Shop from Cups-8

Some memorabilia and photographs from the filming are proudly displayed on Andy’s walls, which I had a blast looking at.

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Andy's Coffee Shop from Cups-5

Until dining at Andy’s, I had been unaware of the eatery’s other film credits.  As soon as I walked through the bell-clad front door, though, I immediately recognized the place as a locale I had been looking for ever since writing my The Fast and the Furious post for Discover Los Angeles.  While researching for that post, I had fruitlessly tried to track down the coffee shop where Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) took Mia (Jordana Brewster) in the series’ fourth installment, 2009’s Fast & Furious.  When I stepped into Andy’s and saw the large front windows, wood-paneled walls and red booths, I realized it was the exact spot I had been hunting for.  I so love it when that happens!

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Andy's Coffee Shop from Cups-23

I asked the owner to confirm my hunch and she informed me that I was indeed correct and then pointed me in the direction of a photo taken of the shoot displayed on the restaurant’s wall.

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Though the layout of the booths has since changed, Andy’s still looks much the same as it did onscreen.

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Amazingly, Andy’s was even recognizable to the GC!  After we placed our order, he turned to me and said, “I think this is where Anna Kendrick’s ‘Cups’ music video was filmed!”  While I love the song, I had never seen the “Cups” video.  Anna Kendrick is the GC’s celebrity crush, though, so he is pretty well-versed on all things concerning the actress.  I immediately grabbed my iPhone to see if he was right and, sure enough, we were sitting in the exact spot where the video had been lensed!  Well done, GC!

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Andy's Coffee Shop from Cups-14

“Cups” made extensive use of Andy’s Coffee Shop.  At the beginning of the video, Anna is shown baking biscuits in the restaurant’s kitchen.

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Andy's Coffee Shop from Cups-20

The kitchen is actually much smaller in person than it appeared to be onscreen.

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While I was back there, I just had to pose for a photo.  Winking smile

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After popping the biscuits into the oven, Anna then ventures out of the kitchen . . .

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. . . and into Andy’s dining area.

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The camera proceeds to follow her through the restaurant in one long take while she walks by customers who are performing the famous Cups routine.

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I can only imagine how difficult the video must have been to film being that the fifty or so the actors on-hand had to perform the routine perfectly, sans any mistakes, in order to complete the single continuous shot.

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You can watch the “Cups” video by clicking below.

Interestingly, the origin of the “Cups” song dates all the way back to 1931.  You can read a more in-depth history of it here, but, in a nutshell, it was originally written and recorded by the Carter Family and was known as “When I’m Gone.”  That original version can be heard here.  (Don’t confuse it with the Carter Family’s similarly titled “Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone?”)  The tune has been sampled a few times over the years, but did not find real fame until 2009, when a group named Lulu and the Lampshades re-worked the arrangement, adding in the “I’ve got my ticket for the long way ‘round” lyrics and re-naming it “You’re Gonna Miss Me.”  The music video the group created for the song (below), which features acapella singing accompanied by a plastic cup routine, instantly went viral and inspired countless re-creations.

Anna Kendrick only perpetrated the trend when she performed the “Cups” routine in 2012’s Pitch Perfect (below).  It proved so popular that the actress released a single of it in 2013 and the video was made soon after.

Andy’s owner also informed me that in the recently-aired Season 5 episode of Scandal titled “Yes,” the eatery played the Fayetteville, North Carolina diner where Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and Jake Ballard (Scott Foley) took murder suspect Gavin Price (Josh Brener).  While there, Gavin alerts the women at a neighboring table of the presence of Olivia, who has just been outed as the president’s mistress, causing all of the customers in the restaurant to go crazy trying to take selfies with her.

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Andy’s also popped up in the Season 6 episode of Veep titled “Judge” as the Birmingham, Alabama truck stop where Mike McLintock (Matt Walsh) and Amy Brookheimer (Anna Chlumsky) looked for Mike’s diary.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

Stalk It: Andy’s Coffee Shop, from Anna Kendrick’s “Cups” music video, is located at 1234 East Colorado Boulevard in Pasadena.  You can visit the eatery’s official Facebook page here.

L’Opera Restaurant from “Charmed”

L'Opera Restaurant Charmed (13 of 18)

I rarely find myself in the LBC (that’s Long Beach, California, for those not in the know), so when I was out there a couple of months ago snapping photos for The Ultimate Guide to Clueless Movie Locations in Los Angeles Part I and Part II (which, if you haven’t checked out yet, you really should!), I made a quick detour to L’Opera Restaurant on Pine Avenue.  The upscale Italian eatery was featured in the pilot episode of Charmed and had remained unchecked on my To-Stalk List for literally years, so I was thrilled to finally see the place in person.

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L’Opera Restaurant was originally established by restaurateurs Terry Antonelli and Enzo DeMuro.  For their culinary endeavor, the duo chose a large corner unit of a 1906 building that formerly housed the First National Bank of Long Beach.  When they initially leased the space in 1988, it was an empty shell and Terry and Enzo spent two years and $2.4 million renovating it.  The eatery finally opened its doors on April 19th, 1990.L'Opera Restaurant Charmed (3 of 18)

L’Opera was an immediate hit and has gone on to win countless awards throughout its 25-year history, including “Best Award of Excellence” from Wine Spectator magazine, which should come as no surprise being that the place offers 600 different wine selections and stocks more than 18,000 bottles in its cellar.  The eatery has also won the Southern California Restaurant Writers’ two highest awards, the “5-Star Award” and “Golden Bacchus,” for the past 23 years running.

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Celebrities have long flocked to L’Opera.  Just a few of the stars who have dined there include Paul Newman, Jimmy Vasser, Roger Penske, Mario Andretti, Tom Cruise, Dustin Hoffman, George Clooney, John Travolta, and Pete Sampras.

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Sadly, L’Opera was closed when we showed up to stalk it, so we were not able to venture inside and grab a bite to eat, but I did manage to snap a photograph of the interior through the front window.  You can check out some more interior photos of the place here.

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L’Opera Restaurant was only featured once on Charmed, in the pilot episode which was titled “Something Wicca This Way Comes.”  In it, Piper Halliwell (Holly Marie Combs) gets a job as a chef at the supposed San Francisco-area eatery.  Both the exterior . . .

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. . . and kitchen area appeared in the episode.

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By the second episode, “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” filming had moved to a different location – the Pasadena Livery Building, where producers set up a fake restaurant entrance.  The name of Piper’s workplace was also changed to “Quake” at that time.  In reality, there is no eatery located in that spot.  As you can see below, what appeared as Quake is actually just an exterior walkway that leads to the Livery Building’s front doors.

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Quake Charmed (1 of 1)

Producers must have really liked the Quake exterior, because they sure got a lot of mileage out of it.  During Season 6 it showed up as two different restaurants – first as Café Le Blue in the episode titled “Spin City” . . .

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. . . and then as Anthony’s Restaurant in “Love’s a Witch.”

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Quake’s interior, which I believe was just a set, very closely resembles L’Opera’s interior.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

L'Opera Restaurant Charmed (6 of 18)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: L’Opera Restaurant, from Charmed, is located at 101 Pine Avenue in Long Beach.  You can visit the eatery’s official website here.  The exterior of the fictional Quake restaurant is really the entrance to the Pasadena Livery Building located at 101 East Green Street in Pasadena.

My Guide to L.A. – Restaurants

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I need to preface this post by stating that I am not in any way, shape or form a foodie.  I enjoy good, fresh fare, but my meal preferences consist mainly of old fashioned comfort foods (you’ll notice many mentions of different fried chicken entrées in the list below).  If a restaurant has bone marrow on the menu, I’m out.  But give me chicken strips and ranch dressing every day of the week and twice on Sundays and I am a happy girl.  This list of recommendations will reflect that.  For those fellow stalkers seeking more of an epicurean experience, I defer to my friend Molly, of the Almost Makes Perfect website.  You can check out her L.A. City Guide here.  It’s filled with restaurants to delight every palate – as well as other great area recommendations.  I should also mention that I don’t do brunch at all, so if you’re looking for good brunch options in Los Angeles, I, again, defer to Molly.   My list consists of eateries that serve good, solid staples, have a unique ambiance and/or a historic background.  Bon appetit!

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1. Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese (223 North Larchmont Boulevard, Windsor Square) – Simply put, this place serves the BEST deli sandwiches on the planet!  I have dreamed about these sandwiches.  I have traveled a good 45 minutes out of my way to eat these sandwiches.  I have purchased two of these sandwiches at once so that I could have one for both lunch and dinner.  There is nothing like them anywhere else.  A friend works just up the street from Larchmont Wine & Cheese and I recently asked her if she pops in regularly.  She responded, “Oh yeah, that place is the absolute best.  Every day I go there convincing myself that an 8-foot sandwich is a completely normal lunch portion.”  Yep, that pretty much sums it up!  My personal favorite sandwich, the Roasted Turkey Breast on French Baguette, with Swiss gruyere cheese, mixed greens, tomato, sundried tomato spread, extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar, is pictured below.

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The Grim Cheaper prefers the Fresh Homemade Tuna Salad (which, sadly, isn’t available every day) or the Roasted Turkey on Italian Ciabatta (pictured below), though lately he has been opting for the Soppressata Salami, with Spanish manchego cheese, mixed greens, sundried tomato spread, extra virgin olive oil and balsamic vinegar.  Truth be told, though, you can’t go wrong with any sandwich choice.  The bread is made fresh daily on the premises and sandwiches are served from 11 a.m. until the shop runs out of bread, which they usually do by 3 p.m., so plan accordingly.   Thankfully, I have never been unfortunate enough to arrive after the sandwiches have stopped being served, but if I ever do, I’m fairly certain this will be my reaction.  Don’t let the long lines, which typically snake past the front door, discourage you – they move exceptionally fast.  Oh, and did I mention that the sandwiches are insanely reasonably priced – around $4.50 for a half size (which is HUGE – the sandwiches pictured above and below are both half sizes) and about $7.50 for a whole.

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The deli is tucked into a corner of a quaint gourmet market that sells specialty cheeses and meats, imported olive oils and spices, and fine wine.  The clerks are exceptionally knowledgeable and well-versed in their fares.  Every time we’ve gone in to ask for a wine suggestion, their recommendations have been top notch.  In fact, my mom is obsessed with the last wine they suggested and, unfortunately, we cannot find it anywhere in Palm Springs, so I have a feeling we’ll be dropping by Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese to stock up whenever we’re in town.  (Note – the shop is closed on Sundays.)

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2. The Slaw Dogs (720 North Lake Avenue, Pasadena) – BEST hot dogs in the state!   With menu items such as a Mac and Cheese Dog (with macaroni and cheese, bacon, grilled onions, and Dijon mustard), The Picnic Dog (with homemade potato salad, BBQ sauce, onion rings, and a dill pickle spear), and the TNT Super Dog, aka “The Good Timer” (with beer chili, cheddar cheese, bacon, pastrami, French fries, grilled onions, and a fried egg, all wrapped in a giant tortilla), there is something for everyone.  The eatery also serves vegetarian options, salads (the potato salad is made onsite each day and is uh-ma-zing!), burgers, and wine, beer and champagne.

My regular order – a turkey dog with melted cheddar cheese and ranch dressing – is pictured below and, let me tell you, it is absolute perfection!  If you are looking for good dogs in L.A., my best advice is to skip Pink’s (the lines are long and the dogs mediocre) and go to The Slaw Dogs instead.  The place honestly cannot be beat!

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3. The Prince Restaurant & Bar (3198 West 7th Street, Koreatown) – One of my favorite meals of my life occurred at The Prince and dining there is nothing short of an experience.  Being at the restaurant, which was originally established in 1949 and has not been altered since, is like stepping inside an episode of Mad Men.

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The specialty of the house is the Deep-Fried Whole Chicken (pictured below), which is served Korean-style, with sauces, slaw, and a specialty crepe-like bread.  During our visit to The Prince, we happened to meet the owner who taught us how to properly eat the dish using chopsticks.  Not only was it a fun experience to try something so completely different from anything I had ever been exposed to, but it was hands-down one of the best meals I have ever had.  Oh, and everything The Prince serves – right down to the complimentary chips and salsa – is handmade on the premises.  I cannot say enough good things about this place!  The Prince is one of Los Angeles’ treasures.

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4. Don Antonio’s (11755 West Pico Boulevard, Sawtelle) – Hands down the best Mexican food in L.A.  I love the place so much that I chose it as the subject of my very first blog post back in November 2007.  I initially visited the restaurant because of its many appearances on The Hills (Spencer and Heidi were regulars) and wound up loving it so much that it became our go-to Friday night spot when the GC lived in Santa Monica.  I absolutely love the Crispy Ground Beef Tacos, the homemade Chicken Tamales, the Chicken Fajitas, and the Special Burrito.  But you honestly cannot go wrong with any menu item.  I recently brought my friend Katie, who was visiting from Kentucky, there for dinner and it’s now the only spot she wants to dine at when in L.A.  (Thanks to my friend Kim for the photo below!)

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5. Vertical Wine Bistro (70 North Raymond Avenue, Pasadena) – One of the best happy hours in Pasadena!  This quaint, sleek, dimly-lit eatery, which has the feel of a speakeasy, is reached via an enclosed patio canopied with strings of Edison lights.  Though the menu is pricey, the happy hour deals can’t be beat.  The food is out of this world (though I am little upset that the Sautéed Mushrooms, my favorite side dish, appears to have disappeared from the menu recently), the service exceptionally friendly, and the atmosphere fabulous.

Vertical Wine Bistro

During one visit, we were lucky enough to experience one of chef Laurent Quenioux’ Foodings and the cheese cart (yes, cart – it’s pictured below!) that was offered was one of the most incredible things I have ever seen!  If you can make it to one of the Foodings that take place there regularly, I highly recommend it.

6. Yamashiro Hollywood (1999 North Sycamore Avenue, Hollywood) – Situated 250 feet above Hollywood Boulevard, this restaurant provides some of L.A.’s best views.  And the food is pretty amazing, too!  The Butter Lettuce Wraps and Yamashiro Crispy Chicken dishes are my favorites.  Yamashiro, which means “Mountain Palace” in Japanese, was originally established in 1914 as a private home for two wealthy German brothers.  After one of the brothers passed away in 1922, the property was turned into a private club where the luminaries of the day gathered to wine, dine and dance.  After falling into a bit of disrepair during World War II,  the site, which was modeled after a palace in Kyoto, Japan, was eventually purchased by a developer in 1948 and transformed into Yamashiro Hollywood restaurant.

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I could walk around the unique property for hours, taking in all of its ornate detailing and the sprawling seven-acre grounds.  The restaurant’s Inner Courtyard, with its retractable roof, sparkling waterfalls, and central koi pond, literally looks like a set taken straight out of a movie.  The exterior garden area, which boasts waterways, Japanese flowers, a 600-year-old pagoda and an outdoor bar that is open during the summer months, is absolutely breathtaking.

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As I mentioned, Yamashiro’s most incredible feature is its striking 360-degree views of Hollywood, Downtown Los Angeles, Century City, and the Pacific Ocean – views which only get more spectacular at night!  I recommend showing up around sunset (the lounge opens at 5 p.m.), so that you can catch glimpses of both the daytime and nighttime views.

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7. The Musso & Frank Grill (6667 Hollywood Boulevard, Hollywood) – Hollywood’s oldest restaurant, The Musso & Frank Grill, or Musso’s as it is more commonly called, was originally established in 1919.  The menu, which offers classic comfort foods, steaks and French-inspired fare, was created by chef Jean Rue in 1923 and little of it has been changed since.  While the eatery is pricey, the food is fabulous, the service impeccable, the ambiance beautiful, and the history surrounding the place in a league of its own.  Musso’s patron list reads like a Who’s Who of the show business and literary worlds and virtually anyone who’s been anyone since 1919 has dined there.  For those who do not want to fork out the dough for a meal, I highly suggest grabbing a drink in the “New Room,” a gorgeous wood-paneled space on the eastern side of the restaurant that was constructed in 1955 (it’s pictured below).

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8. The Galley (2442 Main Street, Santa Monica) – Santa Monica’s oldest restaurant also happens to serve its best happy hour, which is offered nightly.  When I am in SM, The Galley is pretty much the only place I want to eat and I find myself craving their Chicken and Vegetable Tacos (which are only available on the bar menu) on a regular basis.  Though the dinner menu is fabulous, too, it is the bar eats that have me returning time and time again.  The restaurant, which is a sawdust-on-the-floor/everybody-knows-your-name type of place, was originally established in 1934 and during the heyday of Hollywood such stars as Errol Flynn, Ann Sheridan and Marilyn Monroe were all said to hang out there.

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Clark Gable was also a fan of the place and countless props and set pieces from his 1935 flick Mutiny on the Bounty now decorate The Galley’s walls.  As you can see below, the restaurant’s interior is quite unique, with twinkle lights draped across every surface and fish netting and other nautical décor lining the walls.  The owner, Captain Ron, does his best to make the atmosphere comfortable, casual and fun.  You can read Captain Ron’s famous Galley salad dressing story here – it is something of a Santa Monica legend.

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The Galley also features a cute back patio area, where patrons can partake of the happy hour and bar menus.  The eatery gets insanely crowded come 5 o’clock (especially on weekends), but, trust me, the long waits are worth it.

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9. Noma Japanese Restaurant & Sushi Bar (2031 Wilshire Boulevard, Santa Monica) – Outside of veggie rolls, I am not at all a fan of sushi, or seafood of any kind for that matter  The GC is, though, and his favorite sushi place in all of L.A. is Noma Japanese Restaurant.  The eatery is tucked inside of a small strip mall in Santa Monica and you could easily drive right by without knowing it was there.  Despite that fact, it is always crowded and the waits can be long, but the food is definitely worth it.  The GC loves sitting at the sushi bar and letting the chefs pick his selections.  He’s never been disappointed with any of their choices and claims the place serves some of the best sashimi he’s ever had.  While I cannot attest to the raw fish items, I am particularly fond of their Tofu Salad and Gyoza appetizer.

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10. Sur Restaurant and Bar (606 North Robertson Avenue, West Hollywood)  – Another one of my favorite ever dining experiences took place at Sur, the eatery featured regularly on the hit Bravo TV series Vanderpump Rules.  I would recommend the place to both VP fans and non-fans alike.  The food is exceptional (the Crispy Chicken Breast is TO DIE FOR), the prices shocking reasonable, the décor stunning and the atmosphere fun.  Add to all that the fact that the Vanderpump Rules cast actually works at the restaurant and poses for pictures with fans, and you have one of the most unique dining experiences in L.A.  I ate there with my good friends Kim, Katie, Lavonna and Kaylee for my birthday last year and we had a blast.  You can read about our experience here.  A blogger I regularly follow (who I won’t name) recently dined at Sur and described it as “meh,” which had me seriously rethinking ever visiting her site again.  I mean, if she doesn’t like Sur, how can I ever take any of her other opinions seriously?

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11. The Old Place (29983 Mulholland Highway, Agoura Hills) – The Old Place is situated inside of a wood-paneled structure originally built in 1914 that once housed the Cornell Post Office and Country Store.  A local couple named Tom and Barbara Runyon established a restaurant on the site in 1970, offering only two meal items – hand-carved steak and steamed littleneck clams.  Tom and Barbara’s son took over the eatery in 2009 and re-vamped the menu, adding numerous delicacies of the comfort food variety, but left the interior of the 40-seat site pretty much untouched.

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To say that the place is unique would be a vast understatement.  Tom created the restaurant’s booths out of actual doors which once hung in a San Francisco hotel, the columns located at the end of each booth originally stood in the Santa Barbara Mission, and the bench at the 30-foot antique bar was fashioned from an actual wooden diving board.  The food is also some of the best I’ve ever had and the wine list is fabulous.  Be forewarned, though, the eatery is tiny (5 booths, 3 tables and a bar) and waits are long, but oh-so worth it!  While waiting for a table, you can peruse the selection at the Cornell Winery & Tasting Room, which is located next door.   (The Old Place is closed Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, so plan accordingly.)

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12. Malibu Café (327 Latigo Canyon Road, Malibu) – Another spot where dining is an experience!  To call Malibu Café a restaurant, though, would be doing it a disservice.  Don’t get me wrong, the “Nouveau Barbeque-style” fare is downright delicious, but the outdoor eatery (and yes, that’s one of the seating areas pictured below – isn’t it divine?) has so much more to offer than just food.

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Malibu Café sits in the middle of the sprawling Calamigos Ranch, which was originally established in 1947.  Restaurant patrons are able to wander the picturesque 120-acre property, much of which has appeared onscreen in the countless movies and television shows that have been filmed onsite.  The eatery also features waterways, live music, games for children and adults (billiards, anyone?), and paddle and pedal boat rentals.  It is the perfect spot to relax with a glass of rosé on a warm afternoon.

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13. Russell’s (30 North Fair Oaks Avenue, Pasadena) – I am not a breakfast person.  It may be the most important meal of the day, but I can always be counted on to skip it.  Just give me a Starbucks iced latte first thing in the morning and I am good to go!  My mom absolutely LOVES breakfast, though, and I figure some of my fellow stalkers do, too, so I would be remiss if I did not include Russell’s on this list.  The tiny eatery, which was originally established in 1930, is my mom’s absolute favorite spot in the world for breakfast.  If we are anywhere in the vicinity of Pasadena and do not make it to Russell’s for breakfast, it is not going to be a good day for her.  While the eatery does serve a fabulous lunch and dinner (it is especially known for its burgers), it is the morning meals that most people rave about and that websites constantly tout as the best breakfast in town.

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14. The SmokeHouse Restaurant (4420 Lakeside Drive, Burbank) – One of L.A.’s oldest eateries, The SmokeHouse was originally established in 1946.  It moved to its current location in 1949 and very little of it has been altered since.  The dimly-lit, red-boothed restaurant evokes the aura of Old Hollywood.  It is exactly the type of place I’d imagine Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. sipping martinis in during the heyday of Tinseltown.

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The SmokeHouse serves up old school hearty classics (which is my preferred fare) such as Beef Stroganoff, Tournedos of Beef, Creamed Spinach with Bacon, and Barbequed Baby Back Ribs.  The meals are fabulous and the servings huge.  We are such fans of the place that we even ate Christmas dinner there one year.  Thanks to its proximity to the studios (Warner Bros. is right across the street), countless celebrities have also been known to drop in (George Clooney is such a fan he named his production company Smoke House Pictures), so be sure to keep your eyes peeled if you dine there.  And I cannot more highly recommend partaking of “The World’s Greatest Garlic Bread.”  It’s delicious!

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15. James’ Beach (60 North Venice Boulevard, Venice) – In the 2009 comedy I Love You, Man, Sydney Fife (Jason Segel) declares that the Grilled Mahi Mahi Tacos served at James’ Beach are “the best fish tacos in the world.”  And while I have not sampled the fish version (as I said, I am not into seafood), I can attest to the fact that the Grilled Tofu and Half Rotisserie Shelton’s Chicken versions are some of the best tacos I have ever tasted.  The Venice Beach eatery, which was established in 1996, serves up a wide array of what they call “Modern American Comfort Food” and pretty much everything on the menu is fabulous.  The vibe is casual and laid-back and the outside patio area is a favorite with celebrities.  This is my go-to Venice Beach spot.

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16. The Original Farmers Market (6333 West 3rd Street, Fairfax) – One of L.A.’s most famous and popular landmarks, The Original Farmers Market was conceived by businessmen Roger Dahlhjelm and Fred Beck who proposed establishing an outdoor marketplace on 30 acres of vacant land owned by oil tycoon Earl Bell Gilmore.  Their vision became a reality in July 1934 when a dozen or so farmers showed up and sold goods out of the backs of their trucks.  The market became so popular that permanent stalls were erected just a few months later.  Today, The Original Famers Market is an L.A. institution, housing over 70 permanent stalls comprised of shops, restaurants, bakeries, specialty grocery stores, meat and fish counters, and produce stands, employing more than 700 clerks, and serving up over 16 different varieties of native foods to an average of 3 million yearly visitors!

Los Angeles restaurant recommendations (2 of 3)

  You can literally find any food item at The Original Farmers Market (from French cuisine to Chinese specialties to freshly made doughnuts) and it is one of the best spots to grab a meal if you’re with a large group because there’s something for everyone.  The best part of all?  The market is a big time celebrity hot spot.  The Los Angeles Times even declared it one of the top ten places to see stars in L.A.  They’re right.  I’ve never gone there and not seen a celeb.

Los Angeles restaurant recommendations (1 of 3)

17. Taverna Tony (23410 Civic Center Way, Malibu) – This restaurant doesn’t just serve some of L.A.’s best Greek food, but some of L.A.’s best food in general.  While there are healthy items on the menu, this is the type of place where I would suggest tossing all dietary concerns out the window.  If you’re going to cheat, this is the spot to do it – and might I suggest doing it with the Flaming Saganaki Cheese appetizer.  It is not hyperbole to say it may be the best thing I’ve ever eaten in my life.

Taverna Tony (1 of 2)

Other bonuses – the prices at Taverna Tony are shockingly reasonable especially considering the location (it’s situated inside the Malibu Country Mart), the ambiance is adorable, and the place is such a celeb hot spot that dining there almost guarantees you a star sighting.

Taverna Tony (2 of 2)

18. Bay Cities Italian Deli & Bakery (1517 Lincoln Boulevard, Santa Monica) – When the GC lived in Santa Monica, this was our go-to deli.  It’s not as good as Larchmont Village Wine, Spirits & Cheese, but it’s a pretty close second.  I am extremely picky about my deli meat (meat in general, actually) and Bay Cities Italian Deli uses quality slices and carves them thin, which I love.   Bread for the sandwiches is baked fresh daily and while I prefer the Turkey Special, the Godmother (comprised of salami, mortadella, capicola, ham, prosciutto, provolone, mayonnaise, mustard, onions, pickles, tomatoes, lettuce, Italian dressing and hot pepper salad) is the one that most people rave about.  The deli, which was founded in 1925, is housed inside of an absolutely charming little gourmet market that serves specialty cheeses, wine and housewares.  I love walking down the aisles perusing the countless unique finds.  Bay Cities is jam-packed at all times, so be forewarned – if you choose to dine here, you are in for a wait.  And it is closed on Mondays, so plan accordingly.  (Photo via the Bay Cities website)

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19. Lovebird’s Café & Bakery (921 East Colorado Boulevard, Pasadena) – My favorite Pasadena deli, Lovebirds is a spot that I used to visit regularly when I lived in Crown City.  Everything served is made fresh on the premises and while you can’t go wrong with the bakery items, soups or salads, the eatery is most well-known for its fabulous sandwiches.  Lovebirds Chicken Salad Sandwich is the best I’ve ever had (I think it’s the unusual addition of grapes that makes the mixture so tasty), but truth be told all of the offerings are great.  The GC changes up his sandwich order pretty much every time we visit and has never been disappointed.  The site serves up some great espresso drinks, as well, and the prices are extremely reasonable.  There are several locations dotted throughout L.A. (including two in Pasadena!), but the one at 921 East Colorado Boulevard in my favorite.  Even Charlie Sheen is a Lovebirds’ fan and has been known to stop by the Alhambra outpost.

Love Birds Cafe (1 of 2)

20. Figaro Bistrot (1802 North Vermont Avenue, Los Feliz) – A charming little piece of Paris located right in the heart of Los Feliz.  Figaro Bistrot could not be more adorable with its French-inspired décor, tiny sidewalk bistro sets, gilded mirrors, flower-shaped sconces, zinc-plated bar and Parisian soundtrack.  The setting is nothing short of magical and walking through the doors transports one directly to the City of Light.  Figaro Bistrot also serves up one of the best happy hours in Los Angeles.   The food is fabulous, the prices reasonable, and the ambiance parfait!  There is nothing not to love about this place.

Figaro Bistrot (1 of 1)

I hope this list brings my fellow stalkers some culinary delight!  I will most likely be adding to/removing from it as time goes by due to the sad fact that restaurants so often close or change.  (Read: the Formosa Café, which was originally on this list.  I even went out to take photographs of it a few months back, but by the time I sat down to write this post, I learned that the historic 90-year-old property had been extensively remodeled and that the results were horrific.  Needless to say, I had to nix it, which is sad as it used to be one of my favorite spots.)  So check back regularly for new updates.

Be sure to check out yesterday’s post about my L.A. hotel recommendations if you haven’t yet.

Musso and Frank Grill from “Sex and the City”

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (20 of 25)

I deserve a facepalm for today’s location!  For ages I had been trying to track down the Los Angeles steakhouse where Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) dined with “Letterman Lew” (Sam Seder) in the Season 3 episode of Sex and the City titled “Sex and Another City.”  Because the episode had been filmed over 15 years ago, I figured the restaurant was most likely no longer in existence, but still spent quite a lot of time searching for it regardless.  Then in April, I had a brainstorm.  I decided to tweet to Sam Seder to ask if he remembered where filming had taken place.  Not only was he nice enough to respond, but he did indeed remember the restaurant!  As it turns out, it was a place I had stalked before and even blogged about – Musso and Frank Grill, the oldest restaurant in Hollywood!  How I did not recognize it is beyond me!  Not to mention the fact that I should have realized Sex and the City would utilize one of L.A.’s most historic eateries while filming on location in La La Land.  Since my original post on Musso and Frank was written waaaaay back in August 2008, I figured the place was most-definitely worthy of a redux.

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Musso and Frank Grill, or Musso’s as it is commonly called, was originally established by Frank Toulet in 1919 as Frank’s Francois Café in a space located at 6669 Hollywood Boulevard.  In 1923, Frank partnered up with Joseph Musso and renamed the restaurant Musso and Frank Grill.  French chef Jean Rue created the menu with offerings of classic comfort foods, steaks and French-inspired fare.   Amazingly, little of that menu has been changed since.

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (1 of 25)

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (3 of 25)

Despite the fact that Musso and Frank Grill was immediately successful, Toulet and Musso sold it to Joseph Carissimi and John Mosso in 1926.  The restaurant continued to be profitable under Carissimi and Mosso’s tutelage and eight years later it was moved to a larger space one storefront east at 6667 Hollywood Boulevard.   The following year, the duo opened the Back Room, a private enclave for the movers and shakers of the day to congregate.  The room became especially popular with the literary world and such luminaries as William Faulkner, Dashiell Hammett, John Steinbeck, Thomas Wolfe, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and T.S. Eliot all spent time there.   Raymond Chandler is even said to have written The Big Sleep largely from the Back Room.  The space was eventually dubbed the “Writers’ Room” and a Los Angeles Times article stated that if you spent enough time there you “…would have seen every living writer you had ever heard of, and some you would not know until later.”

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Musso and Frank Sex and the City (9 of 25)

When Carissimi and Mosso’s lease on the Back Room expired in 1955, they moved all of its furnishings, including the bar, wood paneling and wall sconces, to the storefront located next door to Musso and Frank.  That space was dubbed the “New Room.”   It still bears that name today, despite the fact that it has been in existence for sixty years.  The New Room, pictured below, continued its tradition of popularity with writers of the day and Joseph Heller, Kurt Vonnegut and Charles Bukowski were all said to have hung out there.

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (12 of 25)

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (13 of 25)

Musso’s was immensely popular with the Hollywood set, as well.  Just a few of the stars who dined there during the early years include John Barrymore, Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford, Orson Welles, Jimmy Stewart, Rudolph Valentino, Cecil B. DeMille, Gary Cooper, Humphrey Bogart, Lauren Bacall, Bette Davis, Greta Garbo, Bing Crosby and my girl Marilyn Monroe.  Charlie Chaplin was such a frequent patron that he had his own booth.  Pictured below, it is the booth located at the front, western corner of the restaurant’s main room.  In more recent years, Tom Cruise, James Woods, Demi Moore, Tom Hanks, Francis Ford Coppola, Keith Richards, Sean Penn and Drew Barrymore have all been spotted at Musso’s.

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (14 of 25)

John Mosso’s family eventually bought out the Carissimi family and they continue to run Musso and Frank Grill to this day.  Though the eatery closed its doors this past Friday (June 28th) for a ten-day restoration project, patrons should not worry – all of the changes set to be implemented are minor.  The restaurant will reopen on Tuesday, July 7th.

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Musso and Frank Sex and the City (6 of 25)

In “Sex and Another City,” Miranda and her old friend Lew head to Musso and Frank Grill to enjoy a New York strip steak.  While dining, Miranda learns that Lew is on a special diet in which he chews his food, but doesn’t swallow it.  Needless to say, their meal does not end well.

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In the episode, Miranda and Lew were seated in the New Room.

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Musso and Frank Sex and the City (8 of 25)

Musso’s has popped up in countless movies and television shows over the years.  In 1994’s Ed Wood, the restaurant is where Ed Wood (Johnny Depp) has a chance encounter with Orson Welles (Vincent D’Onofrio).

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Only the exterior of Musso and Frank was used in the filming, though.  Interiors were shot elsewhere.

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Musso and Frank’s parking lot masked as the parking lot of the Dresden, where Sue (Patrick Van Horn) got into a fight with “House of Pain” in the 1996 comedy Swingers.

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Though the restaurant’s rear awning was covered over to read “Dresden” in the scene . . .

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. . . Musso and Frank’s parking lot signage was still visible.

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The eatery’s parking lot also appeared in the 2003 comedy Hollywood Homicide.

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Musso and Frank was featured twice in 2001’s Ocean’s Eleven.   It is first where Danny Ocean (George Clooney) tells Rusty Ryan (Brad Pitt) about his plan to rob three Las Vegas casinos.

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Later in the movie, the two discuss whether or not to bring on an eleventh person while sitting at Musso’s bar.

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Musso and Frank is where the Diablo Cartel, Tanaka Yakuza, the Antonioni Crime Family and Seamus O’Grady (Justin Theroux) hand over briefcases full of cash in 2003’s Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle.

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The restaurant popped up several times on the television series Mad Men.  It was featured twice in Season 1’s “Red in the Face.”  In the beginning of the episode, Don Draper (Jon Hamm) and Roger Sterling (John Slattery) have drinks at Musso’s before heading to Don’s house for dinner.

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Later in the episode, the two return to eat oysters at Musso’s.

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Musso and Frank masked as Sardi’s, where Don grabbed a bite with Bobbie Barrett (Melinda McGraw), in Season 2’s “The New Girl.”

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It was also used twice in the Season 4 episode titled “The Rejected.”  It first popped up as the spot where Pete Campbell (Vincent Kartheiser) found out from Tom Vogel (Joe O’Connor) that his wife was pregnant.

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Later in the episode, it masked as Jim Downey’s Steak House, where Ken Cosgrove (Aaron Staton) confronted Pete about calling him an “all-American idiot who fell into everything.”

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In the Season 3 episode of 90210 titled “Nerdy Little Secrets,” Marla Templeton (Sally Kellerman) told Annie Wilson (Shenae Grimes) about her life in Hollywood while dining at Musso and Frank.

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Roger Greenberg (Ben Stiller) celebrated his birthday at Musso and Frank with Ivan Schrank (Rhys Ifans) and Florence Marr (Greta Gerwig) in the 2010 drama Greenberg.

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In the scene, Greta is wearing a Henry’s Taco’s t-shirt.  Henry’s is another historic Los Angeles eatery that I blogged about here.

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Musso’s has appeared on the television series Scandal no less than three times as Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and her father Eli Pope’s (Joe Morton) go-to restaurant.  In the Season 3 episode titled “The Fluffer,” the two get a surprise – and unwelcome – visit from Maya Lewis (Khandi Alexander) while eating dinner at Musso and Frank.

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Olivia and her father returned to Musso and Frank in the Season 4 episode titled “Randy, Red, Superfreak and Julia.”  It is there that Olivia asks Eli if he had anything to do with Harrison Wright’s (Columbus Short) death.

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Father and daughter share a meal at the restaurant once again in the Season 5 episode titled “It’s Hard Out Here for a General,” during which Eli scolds Olivia for breaking up with the president when she “had the Oval.”

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In the Season 1 episode of Bosch titled “Chapter 1 – Tis the Season,” Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) and Julia Brasher (Annie Wersching) get drinks at Musso and Frank.

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Musso and Frank Grill is honestly one of the coolest restaurants L.A. has to offer and I cannot more highly recommend a visit!

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (11 of 25)

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (10 of 25)

For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Musso and Frank Sex and the City (18 of 25)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Musso and Frank Grill is located at 6667 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood.  You can visit the establishment’s official website here.

Dinah’s Family Restaurant from “Modern Family”

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (36 of 44)

While I primarily love stalking filming locations of the residential variety, restaurants come in at a close second.  So when my friend Owen, of the When Write Is Blog, recently told me about Dinah’s Family Restaurant, a historic Westchester eatery that was featured in a Season 3 episode of Modern Family, I ran right out to stalk it – and grab a bite to eat.

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Dinah’s Family Restaurant was originally established in 1959 by the Ernst family.

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (32 of 44)

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (31 of 44)

It is still owned by the same family today.  Mario Ernst and his wife, Teri, took over operations of the restaurant in 1989.

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (33 of 44)

The couple gave both the interior and the menu an upgrade shortly thereafter.  Thankfully though, the place still has a fabulous retro feel.

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Dinah's Family Restaurant

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (7 of 44)

The eatery is most famous for its Secret Recipe Chicken.  According to Gayot, over 1,500,000 pieces of it have been sold since Dinah’s opening!  I decided to forgo the fried chicken while there and opted for my usual order of chicken strips.  They were fabulous, as were the mashed potatoes and gravy that they came with.  The Grim Cheaper opted for a turkey sandwich and it was uh-ma-zing, too!  The turkey looked and tasted like it had literally just been carved.  I actually ended up liking his sandwich more than my chicken strips.  Sacrilege, I know!

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Dinah's Restaurant 2

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (4 of 44)

According to a fabulous Eater L.A. article, Dinah’s bucket-shaped signage served as the inspiration for the famous Kentucky Fried Chicken signs.  Apparently, a former Dinah’s server went to work for KFC in the 1960s, told them about the bucket sign, they copied it and the rest is history!

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Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (14 of 44)

Thanks to its retro aesthetic, Dinah’s has been featured numerous times onscreen.  In the Season 3 episode of Modern Family titled “The Last Walt,” the eatery masked as the Moonbeam Diner where Phil Dunphy (Ty Burrell), in the hopes of creating a special memory, took his daughter Alex (Ariel Winter) to sample the “World’s Greatest Milkshake.”   As Phil says, “You can’t expect me to see a sign that says ‘World’s Greatest Milkshake – 50 miles’ and not drive to it!”  Unfortunately, after driving said 50 miles and arriving at the diner, they discover that the milkshake machine is broken.  Phil then makes Alex try everything labeled “World’s Greatest” on the Moonbeam’s menu, eventually causing her to throw up all over their booth.

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The exterior of Dinah’s also appears in the episode in a very heartwarming scene in which Phil writes Alex’s initials on the restaurant’s sign, imitating a gesture that Apollo 17 astronaut Eugene Cernan made for his daughter during a moon landing.

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Dinah’s Family Restaurant masqueraded as Stacks House of Pancakes, where the German nihilists dined on lingonberry pancakes, in the 1998 Coen Brothers comedy The Big Lebowski.

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Wilson (Terence Stamp) and Elaine (Lesley Ann Warren) have dinner at Dinah’s in the ultra-weird 1999 crime drama The Limey.

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While Little Miss Sunshine was not actually filmed at Dinah’s, a bucket of the restaurant’s famous fried chicken did make an appearance in the 2006 comedy.  In one of the movie’s early scenes, Sheryl Hoover (Toni Collete) brings Dinah’s home for dinner, which is amusing considering the fact that the Hoover family supposedly lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.  Grandpa Edwin Hoover (Alan Arkin) is not happy with Sheryl’s take-out choice and says, “What’s that?  Chicken?  Every night it’s the f*cking chicken!  Holy God almighty!  Is it possible, just once, we could get something to eat for dinner around here that’s not the goddamn f*cking chicken?“

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Louis Bloom (Jake Gyllenhaal) interviews Rick (Riz Ahmed) to be his new intern at Dinah’s in the 2014 thriller Nightcrawler.

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In the Season 2 episode of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. titled “Love in the Time of Hydra,” which aired this past March, Agent 33 (Ming-Na Wen) and Grant Ward (Brett Dalton) kidnap Selwyn (Landall Goolsby) from Dinah’s.

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Dinah’s Family Restaurant also appeared in an episode of Malcolm in the Middle, though I am unsure of which episode.

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Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (28 of 44)

For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for telling me about this location!  Smile

Dinah's Family Restaurant Modern Family (44 of 44)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Dinah’s Family Restaurant, aka the Moonbeam Diner from Modern Family, is located at 6521 South Sepulveda Boulevard in Westchester.  You can visit Dinah’s official website here.

Vickie’s Diner from “Lucky You”

Tiffany's Cafe Lucky You (23 of 23)

This year is literally flying by!  It seems like just yesterday that the Grim Cheaper and I headed to Las Vegas, but in actuality our mini work trip/vacay took place over two months ago!  And I still have yet to post all of the stalking sites we visited while there, including today’s locale, which comes courtesy of my friend/Drew Barrymore aficionado Ashley, of The Drewseum website.  A few years back, Ashley posted pictures of Tiffany’s Café, a small Sin City restaurant that was featured in Drew’s 2007 flick Lucky YouOne of Ashley’s photos showed a poster prominently displayed on the restaurant’s wall that had been signed by the movie’s cast.  Once I saw that, I was, of course, chomping at the bit to see the place in person, so I dragged the GC right on over there to grab lunch while we were in town.

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Tiffany’s Café was originally founded in 1955 (or 1960, depending on which website you’re reading) inside of White Cross Drugs pharmacy.  The 1,200-square-foot eatery was so named for the vintage Tiffany-style lamps that dot the ceiling above its central lunch counter.

Tiffany's Cafe Lucky You (12 of 23)

When White Cross Drugs (where Elvis Presley and members of the Rat Pat regularly had prescriptions filled in the ’50s and ’60s) was shuttered in March 2012, people assumed that Tiffany’s had closed down as well, and the restaurant suffered from a decline in patronage.   When longtime owner Teddy Pappas eventually decided to retire, the place was acquired by Vickie Kelesis, a Tiffany’s waitress since 2006.  She re-opened the  eatery, changing its name to Vickie’s Diner, but the menu (which offers homemade, preservative-free fare), was left the same, aside from a few additions.  White Cross Drugs was also re-opened as White Cross Market, an upscale grocery store, in 2013 and, when we were there, business appeared to be on an upswing.

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The food at Vickie’s is fabulous!  I opted for the chicken strips (natch), which were divine.

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The GC ordered a chicken pita, which I sampled and liked almost as much as the chicken strips!

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In Lucky You, Billie Offer (Drew Barrymore) accompanies Huck Cheever (Eric Bana) to Tiffany’s Café for breakfast after agreeing to give him a second chance.

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While there, they run into Eric’s father, L.C. Cheever (Robert Duvall).

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The scene was filmed towards the front of the restaurant, in the bank of booths located near Vickie’s entrance door.  The exact booth used in the movie is denoted with a pink arrow in the photograph below.

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White Cross Drugs was also visible in the scene.

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Vickie’s Diner looks a bit different today, but is still recognizable from its onscreen appearance.

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Tiffany's Cafe Lucky You (6 of 23)

You can check out some photographs of what the restaurant looked like shortly after filming took place on The Drewseum website here.

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Tiffany's Cafe Lucky You (8 of 23)

Sadly, the poster that the cast signed during the filming has faded and Robert Duvall’s autograph is the only one still visible.  You can see what the autographs originally looked like on Ashley’s site here.

Tiffany's Cafe Lucky You (9 of 23)

For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Big THANK YOU to Ashley, of The Drewseum website, for finding this location!  Smile

Tiffany's Cafe Lucky You (22 of 23)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Vickie’s Diner, aka the former Tiffany’s Café from from Lucky You, is located at 1700 South Las Vegas Boulevard in Las Vegas.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here and its Facebook page here.

Hatfield’s Restaurant from “Chef”

Hatfields Restaurant Chef (8 of 9)

Today’s location is a bit of a bummer, I’m afraid.  Ever since seeing the movie Chef (one of my favorites of 2014), I was itching to stalk Hatfield’s restaurant, which appeared quite extensively throughout the flick.  So when I discovered that it had recently closed, I was devastated.  But I ventured on over to see the exterior of it in person, nonetheless, while I was in L.A. a few weeks ago.

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Hatfield’s restaurant was established by Karen and Quinn Hatfield in 2006.  The fine dining eatery was originally located in a small space on Beverly Boulevard, but moved to 6703 Melrose Avenue in Hollywood in 2010.

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The Melrose Avenue space had housed a restaurant named Citrus until 2001 and then went through a succession of different occupants, including Alex, Meson G, and Red Pearl Kitchen.  When the Hatfields leased the site, they remodeled the interior, creating an open space filled with bright white accents.  While I was hoping to get a peek of that interior via the front windows, due to the way the restaurant is set up, not much was visible, unfortunately.

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For reasons that were not specified, Hatfield’s closed its doors in December 2014 and the property that once housed it currently sits vacant.  Karen and Quinn have since opened Odys & Penelope Churrasco and Grill in the Fairfax district and they still operate The Sycamore Kitchen in that same neighborhood, as well.

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In Chef, Hatfield’s masked as the Gaellic-style Brentwood eatery named Gauloises where Carl Casper (Jon Favreau) worked.

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I fell in love with the restaurant’s open kitchen while watching Chef and was dying to stalk – and photograph – it.  A place like that is just screaming to be photographed!  I sincerely hope that whoever takes over the space leaves its design intact.

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According to a May 2014 Eater LA interview with Favreau, who wrote, produced, directed and starred in Chef, the kitchen is what made him choose the site for filming.  He says, “Cinematically it was wonderful.  When you build a restaurant on a stage for a Hollywood film it looks so perfect.  This one had a beauty to it and was very well laid out.  I loved how the front and back of the house you could see the open kitchen – you could see in – that was fun for the cameraman.  Kitchens aren’t usually aesthetically pleasing places in reality; they’re generally hot and crowded.  The visual aspect of it isn’t a priority.  This one is.”

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The culinary scenes in Chef are absolutely beautiful – and not just because of the design of Hatfield’s kitchen.  Eater LA characterizes the sequences as “food porn” and that’s a pretty accurate description.  Roy Choi, the chef behind the immensely popular Korean taco food truck fleet Kogi, consulted on the movie.  According to Jon, before coming onboard Choi said, “’I’ll do it but you have to get the kitchen right.  Movies always get it wrong.  I’ll do everything you need.  I’ll train you, do the menus, look over your scripts, help you in the editing room.  Whatever you want.  But you have to promise you’ll get the details right.’  I said that’s all I ever want to do.  That’s the way I work.  That’s exactly what I had in mind as well.”  Favreau even attended a French culinary school and worked in some of Choi’s restaurants prior to filming, which becomes obvious while watching the flick.  Favreau’s hands move like an artist when handling his dishes.  Check out this grilled cheese-making scene and you’ll see what I mean.  Just make sure you have some sliced sourdough and cheddar on hand ‘cause cravings are sure to follow!

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Hatfield’s was also where Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) and Mellie Grant (Bellamy Young) sat through a terse staged lunch in the Season 3 episode of Scandal titled “Ride, Sally, Ride.”

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The space also masks as Jimmy’s, the restaurant belonging to Jimmy Martino (John Stamos), in the new Fox series Grandfathered.  The interior of the eatery . . .

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. . . and the kitchen area are featured on the show.

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Exterior filming, though, takes place at Faith & Flower, located in The Watermarke Tower at 705 West 9th Street in downtown Los Angeles.  That same building is also where Jimmy lives on the show.

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During the space’s stint as Meson G (which you can check out some photographs of here), it masked as New York restaurant Nolita for the pilot episode of the 2005 television series Kitchen Confidential.  I had never heard of the show, which was created by Darren Starr and starred cuties Bradley Cooper and Owain Yeoman, prior to doing research for this post, but it looks great!  You can check it out for free on Hulu.

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Thanks to my friend Molly, from the fabulous DIY/lifestyle website Almost Makes Perfect, I learned that David Boreanaz was punked at Meson G during Season 6 of Punk’d.

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In 2008, when the site housed Red Pearl Kitchen, it appeared in the Season 4 episode of The Hills titled “We’ll Never Be Friends” as the spot where Doug Reinhardt took Lauren Conrad on a date.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Hatfields Restaurant Chef (7 of 9)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Hatfield’s restaurant, from Chef, was formerly located at 6703 Melrose Avenue in Hollywood.  The space is currently closed and awaiting a new tenant.

The Federal Bar from “Parks and Recreation”

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It’s shaping up to be Parks and Recreation week at IAMNOTASTALKER.com, as here I am with yet another location from the series.  I actually came by today’s locale accidentally.  While scanning through P&R’s “Operation Ann” episode for yesterday’s post about the Hamburger Hamlet in Sherman Oaks, I spotted The Federal Bar, a North Hollywood watering hole that I stalked back in May of last year because of its appearance on fave show Perception.  For whatever reason, I had yet to blog about it, though, and, thanks to the P&R kick I’ve been on lately, figured today was the perfect time to do so.

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The ornate brick building that currently houses The Federal Bar was originally constructed as a branch of Security Trust and Savings Bank in 1926.  It was designed by John and Donald Parkinson, the father-and-son architectural team who also created Union Station (which I briefly blogged about here), Bullocks Wilshire (which I blogged about here) and Los Angeles City Hall (am oft-used filming locale that I have, shockingly, never stalked).  Parkinson and Parkinson built several similar-looking bank buildings for the Security Trust chain across Los Angeles throughout the years.  The one located at 5601 North Figueroa Street in Highland Park is a virtual twin to The Federal Bar.  That structure, which I have yet to stalk, has appeared countless times onscreen.  It is currently featured each week as the police station on the new CBS series Battle Creek.

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For many years, The Federal Bar space operated as Paperback Shack Books, an independent bookstore owned by Earl Spar.  In the mid-2000s, the proprietors of Fred 62 (a popular restaurant/filming locale in Los Feliz that I blogged about here) acquired the location and began an extensive, three-year renovation process to turn it into a restaurant/nightclub.  They named the new venture “Bank Heist,” which I think was a rather unfortunate dubbing considering one of the bloodiest bank heists in L.A.’s history took place just a little over two miles away.

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Bank Heist opened in late September 2007, but never really had a chance to establish itself.  Less than four months later, on January 7th, 2008, it was gutted by a fire.

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In 2010, Knitting Factory Entertainment CEO Morgan Margolis spotted the architecturally stunning building while taking his children to a martial arts class (I am guessing that class was held at the dojo from The Karate Kid, which is located less than a block south) and thought it would make the perfect place for a new Knitting Factory music club (his insanely popular Hollywood Knitting Club outpost had closed in 2009).  The historic look of the building caused him to eventually rethink his plans, though, and, after leasing the place, he decided it was better suited to house a gastropub.

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Of the neighborhood, Margolis stated in a Los Angeles Daily News article, “I was really trying to get to the next area I felt was going to move forward, and North Hollywood seems to be transitioning consistently.  A lot of other areas were also moving up – i.e. Silverlake, Los Feliz, downtown – but I felt like they were already getting saturated.  There are also a lot of great architectural spaces that I like that are hard to find in certain areas.  I like a lot of brick, I like old buildings, auto garages and warehouses.  I like high-beamed ceilings.  This area seems to have an abundance that is popping up.  And I found an area where I felt like you could still touch the square footage at the right price.”

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After a bit of renovation, The Federal Bar was opened in early 2011.  According to a 2012 Los Angeles Times article, it turned a profit the following month and has continued to do so every month since.

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The 5,000-plus-square-foot space, which was fashioned by interior designer Rod Sellard, boasts four (yes, four!) bars, a second floor special events area with a stage, and an outdoor patio.

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The Federal Bar is nothing short of spectacular, both inside and out, and it is not very hard to see why the place has become popular with location scouts.

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In the Season 4 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Operation Ann,” Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) and Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott) headed to The Federal Bar to spy on Ann Perkins (Rashida Jones), who they thought was out on a secret date with her boss Chris Traeger (Rob Lowe).  As Leslie and Ben soon discovered, though, Ann was actually on a date with Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari).

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While scanning through the episode to make screen captures for yesterday’s post, I immediately recognized The Federal’s intricate exterior.

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In the scene, Tom and Ann were sitting in the southwest area of The Federal’s bottom floor and Leslie and Ben spied on them through the windows located on Weddington Street.

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The Federal Bar Parks and Recreation (19 of 26)

The Federal portrays the Philadelphia bar where the Dunder Mifflin gang crashes a trivia contest Oscar Martinez (Oscar Nunez) is participating in in the Season 8 episode of The Office titled “Trivia.”

The Federal popped up as two different places in the Season 2 episode of Perception titled “Wounded.”  One of the bars on the main floor was used as the watering hole where Kate Moretti (Rachael Leigh Cook) told Blake Rickford’s (Logan Bartholomew) date that he was a suspected rapist.

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And one of the upstairs bars was where Kate spied on Blake later in the episode.

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The exterior of The Federal was also used in that scene.

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The Federal also popped up in flashback scenes in Perception’s next episode, titled “Warrior.”

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In 2013, The Federal masked as Sudz in the Season 9 episode of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia titled “The Gang Tries Desperately to Win an Award.”

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Only the interior of The Federal was used in the episode, though.  The establishing shot that was shown was of Alla Spina restaurant, located at 1410 Mount Vernon Street in Philadelphia, which I found thanks to this amazing map of the series’ City of Brotherly Love locales.

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Jake Peralta (Andy Samberg) and Amy Santiago (Melissa Fumero) attend a “jazz brunch” with Amy’s ex, Teddy Wells (Kyle Bornheimer), at The Federal in the Season 4 episode of Brooklyn Nine-Nine titled “The Audit,” which aired in 2017.

The women of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills debrief on the latest Lisa Vanderpump drama while at The Federal in the Season 9 episode titled “A Wolf in Camille’s Clothing.”

In 2013, Morgan Margolis opened a second Federal Bar inside of another former Security Trust and Savings Bank building.  It, too, has appeared onscreen.  Located at 102 Pine Avenue in Long Beach, the space formerly housed Madison steakhouse, which was where Brad’s (Vince Vaughn) company Christmas party was held in the 2008 comedy Four Christmases.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for taking many of the photos that appear in this post.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Federal Bar, from the “Operation Ann” episode of Parks and Recreation, is located at 5303 Lankershim Boulevard in North Hollywood.  You can visit the bar’s official website here.