Alicia Kent’s House from “Bosch”

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I’m just gonna say it – Bosch is straight-up real estate porn!  There isn’t one residence that has been featured on the long-running Amazon police procedural that I wouldn’t want to live in!  The striking cantilevered cliffside abode belonging to Harry (Titus Welliver), Chief Irving’s (Lance Reddick) charming Spanish dwelling, and, in the latest season, the sleek mid-century modern home of (spoiler!) victim-turned-suspect Alicia Kent (Lynn Collins).  They are all perfection!  One look at the latter’s massive wooden double front doors, tiered front steps, and cement siding, and I was smitten!  So I set out to find it.

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A “2647” address number was visible on the curb in front of the house in the Season 6 premiere, titled “The Overlook.”

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And thanks to a view of the backyard shown in episode 4, “Part of the Deal,” I knew the pad was situated in the Hollywood Hills just below the Hollywood Sign.  So I started searching 2600 blocks in that area and quickly came across Alicia’s home at 2641 Lake Hollywood Drive.  As it turns out, the last digit of the address was changed from a “1 “to a “7” for the Bosch shoot.  Nice try, producers, but you have to wake up pretty early in the morning to fool me!

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  In real life, the striking property boasts 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, 2,997 square feet of living space, an entrance atrium, floor-to-ceiling glass sliders, a media room, a fireplace, a maid’s room with a bath, a 0.43-acre lot, a large pool, a spa, and sweeping views of the Lake Hollywood Reservoir, Palos Verdes and downtown L.A.  You can check out some MLS photos of the interior from when it last sold in 2010 here.

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Per building permits, both the interior and exterior of the 1965 pad were extensively remodeled in 2012.

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The property’s original façade is pictured in the top Google Street View image below.

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Though dated, the place was pretty spectacular even then!

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But today it is downright stunning!

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Harry initially visits the house in “The Overlook” while performing an emergency welfare check on Alicia, the wife of a medical physicist whose murdered body has just been discovered.

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The pad goes on to appear in several additional episodes of Season 6.

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Bosch captured the home and all of its mid-century glory beautifully.

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The place’s actual interior is also utilized on the show.  As you can see in the images below as compared to the 2010 MLS photos, the inside looks quite a bit different today than it did when the property last sold.

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The incredible backyard is featured on Bosch, as well, and is, in my opinion, the showpiece of the entire house.

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On a stalking side-note – My friend Shaun recently started a filming locations/pop culture landmarks/historical sites blog named All About Los Angeles.  I’ve long been a fan of his Instagram account and his photogenic way of showcasing the city’s many highlights.  Thanks to his unique interests, he has even managed to introduce me to countless new-to-me spots, which is saying a lot considering I’ve been at this crazy hobby a long time.  You can check out his new site here!

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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: Alicia Kent’s house from Bosch is located at 2641 Lake Hollywood Drive in the Hollywood Hills.

The Theatre at Ace Hotel from “Bosch”

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The latest season of Bosch, which kept me thoroughly entertained during this quarantine, featured countless new-to-me restaurants that I am itching to stalk!  I can only hope they are still in business when this craziness ends.  Fortunately, I did spot one locale that I previously stalked but have yet to blog about – The Theatre at Ace Hotel, a gorgeous and historic venue that began life as the famed United Artists Theatre.  I visited the auditorium via the Los Angeles Conservancy’s Broadway Historic Theatre and Commercial District Walking Tour (another enterprise I hope is still in operation when businesses are allowed to reopen) back on June 20th, 2015 and was thoroughly awed!  I am thrilled to finally be able to dedicate a post to the place.

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The venue was initially built in 1927 as the flagship theatre for United Artists, the independent film studio established by Hollywood legends Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie Chaplin, and D.W. Griffith.

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The Spanish Gothic-style auditorium is situated on the bottom 3 levels of a 14-story building designed by Walker & Eisen.

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Inspired by a recent vacation, Pickford and Fairbanks sought to include European elements in the design of the theatre itself and enlisted C. Howard Crane to realize their vision.

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The finished product is nothing short of stunning, with gilded mirrors, elaborately carved plasterwork, and murals galore!

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They truly just don’t build ’em like this anymore!

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The detailing is absolutely remarkable!

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I mean!

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The auditorium itself is the real showpiece, though!

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Its focal point is a circular mirrored and crystal dome that reflects light and color in an absolutely dazzling way.

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Green lighting gels were in use when I visited, which cast the entire space in an emerald glow to magnificent effect.

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It felt like I had wandered into the Land of Oz!

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The Great Depression hit the venue hard.  In the years following, it closed several times and went through several ownership changes before ceasing theatre operations entirely in 1989.

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The following year, the site was leased to the Los Angeles University Cathedral church.  The group occupied the theatre for the following two decades and even wound up purchasing the building that housed it at some point.

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University Cathedral put the building on the market in 2010 and it sold to hotel developer Greenfield Partners the next year.  The Ace Hotel was quickly tapped to manage the site and a restoration soon got underway.

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The 189-room Ace Hotel Downtown Los Angeles opened to the public on January 6th, 2014.  The former United Artists space became a special events/live performance venue known as The Theatre at Ace Hotel.

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It’s also, of course, a filming location.

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In the Season 6 episode of Bosch aptly titled “The Ace Hotel,” Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) tracks FBI Agent Maxwell (Carter MacIntyre), a murder suspect, to the Ace Hotel . . .

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. . . and winds up chasing him through the theatre.

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Bosch is hardly the first production to feature the space, though it hasn’t wound up onscreen nearly as much as I would have thought.

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The United Artist’s lit and unlit marquee is visible a couple of times in the 1950 noir classic The Asphalt Jungle.

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Benny Goodman (Steve Allen) plays there in the 1956 biopic The Benny Goodman Story.

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The venue portrays a New York theatre in 1957’s Sweet Smell of Success.

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Mr. T (Robert Hooks) breaks into the venue and then into one of the offices upstairs in the 1972 crime flick Trouble Man.

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Ashe Corven (Vincent Perez) scales the building in 1996’s The Crow: City of Angels, though most of what we see is a model, per the Historic L.A. Theatres in Movies blog.

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Quinn Brenner (Stefanie Scott) also auditions for a performing arts school spot at the theatre in the 2015 horror film Insidious: Chapter 3.

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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: The Theatre at Ace Hotel, from “The Ace Hotel” episode of Bosch, is located at 929 South Broadway in downtown Los Angeles.  You can visit the venue’s official website here and the hotel’s here.

Grand Central Market from “Bosch”

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Happy 2019, my fellow stalkers!  I was originally going to write about a different locale today, one that was sadly lost in the Woolsey Fire, but decided it would be best to start the year off on a happier note.  So instead I’m covering a quintessential Los Angeles spot that I have stalked countless times, but somehow never blogged about – DTLA’s Grand Central Market.  The bustling food emporium/retail grocery mart is a virtual city landmark, though I only visited it for the first time while on jury duty in 2007, a full seven years after I moved to Southern California!  Upon stepping inside the vibrant marketplace and poring through the rows upon rows of diverse food vendors – an activity that was recommended as part of jury orientation – I was immediately enthralled.  The Grim Cheaper and I subsequently popped by countless times in the years that followed to grab a bite to eat or do some specialty grocery shopping, but it was not until spotting the place in a Season 4 episode of Bosch recently that I realized I had yet to dedicate a post to it.  So here goes.

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Grand Central Market is situated on the ground floor of what is, interestingly enough, two adjacent buildings.  The Homer Laughlin Building, which fronts Broadway, was designed by architect John Parkinson for Homer Laughlin, founder of the Homer Laughlin China Company, in 1897.  Eight years later, Harrison Albright was commissioned to build an adjoining structure, facing Hill Street, to enlarge the property.  My photos below show the secondary edifice, known as the Laughlin Annex/Lyon Building.  Upscale department store Ville de Paris became the first tenant of the two building’s massive street level space, which opens to both Hill and Broadway.

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Grand Central Market from Bosch (15 of 15)

I had always assumed Grand Central was a more recent addition to the Los Angeles landscape, established sometime in the 1990s or thereabouts, and was shocked to discover while researching for this post that it actually opened its doors on October 27th, 1917, just a few months after Ville de Paris relocated to a different location downtown.  More than one hundred years later, the market is still a DTLA staple.

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Stretching a full city block, the 30,000-square-foot emporium initially housed 90 vendors and catered to the wealthy Angelinos living just up the road in Bunker Hill, who accessed the market via Angels Flight situated right across the street.  Today, the locale plays host to more than 25,000 visitors each day – area businessmen and women, tourists and locals alike, all looking for a unique bite to eat or specialty ingredient to take home.

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Grand Central Market has been rehabbed a few times throughout its history – first in the 1960s, then in 1990, and then again, to the chagrin of many locals, in 2013.  Regardless of the revamps, the site is doing better than ever today.  In fact, Bon Appétit magazine named the entire place one of the best new restaurants of 2014!  Boasting 38 stalls, the locale offers such varied fare as German currywurst, Japanese bento boxes, fresh oysters, and handmade Salvadorian pupusas.  You’ll also find staples like handcrafted bread, gourmet coffees and teas, and artisanal cheeses.

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Bright, vibrant and colorful, GCM serves as the heartbeat of downtown.  As such, it is no surprise that the site has wound up onscreen in numerous L.A.-set productions.

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In the Season 4 episode of Bosch titled “Ask the Dust,” which aired in April 2018, Harry Bosch (Titus Welliver) walks through the Broadway entrance of Grand Central Market and is then shown exiting the Hill Street side on his way to Angels Flight, where the murder of a prominent lawyer has recently occurred.  Only the outside of the locale is shown in the scene, though.

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Back in 1974, Grand Central Market was the site of a lengthy chase and shootout in the comedy/action flick Busting.

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Eddie Moscone (Joe Pantoliano) convinces Jack Walsh (Robert De Niro) to track down accountant/embezzler Jonathan Mardukas (Charles Grodin) over breakfast there at the beginning of 1988’s Midnight Run.

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In 1991, Huell Howser chronicled Grand Central Market in the episode of California’s Gold titled “L.A. Adventures,” which you can watch here.

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Gy. Sgt. James Dunn (Keenen Ivory Wayans) takes refuge in the emporium at the end of the 1997 thriller Most Wanted.

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Seth (Nicolas Cage) and Dr. Maggie Rice (Meg Ryan) shop for produce there in the 1998 drama City of Angels.

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Sam Dawson (Sean Penn) does the International House of Pancakes quiz with a random stranger – and mistakenly gets arrested for solicitation – at Grand Central Market in I Am Sam, though very little of the place can be seen in the 2001 drama.

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Mia (Emma Stone) and Sebastian (Ryan Gosling) are very, very briefly shown grabbing pupusas there in the 2016 favorite La La Land.

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And in 2018’s Will & Liz, Grand Central Market is the spot where titular characters Will (Nathan Wilson) and Liz (Christine Tucker) go on a date.

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Though several sites claim that GCM was also featured in National Treasure, that is incorrect.  The 2004 adventure flick’s market scene was actually lensed about 3,000 miles away at Reading Terminal Market in Philadelphia, as I blogged about here.

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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: Grand Central Market, from the “Ask the Dust” episode of Bosch, is located at 317 South Broadway in downtown Los Angeles.  You can visit the emporium’s official website here.

Demitasse Café from “Bosch”

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I hope all of my fellow stalkers had a fun and safe Halloween.  For this year’s festivities, the Grim Cheaper and I headed over to our neighbor’s house for an amazing party (the decorations were like nothing I have ever seen!) and had an absolute blast.  Our 2018 costumes were, per usual, celebrity-inspired.  Unusual is the fact that they were all the GC, which typically never happens.  As of late, he has been rather obsessed with Spencer Pratt and his Snapchat feed, though, so when we started discussing costumes this summer, he mentioned that he wanted to dress up as Speidi.  I wasn’t following either Spencer or his wife, Heidi, on social media at the time, but as soon as I took a look at her Instagram stories and saw that she regularly dons a set of black pajamas strikingly similar to a pair I already owned, I was all in!

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Creating the look was a snap.  The GC purchased a tie dye t-shirt from Spencer’s company Pratt Daddy, a signet pinky ring from Amazon, and glued a hummingbird toy that belongs to our cats onto a handheld feeder also found on Amazon.  For Spence’s ubiquitous crystal necklaces, he simply looped some suede twine around two actual Spencer Pratt crystals that he had gifted me for Christmas last year.  The Make Speidi Famous Again hat had to be specially made since they are no longer offered on the Pratt Daddy site.  To round out the look, he wore shorts and tennis shoes already in his closet.  To portray Spencer and Heidi’s baby, Gunner, we utilized the same doll that played Shiloh when the GC and I dressed up as Brad and Angelina in 2006.  I also reused my Emily Maynard wig, purchased a sling carrier on Amazon, grabbed my everyday house slippers, and, voila, our Spencer and Heidi costumes were complete!  The GC completely ate the whole thing up, playing “Look What You Made Me Do” on his iPhone and holding crystals to his head all evening.  It looks like I may be rubbing off on him when it comes to Halloween, finally!  Winking smile  And now, on with the post!

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I love a good police procedural.  And, as weird as it may sound (especially considering I couldn’t be a bigger scaredy cat if I tried!), there’s nothing I enjoy more than viewing Law & Order: SVU before bed.  I don’t know what it is about that show – it’s like warm milk to me.  Despite its rather grim nature, it is somehow calming.  And while I could watch it every.single.night., the GC likes to change up our television viewing every so often.  So, on the recommendation of my mom, I recently suggested we give Bosch, the Amazon series based upon Michael Connelly’s detective Harry Bosch novels, a try.  Ten minutes into episode 1 and we were hooked.  I love the show’s noirish roots, lead actor Titus Welliver’s constant deadpan delivery, and the locations.  Oh, the locations!  Set and shot in the City of Angels, Bosch makes spectacular use of real life L.A. locales, some iconic, some lesser known.  I was thrilled to recognize one lesser known spot, Demitasse, while watching Season 2’s “Exit Time.”  The Little Tokyo café is a longtime favorite of mine.  Though I mentioned it in my 2015 guide to Los Angeles’ coffee scene, until I saw it pop up on Bosch, I did not realize it was a filming location.  So I figured it was high time I dedicate a post to the place.

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I first discovered Demitasse in October 2011 when I randomly walked by the corner shop on my way to stalk Kyoto Gardens.  The unique contraptions displayed in the front window stopped me right in my tracks and I promptly ventured closer to get a better look.

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As the posted sign informed me, the machines were actually Kyoto-style slow-drip iced coffee brewers, aka the “Kyoto Twins,” which “drip water onto coffee beds, allowing the water to slowly extract flavors from the coffee, leaving us with a rich, layered and complex iced coffee.”  Intrigued, I headed right inside, where I ordered what turned out to be one of the best iced lattes of my life!  Since that day, I make it a point to pop into Demitasse whenever I find myself nearby.

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Demitasse (which means “small coffee cup”) was the brainchild of Bobak Roshan, a 2008 USC Gould School of Law graduate who found himself more intrigued by java than statutes.  Initially figuring he’d open a café post-retirement, his plans quickly shifted and, in 2010, he traded his law books for grounds.  He found the perfect site to establish his coffee bar in a wedge-shaped spot that formerly housed a frozen yogurt shop on the corner of South San Pedro and Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka Streets.

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Demitasse opened its doors to the public on August 15th, 2011.

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Demistasse Cafe from Bosch (1 of 3)

The inspiration for the café’s horseshoe-shaped interior came from an unusual place.  As Roshan explained to The Rafu Shimpo website, “This bar is actually heavily influenced by sushi bars.  I was in San Francisco once at this place called Sebo.  You sit up at the bar and you talk to the chef and he tells you about the fish and what you’re eating and why it’s fresh and where it comes from.  I thought, ‘This is what coffee should be like.  So we specifically designed [our bar] for making drinks and interacting with customers, so they can sit and watch us work and we can talk to them . . . and we’ve certainly become friends with a lot of our regulars.”

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From the beginning, Roshan has utilized the Kyoto method of brewing.  Of the complicated technique, The Rafu Shimpo website says, “The coffee siphon (also called the ‘vacuum coffee pot’) dates back to 1800s Berlin, but fell out of popularity in Europe around the mid-20th century.  The ‘weird contraptions’ are now most popular in Asia, and Demitasse’s siphons, like much of their other equipment, comes from Japan.  Brewing by siphon instead of with a standard coffee maker creates a smoother, more flavorful cup of coffee, taking out much of the body and leaving a drink almost as delicate as tea.”  The process takes a whopping 8 to 16 hours to complete!  The result is well worth it, though.  The Kyoto Twins create some of the richest and creamiest brew I have ever sampled.

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Demistasse Cafe from Bosch (8 of 11)

In a genius move, Demitasse also serves its iced java in special sake glasses made to keep the cubes separate from the coffee, ensuring that drinks don’t get watered down (one of my biggest pet peeves when it comes to iced brew).

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Though the place struggled a bit during its early days, it eventually caught on.  So much so that Roshan opened up two sister outposts – one at 6363 Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Grove and another at 1149 Third Street in Santa Monica.  Today, the Little Tokyo branch is bustling most hours, which is not surprising.  As I said in my 2015 guide to coffee in L.A., grabbing a java at Demitasse is a full-on experience!  It doesn’t hurt that the café is situated along Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka Street, a quaint closed-to-cars block home to countless cute boutiques and shops.

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In “Exit Time,” which aired in 2016, Harry Bosch pretends to run into Detectives Brad Conniff (David Marciano) and Julie Espinosa (Jacqueline Pinol) at Demitasse in an attempt to find out what they know about the murder of George Irving (Robbie Jones).  Both the exterior . . .

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. . . and interior of the café appeared in the episode.

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Because the GC and I have only watched Bosch’s first two seasons, I did not realize until sitting down to write this post that Demitasse has actually been featured in no less than four episodes of the show!  In Season 3, it popped up in “El Compadre” as the spot where Chief Irvin Irving (Lance Reddick) asked Jun Park (Linda Park) out on an official date.

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Irving and Jun returned to Demitasse the following season in the episode title “The Coping.”

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Jun meets reporter Laura Cook (Kristen Ariza) at the café to give her some off-the-record information in Season 4’s “Book of the Unclaimed Dead.”

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And Demitasse pops up briefly in Bosch’s Season 6 premiere, titled “The Overlook,” as the spot where Captain Sarah McCurdy (Jennifer Hasty) briefs Harry and Jerry Edgar (Jamie Hector) on the Sovereigns.

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: Demitasse café, from Bosch, is located at 135 South San Pedro Street in Little Tokyo.  You can visit the coffee shop’s official website herePortal light installation can be found just up the block in the Weller Court shopping center at 123 Astronaut Ellison S Onizuka StreetKinokuniya, one of my favorite book/gift stores, is on Weller Court’s second level directly above Marukai Market.  And Kyoto Gardens from Her is steps away on the third floor of the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Los Angeles Downtown at 120 South Los Angeles Street.