DANNY TREJO
WESTSIDERS INNOVATORS, INFLUENCERS & CHARACTERS
1 PLACE 6 YEARS IN A ROW! ST
2018
VOTED ‘BEST COSMETIC SURGEON’
BEST OF THE WESTSIDE 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 | The Argonaut
FIRST PLACE
DR. GRANT STEVENS
2017
2016
2015
Marina Plastic Surgery Offers World Class Plastic Surgeons, Together With Comprehensive Skin Care Specialists And Services To Bring You Beauty For Life!
VOTED ‘BEST COSMETIC SURGERY CENTER’ BEST OF THE WESTSIDE 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 | The Argonaut
FIRST PLACE
MARINA PLASTIC SURGERY ASSOCIATES
2014
2013 MATT BEARD PHOTOGRAPHY
In the Past 30 Years Drs. Stevens and Hammoudeh Have Treated Patients From All 50 States & Over 63 Countries Throughout The World
4644 Lincoln Boulevard, Suite 552 | Marina del Rey, CA 90292 | 310.827.2653 | MarinaPlasticSurgery.com
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 3
PAGE 4 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
U
Y
A
L RE Y B
DE
C H T CL
“It Must Be
” Experienced. —Christine Walevska, “Goddess of the Cello” watched Shen Yun 5 times
“
“Demonstrating
the highest realm in arts.”
et
—Chi Cao, principal dancer of Birmingham Royal Ballet
“The highest and the best of what humans can produce.” —Olevia Brown-Klahn, singer and musician
I’ve reviewed about 4,000 shows, none can compare to what I saw tonight.” —Richard Connema, renowned Broadway critic
“Mesmerizing!
I encourage everyone to see and all of us to learn from.” —Donna Karan, creator of DKNY
—Broadway World
MAR 23–MAY 11
Costa Mesa • Long Beach • Downtown LA • Hollywood • Claremont Northridge • Thousand Oaks • Santa Barbara • Palm Desert
Tickets:
ShenYun.com/LA 800.880.0188
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 5
Contents
VOL 49, NO 12 Local News & Culture
Innovators, Influencers & Characters
Westsiders 2019 W
hat makes a Westsider tick?
That’s not so easy to pin down, because diversity — not just racial or ethnic diversity, but diversity of personal background and life experiences — is one of our community’s great strengths. In the following pages you’ll meet a Santa Monica native who conquered the local real estate industry, a high school athlete from Detroit who became a distinguished neurologist in Westchester, a farmworker’s daughter in Mar Vista who’s leveraging digital media skills to promote broader social engagement, a Venice native who worked to beautify the neighborhood despite his own struggle with homelessness, a single mom who journeyed from South Korea to New Zealand to Los Angeles to become Playa del Rey’s favorite shopkeeper, the energetic CEO of a billion-dollar company in Marina del Rey, a former cable news anchor flexing her media muscle to improve animal welfare, and an NPR foreign correspondent and her writer husband who left behind wars in the Middle East to raise their daughter in the comparative peace and quiet of Venice Beach. You can’t put Westsiders in a box, but the ones we’ve profiled in this issue tend to display a few common traits: creativity, determination, openness to new ideas, and an adventurous spirit. They aren’t afraid to be themselves, and we are inspired by each and every one.
Pioneering home designer Kim Gordon, animated film story consultant Kelly Younger and digital media entrepreneur Vanessa Colosio Diaz are Westsiders following their muses
Spend some time with this issue.
Joe Piasecki
Michael Kraxenberger
Managing Editor
WESTSIDERS 2019 .......................................... 9
Art Director
Innovators, Influencers & Characters
Food & Drink .................................................. 30
S p ecia l Ph o t o gra p h y : Courtnay Robbins (courtnayrobbins.com) photographed Vanessa Colosio Diaz, Sadie Gilliam & Alisun Franson, Charlotte Gunter, Teresa Kim, Kelly McEvers & Nathan Deuel, Jane Velez-Mitchell, Peter Ruiz, Mark Verge, Dr. Vernon B. Williams, and Kelly Younger. Ted Soqui (tedsoquiphoto.com) photographed Danny Trejo for the cover and inside. Shilah Montiel (shilahmontiel.com) photographed Kim Gordon. David Yellen’s photo of Michael Dubin appears courtesy of Dollar Shave Club. Brett Wulfson’s photo of Brittney Rose appears courtesy of Brittney Rose.
( 3 1 0 ) 8 2 2 -16 2 9
Classified: Press 2; Display: Press 3 Fax: (310) 822-2089 E D I T ORIAL Managing Editor: Joe Piasecki, x122 Arts & Events Editor: Christina Campodonico, x105 Staff Writer, News: Gary Walker, x112
THE ADVICE GODDESS ............................ 32 Sometimes Being Faithful Isn’t Enough
Westside Happenings ...................... 33 Roller Derby Season Kicks Off in Culver City
The Westside’s News Source Since 1971
Local News & Culture
Newsroom & Sales office 5301 Beethoven Street, Suite 183, Los Angeles, CA 90066 For Advertising info please call:
6 Spectacular Dishes to Devour Immediately
Contributing Writers: Amy Alkon, Bliss Bowen, Andrew Dubbins, Shanee Edwards, Richard Foss, Danny Karel, Kyle Knoll, Jessica Koslow, Angela Matano, Brian Marks, Nicole Elizabeth Payne, Paul Suchecki, Andy Vasoyan, Audrey Cleo Yap Editorial Interns: Joseph Cahn, Tygre Patchell-Evans, Nathan Faust, Matthew Rodriguez
Letters to the Editor: letters@argonautnews.com News Tips: joe@argonautnews.com Event Listings: calendar@argonautnews.com
ART Art Director: Michael Kraxenberger, x141
Classified Advertising: Ann Turrietta (310) 821-1546 x100
Graphic Designer: Kate Doll, x132
Business Circulation Manager: Tom Ponton distribution@argonautnews.com Associate Publisher: Rebecca Bermudez, x127 Publisher: David Comden, x120
Contributing Photographers: Mia Duncans, Maria Martin, Shilah Montiel, Ashley Randall, Courtnay Robbins, Ted Soqui, Zsuzsi Steiner Ad v e rt i s i n g Display Advertising:
Renee Baldwin, x144; Kay Christy, x131 Rocki Davidson, x108; David Maury, x130
The Argonaut is distributed every Thursday in Del Rey, Marina del Rey, Mar Vista, Playa del Rey, Playa Vista, Santa Monica, Venice, and Westchester. The Argonaut is available free of charge, limited to one per reader.
Visit us online at ArgonautNews.com PAGE 6 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
The Argonaut may be distributed only by authorized distributors. No person may, without prior written permission of The Argonaut, take more than one copy of any issue. The Argonaut is copyrighted 2018 by Southland Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in whole or in part in any form or by any means without prior express written permission by the publisher. An adjudicated Newspaper of General Circulation with a distribution of 30,000.
V.P. of Operations David Comden President Bruce Bolkin
Doctors Your Whole Family Can Trust, Close To Home
Providence Saint John’s Playa Vista Office
We have all the physicians and specialists you need for your family’s health under one roof. FAMILY MEDICINE
(424) 443-5555 Stanley Hubbard, M.D. Gabriel Niles, M.D. Wakana Saeki, M.D.
CARDIOLOGY
(310) 829-7678 Jordan Kawano, M.D. Alexandra Lajoie, M.D. Paul Natterson, M.D. Peter Pak, M.D. Rigved Tadwalkar, M.D. Nicole Weinberg, M.D. Richard Wright, M.D. George Wu, M.D.
OB/GYN
(310) 822-5066 Mia Di Julio, M.D. Mojan Gabbay, M.D. Gene Parks, M.D. Jade Singer, PA
DIABETES EDUCATOR/ NUTRITIONIST
HEMATOLOGY/ ONCOLOGY
(424) 443-5535
(310) 453-5654
Dalia Dvoretsky, RD, CDE
Timothy Kristedja, M.D. Carol Nishikubo, M.D.
ENDOCRINOLOGY
(424) 443-5588 Laurie Kane, M.D.
PEDIATRICS
UROLOGY
(424) 443-5530 Jennifer Linehan, M.D. Mehran Movassaghi, M.D.
(424) 443-5600 Jeffrey Bourne, M.D. Danelle Fisher, M.D. Daniel Lau, M.D. Amy Shapiro, M.D.
GASTROENTEROLOGY
(310) 829-6789 Rudolph Bedford, M.D. Rahul Dixit, M.D.
Call today to schedule an appointment or visit providence.org/playavista 12555 W. Jefferson Blvd. Third Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90066 (Between Grosvenor Blvd. and Westlawn Ave.)
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 7
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
B
Danny Trejo
The Changed Man
efore Danny Trejo became a philanthropist, restaurateur and the friendliest tough-guy actor in Hollywood, the Los Angeles native was a real-life tough guy serving time in state prison for armed robbery and drug convictions. Paroled in 1969, Trejo vowed to not only clean up his life, but also help others however he could. He moved to Venice, worked out at Muscle Beach and became a drug counselor for young adults. In the mid-’80s, a struggling client brought Trejo to the set of “Runaway Train,” where he worked as an extra until inmate-turnedscreenwriter Edward Bunker recognized Trejo as the former welterweight boxing champion of San Quentin. Bunker asked Trejo to teach Eric Roberts how to box. “Now, they were giving me $50 a day for acting like a convict. I say, ‘What’s it pay?’ and he says ‘$320 a day.’ I say, ‘How bad you want this guy beat up?’ I thought he was mad at somebody!” recounts Trejo, laughing, while waiting to speak during the recent Chords2Cure pediatric cancer fundraiser organized by students of Crossroads School. “He says the guy is going to be really high-strung, ‘He might sock you.’ I say, ‘Eddie, for 320 bucks give him a stick.’” The job morphed into a speaking part in the film, followed by years of on-camera work playing bit parts like Inmate No. 1 or Bad Guy until Charles Bronson finally gave him a name in “Death Wish 4”: Arthur Sanella. “I didn’t play a Mexican; I played an Italian guy,” Trejo says. “I thought, ‘If I play an Italian guy, that means I’m a real actor.” These days, Trejo has parlayed his fame and good fortune into a group of Trejo’s Tacos restaurants and now also Trejo’s Coffee & Donuts in Hollywood. He can’t stroll the Venice Boardwalk like he used to without getting mobbed, and he misses that. “Venice is the only place that you can go for free — there’s no price of admission — and what it is, it’s an absolute giant amusement park. I think most of California gravitates toward the boardwalk of Venice Beach. There’s a song, ‘On the Boardwalk in Atlantic City’ … — nah, Venice Beach,” he says. “The tattoo of my kids on my back is them playing in the water in Venice Beach.” But when Trejo does return to Venice, keeping his visits low-key, he’s addressing one of the social causes closest to his heart. “The homeless. My friends. Every one of my friends has thermal underwear and socks. That’s what we do — drive around all day and pass them out,” says Trejo, who frequently visits juvenile halls and jumps at chances to help the SPCA. “My outlook is that people don’t realize we’re all on the Titanic looking for a good seat. We have to help everybody we can until the end,” he says. “My life is dedicated to helping others, and that’s why I’ve had the success that I’ve had.” — Joe Piasecki
PAGE 8 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
ArgonautNews.com
Kelly McEvers & Nathan Deuel
The Adventurers S omewhere in her office, Kelly McEvers — the former host of NPR’s “All Things Considered” and current host of NPR’s “Embedded,” a podcast that deep-dives into deserving news stories — has hidden a letter between the pages of a book. The letter is addressed to McEvers’ husband and their young daughter. It was meant to be opened in the event of her death. At the time of its composition, while McEvers was working as a war correspondent in the Middle East, this outcome seemed possible — likely, even. “Increasingly it felt like it’s not if, it’s when I’m going to be sitting at her funeral,” recalls her husband, the writer Nathan Deuel, while sitting next to McEvers on the porch of their Venice home. Their dog, Summer, is nestled
between them. Migrating butterflies drift through their yard. Five years ago the family left their apartment in Beirut, a beloved Ottomanstyle three-flat. Violence from the Syrian conflict had begun to spill across the border, and after a series of chilling incidents — the death of several colleagues, a massive car bombing across town, and a particularly harrowing night when a large-scale shootout occurred on their block — they decided the risk was no longer worth it. “There was a rain of 50mm shells on the steps where our daughter played.” says Deuel. “No, no, no,” corrects McEvers. “There was not a rain of 50mm shells.” He thinks for a second, then his eyes light up.
“It was like a storm!” The couple spent five years living in and covering the Middle East: two years in Saudi Arabia, two years in Beirut, and one in-between with McEvers living in Baghdad while Deuel stayed in Istanbul with their one-year-old daughter. When they returned to the U.S., “… we were bored out of our minds,” recalls Deuel. “I despised it,” adds McEvers. But Venice, which charmed them in the early days of their relationship, has proven dynamic enough to keep them interested. They surf regularly and enjoy taking their daughter, now nine years old, down to the boardwalk. “It’s a good lesson for our kid,” says Deuel, author of the book “Friday Was the Bomb: Five Years in the Middle East”
and a lecturer at UCLA. “She goes there and she’s comfortable among the chaos, the unpredictability.” Even though war no longer threatens their family, Deuel won’t read the letter that McEvers wrote back in the Middle East. “We actually talked about ceremonially burning it when we first moved here,” says McEvers. “And then we just blew it off — but there’s no symbolism in the fact that we didn’t do it. I actually think I lost it. It’s gone!” They high-five each other. Nathan scoops up their dog and bounces her on his knees. “Hey Summer!” he says. “Do you want to stay in Venice, or do you want to move to South Sudan?” — Danny Karel
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 9
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
The Grateful Entrepreneur
Mark Verge
M
ark Verge isn’t shy about praising those who’ve helped him. They’re the secret to his success. The Santa Monica native began his entrepreneurial career with Wilshire Coin, but left in 1996 — while still in his twenties — to launch the game-changing real estate listings service Westside Rentals with his wife, Mar Vista native Lani Verge. He sold the business in 2017 to focus on local nightlife, restaurants and hotels. Verge joined Cedd Moses (son of the late Venice artist Ed Moses) as a partner in 213 Hospitality, which owns and operates Cole’s French Dip, the Arts District Brewing Co. and top Downtown L.A. nightspots including Seven Grand, Casey’s Irish Bar and The Golden Gopher. PAGE 10 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
“I learned from Cedd a lot about building community — he’s really into the soul of places, places that mean a lot to the community — and that’s when [Lani and I] went off and did our Westside restaurants,” says Verge. “It kind of breaks my heart that there are 24 Starbucks in Santa Monica. … They’ll have ’em in bedrooms soon enough.” That portfolio includes Margo’s, Ashland Hill, Art’s Table, The Golden Bull and Verge’s personal favorite, The OP Café, “for just being part of the neighborhood, a local breakfast spot,” he says. One of his biggest takeaways so far from this entrepreneurial journey: “The employees are the key to the game. You can’t just preach family; you really have to mean it. You’ve got to over-deliver for
them. … And I’m blessed.” Verge, who has a 17-year-old daughter and 15-year-old son, spreads a lot of small donations among local nonprofits. Much of his attention is focused on St. Monica’s Catholic Community, where he attended school and met Lani in church; Venice High School, Lani’s alma mater (and where Gondoliers quarterback turned coach Angelo Gasco “was my Joe Namath growing up,” Verge says); and most of all Santa Monica College, where Verge attended classes and his father Art Verge taught history. He often guest lecturers in business classes and is on the board of the fundraising Santa Monica College Foundation. He focuses on education because entrepreneurship taught him the value of
mentors. His lifelong mentors and their lessons include: Al Marco of Erin Condren Designs and Marco Fine Arts, “my go-to about business and life”; his former water polo coach Mark Dahlan, “respect everyone, but no fear”; Kentucky Derby-winning jockey Doug O’Neill, “get better and win the day”; former coach Mike Amloday, a writer for Ave Maria Catholic Books, “never done a drug in my life thanks to him”; St. Monica’s Church Msgr. Lloyd Torgerson, “spiritually, aim higher”; Jimmy Dunne, “the best branding guy, who taught me the word grateful”; his late father, “treat the janitor as well as you would the president”; and his wife — “without her, it’s game over,” he says. — Joe Piasecki
Get on the Water Today! Mantinou 25
Cruisers 370
Marquis 55
Simply log in, select your boat, show up and we handle the rest!
Call 310-822-1037 or visit yachts4fun.com March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 11
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
V
Vanessa Colosio Diaz
A Rising Voice
anessa Colosio Diaz’s political awakening has been slow but steady. Distantly related to a man who ran for president of Mexico (and was subsequently assassinated), politics intrigued Diaz growing up, but also put her off. “I really at a young age learned what the sad realities of politics can be … so I think that’s also why I stayed out of politics, subconsciously,” the 33-year-old muses between sips of a mocha at Alana’s Coffee Roasters in Mar Vista — the neighborhood she hopes to soon represent as an At-Large Director on the Mar Vista Community Council. Then again, she says, “I was always the squeaky wheel amongst my friends to vote and to sign petitions.” There was also something inspiring about knowing that politics, in a way, ran in her blood—that she, “this quote-unquote ‘low-income’ little girl with literally a field-working dad could aspire to something.” Diaz was born in Sacramento but grew up three miles from the Mexican border on a ranch in the Imperial Valley. “I remember looking at the San Diego mountains and thinking I needed to be in a city again. So as soon as I turned 17 and graduated from high school, I went to San Diego State and never moved back,” she recalls. In San Diego, Diaz built up an impressive resume doing PR, social media and marketing for brands such as DC Shoes, MillerCoors and Westfield, as well as various odd jobs for nonprofits and fashion-related operations. Yet a year before #MeToo hit, she experienced sexual harassment while at one organization and felt she had to find a new path forward. She reported the incident the day after the election of President Donald Trump, who’d been accused of sexual misconduct multiple times. “That was my mini-protest,” she says. “The election helped give me the courage to stand up.” Diaz moved to Mar Vista with her partner Chris and started Pipeline Pepper, a creative services and consulting agency that she operates out of The Riveter co-working space in Marina del Rey. “I feel like there was a ceiling in San Diego that you could reach,” she explains, “and I feel like in L.A. there’s no ceiling — it’s just sky.” Since moving to L.A., Diaz has been focused on ways to help women make their voices heard. She’s been involved with VoteRunLead, an organization that helps train women to run for office; hosts the networking-discussion forum Pitches, Pumps & Politics on Facebook; and plans to launch a podcast aimed at helping survivors of sexual harassment get their lives back on track. If elected to the community council, Diaz hopes to show younger people “that you can have a voice, that you can get involved,” she says. “On a national level, there aren’t a lot of things we can do right now, per se, but you can still help at your local level, at your regional level, at your state level — start there.” — Christina Campodonico
PAGE 12 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
Marina Dentistry ALL DENTAL SPECIALTIES
• Easy Payment Plans/Zero Interest • No Insurance • No Problem • All Insurance Accepted • Nitrous Oxide Available • We Accept All Other Competitors’ Coupons • Se Habla Español
COMPLETE DENTAL IMPLANT
INVISALIGN
$1,599
STARTS AT
REG. $4,500. INCLUDES ORAL SEDATION, IMPLANT ABUTMENT AND CROWN. NEW PATIENTS ONLY WITH THIS AD NOW THROUGH 43019
PORCELAIN VENEERS $ 699Each. REG 1,400 COMPLETE DENTURE PORCELAIN CROWN $ $
NEW PATIENTS ONLY WITH THIS AD EXP 43019
399 REG 999 $
PORCELAIN FUSED TO METAL NEW PATIENTS ONLY WITH THIS AD EXP 43019
MARINA DENTISTRY 4292 Lincoln Blvd., Marina del Rey, CA 90292 (Above Starbucks)
www.marinadentistry.com
799 REG 1800
$
$
NEW PATIENTS ONLY WITH THIS AD EXP 43019
$2,999 WITH THIS AD. NOW THROUGH 4-30-19
TEETH WHITENING SPECIAL
8900
$
ONLY
Regular $749
ONE HOUR IN-OFFICE ZOOM! WHITENING AS SEEN ON ABC’S “EXTREME MAKEOVER” INCLUDES X-RAYS & EXAM
Cannot Be Combined With Any Other Offer
FREE CONSULTATION INCLUDING FULL MOUTH X-RAYS & EXAMINATION NEW PATIENTS ONLY EXP 43019
CLEANING SPECIAL
2500
$
Regular $149
X-Rays, Exams, Cleaning, Oral Cancer Screening, TMJ Evaluation, Diagnosis & Treatment Plan
NEW PATIENTS ONLY!
Periodontal Root Planning Not Included • With Coupon Only • Insurance Programs Billed At Regular Fees • Exp. 4-30-19
DEEP CLEANING
SPECIAL
75
$
PER QUAD
REG $499
NEW PATIENTS ONLY WITH THIS AD EXP 43019
310-305-9600
banking done different
Kinecta is on the Westside! • Checking and Savings • Credit Cards
On November 21, the Kinecta Ice Cream Truck visited Mar Vista Gardens Community Center in Culver City.
• Home and Auto Loans • And much more!
We’d love to meet you. Call 855.840.8639 or stop by our local Westside locations: Westchester 8601 Lincoln Blvd., Suite 130 Westchester, CA 90045 Santa Monica 3027 Wilshire Blvd. Santa Monica, CA 90403 23083-03/19
kinecta.org March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 13
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
Dr. Vernon B. Williams
The Neurological Pathfinder T
he edge of scientific breakthrough is a very exciting place to be. Dr. Vernon B. Williams, director of the renowned Cedars-Sinai Kerlan-Jobe Institute’s Center for Sports Neurology & Pain Management in the Howard Hughes Center, is leading that charge in the field of sports neurology. Williams specializes in neuroplasticity, which is how nerve cells in the brain compensate for injury or disease and adjust activities to new situations, and neuromodulation, a therapy that can alter nerve activity by targeting stimuli to specific neurological sites in the body. “I think we’re really on the precipice of an exciting new subspecialty,” Williams believes. “We’re learning so much more about how our brains function. We’re learning that athletes can train their brains PAGE 14 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
to have more focus and better vision, have better balance and improve their performance. And this is applicable to the general public as well, whether you’re a student, a weekend warrior or an entrepreneur who wants to improve your concentration and function.” As team neurologist for the NFC champion Los Angeles Rams, Williams assists the team’s medical staff with evaluating players who have sustained concussions on the field. In addition to scientific research, performing surgeries and helping patients with pain management, Williams participates in a Westchester-based program called Team HEAL (Helping Enrich Athletes Lives), co-founded by KerlanJobe colleague Dr. Clarence Shields Jr. The nonprofit effort provides medical
evaluations and certified athletic trainers for athletes on Los Angeles Unified School District sports teams, including the Westchester Comets. Introducing young people to the intricacies of medicine — especially sports neurology — is a special calling for Williams, because in many ways it’s very personal. As a high school football player in Detroit, Williams was offered an afterschool internship at Henry Ford Hospital and assigned to the neurology department, which was overseeing a research study involving stroke patients. “The chairman of the lab came by and asked me if I wanted to see how stroke patients were rehabilitating. I was always interested in how the brain worked, how we use it, and how we think. That got me interested in becoming a doctor,” he says.
Williams went on to study at the University of Michigan Medical School and returned to Henry Ford for an internship before completing his residency at the University of Maryland Medical Center and a fellowship at Johns Hopkins. A fan of classic jazz who enjoys watching sports and taking his wife on dates to cultural institutions and various Westside restaurants, Williams is serious about making time to work with young people. It brings him full-circle back to his days as a young athlete. “I see myself in a lot of the students,” he reflects. “Giving them this kind of exposure to medicine early on, especially to this newly emerging field, is one of the best parts of my job.” — Gary Walker
Exclusive
SAVE
0 $10R.0 LB PE
$16.99/lb
Available in our Meat Dept.
USDA Prime Certified Angus Beef® Bone-In New York Strip Steak Juicy, tender, and supremely flavorful, it is truly in a class of its own.
$10 off
your entire order of $50 or more*
Our way of saying “thanks” for shopping with us!
gelsons.com
*Offer valid at Gelson’s Marina del Rey and Santa Monica locations only. Excludes pharmacy, tobacco, gift cards, and postage stamps. Cannot be used with any other offer. Limit one coupon per customer per day. No cash back. No reproductions accepted; coupon must be surrendered when tendered. Expires: 3/24/2019 PLU #8880
Gelson’s Marina del Rey
Gelson’s Santa Monica
13455 Maxella Ave • (310) 306-2952
2627 Lincoln Blvd • (310) 581-6450
F U N ! SA F E ! A F F O R DA B L E ! M a r i n a d e l Re y S p o r t f i s h i n g on Spectacular Santa Monica Bay Beginners & Tourists Always Welcome
Catch ’n Keep or Catch ’n Release
Four trips daily plus summer twilight tours!
• Daily Open Party Sportfishing trips • Twilight Fishing from May to September • Private Fishing Charters • Whale Watching Marina del Rey Sportfishing Boats offer:
• Friendly Professional Crews • Personalized Service • Our ‘A’ Rated Galley Service • Rod Rentals & Tackle • Bait • Fish Cleaning & Packaging • Fishing Licenses • U.S. Coast Guard Licensed vessels
ECO TOUR $30 • Cash Only. No Checks or Credit Cards • Tackle rental (rod, reel, etc.): $10.00
Whale Watching Year Round!
Whales, sea lions, dolphin, porpoise, seals, unusual sea birds, and more. 3-3.5 hours on 80 Passenger Big Whale. Great fun for individuals, families, clubs, field trips and parties. Seating both inside and on deck. Onboard snacks and beverages.
SAVE $10 O F F F U L L FA R E
SPITFIRE
3/4 DAY FISHING • 6:30AM-3PM $49 Adults (reg $59)
SAVE $10 O F F F U L L FA R E
BETTYO
3/4 DAY FISHING • 8AM-3PM $44 Adults (reg. $54)
SAVE $5 NEW DEL MAR
1/2 DAY FISHING TRIPS
7:30AM-Noon or 12:30PM-5PM
$34 Adults (reg $39)
ALL TRIPS DEPART FROM DOCK 52 • FREE PARKING! 13552 Fiji Way, Marina del Rey 90292 | 800-822-3625 | mdrsf.com
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 15
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
S
Jane VelezMitchell
A Voice for Animals PAGE 16 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
he has covered some of the biggest headline-making court cases in the country (including the 2005 Michael Jackson trial), anchored her own cable news show and is a New York Times bestselling author, but these days veteran journalist Jane Velez-Mitchell is giving a voice to those she calls the “ultimate voiceless” — animals. “They can’t speak for themselves,” says Velez-Mitchell, 62, over a green juice at one of her favorite local spots, Café Gratitude in Venice. After her eponymous show on cable news network HLN ended in 2014, Velez-Mitchell launched JaneUnchained.com, a social media-driven digital network focusing on animal rights and promoting a vegan lifestyle. Programs include the daily live cooking show “Lunch Break Live” and interviews with notable vegans. The network also publishes dispatches from some 70 contributors from around the world. According to Velez-Mitchell, Jane Unchained videos have been viewed over 17 million times on Facebook. Velez-Mitchell’s own journey into a vegan lifestyle is deeply personal. A few years after finding her sobriety, she went from being what she calls a “half-assed vegetarian” to a committed vegan after interviewing a former cattle rancher who asked if she still consumed dairy. At the time, she did. “They looked at me and they said, “Liquid meat.” And when they said that, I went vegan that moment,” she recalls. That was over 20 years ago; on April 1, Velez-Mitchell will celebrate 24 years of sobriety. The native New Yorker adds, “I wish I had my vegan date like I do my sobriety date.” With Jane Unchained, Velez-Mitchell aims to do more than preach to the choir: She hopes to raise awareness of the climate change issues caused by animal agriculture and to foster a culture of what she calls “normalized nonviolence” for a wider audience. Her current work has also allowed her to reflect on her own 40-plus-year career, a good portion of which involved covering violent crimes and, sometimes, she says, sensationalizing others’ suffering. Although, covering livestock farming can feel just as violent. “It’s a rape, abduction and murder operation,” she says. “So, you might say I’m still covering crime.” The vegan-friendly Westside is a haven for Velez-Mitchell, who has lived on-and-off in the Marina Peninsula neighborhood since 1990 (she had a seven-year stint in New York City during the run of her HLN show). In addition to Café Gratitude, her favorite plantbased spots also include Thai Vegan and Julie Goes Green. She still gets a kick out of seeing the “Venice” sign off Pacific Avenue and the Route 66 placards in Santa Monica. “I just fell in love with it, and I’m still in love with it,” she says of the Westside. “Every day when I walk my dogs, I count my blessings that I live at the beach. I never get tired of it.” — Audrey Cleo Yap
LOYOLA MARYMOUNT UNIVERSITY FRED KIESNER CENTER FOR ENTREPRENEURSHIP SEEKING NOMINATIONS FOR THE HOWARD DROLLINGER MEMORIAL COMMUNITY ENTREPRENEUR AWARD THE AWARD INCLUDES A $2,000 DONATION TO THE CHARITY OF THE WINNER'S CHOICE AND A CUSTOM PLAQUE.
MARCH 24, 2019 RUN, DON’T WALK TO...
Located at The Georgian Hotel
CRITERIA: 1. MUST BE A FOUNDER/PARTNER IN THE FIRM 2. SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS OPERATIONS (PROFIT OR NONPROFIT/SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURS) 3. IMPACT IN THEIR FIELD AND INDUSTRY 4. STRONG COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT 5. OUTSTANDING SOCIAL AND ETHICAL ACTIVITIES
1415 Ocean Avenue, Santa Monica, CA 90401
ALL DAY HAPPY HOUR
AWARD RECIPIENT WILL BE HONORED ON APRIL 11TH Deadline: March 31st For more information and to nominate visit: cba.lmu.edu/entrepreneurshipaward
WHEN YOU SHOW YOUR LA MARATHON BIB Join us at The Veranda following the Los Angeles Marathon, Sunday, March 24, & enjoy access to our fan-favorite Happy Hour menu all day long.* Valid 3/24/19, Dine-in only. Must show bib to redeem.
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 17
T u e s d ay 4 P M
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
W
Keeper of the Pier
Peter Ruiz
PAGE 18 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
hen Peter Ruiz looks at the Venice Pier, he doesn’t see worn-out railings, faded paint or empty holes where benches once seated visitors. He sees potential for a renaissance — restoring the pier as it was more than 30 years ago, when locals and tourists alike would gather to watch beautiful sunsets and dolphins play in the ocean. Ruiz, who was raised in Venice and Mar Vista, spent countless hours fishing off the pier as a child in the 1970s. The past few years he’s made it his personal mission to clean up trash, scrub away graffiti and otherwise care for the pier — a campaign he calls the Venice Pier Project. An electrical fire under the pier last summer exacerbated its deteriorating condition, but now the pier is slated to receive $5 million in structural upgrades next year, due in part to Ruiz’s advocacy efforts. “This place holds a lot of great memories for me,” says Ruiz, gazing into the horizon from the end of the pier, built from 1963 to 1965. “I want people to be able to remember the same kinds of good times that I had or to create their own memories about the pier.” Ruiz, who skateboarded alongside some of the storied Z-Boys back in their heyday, has not found it easy to stay in Venice. As a child, Ruiz hit his head after falling from a playground jungle gym. In 2011 he was diagnosed with a seizure disorder that has kept him from working a consistent 9 to 5. From 2016 to late last year he was homeless, sleeping in a parked car along the streets where he’d play as a kid. But all these challenges did not stop Ruiz from charging ahead with the Venice Pier Project. “The past few years I have been doing my due diligence: cleaning and maintenance and staying in touch with the people who can help me make my dream come true,” says Ruiz, whom Los Angeles City Councilman Mike Bonin named one of his “Neighborhood Heroes” of 2018. Ruiz organized a 20th anniversary celebration of the pier’s 1997 grand reopening after restoration and seismic retrofit work, but his dream is about more than wood and metal infrastructure. On the Fourth of July he decorates the railings of the pier with American flags, and around Christmas he wraps bows and garlands on the closest lifeguard tower. Last year he organized a family-oriented “Let’s Go Fishing” event to teach local kids how to fish. “The beauty of the ocean, feeling the ocean — the vastness of it — and being able to look in one direction and see nothing but ocean, and in the other direction thousands of people. Bodysurfers, skateboarders, fresh air. That’s the Westside, and that’s Venice,” Ruiz says. “People are in a pretty good mood when they come down here, and I want them to feel that way about the pier again.” — Gary Walker
ArgonautNews.com
Kim Gordon
California
Cool
D
esigner Kim Gordon admits carrying some elitist East Coast baggage with her when she moved to Los Angeles almost 30 years ago. “Being from New York, it’s always like New York hates L.A., the whole Woody Allen thing. I kind of had a little bit of that when I first got here,” she recalls. That was especially true when it came to walking through neighborhoods and looking at houses, where one style of home juxtaposes the one next door — a Spanish-style bungalow, say, next to a super modern manse. “At first, I thought it was a disaster,” she says. Gordon later realized that eclecticism was part of the Angeleno real estate DNA: “It’s a little like, ‘This is what I like. F- you.’ There’s some-
thing very L.A. about that.” As principal designer of Kim Gordon Designs, she has become known for an aesthetic that some would call “very L.A.”: her work includes designing interiors, ground-up home builds and renovations that seamlessly integrate indoor and outdoor spaces to take full advantage of sunshine and sea breezes, replete with plants and patterned textiles. Projects can range in budget from $100,000 to well into the millions. An artist by trade, Gordon usually mixes bold pops of color, contrasting textures and quirky flourishes into her work. When staging a home before it goes to market, for example, she refuses to adhere to the “blank canvas” philosophy many home stagers and real estate agents do.
“There is a lot of pressure to keep everything white. I keep thinking, “Who wants to live in a sterile, hotel-looking thing?’ So, I layer it and make it quirky, throw in things, like a weird pig sculpture,” she says. Her goal for any space no matter the budget, she says, is to make something unique, interesting and warm. The Westside is particularly suited to that vibe. “It feels to me more like you could be on a vacation, and I think design is moving towards [that]. When I open up the door to my house, the gate to my house, I have water fountains, plants are happy, there’s ocean around us. It’s very resort-like,” she says. A longtime Venice resident (her first project was a home on 28th Street
behind the Venice Canals), Gordon remembers when the neighborhood was a hub for off-beat artists and misfits, where her dates didn’t want to drive to because it was too far, and where a post-dinner party drum circle was a nightly treat. Even as the neighborhood has become one of the most expensive in the country, Gordon still sees a creative spirit peeking through. “It’s a different type of artist moving in. I’m one of the old artists,” she says. “I hear people say, ‘These people are rich and terrible.’ But I’m like, ‘Dude, they are in the tech industry. They are creatives. What is art now is different.’” — Audrey Cleo Yap March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 19
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
Teresa Kim
Everybody’s Buddy S
itting behind the counter at Gordon’s Market with owner Teresa Kim, I see a different side — actually, every side — of Playa del Rey. There’s a couple on a date buying spices and sauces, a college student picking up some beer, a young man in sweats buying chips and soda for the second time today, a pair of bubbly ladies treating themselves to a bottle of rosé and plastic cups, a junkie buying a lighter, a young professional purchasing stamps to mail in her tax return, two stoners indulging in Dippin’ Dots, an athletic couple buying alkaline water (one of the market’s most popular items) … and the bell at the door keeps dinging as the people keep coming in. PAGE 20 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
For the past five years and change, this creatively stocked shop on Culver Boulevard is the place where people come for just about anything and everything they need. And Kim is usually behind the register with a welcoming smile and warm conversation. “I heard your mom is moving to Long Beach. Are you going with her?” she questions one young man. “You didn’t have time for lunch,” she says to a regular hurrying out, probably referring to ASAP Phorage, which has been serving Asian sandwiches and pho from the back of the market for four years. These are the types of conversations Kim has with her customers. She knows almost every one. They live, work and
play in the neighborhood, and they share their personal stories and struggles with her. That’s because her customers believe Kim cares. And, after sitting with her for 20 minutes, I would agree. Maybe it’s because of her own story, which goes something like this: Kim was divorced when her son was 3. As a single mother in South Korea, she worked extremely hard, hardly ever seeing her son. When her son entered junior high, Kim decided to quit her job as a teacher and visit her two sisters in California for a year. But she was denied a visa — three times. Instead, she packed just two bags and flew to New Zealand, where upon landing she asked a taxi driver to drop her at a hotel near a good junior high school.
Kim enrolled in Auckland University, earned a master’s in education and, on the recommendation of a schoolmate, opened an English-language school — at age 47. She finally made it to the U.S. nine years ago. Kim still works extremely hard, from 1 p.m. to close on weekdays and all day on the weekends. But now her son is married with three children and employed by the U.S. Army. “I’m blessed,” says Kim. “I’m happy all the time.” Except she has one unfulfilled wish: to travel the world in an RV for two years, which she plans to do soon. And it’s easy to believe she will. — Jessica Koslow
CALIFORNIA LASER SPINE
PAIN REDUCTION
New OwNership B ark s Bu BBles
&
Back, Neck & Nerve
PAIN RELIEF Non-invasive Medical
PAIN TREATMENT Non-Surgical Safe Effective Cost-Effective
“Barks”
“Bubbles”
“Old Fashion Friendly Service Since 1988“ BarkS and BuBBleS lOS angeleS 8320 lincOln BOulevard lOS angeleS, caliFOrnia 90045
(310) 649-1585
O p e n M - S at 8 a M t O 3 p M
BEVERLY HILLS PAIN INSTITUTE
310-305-9200
Playa Vista, 5450 Lincoln Boulevard
SiliconBeachMedical.com • Board Certified Physician
DOg grOOmiNg
35
$
00
t en By tm in
Pain Medicine | Fellowship Trained Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine/Larkin Community Hospital, Miami, FL Internal Medicine Residency | Attending Physician Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, CA
po
DR. YASHAR M. GHOMRI, D.O.
ap
Introducing our newest pain medicine specialist:
(3 ca 10 ll ) 6 to 49 day -1 58 5
✓ ✓ ✓ ✓
Non-Surgical • Safe • Cost-effective • Spine Problems • Back & Neck Pain • Nerve / Muscle Injury • Migraine • Work / Sports Injuries • Personal Injury • Spine & Interventional Pain Management • Orthopedic and Sports Medicine • Foot & Ankle Podiatry
20 lbs or less
Includes: Bath, Brush, Nails, Ears, GIFT!
*dematting charges apply Special argOnaut cOupOn expireS 5/1/19 March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 21
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
T
Brittney Rose
The Reluctant Temptress PAGE 22 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
here are two wildly different sides of Brittney Rose. One, the yoga practitioner and instructor, is grounded and introspective. Another, the Instagram model and reality television star, is showy — baring heart, soul and a fair bit of skin for the camera. So it only makes sense that a year and a half ago, the San Fernando Valley native moved to Venice — where yoga studios and social media entrepreneurship intersect under picture-perfect sunsets — to build her spiritual practice as well as her brand. “I couldn’t have dreamt up a more wonderful and nourishing environment for myself. I live with artists and yogis, so there’s a lot of creation happening,” the 28-year-old explains. Just as Rose was settling into beach life and her private yoga practice, Hollywood called. She was cast on the dating show “Temptation Island” as a “single” tasked with tempting a stranger away from his girlfriend. Reality television wasn’t something Rose watched, much less saw herself participating in. A former roommate was asked to be on the show but declined. She ended up referring the casting directors to Rose’s Instagram instead. Rose hesitated. Yoga was private and self-reflective, while reality TV would be public and revealing. “After a month of sitting on the contract, I spoke to some friends who had been on reality TV and thought, ‘You won’t know if you say no to the experience,’” she recalls. “I thought, worst-case scenario I’m going have the greatest digital detox of my life. No phone. No computer. I was thinking it was going to be so peaceful and serene.” But being on camera all the time, including intimate moments, proved to be anything but peaceful and serene. Rose relied upon yoga, which she’s been practicing for 11 years, to stay centered during filming. “My yoga and nature were what kept me sane and grounded because we didn’t even have music. No music. No books. I just had to rely on what I had, which were those two things,” she says. “I was practicing physical yoga at least every other day. But I was really relying on meditation, affirmations and presence. And really taking care of my thoughts while I was there.” As it turns out, the dramatic on-camera relationships of reality television helped Rose with her off-camera ones after returning home. “It gave me a lot more compassion for myself and other people,” she says of her current brush with fame. “Being in such a high-strung environment where there are feelings involved, it was fascinating for me to observe how people act under pressure and what gets triggered or brought up.” Identifying and addressing such pressures is something Rose hopes to do with a series of wellness retreats that she’s planning with the help of fellow Westside yoga instructor Dominick Cole. It seems that Rose’s excursion to “Temptation Island” affirmed that Venice is where she wants to stay. — Lawrence Yee
ArgonautNews.com
C
harlotte Gunter has only one regret about her time with the Kentwood Players: She wishes she’d joined sooner. The 90-year-old great-great-grandmother, known as “Miss Kentwood Players,” joined the Westchester thespian troupe two years after she first encountered them at a venue called “The Barn” in the 1950s. She hasn’t stopped contributing her time and talents since — and hasn’t missed an opening night in more than six decades. Gunter has been a producer, director and even president of the organization, and she’s played a number of roles on stage, too. She’s especially proud of portraying three different characters in a 1958 production of “A Streetcar Named Desire.” But what brings her the most pride is her work behind the scenes, particularly the costume department — “which I absolutely adore,” she says, “because I love clothes!” Gunter was born in Oakland and fell in love with song and dance watching Shirley Temple on screen and attending the Bay Area’s plethora of world-class theaters. She and her late husband Pat moved to Westchester in 1952, partially for its proximity to LAX (they visited friends and family up north often back then). Pat worked at Douglas Aircraft and she had a job with aerospace manufacturer the Garrett Corporation on Sepulveda Boulevard. They initially lived on 84th Street and later upgraded to a custom-built home on 77th Street. “In those days, that was considered moving up,” she says in her warm and cheery tone. “We settled into Westchester and loved it from the beginning. … Lincoln was just a road, and anything beyond Lincoln was fields. ... It was very bucolic. And it was very village-like.” The couple raised their daughter Adrienne (who passed away in 1995) in Westchester, and Gunter joined various community causes, becoming active in Westchester’s historical society, its woman’s club and the Culver City Democratic Club. She also co-founded Westchester’s annual Fourth of July Parade in 2000. The community needed “to cement the small-town flavor,” she says, “which we saw slipping with all the expansion”— meaning the development of Playa Vista beneath the bluffs and LAX’s plans to widen its north runway past Westchester Parkway. Gunter joined community activist Denny Schneider as one of the airport’s more vocal opponents, efforts that helped to facilitate a 2016 settlement replacing LAX expansion with plans for limited commercial development and lots of open space. “I did whatever I could, which was mainly making noise and writing letters, because I had lived through what LAX did to us previously, when they decimated Westchester,” she says. In recent years Gunter downsized to a condo in Culver City, but her heart remains at the Westchester Playhouse and she still serves as a liaison to the LAX Coastal Chamber of Commerce. “I have a finger in a lot of pies,” she says, but “you won’t find my name on a program, because I’m a behind-the-scenes person. I don’t need the limelight. I just contribute where I see a need.”
Charlotte Gunter
Miss Kentwood Players
— Christina Campodonico March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 23
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
The Cultural Gardeners
T
ucked behind an auto shop parking lot on Lincoln Boulevard is Amiga Wild — almost invisible from the main drag but leaving an indelible mark on the Venice arts community with craft workshops, mini-concerts, taco nights and monthly art shows since December 2017. The low-key lifestyle boutique is an airy oasis populated by succulents and perfumed by the scents of artisan soaps and candles. Its proprietors are Venice native Sadie Gilliam and transplant Alisun Franson, jewelry designers who found alignment in their aesthetic tastes (“earthy, hippie, but not dirty!” says Gilliam) and business goals of creating a space to showcase the work of local makers. “The goal has always been to be a community art hub,” says Gilliam, 37. PAGE 24 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
Sadie Gilliam & Alisun Franson She’s the creator of Freedumb Founded jewelry and began a previous iteration of Amiga with Lincoln & Rose blogger Nicole Reed before partnering with Franson. “We just want to create this little friendly pocket … where there’s safety and there’s also community and we’re representing artists, says Gilliam. “If these little pockets of pretty start popping up, there’s more potential and possibility.” Creating a beautifully curated space on Lincoln is important to Gilliam. Growing up in Venice when it was a lot rougher around the edges, she remembers trailing her artist father Edward Gilliam around the boardwalk in the ’80s to help him touch up his murals — sometimes he’d incorporate a gang member or two into a
mural just to keep the peace — as well as her mother forbidding her from biking down certain streets in the neighborhood. Lincoln was one of them. “It wasn’t because it was so busy, it was because it was so cuckoo,” Gilliam recalls. Now she enjoys being able to welcome kids and parents into her shop, especially since an independent toy store will soon be opening next door. Franson, a New York native who founded her jewelry line Beatrice Holiday (which upcycles old bicycle parts into fashion-forward pieces) in Colorado before moving to Venice nine years ago, appreciates the “transient, outgoing and artistic” kinship between her old home of Boulder and her adopted one — “I feel like they’re sister cities in a way,” she
says — and how Amiga has allowed her to plant roots in Venice even after relocating to the outskirts of Playa Vista. “I kind of got disenchanted when I had to move from here because I couldn’t afford the rent anymore,” she says, “so this has been a really great opportunity to come back into Venice, because I feel Lincoln is the new Abbot Kinney in a way, but actually better.” Like a grafted plant, Franson and Gilliam have cultivated Amiga Wild into a place where new and old Venice can meet and commingle. “I know a bunch of old skaters and surfers and then the new families,” says Gilliam. “There’s always a mixture. Each brings a totally different demographic.” — Christina Campodonico
TRIVIA MONDAYS & TACO THURSDAYS SPORTS * BOARD GAMES * BILLIARDS COCKTAILS * DRAFT BEER
We cover NeWsWorthy eveNts, INterestINg PeoPle aNd Fresh Ideas that matter to the WestsIde • Local News & Interviews • Arts & Events • Food & Drink • Real Estate • Special Issue Archive Sign up at argonautnews.com to receive The Argonaut’s digital newsletter and be entered to win a delicious meal courtesy of
OPEN 12 NOON - 2 AM 12740 Culver Blvd.
310.821.4000 | 90westlounge.com
(Winner will be drawn at random on April 25th and notified via email.)
HAVE A BEACH BALL APRIL 28 • 10AM–2PM MUNIT Y
AN
H HO US E
10
AC
RG
1 C
B
E
NENBE
OM
2019
th
Anniversa
ry
Join us at this free event celebrating the Annenberg Community Beach House 10th anniversary Take part in a community group photo in the sand creating the iconic Beach House beach ball, and stay for more fun. Everyone in the photo will receive a complimentary 10th anniversary beach ball and a pool pass for a summer swim!* 10 am
10:30 am MUNIT Y
h
Anniversa
RG
AN
O H H USE
2019 t
AC
10
B
E
NENBE
OM
1 C
ry
Memories made here RSVP at annenbergbeachhouse.com
Check-in for photo and enjoy music and treats! Celebratory remarks and community beach ball photo, then stay for fun, music and games!
We welcome a crowd and encourage you to walk, bike, carpool, rideshare and use the parking lots on either side of the Beach House. Parking at the Beach House may be limited. You can always pull in and drop off your crew before scouting for a spot to park. Parking at the Beach House is $3 per hour and $12 per day. *Pool passes may be limited to the first 300 photo participants.
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 25
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
M Michael Vartanian
The Fixer PAGE 26 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
ost small business owners know the exact date their lives changed forever. “Sept. 20, 1996,” Michael Vartanian replies immediately to the question of when he opened Marina Bay Watch Company. For Vartanian, the son of Armenian immigrants, what has become a thriving family business has jumped a few high hurdles to land where it is now — in the mini-mall sharing space with Wharo Korean BBQ and Walgreens on the southwest corner of Lincoln and Washington boulevards. At age 16, Vartanian received an offer he couldn’t refuse: a job at a watch shop in Lakewood making $4 an hour (minimum wage then was $3.25). He stayed there for nine years, learning the business. Over time his plans to attend medical school and become a pharmacist changed. Vartanian liked repairing watches. “I love dealing with people,” he says. “I’m a people person. I love to make people happy and see them smiling, thanking me a million times.” It’s not just locals. Glance at Yelp and you’ll see why people travel from as far as Santa Barbara to entrust his shop with their valuable keepsakes. “People cherish pieces from their grandma and great-grandma,” he says. “They want to repair them, because of the memories and sentimental value. They want to keep them in the family and pass them from generation to generation.” Vartanian’s business is 90% repair — all done in-house. He services everything from mechanical to quartz, but mostly high-end Swiss watches: Rolex, Cartier, Omega and Breitling. It’s lunchtime on a weekday at Marina Bay Watch Company and several customers slide in with questions. Vartanian and his cousin are behind the counter; Vartanian with his signature loop resting on the top of his head. “We’re busy all the time,” he says, gratefully. “People came in with their kids, and now their kids come in with their fiancés.” But it wasn’t always like this. And it’s not luck, he assures me. “This is my blood and sweat,” he says, “and providing great service.” With the support of his father, Vartanian initially set up shop in Villa Marina Marketplace, in the spot where Ruth’s Chris Steak House is now. Wanting more security than a month-to-month lease, he found his present location in 2008, and business skyrocketed after the move. “It takes an iron gut to endure all the problems in business. After three years, I was 300K in debt. But I worked really hard and paid everyone off. I plugged away building the business. I was a survivor. That experience made me smarter and stronger in business.” And it isn’t just happy customers that make Vartanian love his job. “With all the stress in the world, and the stress and problems in our lives, watches help us focus on one thing,” he says. “The work is intricate. It calms me. … You need to stay focused. One little mistake and you mess up the whole watch. Everything has to be on-point — perfect, literally.” — Jessica Koslow
ArgonautNews.com
Kelly Younger
The Storyteller W hen Kelly Younger was growing up in the San Gabriel Valley, his heroes were the Goonies and Indiana Jones, and he dreamed of being an adventurer. As a Loyola Marymount University undergrad studying to become a classicist and archeologist, Younger traveled to Greece in the hope of discovering legendary treasures like his on-screen idols did. Due to his Irish blood, the only thing he found was sunstroke. After reassessing his life, he realized that what really enthralled him were the stories. “Stories can either hold up a window or a mirror to the world,” says Younger, now a tenured professor of English and LMU’s resident playwright. “I know I’ve succeeded when a person says ‘Oh my God, that’s me,’ ‘I know someone like that,’ or
‘I didn’t know a person like that existed.’” Over the past 15 years Younger has written more than 20 plays that have been produced everywhere from New York to Dubai, many of them acclaimed and award-winning. His comedy “Mandate,” about two men whose wives order them to take a guys’ night out together, won the Samuel French Off-Off Broadway Short Play Festival in 2015. Younger’s career changed dramatically three years ago when Disney Animation reached out for him to write and develop an animated Disney film and to become a member of the Disney Animation Story Trust, which allowed him to work on “Moana,” “Frozen 2,” “Ralph Breaks the Internet” and the forthcoming live-action “Aladdin.” He was also a Pixar Animation Brain Trust participant, assisting in the
development of “Cars 3,” “Incredibles 2,” “Toy Story 4” and other films. These days, Younger is story-consulting on three feature projects for Illumination / DreamWorks Animation and developing new content for The Muppets. He’s co-developed a book on drama to be published next year and is at work on a forthcoming children’s book with illustrator A.J. Knox. At home he stays busy raising his 10-year-old daughter and 13-year-old son with wife Stephanie Younger, the prominent Westside real estate agent. They started dating while at LMU, and she was with him on that fateful trip to Greece. It’s also at LMU that Younger maintains the love of his craft. An avid learner, he believes he learns the most through teaching.
“Every semester brings a new group of students, all with different backgrounds and life experiences,” says Younger, who credits those fresh perspectives with bringing new meaning and complexity to the stories he teaches. In addition to workshops on playwriting, Younger teaches courses in dramatic literature, classical literature, and mythology, as well as a popular seminar on fairy tales. He believes the power of fairy tales rests in that classic opening phrase, “once upon a time.” “A fairy tale is a promise,” he says, and “once upon a time guarantees that no matter what happens — no matter the adversity, no matter the difficulties and the heartbreaks — everything will turn out all right.” — Nathan Faust
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 27
I n n ovato r s , I n f l u e n c e r s
&
C h a r ac t e r s
O
Michael Dubin
The Guy’s Guy
prah is always encouraging women to live their best lives. Dollar Shave Club CEO Michael Dubin is on a mission, he says, “to help men look and feel good so they can be their best selves.” It may seem strange to compare the most influential woman in the world to the guy who launched a business empire with a funny 2012 YouTube video declaring “Our razors are f-ing great,” but men are from Mars and Dollar Shave Club isn’t a mail-order razor company — it’s a lifestyle brand driven by digital technology. Dubin co-founded Dollar Shave Club eight years ago after moving to Venice. He sold the company to Unilever for a reported $1 billion in 2016, and now it employs 300 people at a fashionable creative office space in Marina del Rey. DSC, as he calls it, has likewise expanded its offerings to include Boogie’s hair products, Wanderer shampoos and body washes, Superba toothpaste, Blueprint colognes, Dr. Carver’s shave creams, Big Cloud hand cream and, earlier this month, Groundskeeper antiperspirant and deodorant. It even launched an independent content vertical, Mel Magazine, to fill a void among lifestyle publications aimed at men. “I love building things. I love bringing things to life. That could be a product, a commercial or [expanding business into] a new country. I love the process of saying we’re going to go out and do something, then going out and doing it,” says Dubin, a Philly native with a degree in history and a background in advertising. He’s also a prolific reader, and took up sailing after being dazzled by all the big, beautiful boats docked in Marina del Rey Harbor. Dollar Shave Club was one of the first miracles of the Westside tech sector (before anyone started calling it Silicon Beach), but like all good business ideas it started by addressing a problem — that shopping for razors kept under lock and key in big-box stores is a hassle, and overhyped “shaving technology” makes them pretty expensive. Asked whether he’s a prolem-solver or market disruptor, Dubin answers “I’ll leave that to you.” But he does share advice for budding entrepreneurs: “You have to find a way to stay motivated by curiosity and the spirit of lifelong learning. You start a company with a certain set of skills and experiences, but to run a company you need to be able to broaden that skillset — and fast.” Which begs the question: If Mark Zuckerberg limits his wardrobe decisions to one basic outfit, why shouldn’t busy men with big life aspirations reduce the time they spend dithering over grooming products? That’s why Dollar Shave Club keeps growing. “Looking and smelling and feeling great is an essential part of being confident and, ultimately, being successful,” says Dubin. “We have dozens of products now, and only a few are shaving products.” — Joe Piasecki
PAGE 28 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
GET BEAUTIFUL, SMUDGE PROOF
PERMANENT EYEBROWS!
So natural, no one will know but you!
Women and men with Fine hair have unique problems that need to be understood by a hair designer who knows how to handle and give a design line to fine hair. A personal prescription for your hair and angled weight line hair cuts will make it look thicker and fuller than ever before.
Call today for free consultation 310-592-6337
Saturday, April 6, 2019, 7:30PM
Styled by
Wellness and serenity for the body, mind, and spirit.
• Microblading • Powder Brows • Cover ups & Removals • Licenced & Insured
American Rhythms Latin Music
Fine Hair
Lilythepink.com Program Frank Fetta, Conductor and Music Director
Carlos Chávez:
Celebrating the Rhythms and Sounds of the Americas
Sinfonia India
Juan Pablo Contreras:
(310) 210-8767 New Location “On Broadway” Downtown Santa Monica, 90401
María Grever: Júrame Jose Pablo Moncayo: Huapango Carlos Gardel: Agustín Lara: “Por Una Cabeza,” Arr. John Williams Aubree Oliverson-Violin
Estrellita
Hommaje a Federico García Lorca
Robert Frost Auditorium, 4401 Elenda St, Culver City 90230 Parking lots at Culver City High School. Please do not park on the residential street. For more parking information & tickets, please visit: culvercitysymphony.org This performance is made possible in part by the City of Culver City, in celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Performing Arts Grant Program, with support from Sony Pictures Entertainment.
IV Therapy incl. Glow, Energize & Hydrate Botox & Fillers, Book PRP for Hair Loss Today! and Facial Rejunvenation, Skin Tightening & Body Contouring w/ Radio Frequency & Hormone Optimization
0 30% OFF IF YOU MENTION THIS AD 0 310-451-9900 OCEANOASISDAYSPA.COM 1333 Ocean Ave. Santa Monica 90401
Azure Salon
Granada
Manuel Ponce:
Silvestre Revueltas: Gustavo Hernandez-Tenor
Mariachitlán
Enjoy by the Ocean
(310) 301-3383 New location Grand Opening!
13161 Mindanao Way Marina del Rey www.azuresalon.com
MENS EXPRESS HAIRCUT
$
30*
AVEDA MENS SIGNATURE CUT $45*
*Expires 4-21-19.
VOTED
BEST OF THE
WESTSIDE 2017
CLOCK • JEWELRY • WATCH REPAIR WE SERVICE
Rolex • Omega • Breitling • Gucci • Concord • Cartier • Movado • TAG Heuer Swiss Army • Citizen • Seiko • Bulova • Esq • Casio & much more
WATCH BATTERY
2
$
OFF
With this coupon. Includes installation.
Excludes Lithium & various Swiss brands. Limit one per customer. Exp. 4-30-19
FREE
Jewelry Cleaning & Inspection With this coupon. Expires 4-30-19
Up to
40% OFF
your next watch purchase With this coupon. Expires 4-30-19
We make house calls on grandfather clocks. Expert repair & restoration of clocks and watches from 17th Century to present. (Cuckoos, wall, mantle, grandfather, etc...)
Watch bands and batteries changed while you wait.
310.574.8777 • 4027 Lincoln Blvd. (Near Walgreens next to Wharo BBQ) Mon-Fri 11am-7pm • Sat 11am-5pm • Closed Sunday
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 29
BEST N.Y. PIZZA BY THE SLICE!
Any $25 Purchase
N.Y. PIZZA BY THE SLICE
310-823-7333
MARINA MARKETPLACE
4371 Glencoe Ave., Marina del Rey
www.Pizzarito.com
&
D r i n k
The Must-Devour List 6 spectacular local menu items you really must run out and taste Photo by Tara Woodall
5 OFF
$
F o o d
Present coupon when ordering. Exp. 4-21-19. Limit one per customer.
DELIVERY • CATERING • DINE-IN • TAKE-OUT • SINCE 1984
Lenzini’s Pizza Gluten Free • Vegan Cheese Salads • Sandwiches • Desserts M o n d ay S P e c i a L
3 Large Cheese Pizzas for $2199 after 4pm additional toppings $150 each For any other order mention Argonaut and receive 10% off.
Open 7 Days Lunch & Dinner 12740 Culver Blvd, Ste. B, LA 90066
(310) 305-0305 Lenzinis.com
FREE CATERING DELIVERY for the first 5 miles and only $ 1.15 mile after with $200 minimum purchase or 10% off pick up price. Must mention this ad prior to ordering.
ruttscafe.com (310) 398-6326 11707 Washington Pl, Los Angeles 90066 O P E N 7 D AYS
www.tutsgrill.com
424-289-8605 12114 W. Washington Blvd, Los Angeles 90066 Open 6 Days • Closed Sundays ORDER ONLINE • WE CATER
FREE ENTREE E X P R E S S D I N E- I N O R TA K E O U T
Buy one entreé at regular price, get a second of equal or lesser value FREE! With this coupon. Offer cannot be combined with other offers. One coupon per visit per party. Expires 4/30/19 PAGE 30 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
Flower Child’s Forbidden Rice should be the new model for the food pyramid
By Jessica Koslow and Angela Matano
Potted Red Curry Biscuit at The Tripel Sinfully delicious and shockingly cheap at just seven bucks, Honey butter, melt-in-yourthe potted red curry biscuit with mouth strip steak, Hachiya sesame honey butter will, not persimmon ice cream: Now that quite literally, knock your socks you’re hungry, we present six off. The biscuit is one of those standout dishes that fall into the appetizers that you vow to share exclusive category of one-of-awith friends but soon find kind/too-good-to-miss. Start yourself in a Mexican standoff checking these items off your over. Order your own! Warm and foodie bucket list tonight! tender with all the comfort of a feather pillow, it’s just savory Forbidden Rice enough and interesting enough at Flower Child (with the unusual additions of Calling a dish “forbidden,” as curry and sesame) to keep you in the Forbidden Rice at Flower coming back for more. Best Child, makes it immediately desirable, no? This healthful and ordered with beer on a soupy, foggy night. Oh, and hold onto hearty bowl combines black your socks. (AM) pearl and red japonica grains of The Tripel | 333 Culver Blvd., rice for a chewy and irresistible Playa del Rey | (310) 821-0333 | toothiness. Sugar snap peas and bok choy make you feel extreme- thetripel.com ly virtuous, while the toasted Shrimp & Grits at sesames, red chili sauce and Ms Chi Cafe hoisin with just the right sweet/ When someone mentions spicy ratio keep you taking “just one more bite.” Add shaved beef shrimp and grits, you probably or chicken, tofu or salmon for an think Southern soul food. Turns out, it’s also a Chinese brunch absolutely complete meal. This staple. Chef Shirley Chung plate of food should be the new remembers her grandma’s dish: model for the old-school food “Some people used tofu. My pyramid. (AM) grandma added shrimp. She was Flower Child | 1332 2nd St., Santa Monica | (310) 382-2901 | fancy.” The “Top Chef” runnerup has updated her brunch menu iamaflowerchild.com
with requests from regulars, substituting eggplant for port in her hand-cut noodles and adding her shrimp and grits: a potpourri of fried scallions, crunchy preserved vegetables, sesame granola and shrimp bathed in chili sauce floating around in a nutty batch of brown rice grits. Another pure delight is Chung’s matcha glaze mochi donut, like an old-fashioned buttermilk made with mochi flour, so it’s gluten-free. (JK) Ms Chi Café | 3829 Main St., Culver City | (424) 361-5225 | mschicafe.com New York Strip at Meat on Ocean The New York strip steak at Meat on Ocean is so good, I started dreaming up reasons to return the moment I left, and I’m really not a steak person. Wet-aged for 30 to 45 days — be sure to check out the glasswalled, refrigerated locker with its pink Himalayan sea salt brick wall — and hailing from the Double R ranch in Okanagan, Wash., the beef is so absolutely tender that it nearly melted in my mouth. For added texture, the exacting aging process causes a crust to form around the edges of the steak. Absolute perfection.
ArgonautNews.com
Famous Nashville Hot Chicken Sando
Chinese shrimp and grits for brunch; persimmon upside-down cake for dessert
Great Chicken and Waffles, Variety of French Toasts, Wraps, Burgers, Salads and Gluten-free Options
Everything is made from scratch, using only the freshest and finest ingredients. Happy Hour Menu Tuesday- Friday 8am-11am• Dine-In, Online Ordering, Catering New! Marina del Rey 3105 Washington Blvd. Marina del Rey 90292
310.881.9162
Complement any meal with potted red curry biscuits and sesame honey butter Mother’s Day, anyone? (AM) Meat on Ocean | 1501 Ocean Ave., Santa Monica | (310) 773-3366 | meatonocean.com
The Curious Palate | 395 Santa Monica Place, Santa Monica | (310) 395-2901 | thecuriouspalate.com
Persimmon UpsideDown Cake Sundae at The Curious Palate I’ve followed The Curious Palate from when it first opened in the 2008 in Mar Vista to its current location on the third floor of Santa Monica Place. The food is fresh, local, delicious and beautifully plated — like their elegant roasted Brussels sprouts with burrata cheese and golden beet puree. The Persimmon Upside-Down Cake Sundae is a custom dessert that co-owners Elliot Rubin and Mark Cannon whipped up for Santa Monica Restaurant Week in January, and because of its popularity — and because on the last day of the season, they bought 20 cases of Hachiya persimmons at the Santa Monica Farmers Market — they decided to extend its run. The cake is warm and soft, the ice cream smooth and cold (both are persimmon-flavored), with bittersweet chocolate sauce and house-made pecan crumble. Lucky for us, this seasonal dish is sticking around. (JK)
Sweet Corn Tamales at Tocaya Organica You may have never seen the sweet corn tamale on the menu at Tocaya Organica because it’s only listed as a side dish. For me, it’s a dessert. After eating my Tocaya Salad with achiote chicken and queso manchego, I like to stay in the healthy lane. That’s why a sweet corn tamale is my perfect postre. It’s just the right size and just the right amount of sweet, and it’s incredibly satisfying when the tiny corn niblets inside the tamale pop inside my mouth. (JK) Tocaya Organica has locations in Venice, Playa Vista, Santa Monica and El Segundo | tocayaorganica.com *** What are your favorite new menu items at Westside restaurants? Email editor@argonautnews. com today to suggest dishes, cocktails and desserts we should feature in our upcoming Westside Dining Guide.
b
Santa Monica
20% OFF Any Purchase
310.453.2787
Excludes Happy Hour Menu. Not valid on weekends. Present offer when ordering. Limit one per table. Expires 4/15/19
of $25 or More.
2408 Wilshire Blvd. Santa Monica 90403 R
u
S w
W estsid e
i
f
f
l
e
.
c o M
ne ad deadlith april 12 : issue datteh 5 april 2
Dining guiDe
2019
The Westside has become a top destination for people who love great food. Help your eatery stand out from the crowd by advertising in this year’s Dining Guide. Because our audience has the means and ability to dine out often, you never know when they will be ready to walk in your door. Let us help you promote your catering, delivery, online or dine-in menu to hungry diners in 2019.
C a l l to day: 3 1 0. 8 2 2 .1 6 2 9, e x t. 1 2 7 March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 31
O n S tag e – T h e w e e k i n lo ca l t h e at e r compiled by Christina campodonico Photo by Shari Barrett
Between a Squawk and a Hard Place I’m a 32-year-old gay man, and my boyfriend of three years sometimes vents to his friends about our relationship. I feel a little betrayed by this, like my privacy’s being violated. Why can’t he figure things out on his own — without bringing in a jury? — Disturbed A few years back, a woman with a grudge against my assistant called to try to get me to fire her: “She talks trash about you!” Me: “Everybody talks trash about their boss!” The truth is we all do a lot of grousing to others about people in our lives — our romantic partner, our business partner, our criminal conspirator. That’s actually a healthy thing, though it runs contrary to what emotion researcher Bernard Rime calls the “Lone Ranger individualist perspective of adult emotional regulation.” This, Rime explains, is the mythic view (held even by many psychologists) that healthy adult processing of emotions involves a sort of “rugged individualism” — meaning being “self-contained, independent and self-reliant.” In fact, Rime notes, emotion seems to have evolved to be not just a solo, internal process but a “fundamentally interdependent process.” Research by the late social psychologist Stanley Schachter, Rime, and others suggests that experiences which give rise to emotion in us motivate us to seek out
others — to share the experiences and our feelings. Rime explains that our emotions, especially painful ones, can be overwhelming to us. Experiencing emotion “is a dense and diffuse experience in need of cognitive articulation”; that is, it needs to be hashed out and understood. “By using language and by addressing others, individuals ‘unfold’ the emotional material” so they can understand and manage it and maybe gain objectivity and insight. Understanding how driven we are to share our experiences might help you stop feeling like your boyfriend’s betraying secrets and instead see it as his seeking a sounding board. There’s a good chance that this serves to improve your relationship — sometimes by confirming that he has a legit issue to discuss with you and try to resolve. Of course, we’re all prone to latch on to crazy and ride it like a pony. We need someone to talk sense into us — like to convince us that the jail time isn’t worth it, despite our partner’s disgusting, depraved indifference to all that’s good and right. Yes, I’m talking about atrocities like opening food packages from the middle (“Hello … are you a rodent?!”), vacuuming in weird, random lines (like a serial killer!), and setting the alarm an hour early and then hitting snooze five times (surely an underappreciated cause of homicide).
Fairy Bail Romance I’m a 66-year-old man. I got married in my mid-20s and was totally faithful, but my wife left me after 10 years (I think for another woman). I was with the next woman for 20 years. Again, I was faithful, but she left me, too. Is being faithful overrated? I thought it was the way to secure a relationship. — Failed Relationships Keeping a marriage together by being faithful is important, but it’s also a step above keeping a marriage together by not being dead. (Note that the marriage ceremony has a little more text to it than “Keep it in your pants, mkay?”) Still, it isn’t a surprise that you’d go, “Wait … faithful to the first one, faithful to the next one; must’ve been why these relationships tanked!” This leap you’re making probably comes out of how uncomfortable our minds are with uncertainty (stemming from ambiguous situations, unanswered questions, and other mental untidiness). According to research by cognitive neuroscientist Michael Gazzaniga, a mechanism in our brain’s left hemisphere that he calls “the interpreter” steps in to fill in the blanks, to save us from the cognitive chaos by coming up
with an explanation. Unfortunately, it’s like the world’s sloppiest detective. It quickly scans for any patterns or vaguely plausible meanings and then just goes with them — creating a narrative that seems to make sense of our experience (and never mind the tedious snore of weighing whether it actually does). Accordingly, though it’s easier on the ego to see your being faithful as some sort of common denominator, a more productive take would be accepting that relationships end and considering whether there’s anything you might have done better, both in picking partners and in being one. You might also reconsider the notion that you had “failed relationships.” The reality is, partners change and grow apart. They come to want conflicting things (like a wife perhaps wanting a wife of her own). Or they just get bored with each other. As I see it, a 10- or 20-year relationship is a feat to celebrate — not only making a relationship work for a whole lot of years, but also refraining from bludgeoning your mate for the horrible, psychescraping sounds they make when they chew.
Got a problem? Write to Amy Alkon at 171 Pier Ave, Ste. 280, Santa Monica, CA 90405, or email her at AdviceAmy@aol.com. ©2018, Amy Alkon, all rights reserved. Alkon’s latest book is “Unf*ckology: A Field Guide to Living with Guts and Confidence.” Follow @amyalkon on Twitter and visit blogtalkradio.com/amyalkon.
PAGE 32 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
Don Schlossman and Brian Pirnat in Kentwood Players’ “Sunday in the Park with George” Stroke of Genius:“Einstein!” @ Santa Monica Playhouse Jack Fry delves into the life of the historic physics genius and the personal struggles that made his hair turn crazy. One performance only: 7:30 p.m. Thursday (March 21) at Santa Monica Playhouse, 1211 4th St., Santa Monica. $40 to $60. einsteintheplay.com
16 “New Shoes” alums presented over four weeks. Week No. 3 features choreography by Heidi Brewer, Keith Johnson, Darrian O’Reilly and Rebecca Pappas. Now playing at 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through March 30 at Highways Performance Space, 1651 18th St., Santa Monica. $20 to $25. (310) 453-1755; highwaysperformance.org
Religious Fervor:“Faith Healer” @ Odyssey Theatre Is Fantastic Francis Hardy a miracle worker — or a showman in search of a dollar? Four separate monologues explore the healing power of faith. Opens Saturday (March 23) and continues at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays as well as some Wednesdays, Thursdays and Sundays through May 12 at Odyssey Theatre, 2055 S. Sepulveda Blvd., West L.A. $10 to $37. (310) 477-2055; odysseytheatre.com
Winds of Change:“The Joy Wheel” @ Ruskin Group Theatre Change is blowing through Joy, Illinois, and the lives of Frank and Stella. Stella is shocked and inspired by her best friend’s sexual liberation and independence, while Frank decides to emulate his doomsday prepper friend by building an underground bunker in place of the family’s swimming pool. The show is directed by Jason Alexander. Now playing at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through March 31 at Ruskin Group Theatre, 3000 Airport Ave., Santa Monica. $20 to $35. (310) 397-3244; ruskingrouptheatre.com
Assortment of Laughs:“Crazy Woke Asians” @ Santa Monica Playhouse More than 15 Asian-American comedians team up for a performance festival featuring autobiographical creations, clown acts, burlesque, music, magic, poetry and more. Last shows: 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, 2 p.m. Saturday, and 7 p.m. Sunday (March 21 to 24). $25 to $35. santamonicaplayhouse.com Kentwood Does Sondheim: “Sunday in the Park with George” @ Westchester Playhouse The Kentwood Players revive this lively Sondheim musical about an artist’s complicated relationship with his creations and his longtime mistress. Now playing at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays and at 2 p.m. Sundays through April 20 at Westchester Playhouse, 8301 Hindry Ave., Westchester. $27. (310) 645-5156; kentwoodplayers.org Greatest Hits:“Best of ‘New Shoes’” @ Highways Performance Space Curated by Highways artistic director Patrick Kennelly, this year’s iteration features work by
Talk Nerdy to Me:“Smart Love” @ Pacific Resident Theatre In this new comedy with a scientific twist, the Wachowski’s household is turned upside down when the family’s son returns from MIT with an unexpected guest. Now playing at 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays through March 31 at Pacific Resident Theatre, 703 Venice Blvd., Venice. $25 to $34. (310) 822-8392; pacificresidenttheatre.com Perrault Revisited:“Cinderella” @ Santa Monica Playhouse In this original twist on the classic fairytale, a handsome prince yearns to be loved for himself, not his crown; vain stepsisters ultimately realize that looks aren’t everything; a controlling stepmother may actually be well-meaning; and Cinderella herself pulses with a feisty and independent spirit. Last shows: 2 p.m. Saturday and 12:30 p.m. Sunday (March 23 & 24) at Santa Monica Playhouse, 1211 4th St., Santa Monica. $12.50 to $15. (310) 394-9779; santamonicaplayhouse.com
W e s t s i d e
h a pp e n i n g s
Compiled by Nicole Elizabeth Payne
An Evening with Meb Keflezghi, 8 p.m. Four-time Olympian Meb Keflezghi discusses his book “26 Marathons,” sharing life lessons and tips on training and nutrition. Moss Theatre, 3131 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica. $20 to $95. livetalksla.org “Thirdsdays,” 8 p.m. Flutist Ellen Burr, bassist Jeff Schwartz, guitarist Scott Heustis, keyboardist R. Scott Dibble and drummer Keith Larsen perform two sets of improvisational jazz at Industry Café & Jazz, 6039 Washington Blvd., Culver City. No cover; donations encouraged. (310) 202-6633; industrycafela.com
Friday, March 22 SpeakENDO Light Installation, noon to 9 p.m. A unique installation made of 10,000 lights sets up on the Santa Monica Pier, raising awareness for endometriosis. The installation moves from darkness to light, each room brighter than the next and features interactive components, including an interplay of voice and light powered by speech recognition technology, as well as interactive mirrors, photo opportunities and more. Exhibit runs through March 31. Santa Monica Pier, 200 Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica. Free. eventbrite.com Keith Chagall at the Marriott, 7 to 10 p.m. Singer-songwriter Keith Chagall (as seen on the season finale of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills”) entertains the Marina del Rey Marriott with his music. 4100
Jimmy Brewster with Suzanne Taix, 7:30 to 11 p.m. Singing all the classics from Sinatra to rock ‘n’ roll, Jimmy Brewster and Suzanne Taix celebrate spring at Marina City Club, 4333 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey. (310) 822-0611; marinacityclub.net Nate Hancock & The Declaration, 8 p.m. As heard on the soundtrack for “House of Lies,” soul artist Nate Hancock makes a local tour stop, playing as front man and lead guitarist for The Declaration. Venice Beach Bar, 323 Ocean Front Walk, Venice. facebook.com/thevenicebeachbar Jazz Bakery Presents: Alicia Olatuja, 8 to 9:30 p.m. Hear the vocal talent of Alicia Olatuja in this encore quartet performance accompanied by pianist Josh Nelson, bassist Ben Shepherd and drummer Christian Euman at The Jazz Bakery. Moss Theater Santa Monica, 3131 Olympic Blvd, Santa Monica. $25 to $35. jazzbakery.com BHANGRATON: Reggaeton & Bhangra Party, 9:30 p.m. Come dance the night away to Bollywood and Bhangra music featuring DJ Prashant and DJ Dharam. The event includes an interactive dance lesson and professional photography. $0 to $15. eventbrite.com Tone Def Nation, 9:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. Listen to punk rock band Tone Def Nation along with special guest Rafa Dorawa all the way from Poland. Surfside Venice, 23 Windward Ave., Venice. facebook.com/surfsidevenice
Saturday, March 23 Roga, 8 a.m. A running group and all-levels yoga class each Saturday morning through Aug. 3. Meet under the Santa Monica Pier sign at the top of the ramp for a brisk two- or five-mile run. Walkers welcome. Afterward,
Cash for Cars
&
Local car buyer looking to buy Cars Call Jay at
s
310-526-1942
Estimates by phone
New York-based Ballet Hispánico brings a flamenco, folkloric and Baroqueinfused program highlighting the work of Latina choreographers to The Broad Stage (1310 11th St., Santa Monica) this Friday and Saturday (7:30 p.m., March 22 & 23). “Each dance brings an artist’s perspective that adds to the understanding of our diverse Latina culture. They are ballets that respond to culture, identity, and personal reflection,” says artistic director Eduardo Vilaro. Tickets are $49 to $99. Call (310) 434-3200 or visit thebroadstage.org/ ballethispanico. (Photo by Paula Lobo) Marc Holzman leads a yoga class. Bring your own mat. Santa Monica Pier, 200 Santa Monica Pier, Santa Monica. Free. santamonicapier.org Culver City Rain Garden Needs You, 9 a.m. to noon. Nested between the Ballona Creek and residential properties, the Culver City Rain Garden captures rain and surface runoff, filters noxious contaminants and beautifies the urban landscape. Help take care of the garden by weeding and watering to give the newly planted native plants a chance to thrive. Culver City Rain Garden, 10101 Jefferson Blvd., Culver City. (310) 417-3093; santamonicabay.org
WILLIS MCNEIL I want to help you reach your fitness goals in 2019!
willismcneil_ I have been a certified personal trainer for 10 years now. I like to incorporate yoga, Pilates, kickboxing, stretching, cardio, weights and massage into your personal work out session.
Tomato-bration 2019, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Celebrate the tomato gardening season with Windrose Farms tomato farmers. They bring more than two dozen varieties of seedlings, growing accessories and hold a Q&A at 10 a.m. Participate in a tomato growing workshop and enjoy a free lunch from noon to 1 p.m. on Saturday. Ocean View Farms, 3304 S. Centinela Ave., Mar Vista. Free. oceanviewfarms.net/tomatobration La Moda Flamenco: An Afternoon of Fashion, 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Come to the annual spring fashion show of The Ladies of the Westchester Elks to enjoy a vendor showcase,
luncheon and Planet Chic fashion show with live entertainment by Jean & Jose. Westchester Elks Lodge 2050, 8025 W. Manchester Ave., Playa del Rey. $40. Search “La Moda Flamenco” on eventbrite.com. (310) 780-1393 or (310) 383-2428. 13th Annual Santa Monica Airport ArtWalk, noon to 5 p.m. Spend a day exploring painting, sculpture and ceramic demonstrations, participate in art and theater workshops, listen to live music and sample bites from food trucks. Santa Monica Airport, 3223 Donald (Continued on page 34)
TIME TO GET WHAT YOU REALLY WANTED Come in and browse our ready-made jewelry or make your own from our huge selection of beads from all over the world.
“It’s not the mountain ahead that wears you out, but the grain of the sand in your shoe” — Chinese proverb
. . . . LET’S HIT IT!!!
Will train in house or in gym (310) 625-5544 willismcneil74@gmail.com
a Ave., Santa Monica, CA 90401 • 310.395.0033 2nd & Arizona Ave. • Mon-Sat: 10 AM-9 PM • Sun: 12-6 PM
Identities Film Series: “American Native,” 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Filmmaker Steven Oritt screens and discusses his documentary about the Ramapough Lenape Indians, living 30 minutes outside of New York City, and their fight for recognition as Native Americans. Venice Arts, 13445 Beach Ave., Venice. Free. venicearts.org
Tasha Zappala, 7:30 p.m. Take in the gypsy-folk melodies of Aussie Tasha Zappala while enjoying views from The Whaler,10 Washington Blvd., Venice. Free. Search “Tasha Zappala The Whaler” on songkick.com.
Arizona Ave., Santa Monica, CA 90401 • 310.395.0033 203 Arizona203 Ave., Santa Monica, CA 90401 • 310.395.0033 Behind Tender Greens at 2nd & Arizona Ave. • Mon-Sat: 10 AM-9 PM • Su
Behind Tender Greens at 2nd & Arizona Ave. Mon-Sat: 10 am -7 pm • Sun: 12 noon-6 pm
ady-made rom our huge over the world.
Canada Now 2019: Los Angeles Edition, 7:30 p.m. Thursday and various times through Sunday. Check out the best in contemporary Canadian cinema at the Aero Theater, 1328 Montana Ave, Santa Monica. $8 to $12 per showing. canadanowfestival.com.
Admiralty Way, Marina Del Rey. keithchagall.com. (310) 991-5713
HAT ANTED
Thursday, March 21
March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 33
W e s t s i d e (Continued from page 33)
Douglas Loop S, Santa Monica. Free. eventbrite.com
Special Night Meeting of the
SMALL CRAFT HARBOR COMMISSION Thursday, April 4, 2019, 6:00 p.m.
Burton Chace Park - Community Room 13650 Mindanao Way, Marina del Rey, CA 90292
ATTENTION Boating Organizations in Marina del Rey! The Commission invites recreational and commercial boating organizations to give a 2-3 minute presentation on activities and accomplishments, or comments and concerns, at this special night meeting.
Submission deadline for presentation materials is Tuesday, April 2, 2019.
For more information, visit beaches.lacounty.gov SHERMAN GALLERY & FRAMESTORE 4039 LI LINCOLN BLVD. MDR 310 305-1001 WWW.SHERMANGALLERY.COM
Hollywood Screenings Film Festival, 1 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Meet filmmakers on the red carpet, enjoy film screenings and Q&As with directors and writers. Promenade Playhouse, 1404 3rd St., Promenade, Santa Monica. $12 to $80. hollywoodscreenings.org Farm-to-Table Community Meal, 1 to 4 p.m. Join S.P.Y. for a potluckstyle meal, featuring produce grown from the garden, a tie-dye workshop, live poetry, musical performances and more. Safe Place for Youth’s Community Garden, 681 N. Venice Blvd., Venice. Free. safeplaceforyouth.org Music by the Sea, 1 to 4 p.m. A scenic harbor view is the backdrop for an R&B concert by Soul Brothers. Fisherman’s Village, 13755 Fiji Way, Marina del Rey. (310) 301-9900; visitmarinadelrey.com Ocean Park Library 100th Anniversary Party, 2 to 4 p.m. Celebrate 100 years on the library lawn with crafts, a DJ, a photo booth, refreshments and more. Across the street, the Santa Monica Conservancy offers free tours of the historic 1897 Shotgun House. Build your own origami houses. Ocean Park Library, 2601 Main St., Santa Monica. Free. smconservancy.org “City of Dogs: How Dogs Bring Communities Together” Discussion, 3 p.m. Writer Ken Foster and Photo-
H a pp e n i n g s
grapher Traer Scott discuss their book “City of Dogs” and the role dogs play in building community from office dogs to Homeland Security. Wallis Annenberg PetSpace, 12005 Bluff Creek Dr., Playa Vista. Free. annenbergpetspace.org Masters in the Chapel: “The Rocking Seasons,” 7 to 8 p.m. Organist Sven-Ingvart Mikkelsen and violinist Jochen Brusch perform a convergence of movements from Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons” and rock classics by Procol Harum, The Doors and Savage Rose. Doors open at 6:45 p.m. First Lutheran Church of Venice, 815 Venice Blvd., Venice. Free. fivenice.org/master-inthe-chapel-concerts Terry Reid at McCabe’s, 8 p.m. Come listen to the amazing rock and soul works of Terry “Superlungs” Reid, who’s toured with The Rolling Stones, Jethro Tull and Fleetwood Mac. McCabe’s Guitar Shop, 3101 Pico Blvd, Santa Monica. $25. (310) 828-4497; mccabes.com
Sunday, March 24 Malibu Lagoon Field Trips, 8:30 a.m. Join the Santa Monica Bay Audubon Society the fourth Sunday of each month for a two- to three-hour walk exploring the lagoon and coastal region in search of 40 to 75 bird species. A shorter walk for families follows at 10 a.m. Park near the intersection of Pacific Coast Highway and Cross Creek Road, and meet at the metalshaded viewing area next to the lot. smbasblog.com
Music by the Sea, 1 to 4 p.m. A scenic harbor view is the backdrop for a jazz funk concert by 2 Azz 1. Fisherman’s Village, 13755 Fiji Way, Marina del Rey. (310) 301-9900; visitmarinadelrey.com Hawthorne Arts Complex Open Studios, 2 to 6 p.m. Over 80 artists open their studios, featuring oil and acrylic paintings, ceramics, photography, mixed media, fiber art and jewelry. Enjoy live music, free food and drinks. Hawthorne Arts Complex, 13040 Cerise Ave., Hawthorne. hawthorneartscomplex.com
Monday, March 25 Nina’s Tango Practica, 6 to 9 p.m. Each Monday night learn the art of tango and enjoy a tapas tasting menu. Grand Casino Bakery & Café, 3826 Main St., Culver City. $12.95. (310) 945-6099; grandcasinobakery.com
Tuesday, March 26 Perspectives on Heart Health and Stroke, 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday and 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. Saint John’s Health Center sponsors two educational forums on hearth health and stroke with a Q&A after the panel discussion. Santa Monica Public Library, 601 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica. Free; RSVP required. (310) 829-8453 “An Architectural Guidebook to Los Angeles” Book Discussion, 7 p.m. Join author Robert Inman in celebration of the relaunch of his extensive
*WHILE YOU WAIT
FRAME SPECIAL
$19.99
MON—FRI METAL FRAME UP TO 16 X 20
SEE US ON YELP *VERIFIED FASTER/MORE AFFORDABLE THAN: FASTFRAME, FRAMESTORE & AARON BROS.
Experience the artistry and audacity of roller derby on Saturday (March 23) when Angel City Derby faces off against the Wasteland Roller Derby at 6:30 p.m. and then the Berkeley Resistance at 8:30 p.m. A demonstration by Angel City’s junior team will take place between games. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. at Culver City’s Veterans Memorial Auditorium, 4117 Overland Ave., Culver City. Tickets are $10 to $30 at angelcityderby.com. (Photo by shilah montiel) PAGE 34 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
ArgonautNews.com guide to Los Angeles, containing 96 sections organized in 13 geographic chapters that explore manmade structures, gardens, parks, and other physical features of this sprawling city. Helms Design Center, 8745 Washington Blvd., Culver City. Free. helmsbakerydistrict.com/events
Professional Directory ATTOR NEY S
Personal Injury
Law Offices Of Baker & Oring, LLP
People Planet Plate, 6 p.m. Support the community’s sustainable food initiative and learn how you can make food choices that heal the planet and improve your health with culinary demos, inspirational speakers and interactive information tables from local food organizations. Sample small bites, beer and wine from local restaurants. Historic Woman’s Club, 1210 4th St., Santa Monica. Free. goo. gl/YGxUMP
Thursday, March 28 “Patsy Mink, Ahead of the Majority” Screening, 5:30 p.m. Asian-American Patsy Takemoto Mink became the first woman of color in the U.S. Congress. She was the force behind the passage of Title IX, the legislation that changed women’s opportunities in higher education and athletics. Lloyd TaberMarina del Rey Library, 4533 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey. Free. (310) 821-3415; lacountylibrary.org
310.822.3377 DaviD P. Baker Recipient of Awards for 35 Years of Community Service to Marina del Rey
The Strands, 8 p.m. Local band The Strands returns to TRiP with British soul singer Amanda Campbell, Richard Green on lead guitar, Paul Campbell on bass, Lance Tamanaha on drums and Emily Ashenfelter on keys. TRiP, 2101 Lincoln Blvd., Santa Monica. No cover. (310) 396-9010; tripsantamonica.com (Continued on page 36)
13915 Panay Way, Marina del rey Pacific Mariners Yacht club building
www.marinadelreylawyers.com
Save Your Parent’s Home From Medi-Cal
You must act now while your parent is alive and before new legislation takes effect.
• Medi-Cal Planning • estate Planning
FREE CONSuLTATION JOSEPH C. GIRARD, ATTORNEY AT LAW (310) 823-3943 • www.LAElderLaw.com
Probate. Business. Litigation
n Probates, Trusts, Estate Planning n Conservatorships, Special Needs Trusts n Business Formation, Operation and Transfers
n Litigation (Business, Civil and Probate)
Mario A. Pacione, Esq. 8055 W. Manchester Ave., Ste. 600A Playa del Rey 90293
(310) 912-9940 • www.pacionelawfirm.com Dermatology
D ermatology & S kin S urgery State-of-the-Art Skin Care with a Personal Touch Skin Cancer Detection & Treatment • Mohs Surgery & Complex Closures and Repairs Cysts, Acne, Warts, Psoriasis, Vitiligo & Rashes • Sclerotherapy • Hair Loss • Chemical & Glycolic Peels Laser Treatments • Restylane, Juvederm, Radiesse, Perlane & Botox/Dysport/Xeomin
B e ach c ities D ermatology m eDical c enter www.beachcitiesderm.com
Culver City (310) 204-3376 3831 Hughes Ave., Suite 504-B Redondo Beach (310) 798-1515 520 N. Prospect Ave., Suite 302 New Office LOcatiON! Seal Beach (562) 431-8554 500 Pacific Coast Hwy., Suite 512
William J. Wickwire, M.D. Certified, American Board of Dermatology
Neal m. ammar, M.D.
Certified, American Board of Dermatology
Saturday and Evening Appointments Available
WHEN BAD THINGS HAPPEN TO GOOD PEOPLE BECAUSE OF THE CARELESSNESS OR NEGLIGENCE OF OTHERS
Open Heart Mic, 7 to 9:30 p.m. Find more freedom in your self-expression by connecting with others through a guided meditation. Create art from your discovery with song, dance, poetry, painting or stories. Afterward share your spontaneous creation or something you’ve prepared. 1055 Harrison Ave., Venice. $10. eventbrite.com Soundwaves Series: Pianist Susan Svrcek, 7:30 p.m. Svrcek performs a set of chamber music interpretations of Arnold Schoenberg’s music. Nic Gerpe joins Svrcek for “Six Pieces for Piano Four-Hands” and “Chamber Symphony No. 2.” Svrcek, violinist Elizabeth Hedman and cellist Kate Dillingham perform “Transfigured Night.” Santa Monica Public Library, 601 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica. Free. (310) 458-8600; smpl.org
PACIONE LAW FIRM
Our Legal Staff Includes a Law Professor and Experienced Attorneys with A Proven Record of Success
Wednesday, March 27
Meditation for Pain Management, 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. Learn and practice meditation for pain management. Laura Martorella teaches techniques that can help to manage pain and related stress. Each participant can build a “toolkit” for meditation applications to carry with them. Lloyd Taber-Marina del Rey Library, 4533 Admiralty Way, Marina del Rey. Free. (310) 821-3415; lacountylibrary.org
S K I L L E D • PA S S I O N AT E
Over $25 Million Recovered • Catastrophic Personal Injuries • Motor Vehicle Accidents • Bicycle Accidents • Dog Bites • Trip & Falls
Robert Lemle
p r o v i d e r
f o r
m o s t
p p o s
D ent i st
Your Neighborhood
Dentist
for over 30 years!
Pay Nothing Until Your Case Is Resolved
Early Morning & Saturday Appts. • “No Wait” Policy at Appointment • Invisalign Provider General & Cosmetic Dentistry
LEMLE LAW GROUP, PC
6609 W. 80th Street, Westchester, CA 90045
(310) 392-3055 www.lemlelaw.com
Dr. Kathy Kaprinyak • 310-670-4466 drkathy@drkathydmd.com • www.drkathydmd.com Percentage of proceeds donated to cancer research
M i c ro b l ad i n g
Brow Microblading Permanent Makeup
Before
I m m e d I at e ly a f t e r
Redefine sparse, short, thin or missing brows with microblading
Special $499 (Reg. $999) Offer ends Mar. 28
Call: 310-990-2704 www.FixMyBrows.com March 21, 2019 THE ARGONAUT PAGE 35
Professional Directory
W e s t s i d e
H a pp e n i n g s about their healing. Laband Art Gallery, 1 LMU Dr., Westchester. (310) 338-2880; lmu.edu
Insurance
low
Shift rates into
“Something New in Painting (and Photography) [and even Printing]… Continued” and “Grow’d,” through Saturday, March 23. British artist David Hockney unveils new work, including mural-sized photographic drawings, large-scale multi-canvas paintings and a series of portrait drawings. Alison Saar in her exhibit “Grow’d” premiers a new bronze sculpture, depicting a female figure seated on a bale of cotton with branches of cotton extending towards the sky. L.A. Louver, 45 N. Venice Blvd., Venice. facebook.com/lalouver
I’M THERE
™
One call could bring down your car insurance rates—big time. With average annual savings of $369,* no wonder over 4,000 drivers a day shift to State Farm.® Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.® CaLL MY OFFICE FOr a quOtE 24/7. Vera Lukic, Agent Insurance Lic. #: 0681021 13450 Maxella avenue, Suite 215 Marina Del rey, Ca 90292 Bus: 310-821-0050 *average aaverage annual household savings based on national 2007 survey of new policyholders who reported savings by switching to State Farm. Daily average based on 1.5 million drivers switching to State Farm in 2007. State Farm Mutual automobile Insurance Company, State Farm Indemnity Company, Bloomington, IL
P080102 05/08
Taxes? T a x es
All forms • All Types • All sTATes
over 20 years experience
sAmuel B. moses, CpA smosescpa@aol.com
100 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 1800 Santa Monica 90401
Attract new clients by advertising in The Argonaut’s Professional Directory. Call (310) 822-1629 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
A&M
SMOG SMOG CHECK
$
36
75
+ certificate $8.25 (Reg. $65) 2000 & Newer Most Vehicles With this coupon. Expires 5/31/19
11151 Washington Pl Culver City 310-437-3680 5363 Venice Blvd Los Angeles 323-852-3700
www.amsmog.us
The UPS Store Mar Vista 12405 Venice Boulevard (Corner of Centinela)
Mon - Fri 9AM - 7PM • Sat 9AM - 5PM
5% OFF UPS
Shipping
SAVE TIME & YOUR BACK
Let Us Ship Your Luggage Directly to Your Final Distination
CONCERNED ABOUT IDENTITY THEFT?
SHREDDING SERVICES NOW AVAILABLE AUTHORIZED
DROP N’ SHRED™ LOCATION
FREE PACKAGING SERVICE
With Next Day Air or 2nd Day Air
Packaging Materials Not Included
310-915-6580 Store4398@theUPSstore.com
PAGE 36 THE ARGONAUT March 21, 2019
(Continued from page 35)
Museums & Galleries “Progression,” opening reception 6 to 8 p.m. Saturday, March 23. Artists Sia Aryai, Ray Carofano, Dylan Vitone and Melanie Walker come together for an exhibit that reveals how art is an outlet for innovation and reflection.
dnj Gallery, 3015 Ocean Park Blvd., Santa Monica. (310) 315-3551; dnjgallery.net “Confess,” through Saturday, March 23. Los Angeles-based artist Trina McKillen gives voice and visibility to the survivors of abuse at the hands of Catholic priests by bringing attention to abuse survivors and initiating dialogues
Send event information at least 10 days in advance to calendar @argonautnews.com.
Songs of Exaltation Alicia Olatuja transforms familiar music with vocal finesse and crystalline tone When Grammy-winning jazz pianist Billy Childs was recording his superb 2014 album “Map to the Treasure: Reimagining Laura Nyro,” he called in formidable vocal guests such as Lisa Fischer, Ledisi, and Susan Tedeschi. But during Childs’ subsequent tour stop at Walt Disney Concert Hall in Downtown L.A., it was a lesser-known jazz stylist who earned a standing ovation for her rendition of “Stoned Soul Picnic.” By then, Alicia Olatuja had already made heads snap worldwide with her dynamic range at President Barack Obama’s second inauguration, where the soulful mezzosoprano soloed with the Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir. Now Olatuja is heading her own tour behind her sophomore album “Intuition: Songs From the Minds of Women,” which exalts women’s resilience with songs by composers such as Tracy Chapman, Imogen Heap, Latin American folk goddess Violeta Parra, and Brenda Russell. Like her 2014 debut “Timeless,” “Intuition” is a mostly midtempo set whose elegant arrangements complement Olatuja’s interpretive finesse
Photo by harrisonweinsteinphotography.com
(310) 395-9922
Australian folk-singer Tasha Zappala mixes her intense gypsy melodies with dainty falsettos at The Whaler. SEE FRIDAY, MARCH 22.
“Portals & Mortals,” through Thursday, March 28. Timothea Stewart’s new exhibit features large-scale paintings exploring forms of energy, whimsical drawings from Spain and paintings from the unconscious which juxtapose art and humanity. Fine Arts Gallery at West Los Angeles College, 9000 Overland Ave., Culver City. (310) 553-7626; molly_barnes@hotmail.com
Alicia Olatuja’s solo during President Obama’s second inauguration brought down the house and crystalline tone. The abusethemed “Cherokee Louise” maintains the guideline melody of Joni Mitchell’s original recording, but subtle percussion and bass edge it with menace; a streamlined arrangement of Sade’s “No Ordinary Love” retains the sensuality if not the hypnotism of the original’s groove behind Olatuja’s confessional treatment of the lyric; and a slight tempo shift and trumpet solo give late, great Philly soul songwriter Linda Creed’s “People Make the World Go Round” a more hallucinatory cast than the Stylistics ever envisioned.
If Olatuja and her dexterous trio launch into Kate Bush’s “This Woman’s Work” at the Moss Theater on Friday, her queenly yet playful stage demeanor and gospel fervency are likely to transform it into an uplifting call to hope. — Bliss Bowen The Jazz Bakery presents Alicia Olatuja from 8 to 10 p.m. Friday (March 22) at the Ann & Jerry Moss Theater, 3131 Olympic Blvd., Santa Monica. Tickets are $35 or $25 for students. Call (310) 271-9039 or visit aliciaolatuja.com.
Classified advertising deluxe office sPace for rent
Deluxe Office Space in the Heart of Silicon Beach in Playa Vista
***Palms***
Vacant 1250 Sq. Ft. Office Building / Space
$2,495.00/MO
Deluxe Office Space in the Heart of Silicon Beach in Playa Vista
Deluxe Office Space in the Heart of Silicon Beach in Playa Vista
Vacant 1250 Sq. Ft. Office Building/ Space Newly renovated (Furnished or Unfurnished)
Vacant 1650 Sq. Ft. Office Building / Space
Newly renovated
Only $3,000 per month ($2,850 unfurnished)
Newly renovated
Only $3,850 per month
Only $3,000 per month
Close to LMU. Great central location Featuring 4 full-size Office Rooms, 1 Bathroom. Second floor, front and back entrance. 3 Parking spaces. Central A/C
Close to LMU. Great central location. Featuring: 5 Full-Size Office Rooms 1 Bathroom (w/ shower) Second floor. Central A/C
AvAilAble Now
AvAilAble Now
Close to LMU. Great Central location. Featuring: 5 full Size Office Rooms 2 Bathrooms (w/shower ) Second floor, front and back entrance. 3 Parking space. Central A/C.
12041 Jefferson Blvd. Los Angeles, Ca. 90230
11949 Jefferson Blvd. #102 Los Angeles, CA 90230
323.870.5756 / 310.827.3873
323.870.5756 / 310.827.3873
Advertise in the Argonaut Call Ann 310.821.1546
Part-time Jobs
Volunteers
SENIOrS hELPING SENIOrS We are hiring caregivers who would love to help other seniors. Flexible hours! Ideal candidates are compassionate people who want to make a difference! Must be local and willing to drive. Please apply by visiting the Careers page of our website www.inhomecarela. com or by calling our office at (310) 878-2045.
(DaV) a non-profit Organization seeking dedicated volunteer drivers to transport veterans to and from appts. to VA Hospital in West Los Angeles. Vehicle and gas provided. Call Blas Barragan at (310) 268-3344.
Typist to work with play write needed P/T by project. Hourly neg. Weekend pref’d. Westchester. Literacy Skills, Word program and Final Draft required. wwhizzie@ aol.com
commuting Music Educator couple seek room M-F prefer detached if possible. Mature, Respectful 213-713-5339
AvAilAble Now 12079 Jefferson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90230
323.870.5756 / 310.827.3873
unfurnished aPartments
bookkeePing & accounting
auto Parts/ serVice
2 bdrm/1 bath newly remodeled kitchen All new hardwood floors. Excellent school district. Private patio. 1 covered parking $2,400 p/m. Open 2-4pm Mar 23. 4133 Elenda Ave. Apt A. Culver City. Call Nancy 310-312-0624.
2019 QUIcKBOOKS Install, SetUp & Train. Payroll & Sales Tax Returns. Bank Recs. Also avail for Temp work. Year end report W’2’s & 1099’s Call 310.553.5667
Discounted Tires & Brakes The Trusted Auto Repair Experts 13021 W. Washington Blvd. call Juan (310) 305-7929
Inglewood, Triplex, Upper, 1bdr + 1ba, very quiet & spacious. Non Smoker, $1350 1person. Call Grace H-(310) 671-7228 or O-(323) 585-8302
custom-made adorable Baby clothes Featuring the Lovbugz Characters Buy at: www.zazzle. com/lovbugz
Classifieds 1
seeking room to rent
unfurnished aPartments
2 BD + 2 BA 3 BD + 3 BA
$3,495.00/MO 3614 FARIS DR.
CALL FOR AppOintMent
On-Site MAnAGeR (310) 558-8098
***mar Vista*** 2BD+2BA $2,395.00/MO 11931 Avonway
4 BD + 4 BA
$4,495.00/MO
3954 BEETHOVEN ST. Open HOUSe 10 AM tO 4 pM
Gated garage, Intercom entry, Alarm, FP Central air, Dishwasher, Stove/Oven
www.westsideplaces.com
310.391.1076
clothing
legal advertising FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019 040072 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: APF ADVISORY SERVICES. 3231 Ocean Park Blvd., Suite 217 Santa Monica, CA 90405, 3435 Ocean Park Blvd., Suite 107-211 Santa Monica, CA 90405. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 2487190. REGISTERED OWNER(S) All Point Financial, Inc., 3231 Ocean Park Blvd., Suite 217 Santa Monica, CA 90405. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 12/2008. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Gary Harold Shev. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: All Point
Financial, Inc. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 15, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 2/28/19, 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19
FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019 041872 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: VERSO CREATIVE. 1450 2nd Street #256 Santa Monica, CA 90401. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 3944823. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Verso, 1450 2nd Street #256 Santa Monica, CA 90401. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 2/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ David Thomas Larosa. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Verso. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 19, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious
Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019 049476 Type of Filing: Original. The follow-
LegaL advertisers every five years, let us help you renew your fictitious business name.
Call ann today at (310) 821-1546 x100
ing person(s) is (are) doing business as: AKRON MORTGAGE. 1423 15th Street Apt. #2 Santa Monica, CA 90404. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 4208517. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Akron Ventures Inc., 1423 15th Street Apt. #2 Santa Monica, CA 90404. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 10/2018. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Konstantine Kabilafkas. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Akron Ventures Inc. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 27, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19
FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019 049484 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: AKRON PROPERTY MANAGEMENT. 1423 15th Street Apt. #2 Santa Monica, CA 90404. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 4208517. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Akron Ventures Inc., 1423 15th Street Apt. #2 Santa Monica, CA 90404. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 10/2018. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Konstantine Kabilafkas. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Akron Ventures Inc. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 27, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19
FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019 049498 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: AKRON REALTY. 1423 15th Street Apt. #2 Santa Monica, CA 90404. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 4208517. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Akron Ventures Inc., 1423 15th Street Apt. #2 Santa Monica, CA 90404. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 10/2018. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Konstantine Kabilafkas. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Akron Ventures Inc. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 27, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19
March21, 21,2019 2019 THE ThEARGONAUT arGONaUT PAGE PaGE37 37 March
Home & Business services Design
Design by Maureen
Does your home or office need a facelift? Let us save you time and $$
Maureen Tepedino
COLOR CONSULTANT INTERIOR DECORATOR ABSTRACT ARTIST
310-714-7376
www.designbymaureen.com Drywall
California
Plumbing • Repair • Faucets & Toilets • Drain Cleaning • Water Heaters Since 1978 • Garbage Disposals The Neat & Clean Plumbers • Repipe Specialist • Water & Gas Leaks • Sewer Specialist Licensed-Bonded-Insured • Tankless Water Heaters ALL Work Guaranteed Lic. #799390 • Camera Inspections 11520 Jefferson Blvd., Culver City 90230 • Hydro Jetter 24 hr. Emergency Service
bobco PlumbiNg
310-837-3844
Cleaning serviCes
The European Maid Co.
310-490-8077
Commercial & Residential
HanDyman
HANDYMAN –30 yrs on West Side–
IN BUSINESS SINCE 1984
Call for a FREE Estimate
All home repairs & upgrades. No job too small. Free Estimates
Bill: 310-487-8201
Rosales Handyman 17 Yrs Exp Phone: 323-674-6673 • Complete home repair • Kitchen & Bath Remodeling • Home Additions • Stucco Repair • Electrical • Plumbing • Windows • Molding • Painting • Flooring • Hardwood Floors & Refinishing Web: rosaleshandyman.com Free in home estimate
Painting
Painting Best Prices Int/Ex: Houses, Condos, Townhouses, Rentals 25 yrs exp. Free Est.
310-465-3129 Lic. 791862 ins.
FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 049558 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: 11 MED BILLING. 8436 W. 3rd Street Suite 603 Los Angeles, CA 90048. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Sidper Holdings, LLC., 8436 W. 3rd Street Suite 900 Los Angeles, CA 90048 State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 4/2018. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Khawar Siddique, MD. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Sidper Holdings, LLC. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 27, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19
Classifieds 2
DRYWALL & PAinting QuALitY ConstRuCtion ContraCtor’s LiCense #692889
legal advertising
Cell: 310.569.6265 Plumbing
flooring/CarPets
Floor Installation & Repair Over 30 Years experience
Service & repair • StoppageS Floor & Wall Heat SpecialiSt 10% OFF with ad
Wood • Laminate • Vinyl Carpet • Ceramic Tile Kitchen • Bathroom Floors Best Price in town
310-876-1577
310-383-1265
SAL’S PLUMBING
CarPets
estimates
DA R I O ' S CA R PETS
& ROOTER 24/7 SERVICE
• Fast Honest & Reliable • Price Match Guarantee • Gas Leaks & Gas Repairs • All Types of Drains • Repairs & Remodels • Senior Discounts • Family Owned and Operated since 1979 • Lic# 537357 • WWW.SALSPLUMBING.COM
310-782-1978
Carpet SaleS and ServiCe Carpets • Linoleum Area Rugs • Custom Work Window Coverings
HardWOOd FlOOrS Carpet CleaninG 8330 Lincoln Bl., Westchester (2 blocks N. of Manchester)
(310) 641-2914
www.darioscarpetsla.com darioscarpets@aol.com Lic. #991410
Drive Traffic to Your Business with Ads that Work! Call Janelle at 310.821.1546 to Place an Ad in The Argonaut’s Home & Business Services Directory
PAGE 38 THE ARGONAUT MARcH 21, 2019
FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 052852 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: WESTCHESTER DEL REY FOURSQUARE CHURCH, HOPE CHAPEL DEL REY. 7299 W. Manchester Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90045-3547. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 0126840. REGISTERED OWNER(S) International Church of The Foursquare Gospel, 1910 W. Sunset Blvd., Suite 200 Los Angeles, CA 90026. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 01/1945. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Ron Thigpenn. TITLE: Chief Financial Officer, Corp or LLC Name: International Church of The Foursquare Gospel. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 1, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 057398 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: PLAYA DEL REY SPORTS CAMP. 9100 Fairmouth Ave. Playa del Rey, CA 90293, 1553 Live Oak Road Thousand Oaks, CA 91320. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Sports Camps, LLC, 1553 Live Oak Road Thousand Oaks, CA 91320. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 03/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Steve Taylor. TITLE: President, Corp or LLC Name: Sports Camps, LLC. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 6,
2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 059463 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: A CLEAR PATH. 11081 Venice Blvd., #6 Los Angeles, CA 90034, 2355 Westwood Blvd., 359 Los Angeles, CA 90064. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) A Clear Path, LLC, 11081 Venice Blvd., #6 Los Angeles, CA 90034. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Liability Company. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 02/2017. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Regina F. Lark. TITLE: Owner, Corp or LLC Name: A Clear Path, LLC. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 7, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 059856 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: YOURS TRULY. 1616 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291, 822 Washington Blvd. Marina del Rey, CA 90292. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: 201202700005. REGISTERED OWNER(S) 1616AKB, LP, 822 Washington Blvd. Marina del Rey, CA 90292. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Partnership. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 03/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ David Reiss. TITLE: Partner, Corp or LLC Name: 1616AKB, LP. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 7, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19
FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019 060757 Type of Filing: Original. The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: AGENT LOUNGE. 3229 Rosewood Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90066. COUNTY: Los Angeles. Articles of Incorporation or Organization Number: C2451015. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Agent L. Incorporated, 3229 Rosewood Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90066. State of Incorporation or LLC: California. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Corporation. The registrant commenced to transact business under the fictitious business name or names listed above on: 11/2002. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/ Laura Elian. TITLE: Owner, Corp or LLC Name: Agent L. Incorporated. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 8, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a fictitious business name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., Business and Professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019038205 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: MB HOSPITALITY; 560 Grand Blvd., Unit 1 Venice, CA 90291. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Margot Bloch, 560 Grand Blvd., Unit 1 Venice, CA 90291. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: 01/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Margot Bloch. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 13, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 2/28/19, 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FILE NO. 2019041296 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: HUITRON & HUITRON PRODUCTIONS; 13428 Maxella Ave., #368 Marina Del Rey, CA 90292. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Elizabeth Andrade and Joel Andrade, 13428 Maxella Ave., #368 Marina Del Rey, CA 90292. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a General Partnership. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Elizabeth Andrade. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: February 19, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant
RELEASE DATE—Sunday, April 14, 2019
legal advertising to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 2/28/19, 3/7/19, 3/14/19, 3/21/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019054668 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: MERMAID WAVE WEAR; 804 Pacific Ave. Venice, CA 90291. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Melodie Meyer, 804 Pacific Ave. Venice, CA 90291. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Melodie Meyer. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 4, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/14/19, 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019063019 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: VERUM VENTUS; 3027 Deep Canyon Drive Beverly Hills, CA 90210, 2934 Ω Beverly Glen Circle, #330 Los Angeles, CA 90077. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) M. David Messinger, 3027 Deep Canyon Drive Beverly Hills, CA 90210. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY an Individual. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business
Name or names listed above on: 3/2019. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: M. David Messinger. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 11, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19, 4/11/19 FIcTITIOUS BUSINESS NaME STaTEMENT FILE NO. 2019063919 Type of Filing: Original The following person(s) is (are) doing business as: INFINITY MOM3NTS; 3711 Moore St. Los Angeles, CA 90066. COUNTY: Los Angeles. REGISTERED OWNER(S) Garrett Samuel Safron and Elizabeth Safron, 3711 Moore St. Los Angeles, CA 90066. THIS BUSINESS IS CONDUCTED BY a Limited Partnership. The registrant commenced to transact business under the Fictitious Business Name or names listed above on: N/A. I declare that all information in this statement is true and correct. /s/: Garrett Samuel Safron. TITLE: Owner. This statement was filed with the LA County Clerk on: March 12, 2019. NOTICE ñ in accordance with subdivision (a) of Section 17920, a Fictitious Name Statement generally expires at the end of five years from the date on which it was filed in the office of the county clerk, except, as provided in subdivision (b) of Section 17920, where it expires 40 days after any change in the facts set forth in the statement pursuant to Section 17913 other than a change in the residence address of a registered owner. a new Fictitious Business Name statement must be filed before the expiration. The filing of this statement does not of itself authorize the use in this state of a Fictitious Business Name in violation of the rights of another under federal, state, or common law (see Section 14411 et seq., business and professions code). Publish: The Argonaut Newspaper. Dates: 3/21/19, 3/28/19, 4/4/19, 4/11/19
“Just Desserts” (3/14/19)
Los Angeles Times Sunday Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis
“I CANDY” By JEFFREY WECHSLER ACROSS 1 Stationery item with printed margin lines 9 Arrive with a flourish 16 Artistic dynasty 20 Haydn’s “The Creation,” for one 21 Casual beer order 22 Suzette’s gal pal 23 Ryder Cup twoman team? 25 Othello deceiver 26 MLB info 27 Virus’ protein shell 28 Moved with effort 30 Bunk array 31 Cinque e uno 33 Gooey treat 34 Locally organized event with rides and games? 41 Photogenic expanse 44 Copied, oldstyle 45 Wilder’s “__ Town” 46 Occultist symbol 50 Lazy ones 51 Little ones 52 Look too closely? 53 Rhyme scheme in Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” 54 Boop frame 55 Blunt, as reality 57 Zagreb native 58 Biblical mount 59 Cad 60 Pass 62 Don of talk radio 63 Choir group 66 Signpost signaling farmland? 70 Evening, in ads 71 Kale unit 72 Memorial __ Kettering: NYC hospital 73 Less than right? 75 Unthreatening 76 Sewing cases 78 Brush brand 79 Rock bass supplier? 82 “The __ that men do lives after them”: Antony 83 Wang of fashion 84 Some beer orders, initially 86 Immature insects 88 Moved 90 Okinawa okay
29 Open org. 30 Fish-and-chips fish 32 “No need to shout” 34 Banking org. since 1933 35 One might run an errand 36 “__ take a while” 37 GPS datum 38 “Too little payment __ great a debt”: Shak. 39 Relax between games 40 Union title? 42 Visiting the Griffith Observatory, say 43 Editor’s mark 46 Place for a rocker 47 Spider-Man films director 48 In the area of 49 Cleric’s residence 51 They work on books 56 How to talk to the hand?: Abbr.
91 “Just watch me!” 92 More clement 93 Source of Capitol Hill water? 95 Europe’s longest river 98 Vulcano of “Impractical Jokers” 100 Stare openmouthed 101 Frozen treats 104 City near Mount Rainier 106 Exemplar of corporate malfeasance 111 Medical lab liquids 112 Overworked employee at a desert diner? 116 Wells people 117 Words of desperation, perhaps 118 Metaphorical scrutiny, in modern lingo 119 Nursery staple 120 Charge for using 121 Took stock of
DOWN 1 Cut 2 Times to remember 3 Track pace 4 Big name in razors 5 Hit in the 7-Down 6 They know the ropes 7 See 5-Down 8 Many a late ’90s startup 9 Leaves the office for a bit 10 WWII females 11 Plaza Hotel imp 12 Get away from 13 __ favor 14 Part of MIT: Abbr. 15 At no time, poetically 16 Periodical for some Downton Abbey employees? 17 Mature insect 18 Neighbor of Chad 19 Crystal-bearing rock 24 One holding a derby?
4/14/19
xwordeditor@aol.com
Classifieds 3
57 “The Godfather” actor 59 Only bucket you’ll ever need? 60 Genesis grandson 61 Clandestine org. 63 Transmogrify, e.g. 64 Get going 65 Sri Lankan people 67 Homeric epic 68 2010 health law: Abbr. 69 Airport serving Washington 74 Ski resort helpers 76 Pre-hurricane emergency op 77 Footballer’s tool, in France 78 Literally, “folding paper” 79 Sports shoe brand 80 Star trek figures? 81 Low-level laborer 84 Saigon soup 85 Ram 87 Sleep stage
89 91 93 94 95 96 97 99 102 103 105 106 107 108 109 110 113 114 115
“See you later!” Old-school “cool” Artist Monet Its capital is Kigali Carpentry shop gadgets Kitchen sponge brand The king of France? Old-time actor Lew February forecaster from Punxsutawney Sound measure Make woolens, say They’re woolly Travel pillow spot Clears (of) Redding of blues “Party of Five” actress Campbell In-flight drink option Some appliances Like most of Denmark’s flag
©2019 Tribune Content Agency, LLC. ThE arGONaUT PaGE 39
March 21, 2019
Stephanie Younger Group 310.499.2020 stephanieyounger.com DRE 01365696
Just Listed 8344 Kenyon Avenue Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 8344KenyonAve.com 3 bed | 2 bath | $1,350,000 Join us this Sunday at our brand new listing at 8344 Kenyon Avenue in Westchester for the chance to enter our PELOTON™ bike sweepstakes! Terms and conditions apply.
6568 West 85th Place Open Saturday and Sunday 2 - 5pm 6568W85thPl.com 3 Bed | 3 Bath | $1,289,000
8120 Saran Drive Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 8120SaranDr.com 4 Bed | 5 Bath | $2,339,000
2037 Walgrove Avenue Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 2037WalgroveAve.com 3 Bed | 1.5 Bath | $1,299,000
7833 Naylor Avenue Open Sunday 2 - 5pm 7833NaylorAve.com 3 Bed | 2 Bath | $1,049,000
6376 West 78th Street Shown by Appointment 6376W78thSt.com 5 Bed | 5 Bath | $3,595,000
3412 Palm Avenue - DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY Shown by Appointment 3412PalmAve.com 6 Bed | 6 Bath | Call for more information
COMING SOON
6456 West 84th Street 3 Bed | 2 Bath
COMING SOON
COMING SOON
5625 Crescent Park West #207, Playa Vista 2 Bed | 2 Bath
7620 Stetson Avenue 4 Bed | 4 Bath
Compass is a licensed real estate broker (01991628) in the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only. Information is compiled from sources deemed reliable but is subject to errors, omissions, changes in price, condition, sale, or withdraw without notice.
Proud supporter of LMU Athletics
March 21, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 41
The Real Estate Consultants seeks to instill the principle of civic responsibility and the importance of giving back to our community. “Community” It’s what we are. It’s where we are.
FREE SHREDDING & E-WASTE COLLECTION DAY!
O P E N H O U S E S U N DAY 1 - 4 Gorgeous 1+1 loft, corner unit with lots of light, indoor/outdoor living space with collapsible doors to x-large patio. Concrete floors & construction provide energy efficiency & sound insulation that you will not find in other buildings!
SATURDAY April 6, 2019 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM DROP OFF:
The Real Estate Consultants/Chase Bank Parking Lot 7151 W. Manchester Los Angeles, CA 90045 For more information contact:
310-642-7653
Proceeds Benefiting The Westchester/Playa Education Foundation
REAL ESTATE OPEN HOUSE & PET ADOPTION EVENT New Price of $899,000 Sponsored by Lotus Estate Properties
4141 Glencoe AveStreet, • #209Marina • Marina del Rey Where: 17 Privateer Peninsula When: Sunday, February 17th from 1:00 to 4:00 p.m.
Time to clean out your garage, closets, storage! Bring your old paper documents for shredding while you watch! Bring your unwanted, obsolete or non-working electronics from home or office and We will take: all paper documents including staples & clips recycle them! for onsite shredding. Computer monitors, TVs, computers,
incredible details throughout. Rare single-family home on Ma4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, sexy rina Peninsula! Stunning tri-level ocean view master suite, massive front patiofamily & spectacular roof with ocean single home deck with 360° views. Half block views steps to the sand. to the sand. A rare offering.
Offered at $3,985,000
laptops, cell phones, telecom equipment, wire/cable, PC boards, scrap metal, computer mouse, keyboards, printers, fax & copy machines, toner and ink cartridges, stereo equipment, DVD/CD/MP3 players, microwave ovens, small appliances and more.
OFFERED FOR $3,985,000
Delaney's Dog Rescue is a volunteer run non-profit 501(c)(3) all breed dog rescue organization
310.701.2407 · Lisa@LisaPhillipsEsq.com www.LisaPhillipsRealEstate.com CA Bureau of Real Estate License #01189413
No: fluorescent lights, alkaline batteries, propane tanks, helium tanks, chemical storage containers or smoke detectors.
2 bed + 2 ba $3,800/mo
COME MEET ALL THE DOGS
BIG AND SMALL 17 Privateer Street WHO NEED HOMES Stunning nearly new modern Marina del Rey Mediterranean tri-level home with
17 PRIVATEER STREET
A percentage of all sales commissions go to the charitable organization of clients’ choice!
#1 in Marina City Club SaleS
Marina del Rey Peninsula 3 bed + 2 ba
Marina City Club 2 bed + 2 ba
$2,150,000
$589,900
Just Sold 3 bed + 3.5 ba 3 bed + 2.5 ba 3 bed + 2 ba 2 bed + 2 ba
$2,000,000 $1,400,000 $1,079,000 $840,000
Silver Strand lot Marina del Rey 2,898 sq. ft. Lot
$1,495,000
Marina City Club 3 bed + 2 ba
$759,000
Marina City Club 1 bed + 1 ba
$570,000
Marina City Club 1 bed + 1.5 ba
$560,000
For Lease
In Escrow
1 bed + 1 ba $3,500/mo
1 bed + 1 ba 2 bed + 2 ba
charleslederman@aol.com
www.MarinaCityrealty.com
Call today for a free appraisal!
PAGE 42 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section MArch 21, 2019
JUST LISTED 3609 ESPLANADE, MARINA DEL REY 4,215 SQ.FT. 4 BD & 3.5 BA $3,288,000 www.Esplanade3609.com
JUST LISTED 13700 MARINA POINTE DR. #1629, MDR 3 BD & 3.5 BA + DEN 2,099 SQ.FT. www.Azzurra1629.com $2,549,000
OPEN SUN 2-5 6384 80TH PL., WESTCHESTER 3 BD & 3 BA 1,813 SQ.FT. www.638480th.com $1,399,000
OPEN SUN 2-5 4350 GLENCOE AVE. #2, MARINA DEL REY 2 BD & 2.5 BA 1,544 SQ.FT. $1,079,000 www.4350Glencoe.com
JUST LISTED 6400 CRESCENT PARK #219, PLAYA VISTA 2 BD & 2 BA 1,210 SQ.FT. $869,000 www.Waterstone219.com
OPEN SUN 2-5 7525 COASTAL VIEW DR., WESTCHESTER 5 BD & 5.5 BA + CASITA 5,175 SQ.FT. $3,250,000 www.7525CoastalView.com
JUST LISTED 4253 BEETHOVEN ST., MAR VISTA 3 BD & 2 BA 1,245 SQ.FT. $1,499,000 www.4253Beethoven.com
OPEN SUN 2-5 13082 MINDANAO WAY #17, MARINA DEL REY 2 BD & 2 BA 1,839 SQ.FT. $1,199,000 www.13082Mindanao.com
IN ESCROW 13131 MINDANAO WAY #2, MARINA DEL REY 2 BD & 2.5 BA 1,544 SQ.FT. $1,069,995 www.13131Mindanao.com
IN ESCROW 13044 PACIFIC PROMENADE #305, PLAYA VISTA 2 BD & 2 BA 1,093 SQ.FT. $799,000 www.Promenade305.com
JUST LISTED 13650 MARINA POINTE DR. #1805, MDR 2 BD & 2.5 BA + OFFICE 2,904 SQ.FT. www.Cove1805.com $2,995,000
IN ESCROW 5856 KIYOT WAY, PLAYA VISTA 3 BD & 3.5 BA 2,376 SQ.FT. www.5856Kiyot.com $1,475,000
JUST LISTED 13600 MARINA POINTE DR. #1414, MDR 1 BD & 1.5 BA + DEN 1,720 SQ.FT. $1,179,000
OPEN SUN 2-5 4730 LA VILLA MARINA #L, MARINA DEL REY 2 BD & 2.5 BA 1,456 SQ.FT. www.VillaImperia.com $995,000
JUST LISTED 13700 MARINA POINTE DR. #822, MDR 1 BD & 1 BA 859 SQ.FT. www.Azzurra822.com $768,000
OPEN SUN 2-5 201 WATERVIEW ST., PLAYA DEL REY 3 BD & 2.5 BA + LOFT 2,775 SQ.FT. $2,850,000 www.201Waterview.com
IN ESCROW 1374 ROSE AVE., VENICE 4 BD & 2 BA 2,300 SQ.FT. www.1374Rose.com $1,439,000
JUST LISTED 13600 MARINA POINTE DR. #303, MDR 2 BD & 2.5 BA 1,855 SQ.FT. www.303Regatta.com $1,125,000
OPEN SUN 2-5 13080 PACIFIC PROMENADE #210, PLAYA VISTA 2 BD & 2 BA 1,289 SQ.FT. $899,000 www.Esplanade210.com
IN ESCROW 8738 DELGANY AVE. #205, PLAYA DEL REY 2 BD & 2 BA 1,105 SQ.FT. www.8738Delgany.com $615,000
March 21, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 43
Proud Sponsor of DRALL - Del Rey American Little League
Era Matilla rEalty 225 CulvEr Blvd. Playa dEl rEy
Manager BrE#1323411
The ArgonAuT open houses open
Address
Broker assoc. BrE#01439943
Deadline: TUESDAY NOON. Call (310) 822-1629 for Open House forms Your listing will also appear at argonautnews.com
Bd/BA
price
Agent
compAny
phone
3/3 Mid-century home w/ views of DTLA
$1,215,000
Lockhart & Ruttenburg
Compass
424-354-4224
5/4 Custom built Spanish-style home 3/3 Impeccable Vet’s Park home w/ guest home 3/2 Remodeled Westside home 3/3 Gorgeous Culver City home 4/5 New Construction Carlson Park home 3/1 Culver City home on large lot 3/2 West Culver City home with detached office
$1,999,000 $1,999,000 $1,349,000 $1,489,000 $2,699,000 $1,349,000 $1,349,000
Todd Miller Todd Miller Todd Miller Todd Miller Todd Miller Todd Miller Todd Miller
KW Santa Monica KW Santa Monica KW Santa Monica KW Santa Monica KW Santa Monica KW Santa Monica KW Santa Monica
310-923-5353 310-923-5353 310-923-5353 310-923-5353 310-923-5353 310-923-5353 310-923-5353
4/3 Brand new, open floor layout, rooftop deck 4/3.5 Brand new, open floor layout, rooftop deck 2/1 Plus office space, new updates with modern fixtures and oak floors 5/2 Detached 2 car garage + RV parking space, large yard 4/4 End unit, completely remodeled, open floor layout
$1,539,000 $1,599,000 $999,000 $1,499,000 $1,299,000
Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane Bill Ruane
RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties
310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374 310-877-2374
3/3.5 New construction townhomes, open floor plan
$539,000+
Bill Ruane
RE/MAX Estate Properties
310-877-2374
3/3.5 Twnhme corner lot, amazing ocean views, open floor plan
$3,049,000
Bill Ruane
RE/MAX Estate Properties
310-877-2374
2/2.5 Renovated townhome in Silicon Beach 2/2.5 Extensively renovated end-unit townhome 2/2 Stunning patio home in heart of Silicon Beach 4/2.5 Enjoy privacy & security in this luxuriously remodeled home 3/1.75 Beautifully remodeled home in sought-after Oxford Triangle 2/2 High style & luxury, remodeled Villa Marina East IV
$1,079,000 $995,000 $1,199,000 $2,268,000 $1,600,000 $1,099,000
Jesse Weinberg Jesse Weinberg Jesse Weinberg Denise Fast Denise Fast Bob Waldron & Jessica Heredia
KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach RE/MAX Estate Properties RE/MAX Estate Properties Coldwell Banker & PLG Estates
800-804-9132 800-804-9132 800-804-9132 310-578-5414 310-578-5414 424-235-5377
2037 Walgrove Ave.
3/2 2037WalgroveAve.com
$1,299,000
Stephanie Younger
Compass
310-499-2020
10744 Westminister Ave.
3/2 Gorgeous Westside home with artistic touches
$1,489,000
Todd Miller
KW Santa Monica
310-923-5353
3/2 Ocean view duplex on Playa del Rey’s first hill 3/3 Two-story townhome with views of the Marina 1/1 Updated private condo in Cross Creek Village 4/5 8120SaranDr.com 3/3 Enjoy unobstructed panoramic views
$2,289,000 $1,575,000 $455,000 $2,399,000 $2,850,000
Tom Corte & Dana Wright James Suarez James Suarez Stephanie Younger Jesse Weinberg & Vivian Lesny
ERA Matilla Realty KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach Compass KW Silicon Beach
310-578-7777 310-862-1761 310-862-1761 310-499-2020 800-804-9132
7100 Playa Vista Dr. #219 5935 Playa Vista Dr. #301 13080 Pacific Promenade #210
2/2 Coronado complex, 1,210 sq ft w/ bonus room 2/2 www.5935playavista301.com 2/2 Single level corner unit w/ amazing open floor plan
$929,000 $925,000 $899,000
Charles Fisher James Suarez Jesse Weinberg & Vivian Lesny
RE/MAX Estate Properties KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach
310-902-7214 310-862-1761 800-804-9132
1026 Rose Ave. 6 Voyage St. #103
4/2 Golf course view home w/ private pool 2/2 Extensively renovated ocean front condo
$1,999,000 $1,699,000
Berman/Kandel Jesse Weinberg
RE/MAX Estate Properties KW Silicon Beach
310-424-5512 800-804-9132
3/3.5 Kentwood remodel w/ permitted garage conversion (ADU) 5/3 www.7410elmanor.com 2/1 www.6369w83rd.com 5/4 Newly built 3,046 sf modern farmhouse 9/6 www.7800airport.com 4/4 www.8139naylor.com 5/5 Gorgeous home in One Westbluff offers great amenities & views 3/2 Updated open floor home in Loyola Village 2/2 www.7886truxtonave.com 3/2 8344KeyonAve.com 3/3 6568W85thPl.com 3/2 7833NaylorAve.com 3/3 Recently renovated light & bright Kentwood home 6/5.5 Stunning Mediterranean house on corner lot 4/3 Charming North Kentwood home on large lot 3/1 Oversized 9,990 sf corner lot in Westport Heights
$1,799,000 $1,660,000 $1,195,000 $2,195,000 $1,950,000 $1,650,000 $3,200,000 $1,248,000 $985,000 $1,350,000 $1,289,000 $1,049,000 $1,399,000 $3,250,000 $1,475,000 $975,000
Carla Zeoli James Suarez James Suarez Bob Waldron & Jessica Heredia James Suarez James Suarez Berman/Kandel Karin Hollink Mira Bharadwa & Debbie Castner Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger Stephanie Younger Jesse Weinberg & Vivian Lesny Jesse Weinberg Bob Waldron & Jessica Heredia Bob Waldron & Jessica Heredia
RE/MAX Estate Properties KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach Coldwell Banker & PLG Estates KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach RE/MAX Estate Properties Coldwell Banker TREC Compass Compass Compass KW Silicon Beach KW Silicon Beach Coldwell Banker & PLG Estates Coldwell Banker & PLG Estates
310-803-7087 310-862-1761 310-862-1761 424-235-5377 310-862-1761 310-862-1761 310-424-5512 310-804-5966 310-308-1436 310-499-2020 310-499-2020 310-499-2020 800-804-9132 800-804-9132 424-235-5377 424-235-5377
BAldwin hills Sun 2-5
4308 Don Diablo Dr.
culver city Sun 2-5 11337 Nina Pl. Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5
10817 Lindblade St. 4422 Berryman Ave. 4404 Elenda St. 4133 Vinton Ave. 4016 Albright Ave. 4348 Moore St
el segundo Sat, Sun 2-4 Sat, Sun 2–4 Sun 2-4 Sun 2-4 Sun 2-4
406 W. Grand Ave. 412 W. Grand Ave. 617 Loma Vista St. 412 Concord St. 305 Kansas Street Unit D
lennox Sun 2-4
5053 W. 109th Street #1, 7, 12
mAnhAttAn BeAch Sun 2-4
300 28th St #1
mArinA del rey Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 1:30-4
4350 Glencoe Ave. #2 4730 La Villa Marina #L 13082 Mindanao Way #17 862 Burrell St. 3028 Thatcher Ave. 13078 Mindanao Way #206
mAr vistA Sun 2-5
pAlms Sun 2-5
plAyA del rey Sun 12-4 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5
7325 Rindge Ave. 355 Pershing Dr #A 7777 W 91st #E2137 8120 Saran Dr. 201 Waterview St.
plAyA vistA Sat, Sun 1-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5
venice Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5
westchester Sat, Sun 1-4 Sat, Sun 2-5 Sat, Sun 2-5 Sat, Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5 Sun 2-5
6345 85th Pl. 7410 El Manor Ave. 6369 W. 83rd St. 8045 Dunbarton Ave. 7800-7802 Airport Blvd. 8139 Naylor Ave. 7545 Coastal View Dr. 8433 Holy Cross Pl. 7886 Truxton Ave. 8344 Kenyon Ave. 6568 West 85th Pl. 7833 Naylor Ave. 6384 W. 80th Pl. 7525 Coastal View Dr. 6301 W 77th Pl. 7815 Yorktown Ave.
Open House Directory listings are published inside The Argonaut’s At Home section and on The Argonaut’s Web site each Thursday. Open House directory forms may be emailed to KayChristy@argonautnews.com. To be published, Open House directory form must be completely and correctly filled out and received no later than 3pm Tuesday for Thursday publication. Changes or corrections must also be received by 3pm Tuesday. Regretfully, due to the volume of Open House Directory forms received each week, The Argonaut cannot publish or respond to Open House directory forms incorrectly or incompletely filled out. The Argonaut reserves the right to reject, edit, and/or cancel any advertisng at any time. Only publication of an Open House Directory listing consitutes final acceptance of an advertiser’s order.
PAGE 44 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section MArch 21, 2019
BRIAN CHRISTIE CONGRATULATED Phil Gilboy, Broker/Owner of The Real Estate Consultants, congratulated Brian Christie of the Agents in Action! team for achieving Quality Service Certified Platinum status for the 13th consecutive year. QSC Platinum is the highest level of service achievement in the real estate industry based on independently validated customer satisfaction survey results. Brian’s impeccable reviews places him in the top 2% of real estate agents in North America based on overall client satisfaction. To learn more about the benefits of hiring a QSC real estate professional, visit www.qualityservice.org or call Brian Christie at (310) 910-0120.
The ArgonAuT PRess Releases dream lifestyle
“Live the Silicon Beach lifestyle in this three-bed, three-bath, multi-level home,” says agent Stephanie Younger. “An engaging geometric facade welcomes you into the first-floor flexible living space. Continue upstairs to the bright second floor, featuring a contemporary kitchen, an open-concept dining and formal living space. The third floor boasts a serene and spacious master suite. Finally, a staircase leads to the rooftop deck with beautiful panoramic views. Don’t miss this truly unique property overflowing with taste and detail situated in an astounding location.” Offered at $1,289,000 Stephanie Younger Compass 310-499-2020
marina strand Colony
“This rare townhome is minutes to beach, restaurants, the Venice Boardwalk and the Pier,” say agents Bob and Cheryl Herrera. “Its first floor is graced with a dramatic floor- toceiling fireplace, soaring ceilings with recessed lights, large windows, two large patios, and the powder room. Upstairs are two large bedrooms, both with en-suite bathrooms and enclosed balconies. Other features include inside laundry, storage areas, and two side-by-side parking spaces by elevator.” Offered at $1,199,000 Bob & Cheryl Herrera PRES 310-578-0332
Impressive Playa Vista Condo 1-5 en S u n p O & S at
7100 Playa Vista Dr. #219 Playa Vista CA 90094 Living is easy in this 2 bed, 2 bath single-level condo at the Coronado complex. Beautiful and warm hardwood floors welcome you as you walk in with the home’s open and airy layout. The kitchen exudes modern elegance with wood cabinetry, pristine granite countertops, stainless steel appliances and a breakfast bar. With an open and accommodating floor plan, the den can be the perfect space for a guest room, office or play area. The oversized master bedroom flows into the master bath with dual vanity sinks, a soaking tub, a separate shower and a large walk-in closet. The spacious balcony great for entertaining guests and setting up a BBQ with chairs. This home is ideally positioned to enjoy all Playa Vista has to offer. Offered at $929,000
Charles Fisher 310-902-7214
Stunning Kentwood Home
townhome in marina del rey
“This gorgeous 2 bed, 2.5 bath has been extensively remodeled,” says agent Jesse Weinberg. “Spacious open floor plan with recessed LED lighting through out, sliding glass doors that open up to an expansive patio. The newly remodeled kitchen features Jenn Air appliances, new custom cabinets, quartz counter-tops and new custom porcelain tile floors. The complex has a sauna, a salt-water pool that is heated most of the year, beautifully maintained landscaping and earth quake insurance. Close to waterside shopping, trendy restaurants, dine-in movies and nearby beaches.” Offered at $995,000 Jesse Weinberg & Mimi Sin KW Silicon Beach 800-804-9132
live at the BeaCh
“Enjoy this gorgeous ocean front penthouse, with panoramic views on an idyllic white-sand beach,” says agent Charles Lederman. “Enter this two-story, second floor walk-up into an inviting open living space with vaulted ceilings and gas fireplace. The open kitchen includes custom cabinetry and all new appliances. Also on the main floor is a spacious guest bedroom and full bath. Upstairs is the open master bedroom loft with ocean views, and a rooftop deck, to enjoy your Marina Peninsula location.” $2,150,000 Charles Lederman Charles Lederman & Associates 310-821-8980
Open Sat & Sun 1-4 • 6345 W. 85th Place, Westchester 90045 Total rebuilt home in great Westchester neighborhood. 3 bedroom, 3.5 bath. Contemporary, spacious, open floor plan. Beautiful hardwood floors, vaulted ceilings, LED recessed lighting, two stunning fireplaces, in family room and living room. Gourmet kitchen with SS appliances, wine cooler, quartz counter tops, huge island, farmhouse sink, and large pantry. Master suite with gas fireplace, walk-in closet (Elfa System), dual vanities, massive shower, and sliders to back yard. Two additional bedrooms each with own bath. New central heat/AC, Milgard dual paned windows, tankless water heater. Garage has been converted to ADU (accessory dwelling unit) with separate address, reinforced foundation and all new framing. Stone composite flooring, full kitchen, huge shower, sliders, Dutch door, tankless water heater, Bateman Construction. $1,799,000
C a r l a Ze o l i 310-803-7007
estate Properties
March 21, 2019 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section PAGE 45
Bob Waldron 310.780.0864
www.bobwaldron.com DRE# 00416026
Coldwell Banker
Jessica Heredia
©2017 Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corporation. Coldwell Banker is a registered trademark licensed to Coldwell Banker Real Estate Corporation. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Owned and Operated by NRT Incorporated. Coldwell Banker does not guarantee the accuracy of square footage, lot size or other information concerning the condition or features of property provided by the seller or obtained from public records or other sources, and the buyer is advised to independently verify the accuracy of that information through personal inspection and with appropriate professionals.
310.913.8112
www.jessicaheredia.com DRE #01349369
PLG Estates
JUST LISTED! OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1:30PM-4:00PM
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2:00PM-5:00PM
13078 MINDANAO WAY #206, MARINA DEL REY 90292 6301 W. 77TH PLACE, WESTCHESTER 90045
High style and luxury meet in this completely remodeled, 2 bedroom, 2 baths, 1,929 square foot condo located in one of the Marina’s premier communities. $1,099,000
JUST LISTED! OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2:00PM-5:00PM
OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY & SUNDAY 2:00PM-5:00PM
This charming 4 bedroom, 3 bath and 2,280 square foot home sits on a large lot in coveted North Kentwood! $1,475,000
7815 YORKTOWN AVENUE, WESTCHESTER 90045
8045 DUNBARTON AVENUE, WESTCHESTER 90045 Experience the charming grandeur of this newly built 5 bedroom/ 4 bath, 3,046 square foot modern farmhouse situated in Westchester’s coveted Kentwood neighborhood. $2,195,000
Endless possibilities awaits this original home in Wetstport Heights on a large 9,989 square foot lot! $975,000
Bob Herrera BRE 00910859 Cheryl Herrera BRE 01332794
WHY NOT SAVE $10,000-$40,000
*
* For every $1,000,000
For THE SAME Full Service!!! Over $2 Million Saved in Commissions. Here’s how we do it. We don’t have to split the sales commission or pay a broker an annual fee as Bob Herrera is the broker, so we pass the savings on to YOU the Seller. 1 % T O 4 % C O M M I S S I O N ** · O V E R $ 2 M I L L I O N S A V E D I N C O M M I S S I O N S · 4 0 0 + H O M E S S O L D L O C A L LY · 3 2 Y E A R S E X P E R I E N C E **Participating brokers receive 2.5% of the 4% call for complete details. Savings based on the industry standard 5% sales commission.
NE
G TIN
W
LIS
List Price: $789,000 NEEDS TLC, 4561 Alla Rd., #4, 2+2, apx. 1,153 sf
FO R
S LE A
E
List Price $4,800 13224 Admiral Ave D, 3+2.5, 2,000 sf
PAGE 46 At Home – THE ARGONAUT’s Real Estate Section MArch 21, 2019
IN
R ESC
OW
List Price $579,000 4337 Marina City Drive, #1041, 2+2 apx. 1,500 sf
IN
R ESC
OW
List Price $1,199,000 3950 Via Dolce, #508, 2+2.5 apx. 2,100 sf
THE PERFECT PLACE TO MEET AND EAT. MENDOCINO FARMS
SUGARFISH BY SUSHI NOZAWA
SWEETGREEN
KREATION ORGANIC
FRESH BROTHERS
DRYBAR
SEE’S CANDIES
CALIFORNIA PIZZA KITCHEN
SEPHORA
RAINBOW ACRES
HAVAIANAS
PAPER SOURCE
MAINLAND POKE SHOP
EVERYTHING BUT WATER
WILLIAM B + FRIEND
AMAZON BOOKS
BEAUTY COLLECTION
SHOPWATERSIDE.COM
|
818.637.8921
|
SHAKE SHACK
COMING SOON
4700 ADMIRALTY WAY, MARINA DEL REY, CA 90292