November 2021
Fine living in the greater Pasadena area
Rare Find
TERRACES AT AMBASSADOR GARDENS COMBINES MODERN LUXURY WITH HISTORIC CHARM
'HEAD OVER HEELS' LEA DELARIA IS MAD ABOUT HER LATEST PROJECT
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VOLUME 17 | NUMBER 11 | NOVEMBER 2021
Stop Fighting With Your Sliding Door
06 06 Rare Find
Terraces at Ambassador Gardens combines modern luxury with historic charm —By Kamala Kirk
10 Shields Up
Post Alarm continues reputation for safety with Night Shield —By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
12 A Carefully Cultivated Craft
Dan Santat worked through love and loss with art —By Lynda Lin Grigsby
16 Family Ties
Pasadena Humane strives to keep animals with their pet parents —By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
20 The Strength Shoppe
Staff pushes clients in nontraditional exercise form —By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
24 Suzy’s Sweets Boutique
Refined goodies are kept close to the vest —By Frier McCollister
30 ‘Head Over Heels’
Lea DeLaria is mad about her latest project —By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
34 Putting the Artist First
Indie Lauretta Records has major-label power —By Christina Fuoco-Karasinski
38 Vroman’s Live
Bookstore boasts stellar lineup for November —By Arroyo Staff
DEPARTMENTS
28 CULINARY CUPBOARD Cherries, Chocolate, and the Crack of Dawn
arroyo
fine living in the greater pasadena area
EXECUTIVE EDITOR Christina Fuoco-Karasinski ART DIRECTOR Stephanie Torres CONTRIBUTORS Allison Brown, Emily Chavez, Kamala Kirk, Lynda Lin Grigsby, Frier McCollister PHOTOGRAPHERS Luis Chavez, Chris Mortenson, Tina Turnbow, Sarah Stone ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES Lisa Chase, Catherine Holloway, Michael Lamb OFFICE MANAGER Ann Turrietta
TIMES MEDIA GROUP PRESIDENT Steve Strickbine V.P. OF OPERATIONS Michael Hiatt ASSOCIATE PUBLISHER Zac Reynolds CONTACT US EDITORIAL christina@timespublications.com PHONE (626) 584-1500 FAX (626) 795-0149 MAILING ADDRESS PO Box 1349, South Pasadena, CA 91031 ArroyoMonthly.com ©2021 Times Media Group All rights reserved.
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F E AT U R E
Find RARE
TERRACES AT AMBASSADOR GARDENS COMBINES MODERN LUXURY WITH HISTORIC CHARM
Outdoor living spaces are abundant at Terraces.
Floor plans are expansive and live like single-family homes.
aving a beautiful and comfortable home is more important now than ever. A home serves as the ultimate personal sanctuary, offering a place of comfort, refuge and a direct connection to one’s well-being. For those in search of the perfect place to call home in Pasadena, Terraces at Ambassador Gardens features a limited collection of premium luxury residences by Etco Homes in a prime location just steps away from Old Town Pasadena. Residents of Terraces enjoy unlimited access to worldclass shopping, dining and entertainment, including Ambassador Auditorium — home of the Pasadena Symphony — which is a two-minute walk from Terraces. “Pasadena is rich with history and home to world-renowned arts and entertainment venues like Norton Simon Museum, which is right across the street from us,” says Bree Long, senior vice president of sales and marketing at Etco Homes. “We’re very close to The Huntington Library and Descanso Gardens as well. Terraces at Ambassador Gardens sits amidst a historical neighborhood, and the world-famous Rose Parade goes down our street every year. We are literally a stone’s throw from Old Pasadena and Colorado Boulevard, which has so many beautiful retail shops and restaurants. Because of our close proximity to the 134 and 210 Freeway corridors, our residents can easily access other neighborhoods and cities.” One of the most unique features is Ambassador Gardens, the picturesque 34-acre garden setting that serves as the backdrop at Terraces. Located on the former Ambassador College campus, the grounds are home to a range of stunning plants and rare trees including native oaks, giant cedars and jasmine. Residents can enjoy a peaceful stroll across the expansive lawns surrounded by beautiful scenery such as koi ponds, stone-lined streams and a reflecting pool. “The historic Ambassador Gardens are over a century old and protected by the city of Pasadena and Historic Society,” Long says. “It has rare species of trees that were originally brought over as status symbols for the original owners of the historic mansions that are located along the side of Ambassador Gardens. The trees have been beautifully preserved and are a focal point of the community.” Built in 2018, the brand-new and sophisticated residences at Terraces range from 2,616 to 4,430 square feet and include singlelevel condos, tri-level townhomes and penthouses. The ultraspacious condos include an open-concept great room and floor-toceiling walls of glass that fold open to a private patio or terrace. Each townhome has a private elevator, a great room that opens to a terrace, and a third level that offers a wet bar and media room with glass doors that lead to a private or roof terrace. In addition to expansive roof terraces with views of the surrounding gardens, the penthouses offer soaring ceilings and light-filled great rooms with stairs that lead to an airy mezzanine. The modernized units are outfitted with state-of-the-art amenities and design features that include Sub-Zero appliances, walk-in continued on page 8
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BY KAMALA KIRK
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We Are Buying
Watches, Jewelry, Diamonds Rubies, Sapphires, Emeralds Gold, Platinum and Silver Bring Your
We Buy
Vintage & Modern Jewelry
American Coins & Paper Money
Sterling Silverware & Tea Sets and Trays
Old Pasadena Memorabilia Rare Books & Documents
Wrist Watches & Pocket Watches
Free verbal appraisals and fair, competitive offers on your items. The value of old, broken or out of fashion jewelry adds up faster than you think. Clean up that jewery box! Get rid of unused inherited items and things from past relationships. Trade in old pieces for new designers we carry in our store like Pomellato, Pasquale Bruni, Ginette NY, Dinh Van, Persee and Le Gramme. Place Vendome Jewelers 48 Hugus Alley Pasadena CA 91103 Located in Old Town Pasadena in the One Colorado Courtyard
Please call for a private appointment. 626-577-7001
Department of Justice Secondhand Dealer License #001583, City of Pasadena Permit #11436642 11.21 | ARROYO | 7
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Gourmet kitchens include designer appliances. Many residences include rooftop decks.
Primary bathroom suites showcase luxury appointments.
Historic grounds surround the Terraces.
closets, open-concept chef’s kitchens with islands, bi-fold glass doors and en-suite bathrooms. Every home at Terraces is appointed with the finest materials and finishes that have been handselected by renowned designers. “One of the things that Etco Homes is known for is customization, especially in kitchens and bathrooms,” Long says. “There is a lot of customized tile work and individualized details that vary between each home, and there are many different features and color palettes that homebuyers can select from our remaining units. These homes really lend themselves for entertaining with folding glass doors that create a seamless indoor-outdoor living experience. Living in Pasadena, we have such a special opportunity to enjoy a great climate year-round and our penthouse units with rooftop living rooms are a luxury that our homeowners really appreciate.” Residents at Terraces also enjoy a multitude of exclusive onsite amenities ranging from a resort-style community pool and free one-year Equinox gym membership to top-of-the-line security features and a lifestyle concierge that caters to every need, whether it’s booking dog walking services or reserving a personal chef. Terraces is the last new construction development to be built on Ambassador Gardens grounds, and there are only 20 remaining units left for homebuyers to purchase. “We had a really great response in the early days of our sales process with people really embracing the community and convenience of the lifestyle that Terraces offers,” Long points out. “Our homeowners have been really happy here and enjoy being part of this community. They love the ease of being able to get around, walk their pets in the gardens and engage with their neighbors. Many of them love the convenience of being able to lock their homes up whenever they want to travel and knowing it’ll be safe, secure and cared for while they’re away. Terraces offers the comfort of a single-family home without the burden of owning one.” Long says Terraces attracts a wide range of homebuyers, from young professionals to retirees, but the common thread that ties their community’s owners together is a shared love of all the great things that the location and surrounding area has to offer in terms of its rich history and access to culture and entertainment. “While we only have 20 units remaining, there is still an opportunity for homebuyers to select the best of what we have available,” Long says. “We’d love to invite anyone who is interested to come down so that we can give them a peek at what life at Terraces and in the heart of Pasadena looks like.” For more information, visit pasadenaperfected.com.
Photos submitted
continued from page 6
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Less Than
R E MAI N
THE FINAL OPPORTUNITY to buy a new home among century old gardens in beautiful Pasadena. The Terraces’ plans offer the feel of a single-family home with lock-&-leave security. Final move-in ready residences are selling from the low $2MM. CALL FOR A PRIVATE APPOINTMENT
626.304.0359 | PasadenaPerfected.com SALES GALLERY OPEN DAILY (10AM – 5PM)
328 W. Green Street, #100, Pasadena, CA 91105 WALLS, WINDOWS, PATIOS AND ROOF TERRACES VARY PER ELEVATION AND LOT LOCATION. ALL ILLUSTRATIONS ARE ARTIST’S CONCEPTS, ARE NOT TO SCALE AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE IN ACTUAL PRODUCTION. SQUARE FOOTAGES ARE APPROXIMATE. BUILDER HAS THE RIGHT TO CHANGE SQUARE FOOTAGE, PLANS AND PRICING WITHOUT NOTICE. ©2021 ETCO HOMES. CALDRE LICENSE NO. 01878688.
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F E AT U R E
Post Alarm’s Night Shield product offers 360-degree protection, with smart security cameras that send alerts directly to the monitoring center when suspicious activity is detected.
Shields Up
POST ALARM CONTINUES REPUTATION FOR SAFETY WITH NIGHT SHIELD
amily-owned Post Alarm has a reputation for being innovative. With Night Shield, co-owners Robert Post and his sister, Gina Post-Franco, are taking it a step further. Night Shield is a relatively new product unlike any others in the market. With 360-degree protection, smart security cameras send alerts directly to the monitoring center when suspicious activity is detected. Patrol is dispatched and crime deterred. The team adheres to the company’s mantra of detect, respond and deter. “Alerts are great when you’re awake, but at night, you don’t see it,” Post says. “With Night Shield, when the alarm system is armed, we monitor between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. If a person comes on your property, our central monitoring station and patrol officers see that video and dispatch patrol.” Post himself has witnessed the efficiency of the product. Before the pandemic, Post Alarm woke Post to tell him patrol was en route and there was someone in his driveway. “I got a call on the landline at my house saying, ‘This is Post Alarm. Patrol is on the way,’” Post says. “There were people in the front yard. They caught three of four guys who were breaking into cars and mailboxes around the neighborhood.” The passion for protection runs in the family’s veins. Post Alarm was founded by Post’s grandfather, Sam, in 1956 as a patrol company. In the 1970s, Post and Post-Franco’s father, Bill, built up the alarm side of the business — commercial and residential.
“My grandpa was a chief of police in Colorado. He came out here to take a chief job, but when he got here, the job was taken,” Post says. “At the time, there was a big need for patrol companies with integrity and someone who did it right.” Post, who took over the business with his sister eight years ago, plans on keeping Post Alarm in the family. Post Alarm could be called a one-stop shop for protection. “We are a full-service company,” Post says. “We do everything in-house — installation and service. We really do care about our customers and protecting them. We are one of the most innovative companies.” The company offers month-to-month contracts in lieu of multiyear agreements required by other organizations. Service is provided from Ventura County south to just north of San Diego County. Post Alarm boasts a UL five-diamond central station. UL means it can monitor banks and jewelry stores, for example. Post Alarm is one of only a handful in the nation. The five-diamond status reflects its stellar customer service. “We are proud of our service,” Post says. “Night Shield offers this additional layer of comfort and protection overnight,” he says. “Before they get to your house or try to break in, somebody’s watching out for you. It’s a cool, whole new layer of protection.” Post Alarm postalarm.com
Photo submitted
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BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
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We don’t sleep so you can. Get 360° protection with our Night Shield® technology. Smart security cameras send alerts directly to our monitoring center when suspicious activity is detected. Patrol is dispatched, crime deterred, and your sleep? Uninterrupted.
3:14 AM Trespasser Detected
3:21 AM Patrol Arrives
3:28 AM Situation Resolved
3:40 AM Still Snoring
For details visit postalarm.com/shield or call (800) 654-7678. © 2020 Post Alarm Systems, Inc. | ACO 1843 | PPO 10170 | Contractors License: 670585
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F E AT U R E
A CAREFULLY CULTIVATED CRAFT DAN SANTAT WORKED THROUGH LOVE AND LOSS WITH ART
Dan Santat, 45, is a children’s book writer and illustrator.
This illustration is used for the cover of Dan Santat’s book “Are We There Yet?” channeling his youngest son’s side-swept hair and impatience to grow up.
an Santat’s best work as a storyteller comes when he taps into his experiences to fill the pages of children’s books. He pours himself into his work or uses a muse as a spirit animal to draw out emotions, guide the lines of his illustrations and the narrative arc of his stories. It is a carefully cultivated craft that Santat, 45, weaves in all his work as a children’s book writer and illustrator. His 2014 Caldecott Award-winning book “The Adventures of Beekle: The Unimaginary Friend” is a metaphor about the birth of his oldest son. Similarly, Santat channeled his youngest son’s side-swept hairstyle and impatience to grow up in his 2016 book “Are We There Yet?” And his heartwarming story of how Humpty Dumpty overcomes the trauma of falling off the wall in his 2017 book “After the Fall” is a love letter to wife, who battled anxiety since she was kid. For Santat, the time since “After the Fall” has been marked with contradictory presence of writer’s block and productivity. Anyone who knows Santat knows about his prolific work ethic. When not writing his own stories, he collaborates to illustrate children’s books and graphic novels. His expansive body of work — 12 books he authored and illustrated and over 120 picture and chapter books he illustrated in collaboration with other authors — can make anyone in his field shrink in his shadows. “It wouldn’t hurt for him to slow every now and then to stop making the rest of us look so lazy,” jokes Minh Lê, a writer and frequent collaborator including on the forthcoming book “The Blur.” School-age children most likely have a Santat book on their bookshelf with a profile picture of the artist bespectacled behind a shock of eyebrows. The Art Center-educated artist lives by the mantra “Be undeniably good,” a quote from actor Steve Martin. His momentum seemed unstoppable with collaborations with well-loved authors like Mo Willems, Dav Pilkey and Brad Meltzer. Then the pandemic upended the publishing world. Cue the screeching brakes sound effect. During the lockdown, buying children’s books was not top of mind for consumers, Santat says. But what the pandemic takes away, it gives back in time. The pandemic forced the world to slow down enough for the artist to finish a longsimmering personal project. Santat’s forthcoming book “Aquanauts” marks his return to the driver’s seat as his own storyteller. It is some of his most introspective work born out of the depths of the pandemic, an unexpected move from his longtime home and the loss of his dad. In March, Scholastic will release “Aquanauts,” a fantastical middle school graphic novel that Santat has been working on for 10 years. The story is about sea creatures that repurpose a diving suit into a land-walking device. “It was something that wasn’t originally personal but has now become very personal,” Santat says. The “Aquanauts” story also centers on loss and the ripples after someone passes away. He dedicated the book to his father, Adam Udom Santat, who died of liver cancer in April at 78. “It’s the only one I can really think of honoring my father,” Santat says. It’s almost been six months since his dad’s death, but he says it feels like so long ago. It makes him wonder if it is yet another effect continued on page 14
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BY LYNDA LIN GRIGSBY
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A Better Solution In Home Care has been helping individuals and families with their care needs since 2000. We have a full service staff available 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. Our staff are experienced, professional, caring and ready to meet your needs. From comprehensive home care services to placement assistance and wraparound care management, A Better Solution In Home Care is ready and able to help individuals and families with a wide variety of needs.
1-626-427-0833 | www.absihc.com Dana@absihc.com
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This illustration from Dan Santat’s story “The Adventures of Beekle: The Unimaginary Friend” is a metaphor for the birth of his oldest son.
of the pandemic bending the perception of time or if it’s the appropriate time to mourn. In June, the Santat family moved from their longtime home in Alhambra to San Marino. Yes, the self-proclaimed Fresh Prince of Pasadena, according to the tagline on his Twitter account, is just an alliterative satire. Although both of his teenage sons attend Pasadena’s Waverly School. The Fresh Prince of San Marino just hits differently. The artist and his family moved to a bigger home to fulfill his dad’s dying wish to care for his mom, Nancy Santat, 76, who has yet to decide if she wants to leave her home in Camarillo. Between finishing the book, moving to a new house and settling his dad’s estate, Santat has not had time to feel sad, but the universe has a way of breaking him open in unexpected ways. One day, Santat wandered to the backyard of his new house and found the body of a lifeless crow. Crows are among the few animals that show a social response to a dead member. In his yard, crows cawed mournfully and swooped through the air for their fallen friend. Santat inadvertently interrupted their funeral. You could almost hear him shaking his head through the phone. “That was just like the thing that just triggered me, and I just felt very sad,” he says. “You know, just crying in front of all these birds in the backyard.” Santat is the son of a doctor groomed to follow in his dad’s footsteps. It was a preordained path he abruptly ended after he earned a degree in microbiology at the University of California, San Diego. He chose art school over dental school. At UC San Diego, he met his future wife Leah (Tager) Santat, who knew the artist would never be happy as a dentist.
“In science classes at UCSD, he would doodle in all of his notes,” says Leah Santat, 46, a lab manager and technician at Cal Tech. “Drawing and telling stories was always his calling.” A late September Vroman’s Bookstore virtual forum promoted the new book “Bear is a Bear,” illustrated by Santat. Author Jonathan Stutzman called him the Michael Jordan of children’s books. Then, on second thought, knowing that Santat is a Lakers’ fan, Stutzman changed the reference to Magic Johnson. “I am always in awe of the magic he’s able to create on a page and the fact that he created magic to go along with words I wrote,” says Stutzman, 34. Santat is also working on a graphic novel memoir about his coming-of-age adventures in Europe in the summer of 1989 before the start of high school. He had his first kiss, tasted beer for the first time, and watched the men’s semifinals at Wimbledon between John McEnroe and Stefan Edberg. “It’s just this crazy story about not worrying about the past and just kind of embracing the present,” Santat says. “It’s a book for young Dan from grown up Dan.” He’s crafting this memoir for his sons, Alek, 15, and Kyle, 12. “I want them to understand why I am the way I am, because I never really got to know my father that well,” Santat says. Despite the challenges of the last year and a half, Santat has perspective on his career as a children’s book artist. “I think about what I do and how fortunate I am to get paid very well to sit in front of computer and draw pictures for kids and not break a sweat. And actually, to do something that I don’t even consider work,” Santat says. “I don’t take that lightly.” That’s just undeniably good.
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PHILANTHROPY Pasadena Humane’s support includes advice on any pet-related issues.
FAMILY
Ties
PASADENA HUMANE STRIVES TO KEEP ANIMALS WITH THEIR PET PARENTS hether it’s meowing for water in the middle of the night or urinating outside of a litterbox, pet parents sometimes need a little guidance with their fur babies. Pasadena Humane has the answer for that. It offers a robust inperson and over-the-phone support with the Animal Resource Center’s six animal behavior specialists. Owners can make an appointment with one via the free behavior helpline. The helpline provides guidance for common problem behaviors such as potty training/litter box issues, barking, leash manners and scratching furniture. It can also provide advice for new puppy, kitten and critter adopters. “If someone is having behavior issues like a litter box with cats or reactive dog issues, we can connect them with our free behavior
helpline to resolve that problematic behavior,” says Dia DuVernet, Pasadena Humane’s president and chief executive officer. The center is devoted to helping pet owners whenever possible. “For example, if there’s a pet owner in financial hardship, we can connect them with a food bank, or if someone temporarily does not have a place to live, we will provide temporary boarding for the animals until (their owners) get back on their feet.” Pasadena Humane’s support includes assistance for people who have lost or found pets, need to rehome their pet, or are seeking advice on any pet-related issue. Since the pandemic started, Pasadena Humane has increased its efforts to return lost animals with identification to their owners in the field, rather than having the pets come into the shelter. continued on page 18
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BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
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The whole world in your classroom
Open House January 12 at 6:30 pm
www.efacademy.org/events 1539 E Howard St, Pasadena, CA 91104 www.efacademy.org/pasadena
493
East Jackson St PASADENA 4 Bed | 1.5 Bath | Year Built: 1923 1,844 SF | 10,463 SF Lot Offered at $1,078,000
Bradley Mohr & Susan Mohr Executive Director, Estates Division 626 945 8683 | bradley.mohr@compass.com DRE 01220830 | 00910172 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. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footages are approximate. Exact dimensions can be obtained by retaining the services of an architect or engineer. This is not intended to solicit property already listed.
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Sick or injured wildlife, including possums, are cared for at Pasadena Humane. continued from page 16
Dia DuVernet is Pasadena Humane’s president and chief executive officer.
Pasadena Humane 361 S. Raymond Avenue, Pasadena 626-792-7151, pasadenahumane.org Pasadena Humane Animal Behavior Hotline https://bit.ly/PHAnimalBehaviorHotline Wildlife helpline 626-344-1129 (text is preferred) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Photos submitted
Sick or injured wildlife are cared for as well. DuVernet says Pasadena Humane sees many varieties of birds, squirrels, possums and skunks. Injured or orphaned baby hummingbirds are brought to Pasadena Humane occasionally. “Any wild animals we might have in our community can be brought to us,” she explains. “We don’t have jurisdiction over larger predatory wildlife like bears, which are under the jurisdiction of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. We see all sorts of little critters.” DuVernet says the goal is to rehab the animals and release them back into the wild. For example, if a baby bird falls out of its nest, wildlife experts can tell residents how to reunite the bird with its mom. If that works, there is no need to bring in the bird. Animals that are brought into Pasadena Humane are nursed with incubators and fed with their proper diet. “The goal is to have as little human interaction as possible to keep them wild,” she says. “We keep them until they’re healthy or old enough to take them out and release them.” Resources go beyond Pasadena Humane’s walls. It provides animal control in Altadena, Arcadia, Bradbury, Glendale, La CañadaFlintridge, La Crescenta-Montrose, Monrovia, Pasadena (city and unincorporated), San Marino, Sierra Madre and South Pasadena. The communities contract with Pasadena Humane for animal control. Animal control handles animal cruelty investigations, stray animal assistance, owner relinquishment, nuisance complaints, law enforcement and citations, pet licensing, wildlife and community education. “During the pandemic, we equipped all animal control officers with microchip reader and computer so when an animal control officer picks up a stray animal in the community, they can contact the owner and take the animal directly home, rather than take it to the shelter. “We just want to keep animals in their homes.”
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BUSINESS
The Strength Shoppe brings the benefits of high-intensity strength training to Pasadena.
Shoppe
THE STRENGTH
STAFF PUSHES CLIENTS IN NONTRADITIONAL EXERCISE FORM
M
elinda Hughes suffered from scoliosis as well as knee pain, until she discovered SuperSlow strength training 13 years ago. After experiencing more energy during the day and a more restful sleep each night, the then-27-year-old noticed her knee pain disappeared and her back was stronger. Her scoliosis wasn’t as pronounced because she safely corrected muscular imbalances. “I thought it was too good to be true,” she says. “Something about the science that made sense to me. I went out on a limb and tried the workout with her. Right away, I would tell the difference. In only a few months, my knee pain was completely gone. It was just a matter of strengthening the muscles.” In 2011, wanting to share SuperSlow, she stepped out on her own
and opened The Strength Shoppe to bring the benefits of high-intensity strength training to Pasadena. The move has proven to be successful. Six years later, she expanded to DTLA/Echo Park. Hughes says the technique is quite different, calling it “slow-motion, high-intensity strength training.” “You’re lifting the weight slowly and lowering it slowly,” she adds. “You’re not using momentum to lift the weight. You work very intensely. We never lock out our joints, and we never set the weight down. From the beginning to the end of the exercise, muscles are working to a point of muscle failure. If you’re lifting to the point of muscle failure, you’re not allowing the muscle to rest.” continued on page 22
Photo submitted
BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
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Recent Notable Sales
1730 Monterey Road, South Pasadena Represented Seller
566 Winston Avenue, San Marino Represented Buyer
1925 Montrobles Place, San Marino Represented Buyer
4118 Park Vista Drive, Pasadena Represented Seller
2345 Melville Drive, San Marino Represented Buyer
2767 Fleur Drive, San Marino Represented Buyer
JIM TRIPODES Broker Associate/Realtor®
626 202 9444
jim.tripodes@compass.com jimtripodes.com DRE 01455574 Compass is a real estate broker licensed by the State of California and abides by Equal Housing Opportunity laws. License Number 01866771. All material presented herein is intended for informational purposes only and is compiled from sources deemed reliable but has not been verified. Changes in price, condition, sale or withdrawal may be made without notice. No statement is made as to accuracy of any description. All measurements and square footage are approximate. If your property is currently listed with another broker, this is not intended as a solicitation.
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continued from page 20
The form of exercise was developed for osteoporosis patients in their 80s.
The Strength Shoppe 350 S. Lake Avenue, Suite 105, Pasadena 305 Glendale Boulevard, Los Angeles thestrengthshoppe.com
Photos submitted
Founder Melinda Hughes uses “slow-motion, high-intensity strength training.” Weights are lifted and lowered slowly, as opposed to with momentum.
Hughes says at one point, the weight can’t be lifted. At that point, Hughes or her staff encourage the person to try to move the weight for 10 seconds. “The key element to this is because you’re working the muscles that intensely it’s a more effective workout. The body must be pushed a little bit more to get it to respond, she says. This form of exercise was developed for osteoporosis patients in their 80s and is safe enough for 90-year-old osteoporotic women. “Weight training has long been known to be the only nonmedication way of halting progress of osteoporosis and reversing it,” she says. Her studio members with osteoporosis were using traditional strength training, which made them susceptible to bone fractures. SuperSlow produces results quicker and more significantly, too, she explains. It just takes 20 minutes once a week. Her clients range in age from 12 to 91. The younger ones are children of members who want their kids to understand how to take care of their body and feel good about it, she explains. “I had a client come in walking with a cane,” says Hughes, who adds SuperSlow is based on scientific research. “She said her doctor wanted her to try strength training before knee replacement surgery. “The healing after the knee replacement surgery goes better if you’re stronger. The aftercare is easier. After only about two to three months, she had no pain and was walking without the cane. She still hasn’t had knee replacements.” Hughes says without allowing the body to recover, those who use traditional exercise are more susceptible to cold, flu, sickness and injury. Still, according to the Mayo Clinic, research hasn’t shown SuperSlow strength training to be superior to other forms of strength training. Hughes says SuperSlow is perfect for those who want to exercise and get the maximum benefit in a minimal amount of time. Armed with a Master of Science in holistic nutrition, Hughes sees many clients who are busy parents or those who work long days. The exercise form works, she says, because SuperSlow causes little tears to the muscle fiber. The muscle, which is attached to bone, tugs at the bone, causing trauma to the bone tissue. “Growth hormones are released, osteoblasts are released, and the body recovers from the workout. “It’s like your skin,” she explains. “If you scrape your knee, your skin is going to repair itself pretty quickly. In a day or two it’s done. If you cut your skin to the bone, it’s going to require more days for the body to repair the skin tissue and heal that wound.” The Studio City resident says working out at The Strength Shoppe is appropriate in this pandemic-riddled world. “This is still a raging virus,” Hughes says. “It’s nice to be able to come in and have your trainer wear a mask. You’re the only one in there. You don’t have to worry about bigger gyms with a bunch of people. “COVID-19 hit the fitness industry really hard. However, people are not looking for big classes with lots of people. That’s not what the people are looking for right now. They’re looking for something that makes them healthier and keeps them strong. We have an air purifier system, and we clean the machines after workouts. All it takes is 20 minutes each week.”
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DINING
Suzan “Suzy” Ohanian and her family serve delicious Levantine pastries from their boutique.
Boutique SUZY’S SWEETS
REFINED GOODIES ARE KEPT CLOSE TO THE VEST
I
n Suzan “Suzy” Ohanian’s small townhouse kitchen, the chef has made a remarkable impact on an otherwise sleepy neighborhood in east Pasadena. With the help of her daughter, Hermine, her husband, Hovig, and her mother, Mary Joubalian, she has created some of the most finely crafted and truly delicious Levantine pastries in the Arroyo. With the burgeoning generational Armenian community in Pasadena and Glendale, that’s saying something. Baklava, maamoul, kunafa and lokum are the usual suspects, but Suzy’s marzipan cakes and French macarons have induced swoons locally as well. Hermine is her chief assistant, spokesperson and translator for a Sunday afternoon conversation in the family dining room, where the pastries are packaged for pickup for her growing throng of customers. It seems an unlikely story. In 2011, the Ohanians decamped from Aleppo, Syria, to Pasadena to visit relatives and ostensibly vacation, when the first disturbances erupted in Syria in the wake of the Arab Spring protests.
“In 2011, during the war, we flew to the United States for vacation until everything settled down and got back to normal in Syria,” Hermine explains. “We stayed here for three months, and we realized we cannot go back. I started working. (Suzy) had never worked in her life. She was only making food and sweets for us in Syria. She learned from her mother. She kept baking, baking, baking until her friend asked her to make that kunafa for me please. It tastes so good. That’s the first tray that she wanted to give to someone. Apparently, she sold it. That’s how it all started. “The first time, when my friend wanted (the kunafe), I was very upset. I never worked in my life. One week later, I started to think, ‘Why am I not working?’ I wanted to try to work because everybody was working. In my country, women don’t usually work. But I decided to work.” After that first tray of kunafa went out the door, Suzy began experimenting in the kitchen and selling her pastries at local cultural events. “She started participating in shows in our community,” Hermine says. continued on page 26
Photo by Chris Mortenson
BY FRIER MCCOLLISTER
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The pastries resulted from years of painstaking trials and experiments with techniques and ingredients. continued from page 24
No, I will make the same sweets, the way they’re supposed to taste. With the right ingredients, with the clean ingredients, with pure ingredients, not just buy pistachio powder and create a maamoul,” Suzy explains. “When you try one of those, you will feel that. She was always saying that the sweets here are very, very sweet, lots of sugar. She makes sure to reduce the sugar so that you get the real flavor of every single ingredient,” Hermine interjects. Suzy adds, “Some sweets you have to boil the butter, take the milk out of it and use the real pure butter without the milk, clarified butter. Some sweets require regular butter. I don’t compromise on anything.” Hermine presented a jar of walnuts. “This is the main ingredient for most of her baklavas, whole walnuts. If they need to be cracked, she cracks it. If it needs to be ground, she grinds it. She always starts with the whole walnut, the whole pistachio, the whole almond. That’s how you make sure you’re getting fresh product,” she says. Suppliers send boxes of samples to her to make sure it’s fresh, Suzy said. “They depend on me.” For the newly initiated, regular customer favorites are clear. “The classic marzipan, the chocolate walnut marzipan,” Suzy says. The customers called it “incredible,” Hermine adds. “Maamoul pistachio and then baklava swaret el set,” adds Suzy, noting the other two favorite contenders. Here, Hermine presented a tray of baklava shaped in fat coins of delicate filo, each with a bright green glitter of pistachio over the walnut filling at the center. “This is called the swaret el set. In Arabic this means ‘bracelet of a woman,’” Hermine explains.
Photos by Chris Mortenson
“People have a small stand and sell their products. The shows were in Armenian communities in big halls, where you go and prepare your sweets and you get a table and you start selling. Everybody started loving it, because when she makes something, she makes it as if she is making it for us, for her family. For example, when I’m helping her, if it doesn’t look OK, she doesn’t give it to her customers, she eats it herself — or we eat it. The perfect pieces go to the customer. Friends and friends of friends started asking her to make sweets. That’s how she came to this point now.” Suzy adds, “I decided to work.” Competent baking requires at least a modicum of precision, but Suzy’s self-taught approach is of another order. Her cakes, cookies and pastries resulted from years of painstaking trials and experiments with techniques and ingredients. “She works so hard to make her recipes perfect and perfect and perfect. It took her three or four years to say, ‘OK, this is it. I’m not changing it anymore.’ It’s four years of exploration and tasting and getting feedback and making it perfect and changing,” Hermine says. “She’s very precise with the (measurements), with the cleanliness, with the materials, the ingredients, always using the best. So, people actually appreciated that. When they taste, they can tell it’s much different than what they’re buying in the stores, prepackaged. Everything that she makes is fresh.” If anything, one secret may be in Suzy’s refined and exacting palate. “When I tried the same sweets that I am making, when I buy it here, made by somebody else, they don’t know how it really tastes. 26 | ARROYO | 11.21
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Live strong and smart, not sluggish and sleepy. Sleep is not optional. SAMINA makes your sleep optimal. “It has an interesting story. It’s a very old sweet. It’s called ‘bracelet of a woman’ because of its shape. It’s the bracelet of a beautiful, sweet woman.” Suzy makes five styles of baklava, including antep-style pistachio squares. Finely crafted and popular French macarons are also on the menu. Suzy created them at the request of friends, who suggested that they might be more appealing to the younger generation than traditional cookies. It took her three months to painstakingly perfect the macaron recipe. “Every milligram makes a difference in her macarons. It is like a science,” Hermine confirms. Customers place their orders via email through the website — which Hermine built and designed — or directly by phone. Directions for pickup are given when the order is confirmed. Allow proper lead time, depending on the order. “They can order online, but they pick it up from the house,” Hermine says. “Her customers — who know her already — they know they have to order three to four days in advance. For cakes, it’s 10 days in advance, because she can only make a limited number of cakes. It takes lots of time. It’s not just any simple cake. We package them on the dining table here.” Suzy also supplies her sweets on wholesale order to two local restaurants. “Tarmeh (Mediterranean Grill) in Glendale. The other one we cannot disclose,” Hermine allows. Notably, the other bit of nondisclosure are Suzy’s recipes. Despite a barrage of unseemly cajoling, she remained firmly opposed to sharing any of her secrets. “She definitely doesn’t want to give out recipes,” Hermine confirmed. “As long as I’m working, I don’t,” Suzy affirmed, with a modest proviso. She is considering teaching eventually. “She has a plan later on to teach. Have students and teach them to make these types of sweets in a perfect way. She really doesn’t want to give away recipes. She can share ingredients, of course,” Hermine offers. The sources may be surprising. The best butter? “Kirkland brand, from Costco.” Eggs? “It took her three to four years to find the best eggs for her macarons. You cannot really go and buy eggs from anywhere to use for macarons. It took her a very long time to find that this is the only place to buy eggs,” Hermine says. “Restaurant Depot, medium size,” Suzy reveals. Vanilla? “Mideast brand from Good Food” she says about the neighborhood Armenian market on Washington Boulevard. By the way, Suzy’s dutiful husband Hovig does all the shopping (and returns). In 10 short years, Suzy has found her place in the world. East Pasadena. “This area here, we love it. It feels like home for us.”
Suzy’s Sweets Boutique 626-433-7388 suzyssweetsboutique.com order@suzyssweetsboutique.com
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CULINARY CUPBOARD
CHERRIES, CHOCOLATE, AND THE CRACK OF DAWN
S
BY EMILY CHAVEZ
weet and crumbly scones are the perfect pair for coffee or tea on a chilly November morning. The simple scone recipe starts off with baking basics such as flour, leavening agents and heavy cream. However, this time around, the scone is upgraded with the addition of pump dried tart cherries and silky chocolate. A mildly sweet pastry is the perfect, softly neutral background for delightfully tart cherries and bittersweet chocolate for a balanced bite. From the moment you begin to smell the aromatic cherries and chocolate in the oven to the last scrumptious crumbly bite, this indulgent yet understated bake brings a bit of luxury to a busy morning. TART CHERRY AND CHOCOLATE SCONES ACTIVE TIME: 10 MINUTES | TOTAL TIME: 45 MINUTES YIELDS: 6 SCONES
INGREDIENTS 6 OUNCES DRIED TART CHERRIES 1/4 CUP GRANULATED SUGAR 1 1/2 CUPS ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR 1 1/2 TEASPOON BAKING POWDER 1/2 TEASPOON SALT 6 TABLESPOONS UNSALTED
BUTTER, CHILLED AND CUBED 1 EGG 1/2 CUP HEAVY CREAM 1/4 CUP BITTERSWEET CHOCOLATE, CHOPPED
1. PREHEAT OVEN TO 375 DEGREES. 2. IN A LARGE BOWL, STIR TOGETHER FLOUR, SUGAR, BAKING POWDER AND SALT. 3. ADD IN DRIED TART CHERRIES, BUTTER, EGG AND HEAVY CREAM AND MIX UNTIL DOUGH STARTS TO COME TOGETHER. 4. ADD CHOCOLATE AND MIX FOR A COUPLE MORE SECONDS. 5. FORM DOUGH INTO A 6-INCH ROUND DISK. 6. CUT INTO 6 WEDGES AND TRANSFER TO A PARCHMENT PAPERLINED BAKING SHEET. 7. BAKE FOR 25-28 MINUTES UNTIL GOLDEN BROWN.
Photos by Luis Chavez
INSTRUCTIONS
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A R T S & C U LT U R E
‘Head
OVER HEELS’
LEA DELARIA IS MAD ABOUT HER LATEST PROJECT
L
BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
ea DeLaria just left rehearsals for the Pasadena Playhouse’s production of “Head Over Heels.” The “Orange is the New Black” star is giddy and oozing of energy. “It’s our second day of rehearsals, and we’re having a ball,” DeLaria says enthusiastically. “I’m excited.” “Head Over Heels” is a musical comedy set to the tunes of the Go-Go’s, like “Our Lips are Sealed” and “Vacation,” as well as singer Belinda Carlisle’s hits “Heaven is a Place on Earth” and “Mad About You.” The dance party musical follows a royal family in search of a purpose, lovers in search of each other, and a whole kingdom in search of a beat. In it, DeLaria plays King Basilius to drag performer Alaska 5000’s Queen Gynecia. “I like that they asked me to play the king,” she says. “It is a drag musical. I’m playing a male role, which is really fun. Having Alaska in it is really what drew me to it. It’s just a great show. I’m in between projects right now. I had these two months off. It’s like the universe was saying, ‘Do this musical.’” Award winner DeLaria is best known for her three-time, SAG Award-winning role as Carrie “Big Boo” Black in the Netflix hit series “Orange is the New Black.” However, DeLaria’s multifaceted career as a comedian, actress and jazz musician has, in fact, spanned decades.
Lea DeLaria is a comedian, actress and jazz musician known for her role as being Carrie “Big Boo” Black in the Netflix show “Orange is the New Black.”
Photo by Tina Turnbow
continued on page 32
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continued from page 32
DeLaria is the first openly gay comic on American television, which led to countless television and film roles. She received Obie & Theater World Awards, and a Drama Desk nomination for her portrayal of “Hildy” in the Public Theater’s revival of “On the Town,” and played “Eddie” and “Dr. Scott” in the gender-bending Broadway musical “The Rocky Horror Show.” She was the featured vocalist at the 50th anniversary of the Newport Jazz Festival and has performed in prestigious houses like Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the Chicago Symphony, Hollywood Bowl, the Royal Albert Hall and the Sydney Opera House. DeLaria has five records on the Warner Jazz and Classics label, and her book “Lea’s Book of Rules for the World” is in its third printing at Bantam Doubleday and Dell. Her sixth record, “House of David delaria+bowie=jazz,” was released in the summer of 2015 to critical acclaim. After “Head Over Heels,” DeLaria will work on recording her next album in New York. She chuckles when she’s called a multihyphenate entertainer. “When you look like me and you say what you think like me and make no apologies, it’s a good idea to do a lot of things in show business,” she says. “Oh, honey, believe me, I know it’s true. I’ve never been afraid of it. Obviously, I’m looking to do more than just make a living and entertain. Obviously, trying to change the world is very important to me. I can back my mouth up with all these things, and I do all this well.”
Lea DeLaria will portray King Basilius, while drag performer Alaska 5000 plays Queen Gynecia in “Head Over Heels” at the Pasadena Playhouse.
“Head Over Heels” WHEN: Tuesday, November 9, to Sunday, December 12: 8 p.m. Tuesdays to Fridays; 2 p.m. and 8 p.m. Saturdays; and 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundays WHERE: Pasadena Playhouse, 39 S. El Molina Avenue, Pasadena COST: Tickets start at $30 INFO: 626-356-7529, pasadenaplayhouse.org
Photo by Sarah Stone
Stellar cast At Pasadena Playhouse, DeLaria and Alaska 5000 will be joined by Urel Echezarreta (Steven Spielberg’s “West Side Story”), Tiffany Mann (“Be More Chill”), George Salazar (“Little Shop of Horrors”), Emily Skeggs (“Fun Home”) and Shanice Williams (NBC’s “The Wiz Live!”). The musical kicks off Pasadena Playhouse’s 2021-22 season. The venue will be fully transformed for the production, creating an experience with traditional reserved theater seats and a general admission dance floor. “It’s going to be done environmentally and in the round at the Playhouse,” DeLaria says. “The audience is a major part of the production. It was conceived as a dance musical on Broadway. Everybody in the cast is known for being a really big singer. There’s plenty of dancing in it. It’s wicked fun.” DeLaria says the plot is comedic with Shakespearian themes. It blends “As You Like It,” “The Winter’s Tale,” “The Comedy of Errors” and “The Merry Wives of Windsor.” “It’s such a nice break to be back on the boards,” she says. “I love doing film and TV. Don’t get me wrong. I have a great time doing it. I love being downstage belting at B sharp.” Clocking in at 90 minutes with no intermission, “Head Over Heels” has proven to be challenging for the 63-year-old actor. She says she must be mindful of her vocal cords and, as a physical comedian, she is careful about running and jumping around the stage. “It’s going to be really funny when people see the juxtaposition of me and Alaska together,” DeLaria says. “She’s lovely, so dry and so funny, not to mention she’s way taller than me. The sight gag is going to be funny. My king is a big goofball. It’s really entertaining. The cast is raring to go and chomping at the bit to start.”
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A R T S A N D C U LT U R E
PUTTING THE ARTIST
First
INDIE LAURETTA RECORDS HAS MAJOR-LABEL POWER BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI
Being in the music industry for a decade, Katrina Frye is trying to change the music business by being a Black woman owner of her record label Lauretta Records.
continued on page 36
Photo submitted
K
atrina Frye feels like an outsider in the music business. She’s trying to change that with Pasadena-based Lauretta Records. “There are not a lot of Black women who own record labels,” Frye says. “This category, independent music, has finally gotten the legitimacy and the power that majors have. A lot of people see the value of indie music more than ever.” She is hosting Lauretta Records & Friends in partnership with Los Angeles Performance Practice at Frankie: Mission Road Studio from 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday, November 7, with Marieme, Davie, Meaghan Maples, Kesha Shantrell, Jordan Frye, Revel Day and Sascha Andres. Frye has been in the music business for a decade. In her short time, she says she’s had to explain to family or friends, investors or colleagues, what is sustainable and what money can be made. YouTube and TikTok have proven that. “I’ve never seen so much money invested in music,” Frye says. “I’m trying to ride that wave. The Black Lives Matter movement is finding a lot of legitimacy. I thought I couldn’t talk about it anymore unless I’m doing it.” The talent pool is wide, but there are so many gatekeepers, she says. Music executives are unwilling to sit down and talk to artists, which is “atrocious and disgusting,” she says. “I hope I’m empowering my artists,” she says. “If they don’t stay with me forever, I hope they stay on the course of advocating for themselves.”
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Lauretta Records & Friends in Partnership with Los Angeles Performance Practice w/Marieme, Davie, Meaghan Maples, Kesha Shantrell, Jordan Frye, Revel Day and Sascha Andres WHEN: 6 to 9 p.m. Sunday, November 7 WHERE: Frankie: Mission Road Studio, 300 S. Mission Road, Los Angeles COST: Various tiers INFO: laurettarecords.com Lauretta Records’ focus is on bringing artists’ work to life through televison and film licensing.
Photo submitted
A music professor at night at California Baptist University, Frye is a Black Independent Music Accelerator Fellow. “Lauretta Records is my ode to the artist, “Frye says. “I wanted to create a label that was reflective of what artists need — transparency, accountability, without exclusive commitment.” The label is focused on bringing artists’ work to life through television and film licensing. The current roster of artists spans across genres like the soulfulness of Revel Day with his latest single release “Get Up,” the dark synth pop of Lavendel with her debut single releasing later this fall, and the R&B lyrical charm of Kesha Shantrell’s recent EP “Phase.” “Revel Day is a phenomenal artist,” she says. “His parents are LA musicians. His family has been in the music scene for a while. He was doing really well as a background singer. Now was the time for his own artist project. I feel honored to have met him at this exact time in his life.” Day adds, “Having a team that sees me, sees my goals and says yes, we want to align with that and help you get there — that’s the dream. Being able to find it in a place like this that I trust, it just excites me what the future can be. I think my dreams are coming true and Lauretta is a big part of that.” Shantrell sang background for several artists in LA and around the world. Like Day, she led church services around town. “They’re the call you get when the A-lister wants to arrange a choir and a background vocalist and layer them quickly. She’s doing what a lot of Black women haven’t figured out in the music industry — just to be herself and explore outside of the genre. “Right now, the music industry is a new place for Black women to be. I’m happy to have a label that can house a range of complexities no matter what the background, race or ethnicity. The talent should hold and speak for itself. I’m really proud of her as well. She’s the typical ‘20 Feet from Stardom’ story.” “20 Feet from Stardom” is a 2013 documentary about the lives of background singers. On signing to Lauretta Records, Shantrell says, “My eyes have been open to just a whole other part of myself. I never thought I could write this kind of music and be who I am and be able to dream and set up a future for myself. Lauretta has already set my future up by encouraging me and pushing me to continue doing this.” With Costa Rican and Mississippi roots and years of background singing for artists like Leona Lewis, Andy Grammer and Kanye West, Shantrell’s vocal range shows in songs like “Fire” and “Brand New” from “Phase.” Lauretta Records gives her energy in other ways. The feeling of being the only woman in boardrooms — the only woman of color or person of color in the room — is joyful. “I cheer myself on in those moments and channel all the great people who have come before me and my mentors,” she says. “It shows that yes, I’m qualified, and I know what I’m talking about.”
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ADVERTISING SALES EXECUTIVE
Since 1998 Times Media Group has been a locally owned news and entertainment media company. Fast forward to today and TMG is now one of the largest print and digital media companies in the Southwest. With this level of growth and expansion we need to add to our multi-media sales team. Times Media Group is seeking an experienced advertising account executive. This is an excellent opportunity for a highly motivated and experienced advertising sales professional. TMG has grown significantly as a result of its great professional team, and its well-known print and digital media platforms, including the Pasadena Weekly and Arroyo Magazine.
WHAT WE NEED Two years of outside advertising sales experience is preferred. A good candidate for this position is financially motivated, possesses exceptional organizational skills and is ready to embrace a real opportunity to work on a quality team. An ideal candidate will be familiar with the San Gabriel Valley area including Pasadena, Alhambra, Altadena, Sierra Madre, South Pasadena and the surrounding areas. We are seeking an individual who can sell solutions not just ads, who appreciates straight-talk, and is hardworking, motivated, and values working in a positive team environment.
WHAT WE OFFER + Base Pay + Commission + Health Benefits + 401(k) + Paid Vacations and Holidays If, based on the requirements, you are a qualified candidate and would like to join a quality team and get on with your future, respond with your resume and a cover letter outlining why you believe you are a good fit for the position. We are currently scheduling interviews. Times Media Group offers a positive work environment, great product line and a significant opportunity for income growth. Times Media Group: Times Media Group is a digital and print media company that operates in the Phoenix, Tucson, San Diego and Los Angeles markets. It serves a wide variety of demographic audiences and communities.
E-mail Resumes & Cover Letter to: Zac@timespublications.com 11.21 | ARROYO | 37
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A R T S & C U LT U R E
Vroman’s LIVE BOOKSTORE BOASTS STELLAR LINEUP FOR NOVEMBER BY ARROYO STAFF
T
he renowned bookstore Vroman’s is hosting more top-notch virtual programs throughout November. The “Vroman’s Live” events are held virtually through Crowdcast. Register through vromansbookstore.com. All “Vroman’s Presents” events are ticketed and will be held inperson off-site and will have COVID-19 event safety guidelines that need to be followed attend. Anyone with questions is asked to contact email@ vromansbookstore.com. Vroman’s presents Blair Imani, in conversation with Andre Henry, discusses “Read This to Get Smarter: About Race, Class, Gender, Disability & More” 7 p.m. Monday, November 1 An approachable guide to being an informed, compassionate and socially conscious person today — from discussions of race, gender and sexual orientation to disability, class and beyond — from critically acclaimed historian, educator and author Blair Imani. Accessible to learners of all levels — from those just getting started on the journey to those already versed in social justice — “Read This to Get Smarter” covers a range of topics, including race, gender, class, disability, relationships, family, power dynamics, oppression and beyond. This ticketed event will take place at All Saints Church located at 132 N. Euclid Avenue, Pasadena. Ticket includes one entry plus one copy of “Read This to Get Smarter.” Father Gregory Boyle discusses “The Whole Language: The Power of Extravagant Tenderness” 7 p.m. Thursday, November 4 Over the past 30 years, Gregory Boyle has transformed thousands of lives through his work as the founder of Homeboy Industries, the largest and most successful gang-intervention program in the world. In a community struggling to overcome systemic poverty and violence, “The Whole Language” shows how those at Homeboy Industries fight despair and remain generous, hopeful and tender. Boyle’s moving stories challenge our ideas about God and about people, providing a window into a world filled with fellowship, compassion and fewer barriers. This ticketed event will take place at All Saints Church located at 132 N. Euclid Avenue, Pasadena. Ticket includes one entry plus one copy of “The Whole Language.”
Christina Diaz Gonzalez, in conversation with James Ponti, discusses “Concealed” 6 p.m. Friday, November 5 Katrina doesn’t know any of the details about her past, but she does know that she and her parents are part of the Witness Protection Program. Whenever her parents say they have to move on and start over, she takes on a new identity — until their location leaks and her parents disappear. Forced to embark on a dangerous rescue mission, Katrina and her new friend Parker set out to save her parents — and find out the truth about her secret past and the people that want her family dead. But every new discovery reveals that Katrina’s entire life has been built around secrets covered up with lies and that her parents were actually the ones keeping the biggest secret of all. Katrina must now decide if learning the whole truth is worth the price of losing everything she has ever believed about herself and her family. Editor Saraciea Fennell, with contributors Mark Oshiro, Lilliam Rivera and Ingrid Rojas Contreras, discusses “Wild Tongues Can’t Be Tamed: 15 Voices from the Latinx Diaspora” 5 p.m. Monday, November 8 Edited by “The Bronx Is Reading” founder Saraciea J. Fennell and featuring an all-star cast of Latino contributors, “Wild Tongues Can’t Be Tamed” is a groundbreaking anthology that will spark
dialogue and inspire hope. In “Wild Tongues Can’t Be Tamed,” bestselling and award-winning authors, as well as up-and-coming voices, interrogate the different myths and stereotypes about the Latinx diaspora. These 15 original pieces delve into everything from ghost stories and superheroes to memories in the kitchen and travels around the world, to addiction and grief, to identity and anti-Blackness, to finding love and speaking your truth. Wil Haygood, in conversation with Peter Gethers, discusses “Colorization: One Hundred Years of Black Films in a White World” 6 p.m. Tuesday, November 9 This unprecedented history of Black cinema examines 100 years of Black movies — from “Gone with the Wind” to
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“Blaxploitation” films to “Black Panther” — using the struggles and triumphs of the artists, and the films themselves, as a prism to explore Black culture, civil rights, and racism in America. Beginning in 1915 with D.W. Griffith’s “The Birth of a Nation,” Wil Haygood gives an incisive, fascinating, little-known history, spanning more than a century, of Black artists in the film business, onscreen and behind the scenes. He makes clear the effects of changing social realities and events on the business of making movies and on what was represented on the screen: from Jim Crow and segregation to white flight and interracial relationships, from the assassination of Malcolm X to the O.J. Simpson trial, to the Black Lives Matter movement. Patti Davis, in conversation with Max Boot, discusses “Floating in the Deep End: How Caregivers Can See Beyond Alzheimer’s” 6 p.m. Wednesday, November 10 When Patti Davis’ father, the 40th president of the United States, announced his Alzheimer’s diagnosis in an address to the American public in 1994, the world had not yet begun speaking about this cruel, mysterious disease. Yet overnight, Ronald Reagan and his immediate family became the face of Alzheimer’s, and Davis, once content to keep her family at arm’s length, quickly moved across the country to be present during “the journey that would take (him) into the sunset of (his) life.” In “Floating in the Deep End,” Davis draws on a welter of experiences to provide a singular account of battling Alzheimer’s. She shares how her own fractured family came together. She offers tender moments in which her father, a fabled movie star whom she always longed to know better, revealed his true self — always kind, even when he couldn’t recognize his own daughter. Jung Yun, in conversation with Elizabeth McKenzie, discusses “O Beautiful” 6 p.m. Thursday, November 18 Elinor Hanson, a 40-something former model, is struggling to reinvent herself as a freelance writer when her mentor from grad school offers her a chance to write for a prestigious magazine about the Bakken oil boom in North Dakota. Elinor grew up near the Bakken, raised by an overbearing father and a distant Korean mother who met and married when he was
stationed overseas. After decades away from home, Elinor returns to a landscape she hardly recognizes, overrun by tens of thousands of newcomers. Elinor experiences a profound sense of alienation and grief. She rages at the unrelenting male gaze, the locals who still see her as a foreigner and the memories of her family’s estrangement after her mother decided to escape her unhappy marriage, leaving Elinor and her sister behind. The longer she pursues this potentially career-altering assignment, the more her past intertwines with the story she’s trying to tell, revealing disturbing new realities that will forever change her and the way she looks at the world. Andrew Lawler discusses “Under Jerusalem: The Buried History of the World’s Most Contested City” 6 p.m. Monday, November 22 In 1863, a French senator arrived in Jerusalem hoping to unearth relics dating to biblical times. Digging deep underground, he discovered an ancient grave that, he claimed, belonged to an Old Testament queen. News of his find ricocheted around the world, evoking awe and envy alike, and inspiring others to explore Jerusalem’s storied past. In the century and a half since the Frenchman broke ground, Jerusalem has drawn a global cast of fortune seekers and missionaries, archaeologists and zealots. Their efforts have had profound effects, not only on our understanding of Jerusalem’s history but on its hotly disputed present. The quest to retrieve ancient Jewish heritage has sparked bloody riots and thwarted international peace agreements. It has served as a cudgel, a way to stake a claim to the most contested city on the planet. Today, the earth below Jerusalem remains a battleground in the struggle to control the city above. Dera White & Joe Bennett present “I Will Not Die Alone 6 p.m. Tuesday, November 30” Dera White’s “I Will Not Die Alone” is a hilarious, feel-good story about the end of the world. Featuring illustrations by Joe Bennett, it is a story full of realistic self-love affirmations for those who are just trying to get by, until we die. It’s funny, it’s dark and there’s a lion wearing pants. If you only read one more book before the world ends, make it this one. “I Will Not Die Alone” is a sweet yet sad, heartwarming yet heartbreaking read. 11.21 | ARROYO | 39
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GARDENVIEW
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TEXTURE IN THE LANDSCAPE
exture is everywhere. Every day, you visually and tactically perceive countless different textures, scattered all around you. While texture is technically felt, you can trick the eye into sensing texture. In design, one of the most powerful tools you can utilize is to harness and mingle textures in a way that appeals to the eyes and the hands. In its most simple definition, texture is used to showcase contrast and diversity. Texture is the roughness or smoothness of the individual outlines of plant foliage, hardscape, or any other design element you can think of. Beyond physical and into a visual standpoint, different shapes simulate texture. Texture is best integrated with a focus on contrast, balancing smoothness and roughness, grouping one type of texture and bordering it with another grouping of dissimilar texture. As you can see in this picture (made black and white to highlight outlines), the lines and smooth texture of the Santa Barbara stucco walls contrast with the coarser texture of the paver walkway. The shape and texture contrast allows us to distinguish the different groupings of plants, and the stone benches’ flat, smooth shape distinguishes from the bushy texture of the plants. In terms of plant choices, contrast can be harder to define and therefore is the focus of our illustration above. Try planting sev-
eral shrub-like plants (i.e. Gardenia) and separating the groupings with contrasting strap-like plants (i.e. Daylilies). Their natural textures complement each other, and bring a sense of volume, definition, and interest to the landscape. So far we have discussed in earlier articles how we use line, shape, form, voids, and masses to help create focus and direct the eye on a journey. Along with these tools, we use texture to create contrast and to define objects. We purposely used a black & white photograph to help define this concept without the complication of color, which achieves similar objectives and will be the focus of our next article.
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