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The Living Desert (Palm Springs, The Desert and Deanne Stillman's "29 Palms")
•As I write this, it’s 64 degrees in Santa Monica and Sub-Zero is just a brand of refrigerator I covet. On the East Coast, there is a record cold spell and everyone is paying rapt attention to the wind-chill factor. The climatic difference can best be explained not merely by… -
When Television Challenged America (Rod Serling)
•Around this time of year, I’m often prone to recall Rod Serling, who was born on Christmas Day. I’m helped along by the fact that PBS ran their "American Masters" portrait of Serling over the New Year’s weekend even as the Sci Fi Channel ran a "Twilight Zone" marathon. It… -
Dreaming of a Blue and White Christmas (Christmas Movies from Michael Curtiz to Jon Favreau)
•Christmas came early this year — Nov. 7, when New Line Cinema released “Elf,†the family-friendly comedy that, as of this writing, has earned more than $156 million (see story, p. 19). Another surprise is the success of the far-more-cynical adult offering “Bad Santa,†which had a production cost of… -
'Fabulous Invalid' (Ruth Seymour's Chanukah Program on KCRW)
•I used to have this Thanksgiving Day ritual in New York: no matter what I was doing, or where I was going, I would find a way to be near a radio around 11:30 a.m., to tune in to WNEW-FM 102.7’s broadcast of Arlo Guthrie’s “Alice’s Restaurant,†in its entirety,… -
A Search for Intellectual L.A. (Paul Holdengraber and LACMA)
•It’s a Friday night and an overflow crowd is jammed into the penthouse of the former May Co. store on Wilshire Boulevard — now Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) West — to hear a conversation between French journalist and philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy and The New Yorker’s Adam Gopnik.… -
Reading Something Into Some Books (Marboro Books, Richard Farina and Daniel Deronda)
•At 14, I had never read a book outside of school assignments — certainly not for pleasure. I was more of a comic book kid. My parents were concerned and even asked one of my friends to talk to me. I just wasn’t interested. But I liked hanging out at… -
Making L.A. Real (Developer Larry Fields and architect Frank Gehry)
•This weekend the story of Los Angeles, and its future, is all about one building, the Walt Disney Concert Hall. Critics have already hailed our new symphony hall as a triumph of design, determination and a marriage of form, function and acoustic feng shui. But more significantly, in the Walt… -
Reality of Their Own (Reality TV Producers)
•Reality TV is nothing new. Since the dawn of television, there have always been unscripted formats and game shows of one kind or another. However, the current incarnation of reality programming — shows such as "Survivor," "The Bachelor," and "Fear Factor" — may be the most durable and successful shows… -
Budapest in L.A.
•In the coming weeks I will spend many dreamy hours inside Wilshire Boulevard Temple. Two blocks east of Western on Wilshire, the landmark building is an imposing and awe-inspiring architectural gem that belongs to that school of temple architecture that says: We Jews are citizens, and our house of worship… -
Summer Reading (Sandor Marai's "Embers," Gunter Grass' "The Crab")
•I had planned to spend my summer in Hollywood. I had teed up on my reading list "Maneater" by Gigi Levangie Grazer, "Action!" by Robert Cort and "San Remo Drive" by Leslie Epstein. But, as Primo Levi used to say, life proved otherwise. I had high hopes for "Maneater." I… -
Maahj Cracks Fashionistas (The Maah-jong craze)
•What, you may be asking yourself, is the next hot trend? The style universe looks to Los Angeles in general, and this column in particular, for those cutting-edge trends that define the culture. No wonder this column has become such a favorite of trendsetters and fashionistas everywhere. (Nonetheless, I continue… -
A Guilty Pleasure Swings With Style ("Mr. S. My life with Frank Sinatra by George Jacobs with William Stadiem")
•"Mr. S, My Life With Frank Sinatra" by George Jacobs and William Stadiem is this summer’s guilty pleasure. Jacobs was Frank Sinatra’s valet from 1953 to 1968, and his memoirs are the excuse for a polished backstage tour of Sinatraland, a roller-coaster ride of the high life and the lowdown…