ï»żEagle Rock and Highland Park have become magnets for new businesses, including the resurrected Eagle Theatre (now home to Vidiots). Whatâs changedâand whatâs still in fashion?
Talk to any Âé¶čÆ””Àalumni long enough about their fondest college memories, and inevitably the conversation will turn to their favorite destinations close to campus. Eateries rank high on any list, and many longstanding favorites remain in business todayâCasa Bianca (founded in 1955), Pat & Lorraineâs (1977), and Señor Fish (1995) among them. With a constant influx of new businesses, it was hard to limit this list to 10 notable neighbors new and old, but we tried. (Share your favorites with us.)
ï»żIf streaming movies is not your scene:
Vidiots
4884 Eagle Rock Blvd.
Maggie Mackay traces her love of film to Rare Bird Videoâthe neighborhood video rental store that she grew up with in New York City in the 1980s. Through her work as senior programmer of the Los Angeles Film Festival, director of nominations for the Film Independent Spirit Awards, and myriad other roles over the last 25 years, âIâve always been very devoted to connecting audiences with film and connecting artists to audiences,â she says.
As streaming grew in popularityâembodied by Netflixâs shift away from its bedrock mail-order video rental serviceâMackay grew increasingly vocal about her concerns with a streaming-only world. âI was largely dismissed by most of my colleaguesâand many of my friendsâas a bit paranoid,â she recalls.
But because she was vocal enough about it, several friends and colleagues in the film industry quietly started reaching out to her amid rumors that Vidiotsâthe iconic Santa Monica video store turned nonprofit foundation dedicated to preserving and sharing physical mediaâwas struggling to survive. âI think of Vidiots as a cornerstone of culture in Los Angeles,â Mackay says. But even with a philanthropic lifeline from two major donors in 2015, the organization needed an executive director with the vision to keep Vidiots alive.
âI had never raised any money beforeâI really was squarely in the curatorial spaceâbut my passion definitely came into play.â Mackay says. The first time she met Vidiots co-founders Patty Polinger and Cathy Tauber, âI just knew there was no way I was gonna be able to walk away from it,â she saysâand in 2016, she joined Vidiots as its first executive director, a position she retains today.
âThey took a huge risk on meâI didnât have any experience raising money or leading an organization in that way,â Mackay admits. Nevertheless, she has been instrumental in raising more than $2.4 million to relaunch Vidiots and rehabilitate the Eagle Theatreâan improbable outcome for a venue that had not screened a movie since 2000. How did that come to pass?
âHaving lived on the Eastside of Los Angeles for almost 20 years, I knew that what we were really missing over here, especially Northeast L.A., was a gathering space for film lovers and a real independent movie theater.â From gas stations to warehouses, âI was looking for anything big enough to house the collection so that we wouldnât sacrifice the video store to open a theater. The heart and soul of our project is the video store.â
What she did not expect to find was a historic movie theaterâmuch less one, like the Eagle, whose landlords had been former customers of Vidiots going back to the 1980s. âThey very much wanted the theater to stay an art space, and they liked the idea of the space being run by women,ââMackay says.
âPatty and Cathy were really ahead of their time when it came to supporting independent artists and to connecting their work to audiences,â she adds. âAnd they were also ahead of their time when it came to understanding what a community space for everybody would look like. Sometimes I think that the success of the movie theater has been so immediate and impactful that Vidiotsâ legacy as an L.A. entity gets a little bit clouded.â
Vidiots already enjoys âa lovely community collaborationâ with Oxy, Mackay says, âand weâre committed to further deepening our relationship.â In March, the Media Arts and Culture Department presented a Vidiots screening of writer-director Charles Burnettâs To Sleep With Anger (1990), including a Q&A with Burnett and composer Stephen James Taylor. âWe had an incredible group of students there with [Visiting Assistant Professor] John Traftonâs class,â Mackay says. âWeâre looking forward to welcoming more students both for events but also an internship program, which we hope to launch soon.â
An art and art history alumnus of Oxy, Pablo Nukaya-Petralia â20 started volunteering at Vidiots in May 2023, just before its official opening that June. âI began literally my first day back in L.A. after grad school,â he says. âI split my time between the video store and the theater, so on any given day I might be renting out to customers, organizing the store, scanning tickets, or chatting with visitors.â
He enjoys the organic discovery that comes from being in the store, âwhere I can very easily follow my own personal interests without being impeded by a streaming platform not owning the rights to a certain title. Itâs nice to have a place that lets me indulge in exactly what I want, like watching the complete works of Parker Posey or Grateful Dead concert films.â
Nukaya-Petralia completed his masterâs in art history from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where he wrote his thesis on the collages of artist and author Eve Babitz. In addition to volunteering at Vidiots, he is working as a studio assistant for a composer and aiding with music for a âvery exciting documentaryâ that should be coming out this fall, as well as writing his own music (he keeps his personal copy of Todd Haynesâ 1995 film Safe on his desk for inspiration).
âOrganizations like Vidiots do the important work of maintaining access to new and old works that had a limited release, were pulled from a streaming service, or are simply hard to find,â Nukaya-Petralia says. He implores readers to support small businesses and nonprofits that champion physical media.
âItâs not easy running a movie theater,â Mackay adds. âEvery day itâs like whack-a-mole, with a new problem to solve. But when we get positive feedback from the community, it really puts gas in the tank.
âLast night, we had over 100 people for Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003), which is a Tsai Ming-liang movie nearly without dialogue. And people stood outside talking about it for an hour after the movie ended. There arenât too many places where youâd see that kind of response. So, itâs a joy to show movies here. It makes all of the complexity and difficulty worth it 100 times over.â
Flight of the Eagle
âą May 10, 1929: The Yosemite Theater opens at the corner of Yosemite Drive and Eagle Rock Boulevard with a vaudeville revue and the pledge of âclean, wholesome, up-to-the-minute entertainment.â On May 12, the Yosemite screens its premiere feature, The Younger Generation, starring Jean Hersholt and directed by Frank Capra.
âą June 1937: Following a remodeling, the venue reopens as the New Eagle Theatre (shortened to the Eagle Theatre in 1939).
Fall 1974: Walnut Properties President Vincent Mirandaâoperator of the Pussycat adult movie theater chainâbuys the Eagle, prompting fears of bringing X-rated films to the neighborhood. (On Figueroa Street, the Highland Theater screens Deep Throat and other adult fare until protests from a group called Stamp Out Pornography, aka STOP, shuts it down in December 1974.) Contrary to legend, the Eagle never shows pornos: After Walnut spends $50,000 to refurbish the theater, Steven Laneâs Great Western Theaters chain leases the Eagle, losing more than $15,000 in seven months of operation.
October 1975: Emilio Lujan subleases the Eagle from Great Western, screening mainstream fare (including monthly screenings of family films sponsored by local law enforcement). After Lujan closes the Eagle in December 1976, the theater remains shuttered for 21 months as Walnut seeks a new tenantâor a new owner.
âą August 1978: The Eagle reopens under new management, mixing second-run fare with celluloid classics. Ads in the Occidental newspaper tout $1 tickets for students on Wednesday nights. 2000: After decades of fits and starts, the Eagle closes as a theater for the last time. In the early 2000s, the building gets a new tenant: the Brazilian-based Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, which operates there until April 2019.
âą June 2023: Nearly 3Âœ years after signing a lease with the owners of the Eagle, Vidiots opens for business.
ï»żIf youâre looking for cold comfort:
Fosterâs Freeze
4967 Eagle Rock Blvd.
Nearly 16 years after entrepreneur George Foster opened his first Fosterâs Freeze in Inglewoodâbringing soft-serve ice cream to the Southern California massesâthe franchise came to Eagle Rock in January 1962. Countless cones, dishes, sundaes, and shakes have been consumed ever since.
Fast-food neighbors may come and goâKFC gave way to Del Taco in 2016, and the Burger King next door was recently razed, to be replaced by another Starbucksâbut Fosterâs Freeze is thriving. In an Instagram poll last fall, Âé¶čÆ””Àstudents were asked, âWhat classic spot is still a student fave?â Fosterâs Freeze (39%) iced the competition, outpolling Colorado Boulevard mainstays Cindyâs (34%) and Casa Bianca (26%).
In a decidedly unscientific survey on Facebook, â80s-era Âé¶čÆ””Àalumni shared their own Fosterâs faves. âThe Peanut Butter Milkshake was a large contributor to my âfreshman 20ââmade worse when we actually bought a blender and made our own in the dorm,â Jill (Johnson) Gold â83 recalls. âFor me, it was a Peanut Butter Chocolate Shake,â adds Bill Cochran â88. âThe Root Beer Freeze was excellent,â raves Breck Tostevin â83.
Whether itâs because of the restaurantâs royal-blue exterior or its authentically throwback vibe, Fosterâs Freeze occasionally slips into the culture as well. The Atwater Village location pops up in Quentin Tarantinoâs Pulp Fiction (1994), and last year, eagle-eyed New York Times readers may have clocked a glimpse of the Eagle Rock eatery accompanying a profile of actress Sasha Calle, who appeared as Supergirl in 2023âs The Flash).
George Foster sold his interest in the company in 1951, and Fosterâs Freeze has changed corporate ownership multiple times. While the number of locations is down considerably from its peak, new Fosters franchises are springing up in California. Fosters dropped the apostrophe years ago, but the punctuation mark remains a fixture on the signage at older locales such as Eagle Rock. âLittle Foster,â its smiling soft-serve mascot, greets patrons of all agesâand with temperatures rising, the prospect of a chocolate-dipped cone sounds too good to pass up.
If you need a cup of coffee:
Café de Leche
5000 York Blvd.
Anya Schodorfâs mother, Rosa, was visiting from her native Nicaragua while Anya and her husband, Matthew, were in the planning stages of opening a cafe in Highland Park. As Anya tells the story, âWe were having breakfast and there it wasâmy mother calling out to my husband, âMateo, pasame mi cafĂ© de leche.ââ Matthew turned to Anya and declared, âThat is it. That will be the name of our cafe.â
The Schodorfs launched CafĂ© de Leche in 2008, and its small-batch, hand-crafted coffee quickly gained a following in the Âé¶čÆ””Àcommunity. The following year, then-President Jonathan Veitch arrived on campus, and he fast became a superfan. âI used to go there every day before work and order a large iced latte,â he says. âMy wife, Sarah, and I became very good friends with the owners. Since then, CafĂ© de Leche has moved out to AltaÂdena [opening a second location in 2015]âand so have we!â
In an Âé¶čÆ””ÀInstagram survey last fall, CafĂ© de Leche brewed up a win in the uber-competitive coffee category, with 39% of the vote, edging out nearby Kumquat Coffee Co. (31%), and Muddy Paw (30%) on Eagle Rock Boulevard. Its comfortable couchesâas well as a tasty selection of pastries, bagels, and tamalesâmake it ideal for a study break or catching up with friends.
âSometimes when I take my first sip of cafĂ© de leche in the morning, as if by magic, my soul is transported back home,â writes Anya, who grew up in San JosĂ©, Costa Rica, and Glendale. âThe aroma of the coffee in the house flirts with my senses and creates a feeling of comfort, a feeling of home, a sense of family.â For the SchoÂdorfsâ Âé¶čÆ””Àfamily, CafĂ© de Leche feels like home.
ï»żIf spinning vinyl is your thing:
Arroyo Records
5123œ York Blvd.
Growing up in Chino Hills, Daniel Clodfelter got turned on to vinyl records while exploring his dadâs record collectionâfrom Buffalo Springfield to the Repo Man soundtrack (1984), with songs by Black Flag, Suicidal Tendencies, Iggy Pop, and other hardcore punk icons. âThat album really got me into â80s punk,â says Clodfelter. He soon started collecting vinyl himself, buying his first turnÂtable at age 18 and parsing through countless record store bins around the country over many years as a touring musician.
At the beginning of COVID, Clodfelter was working at a health food store in San Dimasâhis day job for 17 yearsâand a new dad. âWhen everything was shutting down, I took a tiny breakâmy son was 6 months old,â he recalls. Turning to other means to make money, he started selling large chunks of his record collection online, âand it just snowballed from that.â
Today, Arroyo Records occupies a York Boulevard space that has been a destination for vinyl enthusiasts for the last decade. It previously housed Permanent Records, whose owner, Lance Barresi, reached out to Clodfelter when he was looking to relocate. By then, Clodfelter had started selling his friendsâ collections as well, âand I started to think about storefronts when this opportunity came along,â he says. In September 2020, he quit his other job to devote himself to running Arroyo Records full-time. âI just ran with it and itâs been great.â
Clodfelter keeps his inventory fresh by constantly replenishing the storeâs offerings with vinyl gems from newly acquired collections. (The âcoolest thingâ heâs ever found? A 1967 promo copy of The Velvet Underground & Nico among a stack of dollar-bin-quality classical LPs.) âItâs really fun seeing peopleâs collections and hearing their connection with the records and meeting people whose tastes are similar to mine.â
Arroyo Recordsâ inventory is about one- third new records, with the rest being mostly used vinyl. (Thereâs a tiny space dedicated to cassette tapes, and Clodfelter is âtrying to figure out how to fit CDs in here, too.â)
The demographic for the store is âall over the place,â he says. âThere are high school kids, college students [including Oxy], and people whoâve been buying records since the 1960s.â And, of course, there are Swifties: For Record Store Day in May, Clodfelter got an allotment of 20 copies of The Tortured Poets Department, with an exclusive postcard from Taylor. Those LPs sold out quickly.
On the home front, Clodfelter is raising a next-generation music fan: his 4-year-old son. âHe has a few favorite records. He likes Lana [Del Rey] and old doo wop and â50s rock ânâ roll like the Trashmen. He likes the Charlie Brown cartoons so he likes âCharlie Brown,â by the Coasters. Heâs a cool little dude.â
ï»żIf youâre visiting Âé¶čÆ””ÀArts:
Bagel+Slice
4751 York Blvd.
Skafâs on York
4753 York Blvd.
In 2015, Âé¶čÆ””À purchased a 5,400-square-foot commercial building on the northeast corner of York Boulevard and Armadale Avenueâjust a block south of campus. In addition to luring the emerging York retail scene closer to the College, plans were to renovate the building âto make it more obvious that Âé¶čÆ””Àis nearby,â then-Director of Communications Jim Tranquada noted. (The prior tenant was the Ocxy Store, a purveyor of liquor and convenience goods.)
Plans came together to restore the 1920s structure into three distinct spacesâand in May 2019, Âé¶čÆ””ÀArts, the Collegeâs community-based arts hub, opened its doors at 4757 York Boulevard. But it would be three more years before the first of two new restaurants would open in the adjacent spaces.
First up was Bagel+Slice, Blaze Pizza co-founder Brad Kentâs latest contribution to the culinary landscape and his initial foray into bagels after years of tinkering with his recipe. Months later, Kent approached longtime associate Michael Roblesâmanager of his Olio Wood Fired Pizzeria in Grand Central Marketâwith an offer he could not refuse: the chance to buy not only Olioâs Market location but Bagel+Slice as well.
âBrad has a good heartâthatâs a big opportunity that he gave to me,â Robles says sitting outside Bagel+Slice one afternoon in mid-April. âIâm going to continue his legacy and do everything good, but I think itâs going to be even better.â
Robles has already brought a bit of Mexican flair to the menu, serving up a Oaxacan mole pizza with ingredients straight from Mexico. From pizza to bagels, âI make everyÂthing right hereâthe dough, the sausage, the onion sauce, everything is in-house,â he says. âThe neighborhood is really nice and more people are coming here all the time.â
One door down, brothers Daniel and Chris Skaf opened Skafâs on York in March 2023âthe latest iteration of a family-centric franchise that dates back to 1999. Thatâs when their dad, Salim, opened Skafâs Grill in North Hollywood in 1999. âMy aunt had always been the chef in the family, and a lot of recipes are hers,â Chris explains. A quarter-century ago, âThe restaurant industry was so different,â he adds: âThere was no social media, everything cost much less, and you could take your time to develop a client base.â
As the brothers got older, they started helping out more with the family businessâboth at their dadâs original location as well as their motherâs offshoot, Skafâs Lebanese Cuisine in Glendale, which opened in 2007. âMy brother and I always wanted to do our own thing,ââChris saysâand in 2012, he and Daniel stumbled upon a space on Brand Boulevard in Glendale. Subsequently, they opened the third Skafâs location that July. But over Memorial Day Weekend 2013, an early-morning fire broke out in the building when an appliance short-circuited in the apartment above the restaurantâand the entire structure was demolished in 2014.
After opening a side project in Glendale, selling Cornish hens and chicken sandwiches, the brothers signed a lease with Âé¶čÆ””Àin 2019 to bring Skafâs to York Boulevard. âIâve always wanted to be in Northeast L.A.,â Chris says. Six months later, the pandemic hit.
âI didnât expect Âé¶čÆ””Àto help out,â he continues, âbut the College told us, âTake your time. Once things get back to normal somehow, weâll restart everything.â And that gave us the breathing room to wait it out and then start construction,ââhe adds. âWeâre forever grateful for how Âé¶čÆ””Àtreated us then and how they continue to treat us.â
Each Skafâs location has a slightly different vibe. âMy dadâs is a typical hole-in-the- wallâyou come for the food, you come for the environment. Glendale is a little bit bigger in terms of the dining room, but that place is strictly about the food. For this one, we didnât want to make it too nice where people canât come here for casual dinner. This feels nice and approachable.â
After about six months of takeout only, Skafâs on York expanded to full service last September. From shawarma to kebabs, âThis food tastes even better when you can enjoy it on-site,â Chris says. âItâs so great to eat here and share with other people.â
ï»żIf youâre a kid at heart:
Bob Baker Marionette Theater
4949 York Blvd.
BobâBakerâs career as an animator and puppeteer began after World War II, and in the decades to follow he would work in film (G.I. Blues, Bedknobs and Broomsticks, Close Encounters of the Third Kind), TV (Bewitched, Star Trek, NCIS), and theme parks (lending his design skills to Disneylandâs Main Street). But his biggest contribution to the entertainment landscape came in 1963, when he and partner Alton Wood turned a dilapidated special effects workshop near downtown Los Angeles into a live puppet theater and family entertainment institution: the Bob Baker Marionette Theater.
In addition to entertaining generations of L.A.-area schoolchildren, the theater was home to Bakerâs collection of more than 4,000 handcrafted marionettes and was designated a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument in 2009. It remained open until 2018, when it lost its lease four years after Bakerâs death.
Westlakeâs loss is Highland Parkâs gain: In 2019, the theater signed a 10-year lease to relocate to a 10,000-square-foot space at the corner of York Boulevard and North Avenue 50, which was built as a vaudeville theater in 1923. Over the last five years, âWe have expanded a little bit each year in terms of using the space,â says Mary Thompson, BBMTâs director of communications. âWe have a storefront now; we have people working on fabric restoration and fabrication; and we have the main theater. Itâs a great home for us.â
Inside the crimson-red theater, puppetÂeers perform in the round, âand they use all of the space,â Thompson says. âKids especially like to sit on these floor cushions, so the puppets will come up and actually interact with themâmaybe sit on their lap, pat them on the back, that kind of thing.â There are theater seats along the perimeter as well. as recently completed puppet parlors overlooking the stage with additional seating.
Despite a seating capacity of around 100 people per show, BBMTâs theater space hosts around 20,000 visitors per year. Seasonal shows such as the Halloween Spooktacular and Holiday on Strings are among the most popular offerings, and the Nutcracker show âis an annual tradition for a lot of folks,â says Thompson, who saw the show growing up.
On April 13, Hooray LA!âcreated in 1981 for the L.A. bicentennial and regarded as Bakerâs masterpieceâreturned with two new puppets (a bear and a rainbow trout) for its latest iteration, having added a mountain lion last year. Hooray LA! runs through June 16.
Its summer show, Enchanted Toy Shop, will include three new numbers that are slated for next yearâs Choo Choo Revue, BBMTâs first fully original production in 40 years. âItâs a big undertaking, but itâs something weâve wanted to do for a while,â Thompson says.
âWe always say our shows are from ages 2 to toothless,â she adds, âbut we have Friday night shows that attract a younger adult audience with special extras, like food pop-ups and vendors. And we do see Occidental students coming to those.â
Prior to opening to the public at its new home, the theater staged a kidsâ workshop at the neighboring Âé¶čÆ””ÀArts building in 2019. BBMT has had Âé¶čÆ””ÀArts interns over the last couple of yearsâmost recently Jonah de Forest â24 and Willa Caspole â24, both theater and performance studies majorsâwho largely helped in organizing their archives.
On April 21, an estimated 25,000 people turned out for the 10th annual Bob Baker Day at L.A. State Historical Park. âEach year we have special guests, variety acts, music, mimes, and clowns, as well as a marketplace with artisans, vendors, food trucks, and a ton of free activities,ââThompson says. âAt its heart, itâs a celebration of Bob and his legacy.â
But if you want the full Bob Baker experience, the theater is the way to goâand at the end of every show, everyone gets ice cream. (Thatâs supposed to be a surprise, so letâs just keep that between us.)
ï»żIf youâre hungry for a breakfast burrito:
¶Ù±đ±ôŸ±Ččâs
4501 York Blvd.
When ¶Ù±đ±ôŸ±Ččâs restaurant opened for business in 2002, neighbors warned owners Delia and Adolfo Flores that every prior restaurant in the space had closed shop within a year. The couple was unfazed. âIf your food is good, you have business wherever you go,â Delia told The Occidental newspaper in 2016.
¶Ù±đ±ôŸ±Ččâs offers one of the best deals in town for current students: a discounted $6 breakfast burrito that is no-frills, beyond filling, and delicious any time of day. Make yourselves at home at this Âé¶čÆ””Àinstitution (just donât forget to bring cash; credit cards are not accepted).
ï»żIf you need a casual neighborhood nosh:
Joy
5100 York Blvd.
A casual neighborhood eatery in Highland Park, Joy serves up regional Taiwanese cooking inspired by Taiwanâs street food culture, such as minced pork on rice and thousand-layer pancake. Similar to Joyâs sister restaurant, Pine & Crane in Silver Lake, some of its dishes can be traced to the northern-style Chinese dishes chef Vivian Kuâs maternal grandparents grew up with before moving to Taiwan in 1949. Joyâs scallion sesame bread is baked in-house daily and sold by the loaf.
Joy opened its doors in 2018 in the longtime home of Elsaâs Bakery, a neighborhood fixture from 1976 until its closing in 2016. As an homage to Elsaâs founders Manuel and Elsy Vargas, Joy bakes Mexican wedding cookies daily and donates all the proceeds of cookie sales to a nonprofit partner in the area each month, âas we believe in contributing to the community we call home,â Ku says.
ï»żIf youâre craving something sweet:
Berry Bowl
5056 York Blvd.
âTen years ago, I came to Highland Park for a weekend of fun,â Meirav Leibovici recalls. âI have always been pretty health-conscious, and when I spent the day here, I realized there were no health food stores. It was mostly pizza and tacos.â With more young families moving east, Highland Park was poised to become âthe new, artistic, family-oriented community,â she adds. âI wanted to do something with food and beverage that would enrich the lives of the people here.â
In researching the marketplace, Leibovici found that frozen yogurt was on the decline in addition to being âchemical, synthetic, sugar-added.ââBy comparison, acaiâa superfoodâwas fruit-based, gluten-free, and dairy-free, with âtons of antioxidants,â she says. âAnd you could turn that into a healthy option and actually have fun with it because you could layer it with granola and fruits and seeds.â Thus, Berry Bowl was born.
In an Instagram survey, we asked Âé¶čÆ””Àstudents: âWhere to walk to for something sweet?â It was a berry competitive category, but Berry Bowl came out on top, with 38% of the voteâsweet victory for Leibovici. âBerry Bowl is literally my baby because I created it from nothing,â she says. âWhen I walked into this space, it was a storage unit. There was a single, flickering lightbulb dangling from the ceiling.â
In addition to building a business from the ground up, Leibovici hired a vegan chef to help her create the recipes. âWe worked on it for over a year to perfect everything,â she says. âBerry Bowl offers a little bit of everything for everybody. If someone has a nut allergy, we have other options. We donât do anything with dairy, and we have a lot of sugar-free options if someoneâs diabetic.â
Earlier this year, for a volunteer cleanup of Highland Park, Leibovici prepared 20 juices and smoothies to give to participants âso they could have something nice to drink,â she says. âHighland Park is great, and everybody should help each other.â
Berry Bowl turns 10 in November, and Leibovici couldnât be happier. âThe feedback from my customers is very gratifying. I love my staff and the energy in the store is always positive. Itâs fun to come up with new recipes. I love it all.â