ReportWire

Tag: october 2025

  • Upcoming Houston Food Events: Champagne Sabering and Friendsgiving Feasts – Houston Press

    [ad_1]

    On Tuesday, November 18, chef Don Bowie’s nonprofit, Big Chef Bowie Cares, returns with its annual Turkey Bowl fundraiser at Main Event in Stafford, supporting City Wide Club of Houston’s Super Feast. From 7 to 10 p.m., guests can hit the lanes, enjoy bites and drinks, and give back to Houston families in need this holiday season.

    The Marigold Club, 2531 Kuester, is hosting an intimate wine dinner with California’s acclaimed Scribe Winery on Wednesday, November 19 at 6:30 p.m. Guests will enjoy rare, limited-production pours and new releases paired with dishes like Hokkaido scallop crudo, duck Wellington, and classic tarte tatin, all while hearing stories from Scribe’s owner Andrew Mariani. Bubbles are poured at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $295 per person via OpenTable.

    Before the turkey hits the table, Sylvia Casares — aka the Enchilada Queen — invites Houstonians to kick off Thanksgiving week with a tequila-fueled fiesta at Sylvia’s Enchilada Kitchen, 6401 Woodway, on Wednesday, November 19. The four-course dinner features Don Julio sips and cocktails paired with dishes like shrimp aguachile, tacos al pastor, and the beloved Houston Enchilada, plus mariachis, tequila lore, and giveaways. Tickets are $75 per person, plus tax and gratuity, and reservations are required. Call 713-334-7295. 

    Thompson Hotel, 1717 Allen Parkway, invites guests to celebrate the season of gratitude with an unforgettable rooftop Friendsgiving at Sol 7 on Thursday, November 20, . The evening kicks off with a festive cocktail before guests enjoy a lavish buffet of seasonal fare and an exclusive wine tasting, all set against the glittering Houston skyline.

    On Thursday, November 20, The Periwinkle Foundation hosts Houston’s premier wine tasting and sommelier competition, Iron Sommelier, benefiting pediatric cancer programs at Texas Children’s Cancer and Hematology Center. Guests can sip exceptional wines as top sommeliers present their best selections, with judging based on presentation, creativity, and knowledge. The evening features tasting rooms, People’s Choice voting, an awards ceremony and a live auction. 6pm to 10pm. Tickets are $250.

    Berg Hospitality and Madame Zéro Champagne are teaming up to toast Houston’s fall patio season with a series of sparkling celebrations. Enjoy live sabering, tastings and champagne cocktails like the Madame Zéro French 75 and Blanc de Blancs Aperol Spritz, plus the chance to try sabering yourself with bottle purchase. Catch Sunset Sabering at Annabelle Brasserie, 811 Buffalo Park, on Thursday, November 20 from 5 to 7 p.m., or Saber & Sip Brunch at The Annie Café, 1800 Post Oak, on Sunday, 23 from 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

    On Saturday, November 22, Axelrad, 1517 Alabama, is teaming up with School of Rock Houston for Radfest, an all-day, three-stage music festival and artist showcase that doubles as a fundraiser for Houston Food Bank. Expect a killer lineup featuring Daikaiju, Los Skarnales and a stacked list of local acts, plus cocktails, mocktails, beer and wine flowing all day. Fuel up with eats from Homies (tacos, fried chicken, and mac and cheese), Luigi’s Pizzeria, and Tita’s Tamales while you catch sets from Houston bands, DJs and School of Rock students and instructors. Tickets are $20 in advance ($25 at the door), with $40 VIP passes that include drink specials, a Radfest tee and reserved seating.

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Viggiano

    Source link

  • Upcoming Houston Food Events: Eat Good, Honor Vets

    [ad_1]

    On Friday, November 7, Asia Society Texas Center will host its  2025 Night Market from 6 to 10 p.m. The all-ages festival brings together food trucks, retail vendors, a beer tent and cultural performances celebrating Houston’s AAPI communities. Admission to the outdoor market is free; indoor exhibits and performances carry ticketed entry from $5 to $10. 

    Whisky enthusiasts can join Brennan’s for its 17th annual Wild Turkey Trot Spirit Round Table on Monday, November 10, led by whiskey connoisseur Ed Guiney and featuring straight pours of Wild Turkey and Russell’s Reserve paired with Creole-style hors d’oeuvres. The event runs from 6 to 7:30 p.m.; tickets are $50 per person plus tax and gratuity. 

    Tuesday, November 11 is Veterans Day, and Houston area restaurants are offering gratitude on a plate, including Feges BBQ, where veterans will eat free and patrons can “pay it forward” by purchasing a Veteran Plate now through November 10. Check out our full Veterans Day Guide for more.

    On Wednesday, November 12, Hugo’s is hosting an immersive four-course dinner celebrating the art of Clase Azul Tequila, with pairings led by Global Brand Maestro Ruben Vargas. The evening kicks off with a passed-bites reception at 6 p.m. followed by dinner at 6:30 p.m., featuring dishes from chefs Hugo and Ruben Ortega like duck leg confit in mole poblano and braised short rib with mole pasilla. Tickets are $195 per person plus tax and gratuity

    On Thursday, November 13, the Shuck Cancer Houston event will take place at Silver Street Studios from 7 to 10 p.m. Hosted by the American Cancer Society, the stylish evening features wine-and-oyster pairings along with seafood from Houston’s top kitchens. Individual tickets start at $175.

    On Thursday, November 13, The Kid is hosting a Y2K-themed Ladies Night, featuring a Y2K dress code, free shooters for all guests, $8 Espresso Martinis and free pool throughout the night.

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Viggiano

    Source link

  • Spotlight: Inside October 2025 Parties & Events in Los Angeles  – LAmag

    [ad_1]

    Fashion soirées, charity galas, The Academy’s second biggest night of the year and more dazzled across the city in October. Take a look inside below. 

    L.A. Loves Alex’s Lemonade 

    Patton Oswalt and Meredith Salenger attend as LA Loves Alex’s Lemonade Stand presents the 13th Annual Food and Wine Event at UCLA in Los Angeles, CA on Saturday, October 4, 2025
    Credit: Benjamin Shmikler/ABImages
    Nancy Silverton, Billy Harris and Elizabeth Hong attend as LA Loves Alex’s Lemonade Stand presents the 13th Annual Food and Wine Event at UCLA in Los Angeles, CA on Saturday, October 4, 2025
    Credit: Benjamin Shmikler/ABImages

    The best cookout of the year unfolded at UCLA’s Royce Quad for the 13th annual L.A. Loves Alex’s Lemonade, raising $1.3 million for childhood cancer research over the course of the afternoon. Patton Oswalt, Blake Neely, Roxanne Gay and Carla Gallo were among the Angelenos in attendance enjoying food from the city’s top chefs, including Burt Bakman, Chris Bianco, Vivian Ku, Josiah Citrin, Ludo Lefebvre, Nancy Silverton, Suzanne Goin and Valerie Gordon. 

    HollyRod DesignCare Gala 

    HollyRod Foundation’s Annual DesignCare 2025 Gala
    HollyRod Foundation’s Annual DesignCare 2025 Gala
    Credit: Shutterstock for The HollyRod Foundation
    HollyRod Foundation’s Annual DesignCare 2025 Gala
    Isis King and Constance Marie
    Credit: Shutterstock for The HollyRod Foundation

    HollyRod Foundation founders Holly Robinson Peete and Rodney Peete held the annual HollyRod DesignCare Gala on Oct. 4. An evening of fashion, community and music, the event honored Don Cheadle and Bridgid Coulter with the Clarence and Jacqueline Avant HollyRod Humanitarian Award this year. Other honorees included Faith Evans, Vernon Jackson, Sumit and Viraj Dhanda and Frederick Anderson. 

    Rodeo Drive Celebrates Timepieces and Fine Jewelry  

    Thomas J. Blumenthal, Kathy Gohari, and Beverly Hills Mayor Sha
rona R. Nazarian, PsyD attend Rodeo
Drive Celebrates Timepieces and Fine Jewelry tribute to Thomas J. Blumenthal at Beverly Wilshire, A
Four Seasons Hotel.
    Thomas J. Blumenthal, Kathy Gohari, and Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. Nazarian, PsyD attend Rodeo Drive Celebrates Timepieces and Fine Jewelry tribute to Thomas J. Blumenthal at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel.
    Credit: Jorge Meza Photos/ Rodeo Drive Committee
    Chris Gleeson, Reed Kandalaft, Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. N
azarian, PsyD, Thomas J. Blumenthal,
Todd Johnson, Bill Wiley, and Giorgio Cyphaeus Sease Rodeo Drive Celebrates
    Chris Gleeson, Reed Kandalaft, Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. Nazarian, PsyD, Thomas J. Blumenthal, Todd Johnson, Bill Wiley, and Giorgio Cyphaeus Sease
    Credit: Jorge Meza Photos/ Rodeo Drive Committee

    From Oct. 6 to 12, Rodeo Drive honored timepieces and fine jewelry craftsmanship and began the series with a reception on the Rodeo Terrace at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel. The Oct. 6 tribute honored Thomas J. Blumenthal, president and CEO of GEARYS Beverly Hills, for his leadership in shaping the famed shopping district as a watchmaking epicenter.  

    Ramy Brook Women’s Brunch 

    Credit: Courtesy of Ramy Brook
    Credit: Courtesy of Ramy Brook

    On Oct. 8, contemporary womenswear brand Ramy Brook brought together The Bachelor‘s Kelsey Anderson, Selling Sunset‘s Nicole Young, Real Housewives‘ Jo De La Rosa and other L.A. tastemakers at The Maybourne Hotel Beverly Hills in celebration of powerful women in fashion and entertainment.  

    Angel Awards: Signature Chef Gala 

    Angel Awards 2025Credit: Courtesy Angel Awards
    Angel Awards 2025Credit: Courtesy Angel Awards

    Hosted by Chris Mann, the inaugural Angel Awards: Signature Chef Gala took place at the Santa Monica Proper Hotel on Oct. 16 to raise funds for Upward Bound House and its mission to end family homelessness. “This event proved that when culinary artistry meets humanity, the impact is boundless,” said Alexis Bodkin-Glassman, chief development officer of Upward Bound House. “We’re redefining what it means to give back in Los Angeles—one plate, one story, and one family at a time.” Attendees included actress Catherine O’Hara and the night’s honorees, the founders of Rustic Canyon Family. 

    The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures Gala 

    Bruce Springsteen and George Clooney
    Bruce Springsteen and George Clooney onstage at the Academy
    Credit: Photo by Emma McIntyre/Oscars/Getty Images for Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
    Lucy Liu, Penélope Cruz, Demi Moore, and Adrien Brody
    Lucy Liu, Penélope Cruz, Demi Moore, and Adrien Brody
    Credit: Photo by Stefanie Keenan/Oscars/Getty Images for Academy Museum of Motion Pictures

    The Academy’s most exclusive party happened on Oct. 18, where Adam Sandler, Addison Rae, Amanda Seyfried, Ayo Edebiri, Barry Jenkins, Baz Luhrmann, Benny Safdie, Bong Joon Ho and more from across the entertainment industry gathered to raise funds for the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures programs. Read more 

    Chrysalis Butterfly Ball 

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph attends the 2025 Chrysalis Butterfly Ball at The Beehive on Sat. Oct. 18th in Los Angeles, Calif.
    Credit: Jordan Strauss Photography
    The Action Figures at the 2025 Chrysalis Butterfly Ball at The Beehive on Sat. Oct. 18th in Los Angeles, Calif.
    Credit: Jordan Strauss Photography

    On Oct. 18, The Beehive in South Los Angeles welcomed a crowd of business leaders, changemakers and Hollywood players for a night of charity and camaraderie that raised over $1 million for Chrysalis, a nonprofit that assists people in finding job stability. Read more 

    Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere L.A. Premiere 

    AFI Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere Los Angeles Premiere
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Bruce Springsteen, Patti Scialfa, Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Strong and David Greenbaum, President, Disney Live Action and 20th Century Studios attend the AFI Los Angeles Premiere of 20th Century Studios’ “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at The TCL Chinese Theater.
    Credit: Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for 20th Century Studios
    AFI Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere Los Angeles Premiere
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 22: (L-R) Matthew Anthony Pellicano Jr. and Scott Cooper speak onstage during the AFI Los Angeles Premiere of 20th Century Studios’ “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at The TCL Chinese Theater.
    Credit: Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for 20th Century Studios
    AFI Springsteen: Delivery Me From Nowhere Los Angeles Premiere
    HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 22: Bruce Springsteen performs onstage during the AFI Los Angeles Premiere of 20th Century Studios “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” at The TCL Chinese Theater in Hollywood, California.
    Credit: Photo by Jesse Grant/Getty Images for 20th Century Studios

    AFI Festival opened on Oct. 22 with the Los Angeles premiere of Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere. Inside the TCL Chinese Theatre, director Scott Cooper introduced the film and his cast and collaborators: Jeremy Allen White, Odessa Young, Jeremy Strong, Marc Maron, Matthew Anthony, Bruce Springsteen and Warren Zanes, who wrote the book that inspired the film. After the credits rolled, Springsteen surprised the crowd by returning to the front of the theater for an intimate, two-song acoustic set. Between “Atlantic City” and “Land of Hopes and Dreams,” The Boss reflected on the turbulent state of the U.S., but ended on an optimistic note: “”For 250 years around the world, despite all the faults that we’ve had, the United States has served as a beacon of democracy and hope and freedom… those ideals remain worth fighting for.” 

    Neiman Marcus Fantasy Gifts 

    Neiman Marcus Celebrates 2025 Fantasy Gifts
    Leslie Bibb, Sarah Michelle Gellar
    Credit: Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com
    Neiman Marcus Celebrates 2025 Fantasy Gifts
    Malin Åkerman
    Credit: Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com

    Neiman Marcus showed off its ultra luxe Fantasy Gifts collection on Oct. 21 at Bar Marmont. Eva Longoria, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Ashlee Simpson, Evan Ross, Kathy Hilton, Leslie Bibb and more weaved through rooms dedicated to bringing each Fantasy Gift to life, including a Western-style bar in tribute to a Christian Louboutin custom saddle and a martini bar decked out with Phaidon coffee table books alluding to an Annie Liebovitz gift. The soirée came to a close with a final surprise: late-night bites from Raising Canes. 

    Victoria Justice’s Love Zombie Halloween 

    Victoria Justice Halloween 2025 partyCredit: Nick Velasco/Lasko Media
    Victoria Justice Halloween 2025 partyCredit: Nick Velasco/Lasko Media

    Celebrating her new single, “Love Zombie,” Victoria Justice got into the Halloween spirit early with a spooky-chic party at Bar Jubilee on Oct. 21. Dressed as a stylish, gory bride, the actress-singer was joined by Leon Thomas, Janet Jackson, sister Madison Grace and more who enjoyed bites, drinks and experiences courtesy of Rumor, Casablanca Karaoke, Altos Tequila, It’Sugarr, Dear Caviar, Peroni and Monbeau.  

    Gala of the Stars 

    Gala for the Stars 2025
    Janet Jackson
    Credit: Shutterstock
    Gala for the Stars 2025
    Noah Lands, Abby Lee Miller and Adrian Ruiz
    Credit: Shutterstock

    Dancers Against Cancer held its annual black-tie tribute to artistry, resilience and community within the global dance world. Hosted by Maks Chmerkovsky at The Beverly Hilton, the evening honored Janet Jackson, Liza Minnelli, Ben Vereen, Debbie Gibson, Derek Hough, JoJo Siwa, Anita Mann, Julie McDonald, Mandy Moore, Christopher Scott, Robbie Blue and Kaeli Ware and raised more than $700,00 to support dancers and families affected by cancer.  

    Staud Opens Melrose Avenue Flagship 

    STAUD Flagship Cocktail Event
    Lydia Kives, Sarah Staudinger, Veronica Smiley
    Credit: Jojo Korsh/ BFA
    STAUD Flagship Cocktail EventCredit: Jojo Korsh/ BFA
    STAUD Flagship Cocktail Event
    Lili Reinhart
    Credit: Jojo Korsh/ BFA

    On Oct. 23, Staud debuted its holiday collection with the unveiling of its new Melrose outpost. The in-store cocktail party paired bistro-style French fries and burgers with Champagne and cocktails by Tanqueray No. Ten, Ketel One Vodka and Casamigos Tequila, and wowed with a Staud x Roe Caviar ice installation. VIPs like Dixie D’Amelio, Charlotte Lawrence and Lili Reinhart mingled between snapping photos for live, custom portraits by Unfortunate Portrait.  

    Tory Burch Book Party 

    Cindy Crawford, Laura Dern, Laura Brown, Tory Burch, Kristina O’Neill and Carolyn Murphy
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA.com
    Kiernan Shipka
    Kiernan Shipka
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA.com

    Celebrating the release of Kristina O’Neill and Laura Brown’s new book, All the Cool Girls Get Fired: How to Let Go of Being Let Go and Come Back on Top, Cindy Crawford, Laura Dern, Max Greenfield, Kiernan Shipka and more hit the Tory Burch Rodeo Drive flagship on Oct. 23. Read more 

    Critics Choice Assoc. Celebration of Latino Cinema & Television 

    The Critics Choice Association's 5th Annual Celebration Of Latino Cinema & Television - Inside
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 24: America Ferrera accepts the Trailblazer award for “The Lost Bus” onstage during The Critics Choice Association’s 5th annual celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.
    Credit: JC Olivera/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association
    The Critics Choice Association's 5th Annual Celebration Of Latino Cinema & Television - Inside
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 24: (L-R) Cristo Fernández, Anthony Ramos, America Ferrera and Tonatiuh attend The Critics Choice Association’s 5th annual celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.
    Credit: Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association
    The Critics Choice Association's 5th Annual Celebration Of Latino Cinema & Television - Inside
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 24: (2nd L-R) Dolores Huerta, winner of the Icon award and Gregory Nava attend The Critics Choice Association’s 5th annual celebration of Latino Cinema & Television.
    Credit: JC Olivera/Getty Images for Critics Choice Association

    Honoring the standout work of the Latino entertainment community on and off screen, the Critics Choice Assoc. threw an Oct. 24 celebration at the Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills with sponsors Milagro Tequila, NEP Sweetwater and Fiji Water. “It’s so great to be in these rooms with you, most especially with my hero Dolores Huerta, who has been a model for all of us about how to live a life of purpose,” Trailblazer Award winner America Ferrera said during her speech to a crowd that included fellow honorees Anthony Ramos, Gabriel Luna and Camila Perez. “Your dedication has brought dignity to the Latino community, and it has changed the story for millions of people about who we are and what we deserve.” Attendees also include Jamie Lee Curtis and Seth Rogen. 

    Willy Chavarria x Maxfield Party 

    Willy Chavarria
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA
    Willy Chavarria x Maxfield Oct 2025 partyCredit: Matthew Kavanagh
    Willy Chavarria, Arianne Phillips, Jess Cuevas
    Credit: Cody Marquez/BFA

    Willy Chavarria unveiled his autumn-winter 2025 Tarantula collection and an exclusive capsule with a party at Maxfield in West Hollywood on Oct. 24, putting on a head-turning showcase of suits and streetwear among the boutique’s avant-garde curation of vintage and designer pieces. The California-born, New York-based fashion designer treated stylists Karla Welch, Enrique Melendez and B. Åkerlund and other guests to music by DJ Vago, a showcase of sleek lowriders, specialty cocktails made with Tequila Don Julio 70 Añejo Cristalino and gooey quesadillas from Leo’s Taco Truck. 

    The Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Brunch 

    Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch Hosted by Noah Wyle and the Cast of The Pitt
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 26: (L-R) Patrick Ball, Shawn Hatosy, Supriya Ganesh, Sepideh Moafi, Katherine LaNasa, Noah Wyle, Shabana Azeez, Taylor Dearden and Gerran Howell attend the Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch hosted by Noah Wyle and the cast of “The Pitt” at Skirball Cultural Center on October 26, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Credit: Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for UCLA Rape Treatment Center
    Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch Hosted by Noah Wyle and the Cast of The Pitt
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 26: Max Greenfield speaks during the Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch.
    Credit: Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for UCLA Rape Treatment Center
    Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch Hosted by Noah Wyle and the Cast of The Pitt
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 26: (L-R) Patrick Ball and Katherine LaNasa attend the Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House Annual Brunch.
    Credit: Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images for UCLA Rape Treatment Center

    Hosted by Noah Wyle, Katherine LaNasa and their fellow cast members on The Pitt, The Rape Treatment Center and Stuart House at UCLA Health held its annual brunch at Skirball Cultural Center on Oct. 26. Other stars, advocates and community leaders joined the afternoon to honor survivors and raise funds during a live auction led by Max Greenfield.  

    Swarovski Celebrates Masters of Light: Hollywood Exhibition  

    SWAROVSKI Masters of Light Hollywood Opening Celebration
    Baz Luhrmann, Jeff Goldblum
    Credit: [Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com
    Alexander Edwards, Cher
    Credit: Miguel McSongwe/BFA.com
    SWAROVSKI Masters of Light Hollywood Opening Celebration
    Rashmika Mandanna
    Credit: Jason Sean Weiss/BFA.com

    Swarovski officially landed in Hollywood with its Masters of Light exhibition by throwing a party on Oct. 28 at Amoeba Music, gathering Cher, Kylie Jenner, Baz Luhrmann, Viola Davis, Elisabeth Olsen, Alex Cosani and other friends of the house in the heart of Tinseltown. 

    2025 Dia de Muertos Gala

    Dia De Muertos Gala
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: Carlos Eric Lopez (R) and Miguel (L) attend the 2025 Dia De Muertos Gala presented by Lexus, Tequila Don Julio, Nike, DNERO, Calamigos Ranch and Maremoto at The Los Angeles River Center and Gardens.
    Credit: Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala
    Dia De Muertos Gala
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: Lupita Infante performs onstage during the 2025 Dia De Muertos Gala presented by Lexus, Tequila Don Julio, Nike, DNERO, Calamigos Ranch and Maremoto at The Los Angeles River Center and Gardens on October 30, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala)
    Credit: Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala
    Dia De Muertos Gala
    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: (L-R) Carlos Eric Lopez, Mercedes Rodriguez, and Camila Cabello attend the 2025 Dia De Muertos Gala presented by Lexus, Tequila Don Julio, Nike, DNERO, Calamigos Ranch and Maremoto at The Los Angeles River Center and Gardens on October 30, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Amy Sussman/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala)
    Credit: Photo by Gonzalo Marroquin/Getty Images for The Dia De Muertos Gala

    On Oct. 30, Camila Cabello presented the Abuelita Award to her grandmother, Mercedes Rodrigues, at the fifth annual Día de Muertos Gala hosted by Carlos Eric Lopez. Presented by Lexus, the party marked the launch of Lopez’s Tú Tomorrow nonprofit. Nicole Richie, Miguel, Taylor Zakhar Perez, Nezza, Xochitl Gomez and Gloria Calderon Kellett also attended.

    Simon Wiesenthal Center Humanitarian Dinner

    BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: Jeffrey Katzenberg speaks onstage during the humanitarian award dinner for Warner Bros. Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav presented by the Simon Wiesenthal Center at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on October 30, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.
    Credit: on Kopaloff/Getty Images for Simon Wiesenthal Center
    BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA – OCTOBER 30: (L-R) Jim Berk, Dana Bash, Lee Kuperman, Steven Spielberg, Aya Meydan, Omer Shem Tov, Michael Feinstein, David Zaslav, Dawn Aaron and Daniel Finkelman attend the humanitarian award dinner for Warner Bros. Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav presented by the Simon Wiesenthal Center.
    Credit: on Kopaloff/Getty Images for Simon Wiesenthal Center

    The Simon Wiesenthal Center Humanitarian Dinner raised $4.3 million for its global education, advocacy and storytelling initiatives, drawing a crowd that included Steven Spielberg, Jon Bon Jovi and David Geffen. The ceremony honored Warner Bros. Discovery President and CEO David Zaslav; CNN Chief Political Correspondent Dana Bash; and October 7 survivors Aya Meydan and Omer Shem Tov.

    [ad_2]

    Haley Bosselman

    Source link

  • Upcoming Houston Food Events: From Kolache to Craft Beer – Houston Press

    [ad_1]

    Kolache Shoppe, 10321 Katy Freeway, is now open in Memorial City, and it’s celebrating with a full week of pastry-packed festivities from Monday, November 3 to Sunday, November 9. Each day brings something new — free kolaches, coffee, gift cards and bonus loyalty points. Highlights include a Houston Food Bank benefit day on Wednesday, buy-one-get-one pastries on Thursday and complimentary coffee drinks on Friday (with a chance to win free weekly coffee for a year). 

    Goode Co. Armadillo Palace, 5015 Kirby Dr, hosts its annual Oysters, Blues & Brews on Thursday, November 6, celebrating Gulf Coast flavors and live Texas blues while benefiting the Coastal Conservation Association’s Building Conservation Trust. Guests can dig into mesquite-fired coastal dishes like smoked boudin links, Gulf redfish, and Christmas Bay gumbo, plus Gulf shrimp taquitos, Yellowfin tuna tostadas, and a seafood bar stacked with Campechana, boiled shrimp, and freshly shucked mariculture oysters. The Mighty Orq keeps the night rocking from 6 to 9 p.m. Tickets start at $100, ages 21 and up.

    On Saturdays, November 8, 15 and 22, Brennan’s, 3300 Smith, will host a brunch series featuring live piano tunes and half-priced rosé from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. And on Monday, November 10, Brennan’s throws its annual Turkey Trot Whiskey Tasting, honoring the late Brennan’s bartender Richard Middleton and led by his longtime friend Ed Guiney. Guests will enjoy eight one-ounce pours of select Wild Turkey whiskies paired with Brennan’s signature hors d’oeuvres from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Tickets are $50 per person plus tax and gratuity. 

    Discovery Green, 1500 McKinney, is turning into a playground for food, music and art when the Bites & Beyond Festival debuts on Saturday, November 8 from 1 to 10 p.m. Expect a full sensory takeover with local chefs, food trucks and beverage pop-ups showing off the city’s flavor, plus live sets across four stages spanning house, disco, Latin and Afro beats, immersive art installations, cultural activations and plenty of photo-worthy moments. Tickets start at $30.48, with VIP and Party on Stage passes for those who want the elevated experience.

    The Pit Room Memorial City, 10301-A Katy Fwy, fires up the smokers for the Brighter Futures BBQ on Saturday, November 8, a lively fundraiser supporting Communities In Schools of Houston. From 6 to 10 p.m., guests can dig into top-notch barbecue and fixings, sip on drinks, enjoy live music, and bid in a silent auction—all benefiting local students through academic and mental health support programs. Tickets are $300 per person, with table options for six ($1,800) and ten ($3,000). Western wear encouraged.

    Saint Arnold Brewing Co., 2000 Lyons Ave, teams up with Houston Dairymaids for a Beer & Cheese Pairing on Sunday, November 9, offering a curated tasting of five artisanal cheeses matched with five of Saint Arnold’s signature brews. Guests can also enjoy soft pretzels with mustard and receive a token for an extra beer at the Beer Garden & Restaurant. The event runs from 1 to 3 p.m., and tickets are $50.

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Viggiano

    Source link

  • Leader of the Patch: Professional Pumpkin Sculptor Terri Hardin’s Tips & Tricks for Halloween – LAmag

    [ad_1]

    The Food Network’s ‘Outrageous Pumpkins’ judge Terri Hardin shares her sculpting tips

    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Pumpkins are a billion-dollar business in the U.S. Their sweet, earthy aroma has found its way into everything from breakfast cereal to hand cream, but much of the fresh fruit sold this month will end up on porches with two eyes and a candle inside. 

    The contestants Terri Hardin judged on five seasons of the Food Network’s Outrageous Pumpkins attacked gourds with chainsaws, grinders and sanders to craft a crop of prize-winning jack-o’-lanterns up to 6 feet tall for the TV competition show. Back home in Burbank, Hardin is a veteran Muppeteer for the Jim Henson Co. and has worked on numerous rides and attractions as a Disney Imagineer. This time of year, the artist shares her pumpkin expertise through videos and a line of customized tool kits. She even takes on a limited number of students at her home studio for a master class in the art of pumpkin sculpting. We asked her for tips on tackling the calabaza. 

    Bring to Light - A Carved PumpkinCredit: Irvin Rivera

    Q: What’s the difference between carving and sculpting?

    A: The jack-o’-lantern type is carved, meaning you’re cutting a full-on hole. You punch through and the light is a hot yellow. With sculpting, you take the skin off and carve the flesh. You’re playing with various thicknesses, creating different hues, from rosy colors to fiery oranges depending on how close you are to the light inside.

    Q: What kind of pumpkin is best for sculpting?

    A: You can go out and get an orange pumpkin from the grocery store, but those are evil. There’s a breed that grows like celery and if you catch a thread, it can rip your pumpkin in two. If you go to a patch where they’re growing, they can tell you the variety. If you dream of a big pumpkin, you could ask for a Big Mac, which starts at about 100 pounds. The stem of a Wolf pumpkin looks like a sequoia tree – and that’s a fun one if you want orange. Walmart happens to have a really nice pumpkin called the Ghost. It has a smooth white surface like a casaba melon and it’s about the size of a basketball; that one is easy and fun to carve. Some people use butternut squash. I had one 2 ½ feet long and thought, “Wouldn’t this make some nice horns or nice tentacles?” 

    Q: What’s your class like?

    A: I ask [students] to bring a picture of what they want. Jack Skellington is a really good one to start with or maybe I’ll do Godzilla. We once did a howler monkey in a little hat. You draw the lines but don’t cut them out. You scribe on the surface and shave off the eyes, nose and mouth so that it looks like a creature in a pumpkin mask. Some of my classes hold me to a two-hour window, and other times we’ll do it until God turns the lights out. Some students take hours just because it’s so much fun.

    [ad_2]

    Chris Nichols

    Source link

  • Eric Wareheim’s New Book ‘Steak House’ Serves Stories & Recipes

    [ad_1]

    The bestselling author explores his favorite chophouses

    Sumptous leather banquettes, tuxedoed captains and the extremely flattering light of restaurants like Clearman’s Steak ‘N Stein and Musso & Frank Grill captivate Eric Wareheim as much as the meat on the menu. The Emmy-nominated television producer, comedian, director and actor (Master of None; Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!) had an idea to visit and photograph 11 of his favorite comfort food restaurants for a book of stories, photographs and recipes.  

    That idea grew into Steak House: The People, the Places, the Recipes, out Oct. 14 from Ten Speed Press, as Wareheim hit the road, visiting more than 60 new and classic fine dining spots, barbecue joints and churrascos across the U.S. and Mexico that capture the special feeling of comfort and community the comedian holds dear.  

    At the beginning of the 21st century, best friends Wareheim and Tim Heidecker were fresh out of college and sending goofy videos to funny people they admired. Actor Bob Odenkirk invited the duo to Los Angeles and helped them launch a comedy empire that changed the art form. The pair recently invited Odenkirk and another friend and mentor, John C. Reilly, to dinner at Taylor’s the 1950s-era landmark in Koreatown, for a summit about Wareheim’s new book.  

    “They make me smile, but there’s a darkness to them, too,” Odenkirk says in the book. “My father spent a lot of time in country club bars and steakhouses with other salesmen, trying to emulate the Rat Pack.” Wareheim loves the literal darkness at Taylor’s. “I go right after work,” he says. “You walk in and you can’t see anything because your eyes are accustomed to the bright L.A. sun. The vibe is perfect.” 

    Taylor's in Koreatown, featured in Steak House by Eric Wareheim
    Taylor’s in Koreatown
    Credit: Marcus Nilsson

    Wareheim is as invested in food and drink as he is in comedy. His first cookbook, Foodheim: A Culinary Adventure, was a New York Times bestseller. He also co-founded the Las Jaras line of natural wines, hosts the annual Beefsteak benefit dinner downtown with chef Neal Fraser and has a dream to open his own steakhouse.  

    Wareheim is always on his best behavior at the institutions he loves. “Respect the place. Don’t ask for crazy substitutions,” he says. “Tip really well, remember the name of your servers and say good-night. It’s about communication and being nice instead of stumbling out drunk. Be classy about it.” 

    When friends ask if he’s been to their favorite spot, Wareheim reminds them of the realities of eating and photographing a lunch and two rich dinners (often with creamed corn, biscuits and a slice of cheesecake) every day while working on the book. “I had to stop for my health,” he says. “We sampled everything. It was intense, but I think it was worth it.”  

    [ad_2]

    Chris Nichols

    Source link

  • New Headline

    [ad_1]

    Overview:

    We take a look at the upcoming food and drink events in Houston.

    Mark your calendars, because you don’t want to miss these deliciously fun culinary happenings:

    Chef Shawn Gawle’s buzzy Height restaurant Camaraderie, 608 West 11th, is debuting a “Sunday Supper” beginning October 26, offering diners a family-style feast priced at $42 per person. Guests can enjoy roast chicken, seasonal salad, decadent potato puree, roasted seasonal vegetables, golden Parker House rolls and a spice cake with housemade vanilla ice cream for dessert; with bottomless carafes of red or white wine for $16 per person. Reservations are available via Resy.

    Several Houston restaurants are giving back to the heroes who give so much this First Responder’s Day, Monday, October 28. At State Fare, first responders can enjoy a complimentary dine-in meal from a special menu featuring favorites like the State Fare Cheeseburger and Hot Honey Chicken Sandwich; Hachi invited first responders to enjoy a complimentary chef’s choice nigiri; first responders who present proof of employment on can enjoy a free cup of coffee or kolache with any purchase and Kolache Shoppe’s Greenway location; Molina’s Cantina is showing its gratitude with 50 percent off for first responders; Pier 6 is extending the appreciation year-round with a daily 10 percent discount for first responders; and educators, military members and first responders can take 25 percent off in-store orders every day at PINCHO — just show valid ID at checkout.

    Starting Halloween weekend, Jane and the Lion Bakehouse, 4721 North Main, debuts dinner service with cozy, seasonal three-course suppers served Thursday through Saturday at 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Expect locally sourced ingredients, rotating chalkboard menus and chef Jane Wild’s signature no-shortcuts style. Soft launch seatings kick off October 31, with regular service in November. Reservations required.

    Communities In Schools of Houston is partnering with The Pit Room for the Brighter Futures BBQ Fundraiser on Saturday, November 8, from 6 to 10 p.m. at The Pit Room Memorial City, 10301 Katy Freeway. Guests can dig into some of Houston’s best barbecue, enjoy drinks and live music, and bid in a silent auction to support CIS programs that provide academic and mental health services to local students. In addition, throughout the day, the Montrose location, 1201 Richmond, will donate 100 percent of food and beverage sales to CIS. Tickets for the evening fundraiser start at $300 per person, with table options available.

    San Leon favorite Pier 6 Seafood & Oyster House, 113 6th, is marking five years with a blowout bash on Friday, November 8. Executive chef Joe Cervantez will serve an exclusive anniversary menu paired with caviar and Champagne tastings, plus a few surprises to toast the milestone.

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Viggiano

    Source link

  • Mr. Scorsese Brings the Director’s Genius to Life on Apple TV

    [ad_1]

    The first time Rebecca Miller witnessed Martin Scorsese working on set, he seemed edgy.  

    “Marty’s demeanor was so anxious and nervous and alive,” she recalls. Miller had been living in Rome with her husband, actor Daniel Day-Lewis. The couple were overseas while he filmed in Scorsese’s historical crime epic, Gangs of New York, and a visit to set put the director in a whole new light.  

    “I remember thinking, ‘My God, this is a man who’s made all these masterpieces, and yet he’s as nervous as if he’s never made a film before.’ And yet it did occur to me later that, in a way, that is part of his secret is he’s so alive. He hasn’t gotten complacent. There’s no part of him that is resting on his laurels. He’s always only as good as… what he’s doing now.”  

    Miller captures the duality of Scorsese as a living legend and human artist in Mr. Scorsese, her docuseries about the famed director that begins streaming globally on Apple TV on Oct. 17. The five episodes offer an unrestricted look into his entire personal and professional life, scoping in on his extensive private archives and robust filmography. She also captures a number of unprecedented interviews with friends, creative collaborators, and family members. The star-studded lineup includes, among others, Robert De Niro, Leonardo DiCaprio, Mick Jagger, Isabella Rossellini, Steven Spielberg, Sharon Stone, Jodie Foster, Paul Schrader, Margot Robbie, Cate Blanchett, longtime editor Thelma Schoonmaker and, of course, Scorsese himself.  

    The Oscar-winning filmmaker in action
    Credit: Courtesy Apple TV

    After Gangs of New York wrapped, Miller got to know Scorsese more as filmmaking peers. While getting ready to make Personal Velocity — a drama based on the book of the same name that she wrote — she asked for some advice from Scorsese about using voiceover while at his daughter’s first birthday party. “The minute you asked Marty for advice on films, the floodgates open.” 

    Over the next two decades, Miller and Scorsese didn’t see much of each other, but she continued to screen her films for him, and he would privately pass along his thoughts. Then, as early 2020 set in, she wondered to her producing partner, Damon Cardasis, about making another documentary (her first, 2017’s Arthur Miller: Writer, captured her father). 

    “The first person that came to mind was Martin Scorsese,” she says. “I was sort of fascinated by the dichotomy of Catholicism and his fascination with violence and how those two things go together… I had a sense that his spiritual life was very key to actually reading his films.” 

    Leonardo DiCaprio and
    Scorsese on the set of The Aviator
    Credit: Brigitte Lacombe

    She inquired with Scorsese’s documentary producing partner Margaret Bodde if someone was already working on a documentary about him. No one was, and one letter and a meeting later, the documentary was underway. “That was [my] last hug of anyone before the pandemic,” Miller remembers. “That’s why some of our interviews are outside.”  

    From the start of COVID-19 to 2025, Miller and her team went to work. She estimates they had at least 200 hours of footage to edit down, about 20 hours of which was just Scorsese. 

    Five hours into interviewing Scorsese, he was only at 12 years old in his life story. It became clear that the planned two-hour documentary needed a longer runtime. Early on, she interviewed filmmaker Brian De Palma, who warned, “You can’t do it in two hours. There’s no way. Maybe you can get to Taxi Driver.”  

    Grateful for the flexibility of Apple TV, Miller expanded it from two hours to two parts to five parts, each of which runs about one hour. “His whole nerve center, in a way, as an artist, is in the neighborhood [he grew up in,]” she explains. The Catholicism, the machismo, the moral complexity and violence and crime of his films — it all bubbles to the surface in the examination his Little Italy childhood. 

    Martin Scorsese as a child
    Scorsese spent much
    of his childhood indoors due to asthma
    Credit: Courtesy Apple TV

    Scorsese’s exuberant passion for filmmaking is reflected in electrifying needle drops, many courtesy of The Rolling Stones. Sure, the music choice was a technicality: the English rock legends’ songs pepper many of his movies, not to mention he directed their 2008 concert film, Shine a Light. But it also kicks up the pulse of the docuseries.  

    “He has such a deep, visceral connection to the stones, to The Stones…That was the Holy Grail in terms of music,” Miller says. “It’s an intelligent but very anarchic energy in that music.” 

    Given the richness of his life and art, Scorsese is a dream documentary subject. But what made the process run smoothly was his openness. No topic goes untouched, from filmmaking fun and his love for cinema to religion, drugs, relationship turbulence and career peaks and valleys.  

    “He was so wanting to say things in a new way,” Miller notes. “He really made such an effort. Because, of course, he’s somebody that has spoken endlessly and people know a lot about him, but he was just trying to create a new angle or a new way of saying something that he hadn’t quite said, and he was very, very considerate in that way.” 

    “I really did follow Marty in these interviews,” she adds. “I think the fact that I wasn’t coming out with an agenda actually helped him to probably be open. And after all, he’s probably the most, one of the most, honest filmmakers in existence.” 

    [ad_2]

    Haley Bosselman

    Source link

  • Upcoming Food Events: Taste the Festival of Lights – Houston Press

    [ad_1]

    Pondicheri, 2800 Kirby, is ushering in the Festival of Lights with a festive Diwali Thali, available in-house from Saturday, October 18 through Monday, October 20. For $28 (vegetarian), $32 (chicken) or $35 (lamb), enjoy a platter featuring 7-Vegetable Stew, Rajma Chaat, Carrot Paratha, Fresh Fruit, Besan Mithai, and a choice of Paneer Kebab, Chicken Kebab or Lamb Kebab. 

    Now through Tuesday, October 21, guests can celebrate the Festival of Lights at Musaafer, 5115 Westheimer, where chef Mayank Istwal presents a dazzling six-course tasting menu inspired by the vibrant art and spirit of Diwali. Each dish draws from a different region of India, translating traditions like Rangoli and Mandala art into stunning, edible works of color and symmetry. The menu runs $120 per person and reservations are required.

    Bar Buena, the moody new bar tucked just behind Goode Co. Kitchen & Cantina, 2002 West Gray, continues its bi-monthly “Meet the Maker”  series with an intimate tasting session from Carabuena Tequila, held from 1 to 2:30 p.m. on Wednesday, October 22. Cost is $30 per person.

    The Rare Steak Championship takes over at Post Houston, 401 Franklin, on Wednesday, October 23. Steak enthusiasts can join over 25 of Houston’s top steakhouses and chefs for an evening of unlimited steak sampling, creative cocktails, live music and spirited competition. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. and tickets start at $145.31.

    Trill Burgers and ChòpnBlọk mark the final cycle of ChòpnBlọk’s Celebration Circuit honoring its one-year anniversary of its Montrose flagship with a special takeover. On Thursday, October 23 from 9 to 11 p.m., Ope Amosu and the ChòpnBlọk crew will take over Trill Burgers, 3607 South Shepherd, with West African-inspired takes on Trill’s signature burgers and tenders.

    The 7th annual A Taste of Cy-Fair returns Friday, October 25 to Bridgeland’s Lakeland Village Center, bringing an evening of food, drink and community spirit. Guests can dig into bites from dozens of local restaurants, sip fine wines and craft brews and enjoy live music under the stars while raising money for a great cause. Every ticket sold supports Cy-Hope, the local nonprofit working to make life brighter for kids across the Cy-Fair community.

    [ad_2]

    Brooke Viggiano

    Source link

  • John C. Reilly Is in the Mood for Love – LAmag

    [ad_1]

    Powerful art can move you centuries after it was created. Sculpture and songs from generations past can evoke enough emotion to instantly return you to the original destination. John C. Reilly plays the title character in Mister Romantic, a touring musical comedy the Oscar- and Grammy-nominated actor is bringing to Downtown’s Palace Theatre on Oct. 10. 

    Reilly’s character seems like he has been hiding in the wings of the ancient hall from time immemorial. Reilly materializes from some other dimension, a lovable imp searching for love. He wanders the theater, offering kindness and longing gazes while crooning a gorgeous repertoire of songs from out of time. The show’s soundtrack, titled What’s Not to Love? (also available as a limited-edition blue vinyl album pressed at Jack White’s record factory), includes hundred-year-old hits by Irving Berlin and Glenn Miller and newer songs by Tom Waits and Randy Newman. Mister Romantic makes them all feel profound and timeless.

    “It’s a combination of my whole life that led me to do this show,” Reilly says. “The initial seed was musical theater as a kid and doing the movie Chicago. I started collecting songs, and it turns out they were all love songs —very sincere and very emotional songs. The mission of the show is to share this music and tell you a story live, in-person. Getting out in the audience and crawling through the seats trying to literally connect with as many in the audience as I can seemed radical and punk rock to me.”

    John C. Reilly of Mister Romantic
    Credit: Photo by Bobbi Rich

    Reilly assembled a band full of acclaimed musicians to accompany him. Davíd Garza, Charles De Castro, David Piltch and Gabe Witcher provide the richness and authenticity the moving show deserves. “This is not John C. Reilly, it’s Mister Romantic,” the actor says. “He doesn’t remember the past and he’s been alive for thousands of years. It allows the audience to escape the world and live in a perfect place where everyone cares about each other for 90 minutes.”

    Reilly’s tousled hair, derby hat and floppy tie would have been perfectly at home in the Palace when it was a vaudeville house hosting acts like the Marx Brothers and Will Rogers. “What other performers are out there singing, dancing and making you laugh doing a show about love?” Reilly says. “I thought… ‘Well, nobody!’ I love a crazy scheme, so I’m taking the success and notoriety I have and paying it back to the audience by telling them I love them. That’s really fun and it has meaning for me.”

    The post John C. Reilly Is in the Mood for Love appeared first on LAmag.

    [ad_2]

    Chris Nichols

    Source link

  • Forum Bound: Haim Heads Home with the I Quit Tour – LAmag

    [ad_1]

    The Valley-raised sister trio perform in Los Angeles on Oct. 9

    Valley Girls: Alana, Danielle and Este Haim shot the album art for I Quit at Steamer Cleaners on Ventura Boulevard in Sherman Oaks.
    Credit: Terrence O’Connor

    Eight days before the start of the I Quit Tour, Haim is still figuring out its set list.  

    “It’s 24 songs, but I think it might be cut down,” Alana Haim divulges to Los Angeles. “I wouldn’t quote me on that. It’s a lot because this is our fourth album, so we’re trying to fit as many songs as we can.”  

    Alana, Danielle and Este Haim —known collectively and professionally as the rock band Haim (pronounced HY-im) — kicked off summer with the release of I Quit, a 15-track self-reclamation manifesto turbocharged, in particular, by being freed from draining relationships. The new LP comes five years after the band’s acclaimed third album, Women in Music Pt. III, for which Haim became the first all-female rock group ever to earn a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year.  

    The sisters are on the road this fall in support of I Quit, taking the Los Angeles natives across the U.S. and around the U.K. by the end of October, with a Halloween finale set for Glasgow. The North American leg wraps on Oct. 11 in Santa Barbara, just ahead of the Oct. 17 theatrical release of The Mastermind, in which Alana stars alongside Josh O’Connor.  

    “We made a very long album, and I think we always just have a lot of fun taking our old songs and refreshing them to fit into this new album,” Alana says. “It’s constantly changing. We had a set list yesterday, and then it got changed this morning.”  

    When the I Quit Tour kicks off on Sept. 4 in Philadelphia, the band has curated a 21-song performance that celebrates their latest album, while also making room for fan favorites like “My Song 5,” “Gasoline,” “The Wire” and “Want You Back.”  

    The show begins with “Gone,” the I Quit opener powered by a “Freedom! ‘90” sample. “I’ll do whatever I want… Now I’m gone, quick as a gunshot,” sings Danielle, who —ahead of the tour — namechecks the song as the new track she most looks forward to performing.  

    Este favors “Relationships,” during which the text of bad relationship stories unfurled on screen while they played a string of summer shows overseas. The camaraderie of dating nightmares continues with the headlining tour, for which the band has asked fans to send their own experiences via Instagram DM for the chance to be the nightly “Relationships girl,” a moment during the song that the camera zeroes in on a dancing fan — middle fingers up, encouraged. Night one of the tour featured their mom, Donna Haim. 

    “I feel like this whole album cycle, we’ve really opened up about our dating horror stories, and it’s just honestly extremely comforting to know that all of our fans, have gone through similar, if not even crazier, circumstances when it comes to dating,” Alana says. 

    Amid the catharsis and connection, Haim delivers an expert rock show. Creating one, after all, is their favorite part of the album cycle process. “This album is so rock forward,” Alana explains. “It really was just bass, guitar, drums and then going from there. So, translating it from album to stage has been the greatest joy because it’s just so effortless. So, we’re really trying to showcase melting your face off.” 

    Haim I Quit 2025Credit: Heidi Stanton

    Haim brings the I Quit Tour to Los Angeles on Oct. 9 at the Kia Forum, one of the venues the sisters didn’t sneak into while growing up in the Valley. That was reserved for places like the old Universal Amphitheatre and Hollywood Bowl, where they played on their last headlining tour.  

    “I’ve been to so many shows at the Bowl throughout my life. There were moments on our set,” Danielle remembers of the 2022 show, “it felt like everyone was on their feet. And that, to me, was huge because it’s such a huge venue… That was a real accomplishment.” 

    “It’s such an honor to play the Forum,” Alana also says. “We were lucky enough to see Prince play the Forum, and to be able to play in the same place that I saw Prince — it hasn’t really hit me yet.” 

    Haim has long touted The Purple One as an inspiration. Following Prince’s sudden death, the trio paid homage with an electric “I Would Die 4 U” cover during their tour throughout the late spring of 2016. They also point to his influence on their use of drums and variety of genres. “When we saw him perform, it felt like we were watching an alien,” Este remembers. “It just didn’t make sense how talented he was. Just he felt so otherworldly and like we were watching something so [of the] future.” 

    Second time may be the charm for Haim. In 2020, following the release of WIMP III, the band was supposed to headline at the Forum. When live music came to a halt because of the onset of COVID-19, they instead set the music video for “Don’t Wanna” in the venue parking lot, which sees the sisters walking, then running, across the arena parking lot.  

    “We were born and raised in L.A., and we would play in the Valley to like two people,” Alana says. “Now, on our fourth album, to play the Forum is insane, and we’re just forever grateful that we have the opportunity to do it.” 

    [ad_2]

    Haley Bosselman

    Source link

  • Lights, Camera, Action: 18 Can’t-Miss Movies Arriving This Month  – LAmag

    [ad_1]

    October brims with high-stakes thrillers, intimate documentaries and buzzy biopics 

    Dwayne Johnson in The Smashing Machine
    Credit: Eric Zachanowich

    From the big screen to streaming, film premieres excite with the return of Daniel Day-Lewis, Dwayne Johnson’s foray into Oscar territory, Emma Stone teaming up with Yorgos Lanthimos again and more. Read on for the best movies arriving in October.

    Anemone 

    Daniel Day-Lewis in AnemoneCredit: Courtesy of Focus Features

    Oct. 3 

    In his feature directorial debut, Ronan Day-Lewis pulls his dad, Daniel Day-Lewis, out of retirement for an examination of the complex ties among brothers, fathers and sons. Focus Features 

    The Lost Bus 

    The Lost BusCredit: Apple TV+

    Oct. 3 

    Inspired by a true story during the deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California history, this gripping tale stars Matthew McConaughey as a school bus driver and America Ferrera as a teacher who must save 22 children from an encroaching blaze. Apple TV+ 

    The Smashing Machine 

    The Smashing Machine Credit: Ken-Hirama

    Oct. 3 

    Dwayne Johnson brings the muscle to his portrayal of mixed martial arts and UFC fighter Mark Kerr in this biopic written and directed by Benny Safdie and co-starring Emily Blunt. A24 

    If I Had Legs I’d Kick You 

    If I Had Legs I'd Kick You Rose ByrneCredit: Logan White

    Oct. 10 

    Rose Byrne finesses the space between comedy and drama as a woman whose life is crumbling — navigating her child’s mysterious illness, an absent husband, a missing person and an antagonistic therapist. The cast includes Conan O’Brien, Christian Slater, A$AP Rocky and Danielle Macdonald. A24 

    John Candy: I Like Me 

    John Candy: I Like MeCredit: Prime Video © Amazon Content Services LLC

    Oct. 10 

    Produced by Ryan Reynolds and directed by Colin Hanks, this documentary looks at the life of comedian and actor John Candy. Amazon MGM Studios 

    Kiss of the Spider Woman 

    Kiss of the Spider WomanCredit: Roadside Attractions

    Oct. 10 

    Following the film’s Sundance debut, writer-director Bill Condon’s adaptation of Terrence McNally’s Tony-winning musical (based on the 1976 novel by Argentine author Manuel Puig, which inspired the 1985 film starring William Hurt and Rual Julia)  arrives on the big screen featuring Diego Luna, Jennifer Lopez and L.A. actor Tonatiuh. Roadside Attractions 

    Roofman 

    Roofman move
    Channing Tatum and Kirsten Dunst star in Paramount Pictures’ “ROOFMAN.”
    Credit: Davi Russo/ Paramount Pictures

    Oct. 10 

    Escaped prisoner and accomplished burglar Jeffrey Manchester (Channing Tatum) hides out in a Toys R Us while plotting his next move – but gets distracted when he starts to fall for a divorced mother (Kirsten Dunst). The cast includes Juno Temple, Uzo Aduba, LaKeith Stanfield and Peter Dinklage. Paramount Pictures 

    Tron: Ares 

    Tron: AresCredit: Disney

    Oct. 10 

    Invigorated by a score from Oscar-winning duo Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, the third installment in the Tron film franchise follows a super AI program’s encounter with the human world. Stars include Jared Leto, Greta Lee, Evan Peters, Hasan Minhaj, Jodie Turner-Smith, Gillian Anderson and Jeff Bridges. Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures 

    The Woman in Cabin 10 

    The Woman in Cabin 10Credit: Parisa Taghizadeh/Netflix

    Oct. 10 

    Joined by Hannah Waddingham and Guy Pearce, Keira Knightley stars as a travel writer whose assignment to cover the first voyage of a luxury yacht is compromised when she sees a woman fall to her death and no one believes her. Netflix 

    The Mastermind 

    emmys red carpet
    Rich Fury/Getty Images

    Oct. 17 

    Kelly Reichardt’s Cannes competition film sees Josh O’Connor balance a double life as a stunted suburban family man and art thief in the 1970s. Gabby Hoffmann and Alana Haim also star. Mubi 

    Stiller & Meara: Nothing is Lost 

    Stiller and Meara Nothing is LostCredit: Apple TV+

    Oct. 17 

    Ben Stiller explores the lives and impact on pop culture of his parents, comedy legends Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara. Apple TV+ 

    Hedda  

    Credit: Matt Towers/ Prime

    Oct. 22 

    Writer-director Nia DaCosta reimagines Henrik Ibsen’s 1891 play with Tessa Thompson in the title role as a woman torn between a stifling marriage and temptations from the past. Amazon MGM Studios 

    Blue Moon 

    Richard Linklater
    Richard Linklater
    Credit: Jason Mendez/Getty Images for Netflix

    Oct. 24 

    Director Richard Linklater reteams with Ethan Hawke, this time for a snapshot of lyricist Lorenz Hart as he grapples with the successful premiere of Oklahoma! by his former collaborator Richard Rodgers (Andrew Scott) and new lyricist Oscar Hammerstein. The cast includes Bobby Cannavale and Margaret Qualley. Sony Pictures Classics 

    Bugonia 

    BugoniaCredit: Focus Features

    Oct. 24 

    Director Yorgos Lanthimos and stars Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons stir up another storm together in a black sci-fi comedy that sees two men kidnap a powerful CEO they suspect is an alien intent on destroying Earth. Focus Features 

    A House of Dynamite 

    A HOUSE OF DYNAMITECredit: Eros Hoagland/Netflix

    Oct. 24 

    Oscar winner Kathryn Bigelow directs a star-studded cast in a political thriller that focuses on White House staffers racing to save the U.S. from an unattributed missile strike. The ensemble includes Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Anthony Ramos, Tracy Letts and Greta Lee. Netflix 

    Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere 

    SPRINGSTEEN: DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERECredit: Focus Features

    Oct. 24 

    Alongside a cast with Jeremy Strong and Marc Maron, Jeremy Allen White does his best Bruce Springsteen impression during the singer-songwriter’s Nebraska era. 20th Century Studios 

    Ballad of a Small Player 

    Ballad of a Small Player Collin FerrellCredit: Netflix

    Oct. 29 

    Colin Farrell stars as an alcoholic gambler whose untrustworthy perception of reality complicates his chance at salvation as a private investigator closes in on him. Netflix 

    Nouvelle Vague 

    Nouvelle Vague Credit: Netflix

    Oct. 31 

    Linklater closes October with one more release — a love letter to the French New Wave in this comedy-drama starring Guillaume Marbeck as Jean-Luc Godard as he makes 1960’s Breathless. The cast includes Zoey Deutch and Aubry Dullin. Netflix 

    [ad_2]

    Haley Bosselman

    Source link

  • Snark Attack: TMZ Turns 20 – LAmag

    [ad_1]

    TMZ founder Harvey Levin (right), at the company’s headquarters, talks to staff members, from left: Derek Kaufman, Arielle Port, Courtney Doucette, Roger Corral and Charlie Neff.
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Just as the dark hallway outside the newsroom of TMZ gives way to the bustling chaos inside, the last thing you see is a self-portrait of Paris Hilton framed on the wall. The pencil drawing is cute and girly, like something scrawled in an eighth-grade yearbook, complete with hearts dotting the “i”s. It depicts the actress locked up at the L.A. County Jail with TMZ’s Harvey Levin on the jailhouse TV. The artwork is on a greeting card sent to the entertainment news show in 2007, thanking Levin for his fair coverage of her case.

    The lanky blond heiress is the star who inadvertently jump-started the celebrity news empire two decades ago. On Nov. 8, 2005, the beta version of tmz.com launched, and a day later, the site posted a video showing Hilton’s Bentley, driven by her boyfriend, Greek shipping heir Stavros Niarchos III, crashing into a parked vehicle to escape paparazzi, then later being stopped by police, who let the couple go. TMZ’s caption notes the car “slams into a truck with a hit and run,” and then, “Paris makes things right by blowing a kiss to the cops.”

    The TMZ formula of snark, sexy babes, exclusive footage and a wink back at the audience was born. Today, the TMZ brand reaches 70 million visitors each month and operates an integrated ecosystem with TV shows and websites dedicated to entertainment news, sports and hip-hop. A sister site, TooFab, focuses on fashion and red carpets. The brand also operates an array of podcasts (including one featuring Los Angeles magazine co-owner Mark Geragos), has a kiosk at LAX and boasts a documentary film division. Famous faces (think: JoJo Siwa, Ray J and Bill Maher) can sometimes be seen on TMZ’s battalion of branded Hollywood bus tours. An “After Dark” tour shuttles fans to bars to pound shots, ride a mechanical bull and hear candid tales of debauchery.

    “It was just a different voice,” says Charles Latibeaudiere, an executive producer who has been with founder Harvey Levin since the beginning of the show. “It was a voice that made [reporting about celebrities] palatable, I would say, to a male audience. Yes, we’re covering entertainment news, but we’re gonna say it kind of in a mocking, snarky and, at times, funny way. It was done more for ‘let’s have a laugh.’ It’s how guys sit around stereotypically in a group and just take shots at each other. We stumbled into presenting the show that way.”

    TMZ at 20. TMZ’s Charles Latibeaudiere, Harvey Levin and Liza Ovsianniko
    TMZ’s Charles
    Latibeaudiere, Harvey Levin
    and Liza Ovsianniko
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Executive producer Ryan Regan thinks the show’s speed, agility and point of view put it in a unique position. “Harvey prioritizes movement,” he says. “We need to be making 100 calls. We’re good storytellers. We’re very cost-efficient and we can do things faster than anybody.”

    “We are to celebrity journalism,” says Michael Babcock, head of TMZ Sports, “what the New York Times is to hard news.” Staffers report occasionally pulling all-nighters, leaving the newsroom just as the morning shift checks in. The New Yorker once quipped that “TMZ resembles an intelligence agency as much as a news organization.”

    During the first two years of the site — before the launch of the TV show that would bring celebrity chaos into American living rooms — tmz.com broke news about Mel Gibson’s DUI arrest, ensuing antisemitic rant and possible police cover-up; a bald-headed Britney Spears attacking a paparazzo’s car with an umbrella; and Seinfeld’s Michael Richards screaming the N-word at Laugh Factory hecklers. Levin was fascinated by the way law enforcement sometimes treated celebrities differently, and grew his network of informants in courthouses, law offices and police stations. He connected with the legions of omnipresent paparazzi roaming the streets of L.A. and built a newsroom of reporters doggedly chasing down leads. In short, TMZ reinvented the entire concept of Hollywood news.

    TMZ at 20
    TMZ offices in Marina Del Rey
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    In the decades that followed the probing celebrity columnists Louella Parsons and Hedda Hopper, entertainment coverage was filled with fawning fans like Johnny Grant, who emceed Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremonies, and softball-slinging oddballs like Skip E. Lowe, the inspiration for Martin Short’s Jiminy Glick. Levin’s plan was to subvert the sway of celebrity publicists by avoiding scheduled interviews in controlled environments and go looking for stories at the places they were unfolding.

    The first version of TMZ’s TV show was similar to the competition, with glamorous anchors reading scripted news. Latibeaudiere thinks their early shows were terrible. “Our producer said these [episodes] should be in the library,” he remembers. “I said, ‘Please don’t ever play them.’” 

    Producers hit on the idea of inviting the entire newsroom to pitch their stories on the air. “They wanted everyone who is in the office to kind of be involved in the TV show,” says Brian Particelli, a supervising editor, who adds that anyone with a story that day is in the mix. Pitches go into a central email and get filtered through producers. “Harvey’s always been very ‘best idea wins’ no matter who it comes from,” says Particelli. “That’s kind of his motto.”

    Actor David Arquette, who’s been a staple of TMZ stories from the beginning, sees the show’s interest as double-edged. “It’s typically pretty awful if they’re covering you. It’s usually for something embarrassing,” he says “The flip side is that when you have a big movie coming out, they’ll cover it. It’s the old Hollywood thing where it’s good they’re talking about you even if it’s negative. It means that you’re part of the culture and interesting enough that they’re paying attention.”

    TMZ at 20. Shevonne Sullivan and Courtney Doucette
    Shevonne Sullivan and
    Courtney Doucette
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Cast your mind back to the beginning of 2005 and a world before iPhones, YouTube and streaming Netflix. Dial-up internet was most often accessed on home computers connected to the same clunky cathode ray tubes that had powered televisions since they were invented. Most offices still had fax machines, and online video was rare. If you wanted to know who Orlando Bloom was dating back then, you might tune in to Extra or Entertainment Tonight or Access Hollywood around dinnertime and hope for red-carpet footage. You might have to wait until the next issue of People or the National Enquirer hit the stands.

    TMZ gave the world scandal at the speed of light, pushing out story after story about celebrity shenanigans and beating the competition with the help of a huge newsroom that today sprawls over two-thirds of an acre inside a converted postal facility in Playa Vista, backed up by a New York office that filters the news overnight. At the helm is the indefatigable Levin, who his staff reports is approving stories at 3 a.m. before hitting the gym and commanding the office. The 75-year-old attorney and high-energy TV veteran has been a staple of L.A. news for almost five decades.

    Levin started in media offering legal advice on the radio as “Dr. Law,” which led to regular columns in the Los Angeles Times and Herald Examiner in the 1970s before branching into long stints in TV news. Levin spent 26 years doling out legal analysis and interviewing bystanders on The People’s Court. “Harvey was always a legend for changing the game on breaking news,” says Christina McClarty Arquette, David Arquette’s wife and a former reporter for Entertainment Tonight. “Before TMZ existed, there was no source like it for breaking news. He also changed the game by making things a lot more salacious. People wanted to get the craziest stuff to compete with TMZ.”

    Levin had been producing the slick syndicated TV entertainment news show Celebrity Justice when Jim Paratore, head of Warner Bros.’ Telepictures, canceled the show and offered to move Levin to a website. The company had merged with AOL and was in the market for new online content. Paratore imagined a celebrity news site with familiar coverage of TV, movies and red carpet fashion. But Levin wasn’t interested and left town. “I went to Mexico and was in this kind of margarita haze and it just hit me,” Levin says. “By the time they aired Celebrity Justice, it was old news. If you can break stories where you have producers and research and lawyers to vet everything and you don’t have a time period like a TV show, then you get it up and you beat everybody.”

    TMZ at 20
    Harvey Levin plans the show.

    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Harvey Levin grew up in the San Fernando Valley. Meadowlark Park in Reseda was an instant neighborhood that popped up in the early 1950s, filled with quintessentially suburban midcentury tract houses that originally sold for about $10,000. A few feet from the family’s butterfly-roof home was his dad’s liquor store. Harvey remembers being fascinated by the blue and red lights outside his bedroom window as a kid— they weren’t from the store’s neon sign across the alley but from the LAPD squad cars that would show up when the store was being robbed. 

    “[He] would open the store at 7 in the morning and run it until 2 the next morning,” Levin remembers. “[The family was] in that store all the time. I ended up working there. My dad taught me how to be a salesman. I would learn all these terms like calling it a heady bottle of wine so I could sell a more expensive bottle. That whole experience taught me a lot.”

    Levin became interested in politics at Grover Cleveland High School, where he served on multiple debate teams and became president of the Boys’ League. That’s the group that planned special events for the class of 1968, which included a performance by psychedelic band Strawberry Alarm Clock, an Arab-Israeli debate and a special assembly conducted by a skeptic of the official story of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. That one had Levin’s fingerprints all over it.

    The teenager had long been fascinated by the case, and even camped out at the Reseda library to read the 888-page Warren Commission report. He repeatedly called New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison (played by Kevin Costner in Oliver Stone’s JFK) from an anonymous pay phone after reviewing stills from the Zapruder film, to offer a new angle on the case.

    As a high school senior, Levin won a mock debate where he acted as Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in a battle against Richard Nixon. He dressed up the auditorium with fans, polls and friends costumed as a donkey and an elephant. “I started calling all the stations in town and they all came,” Levin remembers. “I was thinking, well, this is interesting how the media gets attracted to something because it was just different.”

    Levin volunteered for RFK’s presidential campaign and was at the Ambassador Hotel the night he was shot. He soon left L.A. to study political science at UC-Santa Barbara and received his law degree from the University of Chicago Law School.

    TMZ at 20
    The TMZ team in the bullpen.
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    Levin’s interest in the Kennedys is at the root of one of TMZ’s greatest flubs. In 2009, the website published a crumpled snapshot of a man who resembled JFK partying on a yacht with naked women. It turned out to have been a Playboy magazine photo, taken years after the president’s death. “We screwed that up,” Levin says. “That one was on me. I spent the last two weeks of the year bringing in Kennedy experts, machines to analyze this thing, going to the Marina del Rey boatyards. We spent so much time on it, and we got it wrong.”

    “We do what everybody is supposed to do,” Levin says. “You get a tip, you chase it down, you accept the fact that you’re going to hit 100 dead ends and, you know, you find ways around the dead ends.” Levin says that plenty of stories consume resources yet never make it on air. “If we find out that something’s unfair or untrue,” he says, “it’s dead.”

    The show has been accused of paying informants, but producers deny the claim. “People do sometimes look for money,” Particelli says. “But we only pay for photos.” Sometimes an unrelated news story has such shocking video that it rises to the top. “It doesn’t have to be celebrity-driven,” says director of audience development Cameron Lazerine. “It can be a crazy viral moment of a huge tidal wave crushing a ship.”

    With some 200 contributors, the show boasts veterans of CNN, Extra and The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Many of the crew come from less conventional backgrounds but all share a dogged determination to tell the show’s stories. Producer Charlie Neff started out as a fashion model; TMZ Sports producer Michael Babcock was a restaurant manager in New Jersey before he sent in a winning audition tape. “One of our most successful guys Harvey met while pumping gas,” says Latibeaudiere. “This guy was at another pump and selling speakers out of his trunk, just hustling. He worked with us for at least 10 years.”

    TMZ staffers enjoy the niceties that once enticed tech workers into the office. There’s a volleyball court filled with sand, and replicas of vintage military bombs stenciled with the TMZ logo hang near a ping-pong table across from the complimentary Starbucks station. Clear tubes of Frosted Flakes and Cinnamon Toast Crunch beckon hungry employees, as does a free convenience store stocked with Kraft Mac & Cheese and Pop-Tarts. Pizza Hut delivers on Mondays. Fox purchased TMZ for roughly $50 million in 2021.

    TMZ at 20
    Derek Kaufman speaks at a
    morning meeting.
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    One of the newest staffers met his future at a scoop shop in Brentwood. Twenty-one-year-old London native Jakson Buhaj started filming skits and live streams for YouTube as a tween. He learned Python and JavaScript as he was finishing high school and faced a “what am I going to do with my life” moment before a TMZ field producer wearing a camera over his shoulder walked into his Salt & Straw location. “I made this pitch to him,” Buhaj says. “‘Please take my information,’ and to sweeten the deal I gave [him] free ice cream and sent [him] out the door.”

    After graduating Santa Monica College, Buhaj had offers from several schools but instead took a spot at the TMZ intern desk. “I made this software— this bot,” he says, “that surfaces a thousand different media outlets and celebrities the moment they posted something, so we would be the first to get to it. That put me on Harvey’s radar.” Buhaj’s efforts have made TMZ on YouTube a major destination that may one day eclipse the brand’s TV efforts. “Jakson is being very humble,” Latibeaudiere says of the channel’s explosive growth since the eager Gen Zer showed up. “Once he was here … Thank the ice cream gods.”

    Levin isn’t afraid to predict the future. “The reality is, YouTube is totally dominating,” he says. “I don’t think there’s going to be television in five or six years. You’ve got to pivot to where the audience is going.” In today’s age of infinite customization of personal livestreams, everyone can be a celebrity to somebody.

    “People want authenticity,” Neff explains. “The new generation wants to see relatable people. Alix Earle, who is a very famous TikTok’er, is just a regular college girl who would post makeup videos. But she wasn’t fixing up the background of her bedroom. She had her tampons out, she had, you know, bloody panties in the corner, she had a Plan B package in the background. People are watching and they’re like, ‘Oh my gosh! She’s so relatable!’”

    TMZ at 20, Charlie Neff
    Charlie Neff on the job
    Credit: Irvin Rivera

    But is being an internet streamer as significant in the culture today as singers, actors and comedians used to be? Kai Cenat posted skits on YouTube before turning the camera on himself all day and all night. By the time he reached 19 million followers on Twitch, more-established stars like Kim Kardashian and Mariah Carey were showing up on his livestream. “Streaming your life can be performance art. That’s what an actor is doing, right?” says Buhaj. “Nothing like that has been done in the history of entertainment.”

    History buff Levin, whose life has long been colored by the promise and tragedy of the Kennedys, can relate. He has a favorite quote of RFK’s — words engraved on the late politician’s tomb: “Some men see things as they are and ask ‘Why?’ I dream things that never were and ask, ‘Why not?’”

    [ad_2]

    Chris Nichols

    Source link