Month: January 2020

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A group of 20 firefighters, including several who battled October’s Saddleridge fire near Sylmar, will travel to Australia on Monday to help combat the wildfires that have ravaged roughly 12.4 million acres of land and killed at least 24 people and millions of birds, reptiles and mammals.

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The firefighters are all leaders in their units and collectively have more than 100 years of experience, each five- to 20-year veterans.

“It’s an impressive dream team of sorts,” said Angeles National Fire Service spokesperson Andrew Mitchell.

Many in the group performed an array of tasks during Saddleridge — one was the captain of a hotshot crew, another oversaw a firefighting unit, some worked on aviation assignments. They all will assist the Victoria Rural Fire Service, the largest fire service in the Australian state of Victoria.

Jonathan Merager, a fire-prevention technician and 18-year firefighting veteran, said he didn’t hesitate to volunteer for the assignment when a request for help was submitted to various state and federal agencies.

“Our Australian sisters and brothers have helped us over the years,” he said. “It seemed natural to reciprocate that assistance.”

Merager, 47, said that his only apprehension is that he will be leaving behind his wife and sons, ages 9, 11, 15 and 25. He said the family has expressed concerns after seeing images of the fires’ path of destruction throughout Australia.

But they’re used to his travels throughout California and across the country to combat fires. In 2009, he battled the Station fire that blackened more than 160,000 acres of the Angeles National Forest. In October, while firefighters in Southern California battled Saddleridge, Merager was dispatched to North Carolina, where fires burned thousands of acres of land.

The request to Angeles National Fire Service came from the National Interagency Fire Center — the government agency that is coordinating the deployment of firefighters from the United States. Roughly 100 firefighters have traveled to Australia over the last four weeks after a U.S. liaison visited to help determine the scope of U.S. resources. Those dispatched Monday from California are part of a group of 50 to 60. At least sixteen other firefighters from California were deployed earlier.

Mitchell said that while the terrain in Australia is similar to that of Southern California, environmental hazards to plants and animals differ.

“There’s a lot more snakes that could bite you,” he said.

The group will receive a brief orientation before receiving their assignments in Victoria, where they will remain for 35 days.

Merager believes that his assignment will be on the ground at the cutting line, removing brush around the perimeter of the fire.

The exchange of fire resources is made through an agreement between the U.S. Department of the Interior and Emergency Management Australia.

“It works really well because Australia has a different fire season than we do in the United States,” NIFC spokesperson Kari Cobb said.

In August 2018, Australia and New Zealand sent roughly 140 firefighters to the United States for nearly 30 days. The group was stationed in Northern California, Washington and Oregon. This is the first time since 2010 that the United States is sending firefighters to Australia. Canada is also sending firefighters for the first time.

The firefighters earn their normal salary on the special assignment, Cobb said.


A Los Angeles police officer who allegedly touched a dead woman’s breast while he was on duty last fall pleaded not guilty Monday to a felony count.

David Rojas, 27, could face up to three years in state prison if convicted of having sexual contact with human remains without authority.

Rojas, who is free on $20,000 bail, appeared in a downtown courtroom to enter his plea. He was ordered to return Feb. 27, when a date is expected to be set for a preliminary hearing to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to proceed to trial.

Rojas and his partner responded Oct. 20 to a report of a possible dead woman in a residence. He’s accused of touching the woman’s breast while he was alone in the room, according to the district attorney’s office.

The allegation against Rojas was brought to the department Nov. 20.

The four-year Los Angeles Police Department veteran — who was assigned to the downtown-area Central Division — was subsequently placed on leave.

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He was arrested Dec. 12 by Los Angeles police and released on bond later that day, according to jail records.

“This incident is extremely disturbing and does not represent the values of the Los Angeles Police Department,” LAPD Chief Michel Moore said then.

“The Los Angeles Police Protective League will not defend Mr. Rojas during his criminal proceedings, and his alleged behavior is abhorrent and an affront to every law enforcement professional working for the LAPD,” the league said in a statement.


Hundreds of taxi drivers held a one-day strike Monday at Los Angeles International Airport, demanding that city officials reinstate curbside passenger pickups at the nation’s second-busiest airport.

More than 200 drivers wearing their laminated city credentials marched around the 1.5-mile horseshoe in the central terminal area, holding signs and chanting: “What do we want? Curbside! When do we want it? Now!”

The airport’s decision to ban curbside pickups last year dealt another blow to taxi drivers who are struggling to make ends meet in an industry decimated by Uber and Lyft, drivers said.

“This is our last chance to survive,” said Arman Zohrabyan, who has driven for United Taxi for 17 years, as he marched down the sidewalk on Century Boulevard.

Taxi ridership in Los Angeles fell 77% between 2013 and 2018, city officials said. Drivers have long complained that Uber and Lyft had an unfair advantage because they were not required to comply with local laws, including higher fares set by city officials.

The airport has become the most important source of revenue for drivers as taxi ridership has declined, said Leon Slomovic, a spokesman for the Taxi Workers Assn. of Los Angeles. Fares from LAX are more plentiful and typically more lucrative than those from hotel cab stands or street hails.

In general, each taxi driver is allowed to pick up passengers at LAX every fifth day, which yields more than half of their take-home pay, drivers said.

Travelers who are older, have disabilities or mobility impairments, or have a lot of luggage would be willing to pay slightly more to take a taxi from the curbside if the airport would just give them the option, said Jano Baghdanian, general manager of LA City Cab.

Some of those passengers are now paying more to take private town cars, including Uber Black, because they are still allowed to pick up at the curb, said Martin Manukyan, president of Yellow Cab. That system, he said, “benefits Uber and not us.”

Representatives from each taxi company have asked airport officials to reinstate curbside cab stands and allow taxis to operate in the new bus-only lanes for the LAXit shuttles.

“This is not fair competition,” said Mekoya Kubssa, who has driven a cab for United Independent Taxi for 26 years. If passengers are forced to take a shuttle to get a taxi, he said, they will choose the cheaper option: Uber.

Taxis represent about 4% of the vehicle traffic picking up passengers at LAX, according to airport data. Uber and Lyft combined represent about 11%.

Offering cab stands next to the bus stops to the LAXit pickup area would relieve crowding on the shuttles during peak periods and drum up more business for taxi companies, Baghdanian said. If 50 people were waiting in line for a bus, he said, “half of those people would take a cab.”

The airport “simply does not have the curb space” to accommodate taxis at the curbside because major construction, including work on the people-mover train, will force major lane and curb closures, Los Angeles World Airports spokeswoman Becca Doten said Monday.

Officials with LAX will “continue to meet with all stakeholders, including taxi companies and drivers,” she said in an email.


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SAN DIEGO — 

A team of eye experts has operated on an unusual patient — a gorilla.

A cataract was removed on Dec. 10 from the left eye of a 3-year-old western lowland gorilla who lives at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, the park announced Monday.

The gorilla, named Leslie, was given a muscle blocker to keep her still while a team that included vets along with anesthesiologists and an ophthalmology team from UC San Diego Health removed the cloudy lens and replaced it with an artificial lens that should last for life.

The operation was performed at the San Diego Zoo Global’s Paul Harter Veterinary Medical Center.

Cataract surgeon Chris Heichel, who led the team and has performed thousands of operations, said it was his first on a gorilla.

“Fortunately, the similarities between the anatomy of human and gorilla eyes are great enough to allow us to safely navigate the procedure without complication,” Heichel said in a statement released by the park. “The remainder of the eye appeared to be in excellent health, indicating exceptional vision potential for the rest of Leslie’s life.”

Cataracts can occur naturally with aging. But given that Leslie is a youngster, her problem more likely stemmed from an injury, either from a fall while practicing her climbing or from “an overly rambunctious play session with other young gorillas in her troop,” the park said.

Leslie will need antibiotics and steroids to prevent infection and inflammation, but she is already back with the troop at the park.

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ORANGEVILLE, Canada  — 

To get to the Rosebud Motel, proprietors Johnny Rose and Stevie Budd, you drive northwest from Toronto for an hour, through fields of suburban McMansions, flat farmland giving way to rolling hills sheltering country estates with names like Windwood. At a certain point you turn right, climb a hill and round a corner, and there on your left, a little below the road, you will see it: the signature location of the television show “Schitt’s Creek.”

You will also have to drive into the past. It is June 25, 2019, and “Schitt’s Creek” is finishing filming on its sixth and final season, which begins Tuesday 1/7 on Pop. In three days all will be as it once was — that is to say, the building will still be here, but the Rosebud Motel will be gone.

“Schitt’s Creek” tells the story of the Roses, a rich family that loses all its money and winds up living in two adjacent motel rooms in the moderately eccentric small town that gives the series its name. Stories of people who need to lose what they have in order to learn what they need are not new, but there is something especially original and touching about these characters, growing more real with each season, even as they remain outlandish, suspended between acceptance and a dream of escape.

Most of the main cast is working today. Catherine O’Hara and Eugene Levy, who play parents Moira and Johnny Rose, were on “SCTV” and in four Christopher Guest movies together. Annie Murphy and Dan Levy — who created the series with Eugene, his father, and continues to run it — play their adolescent adult children, Alexis and David. Emily Hampshire, who plays Stevie, Johnny’s business partner and David’s best friend, is here. Chris Elliott and Jennifer Robertson, who play the Schitts, Roland and Joceyln, are here. Absent are Noah Reid (David’s fiancé and business partner, Patrick), Dustin Milligan (Alexis’ veterinarian boyfriend, Ted) and Sarah Levy, Eugene’s daughter and Dan’s sister, who plays town waitress Twyla.

Dan Levy is not performing but is on set for questions, suggestions and last-days camaraderie. His vision transformed “Schitt’s Creek” bit by bit from a fish-out-of-water comedy into something deeper, wider, more universal; in the bargain, he became something of a screen heartthrob and LGBTQ standard-bearer. (In Hollywood, Pop is advertising the final season with a Sunset Boulevard billboard of David and Patrick kissing.) The series, little noticed at first, gained traction when Netflix began streaming earlier seasons; it’s going out as a legitimate sensation.

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“It’s beautiful, this part of Ontario,” Dan says, monitoring the filming by video feed from around the corner of the building. “In the early days, people would camp because it’s so long to get back to Toronto. The crew would set up little camping tents and fires. We’d play volleyball in the back when global warming hadn’t hit us quite so hard and the ground was firm and not actually marshland.”

Indeed, having rained the night before, there are muddy puddles to navigate in the dirt lot fronting the motel. Fleecy white clouds scud across a bright blue sky, providing enough intermittent shade to keep temperatures tolerable. “It’s been terrible weather,” says Dan, “and we’ve just been terrified. It was supposed to be raining all day today. We don’t have any flexibility — there’s so much to shoot in so little time and we have no budget for anything to change.”

Eugene Levy, co-creator and star of “Schitt’s Creek”

“It’s been a real roller coaster of a week,” says Murphy, taking a moment to talk in a room that smells of “mothballs and rat poison and the great outdoors.” From the outside, one would imagine this to be the motel office, but it’s a kitchenette that opens at the back onto a wide expanse of lawn. The rooms here, used to touch up hair or makeup, for costume changes, for walking out of a shot or into one, are even more cramped and dull than the ones into which the Roses crowd — or crowded. The interior sets, built on a soundstage in Toronto, have been struck.

Before “Schitt’s” moved in, the Rosebud had been the dormitory for a basketball camp, and when someone tells you it needed airing out, it is clear they are speaking about years, not days or weeks.

“I thought I’d be sad,” says Murphy, dressed as Alexis in party clothes, with hoop earrings you could toss a bean bag through. “But it’s just made me a husk of a woman with no moisture left in her body. There’s a part of all of us that’s like, ‘Oh, no! What have done?’ People are so deeply invested in the show and its message. But I think it’s the right choice, and we were really, really lucky to be able to end the way Dan and the writers wanted to. All of the characters are going to be tied up in this beautiful little bow.”

If you travel a little farther down the road past the motel, you come to a little village, which is not Schitt’s Creek. (The buildings that serve for the series’ other signal locations — the Rose Apothecary, the boutique David runs with Patrick, and the Café Tropical, where Twyla works — are an hour to the east.) Here, in the miniature Hockley Community Hall (built 1894), lunch is being self-served. Eugene Levy, in shirtsleeves, is sitting with directors Jordan Canning and Andrew Cividino, both of whom are working today. Scenes for five different episodes are being shot, mostly in front of the motel, but also in a nearby field.

“It’s hard,” Eugene says, of the coming end. “But you can’t go there. You can really slow down the day. You’ve got to redo makeup. Touch up the eyes again.”

“I’ll cry on Thursday,” says Canning. “That’ll be a tough one.”

“This was a project I had to succeed in,” says Eugene, “getting this idea off the ground, because it was the only time in his life Daniel came and said, ‘Do you want to work on this with me?’

“At the beginning, I was in a slightly different frame of mind, more kind of mentoring — ‘This is what you have to do here. Be careful what you’re doing there.’ It didn’t take long before I realized, ‘All I have to do is give him some space and not crowd him with what I think.’ I could not be prouder of what he’s done, and I’m really glad I had the opportunity in my life to be able to say we had a good run working together, me and my kids — Sarah too. It’s just been a joy.”

Did Dan come to tell him he wanted to end the show?

“We had a conversation, and he told me what he was thinking, and I said, ‘I’m right there.’ This is the natural end point for character growth, for the relationships, and anything after that is just more of the same. Then you get into the dangerous territory of diminishing returns. It’s a clean out.”

“I’m glad we’re ending at the motel,” says Hampshire, sitting cross-legged in a director’s chair between takes. Where Stevie is guarded and contained, Hampshire is open and fleet, a fast talker, a runner, not a walker. Driving back from lunch, she had mentioned that the motel’s clothesline had triggered a memory; now she is looking at it. “That was one of my first scenes. I remember I had the [cleaning] cart, and David and Alexis were there and I wanted to invite them to a tailgate party. And it just reminded me it was such a different relationship then. Fans do these compilation videos and they’ll put in stuff from Season 1, and Dan will forward me one — ‘You’re such a baby’ — and I’ll forward him one — ‘We’re so old.’

“We finished shooting in the office and were moving on to something else and Dan was like, ‘That was the last time we were in that place,’ and I’m like ‘Oh!’ I’m glad he didn’t tell before.” She’s taking the stag painting that hung on that set home with her. “It’s huge. It’s going to fill my entire apartment.”

It’s expected that actors speaking to the press about their latest project will describe it as the best experience of their life. It does actually seem to be the case that the people of “Schitt’s Creek” are crazy about their show and one another. “This is like being at camp with your best friends,” says Hampshire.

“I do see a future in which a road trip movie needs to happen with me and Dan. I can’t see us all not doing something else together.” (In the near term, Dan has rented a villa in Italy and invited some of the cast over — it’s there that he’ll learn of the series’ first Emmy nominations in July. “We’re going to see Elton John and just have some fun together, no deadlines, no sides to learn. It defuses the permanency of the last day of shooting.”)

They have already had their wrap party. “There were a lot of people,” O’Hara recalls, “wild, drunk and excited and emotional. And we’ve done a clip package at the party every year, but they did extra and they had moments from all six years, with Sarah Levy singing, ‘There are places I remember…’ There was a lot of crying.”

“This year was sort of very anthemic, empowering, a lot of Queen,” Dan says. “Noah sang Elton John’s ‘Daniel,’ which was a loving tribute, but I’m pretty sure he dies in the song, so … There’s always a show-stopping Noah moment at the karaoke, because he can sing, and the rest of us just scream into mikes. I thought it would be sadder, but I think we’ve all decided that it’s better for our sanity if we choose to be excited rather than melancholic.”

“Love” is a word you hear a lot here, not in the casual, hyperbolic, verbal air-kissing Hollywood sense, but the real emotion, the spiritual state, the intentional action. “No one ever talked to me about how this show was going to be written from love and about love,” says O’Hara. “It never came off as any kind of agenda. It’s just the world that Daniel would love to live in.”

She is fighting a cold. “It’s really hard to keep my eyes open. My eyes just want to be asleep, closed.”

Seated in the sun on a plastic chair on the walkway that runs the length of the motel, O’Hara is in full Moira regalia — though because Moira’s outrageous wardrobe and wigs are considered spoilers, she is covered with an extra jacket and a hat. There is a newspaper photographer on the set today, and fans have gathered along the road that overlooks the motel. She is watching them watch her watching them. Whenever anything they shouldn’t see or hear is happening, anything that might give away the direction of the season, they will be asked to move away a little.

“lt’s such a surprise that I would wear black and white,” O’Hara jokes.

“When we’re actually doing a scene, I’m not thinking about [the end]. But then it hits me, looking around at this funny motel. I think as much about it being a place where the kids from basketball camp would stay. It started really rough. First and second seasons, it was, ‘Please say “action” so I can get out of this room.’ It’s much nicer now.

Dan Levy, co-creator and star of “Schitt’s Creek”

“Our show is a bit of a late bloomer and I’m grateful for that,” she says. “Who wants to peak early? [Viewers] are seeing the show that we did for ourselves, as opposed to doing things when you’re aware of an audience. Even after the tour, Daniel said, ‘OK, now I have to go back and write and forget that I saw this, forget I experienced this.’”

The tour: In September 2018, the cast gathered before a rapturous crowd at L.A.’s Ace Hotel theater for “Schitt’s Creek: Up Close & Personal,” an evening of stories, clips and games whose tickets had sold out in no time at all. Surprised and gratified, they took their live show on the road around North America to packed houses and standing ovations.

“They’re there as much for each other as for us,” O’Hara says of the fans. “It’s almost that we don’t have to be there, but we brought them together somehow.”

One by one, scenes are written into history. Johnny and Stevie. Roland and Johnny. Stevie and Moira. Alexis and Johnny. Moira and Johnny and Roland and Jocelyn. Small adjustments are made between takes: Stand a step back, come in a beat later, move a hair faster, struggle harder. Hampshire, pushing a cart down the walkway, comments on her own performance as she gives it: “I don’t know why I got an accent there… This is the room I’m going to, I should stop here.” O’Hara plays with the music of her lines, turning “vigilante” and “vandalization” over in her mouth, putting a hint of air between the syllables, stretching some out like taffy, pushing vowels into new shapes.

For all that the end is near, it’s a pleasant day on a country road. Birds are singing. A school bus drives by, a hand waving out the window. Crew members pitch in egging a car for a scene. O’Hara’s husband, production designer Bo Welch (“Men in Black,” “A Series of Unfortunate Events”), is visiting, as is executive producer Andrew Barnsley. It’s not a party, but there is something convivial going on alongside the work. Late in the day, production stops for several minutes, while O’Hara brings out a cake — someone is turning 25 — the cast and crew sing and Elliott attempts to plant a slobbery kiss on the the birthday boy.

“Hysterical tears are not the most productive thing to be experiencing when we have three pretty big days out here,” Dan muses, “but I’ve found myself in the most random of times just completely falling apart. To people who don’t know what’s going in my life, I look a little unstable. You get flooded by memories. Every little thing carries slightly more substantial weight than it did before.”

Retiring the series “was a really tough decision, obviously, because I love these people and would love to work with them for 50 years,” he says. “But I love the show more. Our viewers have such an intimate connection to it, and for them to question why we’re still on the air is not a place that I ever want to find myself.”

Who will be on hand when the last bit of footage is shot?

“Everybody. It’s a big scene, actually. We always do a little bit of some Champagne and make a toast. But, yeah, it’ll be messy. Annie legitimately called me saying she wants an EMS crew there.

“I’m not good with letting go of things, generally speaking. I’m the person who worries, ‘What if I throw something out or give it away and need it later?’ It’s a similar thing I’m experiencing with this. But in a weird sort of philosophical way it’s been an amazing exercise in appreciating what you have, respecting the process and letting go.”

In fact, he isn’t entirely letting go. “If we feel like there’s more story to tell, then great — let’s do a movie, let’s do a holiday special. I’m by no means saying I would never want to revisit these characters. I would love to. I have been saying to our production design team, ‘Document everything, ‘cause if we have to rebuild this down the line, I want it saved for posterity.’

“I don’t know what will happen to this,” Dan says, indicating the funny little motel that has been at the center of his life for six years. “If this were a bigger show, we’d have just bought the property by now.”


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Damn… This girl just blew us all away! Congrats on the golden Globe @awkwafina, so much love to you! ❤️??

A post shared by Henry Golding (@henrygolding) on

Chu’s daughter, Willow, was born in July 2017, the year before “Crazy Rich Asians” came out. He and wife Kristen Hodge also have a son, Jonathan Heights, who was born in July and named after his upcoming Lin-Manuel Miranda movie “In the Heights,” which he was filming at the time.

Written and directed by Lulu Wang, “The Farewell” marked the dramatic lead debut for Awkwafina. In the film, she plays Billi, an American woman whose family has chosen to keep the truth of a terminal diagnosis from her grandmother in China.

“The Farewell” was nominated in the Globes’ foreign-film category, where “Parasite” took home the trophy.

“I don’t know a lot about how those different things are categorized, but it definitely is in a lot of Chinese,” Awkwafina told The Times last month after the nominations were announced. “I think my Chinese would be considered foreign to anybody because it’s so bad!”


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Since the best film nominated at the Golden Globes this year was a Korean film, it was only fitting that some of the event’s most resonant words were spoken in Korean.

“Once you overcome the 1-inch-tall barrier of subtitles, you will be introduced to so many more amazing films,” said “Parasite” director Bong Joon Ho as he claimed the prize for foreign-language film. In one perfectly barbed sentence (translated into English by his interpreter, filmmaker Sharon Choi), Bong called out the American moviegoing public’s perceived aversion to subtitles. That aversion can clearly be surmounted, if “Parasite’s” word-of-mouth success and astonishing $23-million-plus gross in the U.S. alone is any indication.

But Bong also seemed to be rebuking the cultural myopia of Hollywood itself, which reserves special prizes each year for movies shot in countries outside the U.S. and in languages other than English. The bestowing of these awards — whether by the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn., an organization of Southern California-based journalists that presents the Globes, or by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which will hand out the Oscars next month — is often a condescending gesture disguised as an inclusive one. These awards function more or less as consolation prizes, effectively keeping certain pictures in their place — on the margins — and preventing them from competing in any meaningful sense for bigger accolades.

Don’t get me wrong. I am grateful that awards for non-English-language cinema exist; without them, some outstanding movies would go completely unrecognized. I’m a member of two critics organizations, the Los Angeles Film Critics Assn. and the National Society of Film Critics, which regularly hand out foreign-language-film prizes themselves. But I’m also proud to say that, this year, both those critics groups, along with many others, gave their best picture prizes to “Parasite.”

This is not an atypical or groundbreaking gesture. Both LAFCA and the NSFC have long recognized that some of the best movies each year hail from outside the U.S. and should be celebrated rather than penalized for it. (The NSFC has an especially strong track record in this regard; its past best picture winners include “Blow-Up,” “Persona,” “The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie,” “Ran,” “Yi Yi,” “Pan’s Labyrinth,” “Waltz With Bashir” and “Goodbye to Language.”)

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Will the industry finally wake up to that realization this year? Much has been written about how “Parasite,” a critics’ darling and massive crossover hit, could finally shatter the mold by becoming the first non-English-language movie to win the Academy Award for best picture. It would be a worthy outcome indeed, though I’m not holding my breath, given that many were predicting the same milestone last year for Alfonso Cuarón’s “Roma.” Listening to Bong’s gracious, humorous, subtly barbed speech at the Globes, I was reminded of Cuarón’s similarly droll words when he collected his foreign-language-film Oscar last year: “I grew up watching foreign-language films and learning so much from them — films like ‘Citizen Kane,’ ‘Jaws,’ ‘Rashomon,’ ‘The Godfather’ and ‘Breathless,’ ” he added with the friendliest of winks.

Bong effectively echoed that democratic sentiment Sunday night when he concluded his speech by saying, in English: “I think we use just one language — the cinema.” And he has learned to speak that language more fluently than most filmmakers of any nationality. Bong’s mastery of genre filmmaking has long earned him comparisons to Hitchcock and Spielberg, even as his authorial stamp is becoming increasingly difficult to mistake for anyone else’s. One of the most satisfying ironies about the success of “Parasite” is that, after making two mostly English-language pictures with starry casts (“Snowpiercer” and “Okja”), this South Korean filmmaker reached his widest, warmest audience embrace with a film set in his home country, a domestic thriller deeply rooted in specifically Korean class and cultural tensions that speaks just as powerfully to the world at large.
It would be nice if someone relayed Bong’s “one language — the cinema” sentiments to the motion picture academy, which has nominated only 11 non-English-language films for best picture in its 91-year history and has never given even one of them the top prize. Many of those omissions look especially short-sighted in retrospect: Imagine how much more respectable the Oscars might be if “Grand Illusion” or “Cries and Whispers” or “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” or “Amour” had been rightfully named the best pictures of their respective years.

But the academy, which has made concerted efforts to diversify its membership ranks in recent years, still looks like a model of progress next to the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. Although it received director and screenplay Globe nominations, “Parasite,” like all non-English-language films, was deemed ineligible for the two best motion picture categories. Those Globes went instead to Quentin Tarantino’s “Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood” (motion picture, musical or comedy) and Sam Mendes’ dazzling stunt of a World War I thriller, “1917” (motion picture, drama).

And with no acting nominations for a superb ensemble that includes Song Kang Ho, Park So Dam, Cho Yeo Jeong and Lee Jeong Eun, “Parasite” was basically kissed off with an easy foreign-language-film win over Pedro Almodóvar’s “Pain and Glory” (Spain), Ladj Ly’s “Les Misérables” (France), Céline Sciamma’s “Portrait of a Lady on Fire” (France) and Lulu Wang’s “The Farewell” (U.S.). Yes, you read that last one correctly. Because the HFPA’s rules differ drastically from the academy’s, American productions are allowed to compete for the foreign-language-film Globe — a rule that has benefited past nominees like Clint Eastwood’s “Letters From Iwo Jima” and Mel Gibson’s Mexico-set “Apocalypto.”

But the category makes an especially perplexing fit for “The Farewell,” an outstanding American independent drama that takes place mostly in China, features a mix of English and Mandarin dialogue, and stars Awkwafina (the Globe winner for actress in a musical or comedy) as a Chinese-born New Yorker. “Foreign” is an odd designation for a movie about the challenge and irreducible complexity of American immigrant identity. I would go further and suggest, as I think Bong and Cuarón would too, that “foreign” is an odd word to throw at any movie — something the academy, to its credit, recently recognized, though its newly rechristened “international feature” category is far from a perfect solution. (The HFPA, for its part, has the word “foreign” in its own name and may be less likely to change its own category’s name anytime soon.)

One more word about the National Society, which announced its awards on Saturday, a day before the Globes. Although it would be difficult to find two groups with more disparate voting bodies than the NSFC and the HFPA, the two actually found a fair amount to agree on this year. Both groups recognized Brad Pitt (“Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood”) for supporting actor and Laura Dern (“Marriage Story”) for supporting actress. Curiously, neither group wound up giving a prize to “The Irishman,” despite clear admiration for Martin Scorsese’s heavily touted movie on both sides.

Where the two groups really parted company was in their regard for “Little Women.” Greta Gerwig’s luminous film notably failed to receive Globe nominations for picture or director, briefly fueling widespread anxiety that it would be overlooked by industry voters and audiences alike (particularly male voters and male audiences). That the movie has since become one of the box office hits of the season should hopefully reveal those fears as premature. The NSFC, for its part, handed Gerwig its prize for best director and cited Dern’s performance in “Little Women” along with her work in “Marriage Story.” “Little Women” also earned runner-up placements for supporting actress (Florence Pugh) and for picture, screenplay and cinematography, where it consistently finished just a few votes or so behind “Parasite.”

My NSFC colleague Ty Burr, critic for the Boston Globe, noted that “Little Women” and “Parasite” seemed to be doing a sort of dance all afternoon, which is a lovely image as well as an apt one. These two movies could scarcely be more different in style, tone or effect, even if they are both thrillingly energized domestic dramas about the resilience of families in impoverished circumstances. The language of cinema forges its own connections, as great filmmakers know and as the awards-season circuit has yet to learn.


If anybody passed out Movie Father of the Year awards, Song Kang Ho’s performance as the shifty Kim family patriarch in “Parasite” would surely earn a nod. As it is, Song has created a big-screen dad for the ages in South Korean auteur Bong Joon Ho’s comedy/drama/satire/thriller/bloodbath. The Oscar-shortlisted Golden Globe winner marks Song’s fourth collaboration with Bong, including 2013’s similarly class-conscious sci-fi drama “Snowpiercer.”

Song spent a decade on stage before getting into film at age 30, where he has played the action hero (“The Foul King”), the obsessed father (Choon Park Wo’s “Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance”) and the hardened criminal (“No. 3″). In “Parasite,” he brings all of those colors to bear in the role of Kim Ki-Taek, the once-ambitious, now-unemployed head of the impoverished Kim clan. By turns aimless, sly and bitter, Mr. Kim conspires with son Ki-Woo (Choi Woo Shik), daughter Ki-Jung (Park So Dam) and wife Chung-Sook (Chang Hyae Jin) to take over the lives of their rich employers, the Park family.

Visiting L.A. for a few weeks, Song and his interpreter sequestered themselves in a booth at a Beverly Hills Hotel café. Over a cup of coffee, the soon-to-be 50-year-old “Parasite” star laid out the emotional architecture of his remarkable Mr. Kim.

As “Parasite” shifts tone from dark comedy to thriller to bleak tragedy, your character Kim Ki Taek undergoes extraordinary transformations. How did you get under the skin of this character?

Ki-Taek may seem kind of extraordinary, but I would argue that he’s really more ordinary, in the sense that he’s somewhat of a next-door neighbor and maybe seems ineffectual. But director Bong and I don’t have deep discussions when we go into a project, so we didn’t really discuss how to attack Ki-Taek’s character. And I didn’t really draw inspiration from any people I know in real life because, to be honest, Ki-Taek is more of a metaphor, a symbolic character.

The Kim family, living together in cramped quarters, has great chemistry and feels very much like a real family. Did you spend time getting to know your castmates before production began?

We didn’t really sit down and discuss any of that [chemistry] before we started shooting on Day One. Of course, we had a table read beforehand, but other than that we didn’t have any rehearsals per se.

In “Parasite” at the homeless shelter, your Ki-Taek says, “No plan is the best plan.” How did your character get to that point in his life?

That’s something you wouldn’t normally say to your own son. But it shows that Ki-Taek, despite all of his efforts throughout his life, has come to be in this situation because of the very scary reality we live with, under capitalism. Sometimes you don’t get to the place where you’d hoped to be when you were younger. That was what I was reflecting on when I approached the “no-plan” scene.

Unlike your “no-plan” character, Bong Joon Ho is said to be meticulous in planning out the details of his movies. With “Parasite” being your fourth movie together, what’s it like being directed by him?

It’s thrilling but at the same time agonizing. I always expect the project will turn out great. However, to carry out my assignment and meet director Bong’s expectation, I have to put out my very best effort to address every detail that he hands out. So there’s always those two sides of the coin when you work with Bong Joon Ho: great and agonizing.

Posing as the chauffeur, Ki-Taek has to hide his resentment when wealthy Mr. Park says poor people have a certain smell and compares them to cockroaches.

When you don’t have money because you’re struggling financially — that you can sort of take. However, when he talks about how you smell and cockroaches, now you’re going to a place where you really shouldn’t go.

Eventually, Ki-Taek snaps. How did you channel all of his rage and sadness?

The irony of the life we live is that we struggle so hard to move up the ladder, but as you see in the movie, Ki-Taek descends to this place at the end. That is exactly, I think, how our lives are.


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What's on TV Tuesday: 'black-ish' on ABC

January 7, 2020 | News | No Comments

SERIES

NCIS Gibbs (Mark Harmon) must face the consequences for helping Ziva (Cote de Pablo). David McCallum also stars in this new episode. 8 p.m. CBS

Ellen’s Game of Games The game show returns with two new episodes. 8 and 9 p.m. NBC

Jeopardy: The Greatest of All Time Former champions James Holzhauer, Ken Jennings and Brad Rutter, the three highest money winners in the answer-and-question game show’s history, compete in this new mini-series. Alex Trebek hosts. 8 p.m. ABC

The Resident After being terminated, Conrad (Matt Czuchry) has a hard time figuring out his next step and distracts himself by accompanying a patient on a zero-gravity adventure in this new episode of the medical drama. 8 p.m. Fox

Finding Your Roots With Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Sterling K. Brown, Jon Batiste and Sasheer Zamata learn about their ancestors in this new episode. 8 p.m. KOCE and KPBS

FBI After a businessman with a history of harassment claims against him is killed Special Agents Bell and Zidan (Missy Peregrym, Zeeko Zaki) suspect that the killer may be one of his several accusers. 9 p.m. CBS

Mixed-ish In the wake of the Challenger tragedy, Rainbow (Arica Himmel) and her family handle their grief in this new episode. Christina Anthony also stars. 9 p.m. ABC

Gordon Ramsay’s 24 Hours to Hell and Back The restaurant renovation series returns for a new season. 9 p.m. Fox

black-ish Bow (Tracee Ellis Ross) takes Diane (Marsai Martin) to a salon as a bonding opportunity in this new episode. Anthony Anderson, Marcus Scribner and Miles Brown also star. 9:30 p.m. ABC

FBI: Most Wanted Producer Dick Wolf’s spinoff of his procedural drama “FBI” stars Julian McMahon as a seasoned agent who oversees a federal team that functions as a mobile undercover unit that tracks down fugitives. Roxy Sternberg (“Emerald City”), Keisha Castle-Hughes (“Game of Thrones”), Nathaniel Arcand (“Heartland”) and Kellan Lutz (“Twilight”) also star. Henry Thomas guest stars in the premiere. 10 p.m. CBS

Zoey’s Extraordinary Playlist Jane Levy stars in this quirky new dramedy as a computer coder in San Francisco who experiences “an unusual event” that leaves her with the ability to hear the innermost thoughts and desires of those around her as songs. Skylar Astin, Alex Newell, Peter Gallagher and Mary Steenburgen co-star. 10 p.m. NBC

Emergence After enduring months of dead ends, the Evans family receives information they hope might finally lead them to Piper (Alexa Swinton) in the new episode. Allison Tolman, Enver Gjokaj, Ashley Aufderheide, Clancy Brown, Donald Faison, Robert Bailey Jr. and Owain Yeoman also star. 10 p.m. ABC

Running Wild With Bear Grylls Rock climber Alex Honnold joins Bear for an adventure in the Swiss Alps. 10 p.m. National Geographic

Frontline Border patrol agents, militias, local advocates and migrants provide insight into the border crisis in El Paso, Texas, in this new episode of the documentary series. 10:30 p.m. KOCE and KPBS

SPECIALS

Dave Chappelle: The Mark Twain Prize The comedian is honored at the Kennedy Center in Wash., D.C. With Michael Che, Colin Jost, Lorne Michaels, Keenan Thompson, Common, Bradley Cooper, Morgan Freeman, Tiffany Haddish, John Legend, Q-Tip, Trevor Noah, Sarah Silverman and Jon Stewart. 9 p.m. KOCE and KPBS

MOVIES

The Little Stranger Set in 1948, Lenny Abrahamson’s 2018 drama stars Domhnall Gleeson as a physician summoned to a dilapidated estate that belongs to a disfigured British WWII veteran (Will Poulter), whose sister (Ruth Wilson) serves as his nurse. The home also is the site of apparent paranormal activity that seems to be escalating. Charlotte Rampling and Harry Hadden-Paton also star. 9:50 p.m. HBO

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning Rascal Flatts; Daniel Levitin; Jodi Kantor. (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Valerie Bertinelli; Martha Stewart. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Salma Hayek; Jamie Oliver; Brandon Larracuente, Emily Tosta, Niko Guardado and Elle Paris Legaspi. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day L.A. Elizabeth Wagmeister; Dr. Drew Pinsky; chef Gordon Ramsay; Bellamy Young (“Prodigal Son”); Mark-Paul Gosselaar (“mixed-ish”). (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Live With Kelly and Ryan Bobby Cannavale (“Medea”); Julian McMahon (“FBI: Most Wanted”). (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). (N) 10 a.m. KABC

Rachael Ray(N) 10 a.m. KTTV

The Wendy Williams Show Jillian Michaels. (N) 11 a.m. KTTV

The Talk Lisa Vanderpump. (N) 1 p.m. KCBS

Tamron Hall Marsai Martin (“black-ish”); financial expert Anthony O’Neal. (N) 1 p.m. KABC

The Dr. Oz Show Carey Kelly says he and his brother, R. Kelly, endured years of sexual abuse; Harvey Weinstein’s former assistant. (N) 1 p.m. KTTV

The Kelly Clarkson Show Jenna Dewan; Luis Fonsi; Rob Gronkowski; Curtis Stone. (N) 2 p.m. KNBC

Dr. Phil A woman fears that her grandson still has contact with the child he nearly beat to death. (N) 3 p.m. KCBS

The Ellen DeGeneres Show Kate McKinnon (“Bombshell”); O’Shea Jackson. (N) 3 p.m. KNBC

The Real Kristin Cavallari (“Very Cavallari”); Morris Chestnut (“The Resident”). (N) 3 p.m. KTTV

The Doctors A man brings an emotional-support clown to a termination meeting; decision-making disasters. (N) 3 p.m. KCOP

Amanpour and Company (N) 11 p.m. KCET; midnight KVCR;1 a.m. KLCS

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central

Conan Ewan McGregor (“Doctor Sleep”). 11 p.m. TBS

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Salma Hayek; George MacKay. (N) 11:34 p.m. KNBC

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Rose Byrne; Bobby Cannavale; Jamie Oliver. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Live! Rachel Brosnahan; Greta Gerwig. (N) 11:35 p.m. KABC

The Late Late Show With James Corden Demi Moore; Maggie Gyllenhaal; Jay Larson. 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Late Night With Seth Meyers Rachel Maddow; J.B. Smoove; Caitlin Kalafus. (N) 12:37 a.m. KNBC

Nightline (N) 12:37 a.m. KABC

A Little Late With Lilly Singh Figure skater Adam Rippon; Iliza Shlesinger. (N) 1:38 a.m. KNBC

SPORTS

College Basketball Miami visits Louisville, 4 p.m. ESPN2; Providence visits Marquette, 4 p.m. FS1; Baylor visits Texas Tech, 6 p.m. ESPN2; Villanova visits Creighton, 6 p.m. FS1; Utah State visits Air Force, 8 p.m. ESPN2

NHL Hockey The Colorado Avalanche visits the New York Rangers, 4:30 p.m. NBCSP; the Columbus Blue Jackets visit the Ducks, 7 p.m. FS Prime

NBA Basketball The New York Knicks visit the Lakers, 7:30 p.m. SportsNet

For more sports on TV, see the Sports section.


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The late Julia Child was a big fan of In-N-Out Burger. Jamie West, executive chef at the Montecito Club in Santa Barbara California, said he stopped at the fast-food chain more than once during a road trip with the grande dame of cooking.

“On the way up the coast, we ate In-N-Out burgers in the car,” West told the Ventura County Star newspaper in 2009. “On the way back, we went inside to order at the In-N-Out Burger in Santa Maria. A young woman behind the counter kept looking at us. Then she whispered to me: ‘Is that Julia Child?’ It was great how people of all ages knew who she was.”

Learn more about Child’s enthusiasm for the love of food during the Santa Barbara Culinary Experience, a weekend of wine tastings, garden tours, cooking classes and gourmet dinners. This year’s experience will be held March 13 to 15 and will feature individual events, such as an Indian feast by Alejandro Medina and Rajat Parr at Bibi Ji ($200 per person); a market tour and gourmet dinner with chef Greg Murphy of Bouchon in Santa Barbara ($195); and a Greek mezze cooking class with chef Robin Goldstein ($115).

Tickets sell out quickly. The Platinum Pass, which includes weekend events and seating at signature events, costs $995 and is on sale now. Tickets for individual events, starting at $35 for classes, will go on sale Jan. 21.

For fans of Child, there will be a downloadable map of her favorite local restaurants, which includes the In-N-Out and the Costco food court (“she always ordered a Costco hot dog,” according to a press release), both in Goleta. Child was born in Pasadena but moved to Montecito near Santa Barbara in 2001. She died three years later at age 91.

The event that celebrates her legacy as well as talented contemporary chefs is sponsored by the Julia Child Foundation for Gastronomy and the Culinary Arts, and Visit Santa Barbara.

Info: Santa Barbara Culinary Experience

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