Lifestyle
A Quest for the Best Coffee in New York Leads to Love
On June 28, 2016, Ms. Ng and Mr. Leung found their relationship tested under extraordinary circumstances. They had traveled to Istanbul for a friend’s wedding and were awaiting a domestic flight at Atatürk Airport when news broke of a terrorist attack. The attack had occurred just an hour earlier, in the same terminal they had recently passed through. “It was terrifying,” Ms. Ng said. “Justin was calm and gave clear directions, making me feel safe in a way I’ll never forget.”
For Mr. Leung, the moment required immediate action. “We’re in this situation, and I had to communicate with her in a new way very quickly,’ he recalled. ‘I asked, ‘Andrea, do you trust me?’ and guided us to safety. ” The experience, though harrowing, became a critical point in their relationship, cementing their trust and ability to handle challenges together.
Last year, on March 22, Mr. Leung proposed at Devoción, where they had their first date. “I teared up and said, ‘I love you and want to spend my life with you,’” he said. As baristas played “Kiss Me” by Sixpence None the Richer, Ms. Ng said yes, and the cafe customers applauded. They celebrated with dinner at Aska, a Scandinavian restaurant in Brooklyn, where he shared what he couldn’t say during the proposal: “These past 10 years have been the best of my life, and you are the best part of it.”
Three wedding celebrations marked their marriage. “We did everything backward, and it wasn’t our initial plan,” Ms. Ng said, “but each one served a different purpose.”
They legally wed on Jan. 3, at New York City Hall, officiated by Guohuan Zhang, a city clerk, with Mr. Leung’s parents as witnesses. The day included lunch at the Odeon and dinner at Bridges, both in Manhattan. The following day, they hosted an after-party for 69 guests at Sommwhere, an event space on the Lower East Side, featuring D.J. sets by close friends, heart-shaped pizzas, and their first dance to Lauryn Hill’s “Can’t Take My Eyes Off of You.”
Lifestyle
Zorthian Ranch, 'a magical, deep labyrinth' of art, suffers major damage in Eaton fire
For years rumors swirled about a cult living on the secluded property at the end of Fair Oaks Avenue in the San Gabriel Mountain foothills bordering Altadena. There were stories of wild bacchanals involving nudists, and grand parties attended by the likes of artist Andy Warhol, jazz musician Charlie Parker and Nobel laureate physicist Richard Feynman.
Since 1946, the Zorthian Ranch had served as a haven for artists and creatives who wanted to escape the confines of urban living and find their bliss in a rustic paradise. The sculptor who founded the ranch, Jirayr Zorthian, transformed discarded objects into art. His family carried on that legacy after his death in 2004, and the property lived on as a sort of outdoor museum featuring artwork by established and new artists alike.
But last week, the Eaton fire ripped through the property, leaving mostly ashes in its wake. Jirayr’s son, Alan Zorthian, who oversees the ranch, fought alongside others to save the 40-acre estate and its eclectic collection of sculptures and artwork.
The ranch had survived wildfires in the past. Its caretakers had firefighting equipment, hoses and standpipes at the ready to draw water across different points of the property. But this firestorm, driven by hurricane-force winds, proved too fast and overwhelming. The blaze consumed every structure on the property save for two — the main house where Alan was raised and a mid-century home known as the “green house.”
But Alan’s one bedroom cottage, his father’s studio, the various barns and outbuildings that supported the farming operation and countless pieces of art are gone.
“I don’t know if I can duplicate 57 years of work,” Alan, 66, said this week, referencing the years his father devoted to establishing the ranch. A steel container that stores some of his father’s artwork survived, he said, but he’s afraid to open it; the outer shell shows signs of heat damage.
“I start to feel bad about the cultural infrastructure that we’ve lost,” Alan said. “But then I look around and I see what other people have lost. I mean, our whole area has lost everything.”
After erupting Jan. 7, the Eaton fire devastated large swaths of Altadena, a community of 42,000 residents, destroying more than 4,600 structures and killing at least 16 people. In some areas, entire blocks of homes were razed. The Bunny Museum, Pasadena Waldorf School and Zane Grey Estate are among the historic landmarks destroyed.
The Zorthian Ranch had come to encapsulate an untamed slice of Altadena: It was a brazenly bohemian scene, cloaked by forest, that attracted a range of artists, scientists and musicians. Bears, coyotes and mountain lions were regular visitors. Beehives, pig pens and horses coexisted. On clear days, the ranch offered a nearly panoramic view of downtown L.A. and Catalina Island.
Alan evacuated the property during the early hours of Jan. 8, leaving behind key documents and nearly all his belongings. He was forced to abandon his Jeep after the wooden bridge connecting the upper and lower portions of the ranch was incinerated. He crossed a deep gully full of ember and ash to escape.
“That was a barn,” he noted, pointing to a pile of rubble. His office, where he worked on architectural projects, was gone. Near the ruins of what was once his father’s art studio, he bent to pick up a piece of shattered white Masonite board. It was all that remained of a painting his father had crafted after an acrimonious divorce with his first wife.
The painting, titled “The Divorcement,” depicted Jirayr’s former mother-in-law in an unflattering light, and as part of the divorce settlement, could not be shown while Jirayr and his ex-wife were alive. But after their deaths, the painting was hung in a multipurpose room that doubled as a gift shop.
“There’s nothing left,” Alan said, defeated. He dropped the piece, which landed with a sharp crack. “It’s all gone.”
Jirayr Zorthian and his family fled the Armenian genocide when Jirayr was 11. They ended up on the East Coast, and Jirayr eventually studied fine arts at Yale University on a scholarship. He served in the military during World War II, and after his Turkish language abilities were no longer needed, was tasked with creating propaganda. He painted a 157-foot mural titled “Phantasmagoria of Military Intelligence Training.” Photocopy plates of the mural survived the fire.
In 1945, Jirayr and his first wife, Betty Williams, bought 27 acres in the foothills of Altadena. After they divorced, Zorthian kept the land and continued to expand along the rugged foothills. He married Dabney, Alan’s mother, and together the couple ran the “Zorthian’s Ranch for Children” summer camp for more than 25 years.
With friends and fellow artisans, they would throw alchohol-fueled parties where Jirayr would dress in a toga, as “Zor-Bacchus,” and nude women would feed him grapes. They famously hosted tryouts for the Doo Dah Parade queen, an irreverent counter to Pasadena’s Rose Parade.
For Alan, growing up on the ranch meant learning how to live off the land. He fed the pigs and horses and helped at the summer camp. Feynman even helped him with his algebra homework, he recalled. But when he turned 21, a trip to Europe exposed him to a life beyond the ranch, and he left to study architecture in San Diego.
He found himself back at the ranch in 2006, after both his parents died, to help manage it with his sister Alice. Over the years, their father, who opined on the wastefulness of Americans, had accumulated discarded objects and found ways to introduce them into his art. The property was cluttered with telephone poles, car doors, old trailers, broken concrete.
Alan said he was determined to create a “museum with no walls” that would showcase art created at the ranch. His daughters, Julia and Caroline, grew up spending weekends and summers there, running around property decorated in intricate sculptures and meeting people from around the world.
“The place itself was a sort of magical, deep labyrinth that was full of nooks and crannies of strange objects, out in the elements to be enjoyed by whoever wanted to walk by,” said Julia, now 29.
She moved to the ranch as a young adult, dropping out of college to help her father manage the ranch when it hit a precarious period of financial instability. They needed to find a way to stay true to their roots, she said, while also creating a viable business.
In recent years, the family transitioned the property into a working farm. They maintained four gardens, growing squash, potatoes, watermelons and oranges, and sold their honey. A community of about 20 people lived and worked at the ranch as docents, hosting drawing and yoga classes. Airbnb became a primary source of income, as artists rented out structures on the property, including Jirayr’s former art studio.
The family has launched a GoFundMe to keep the ranch afloat. So far, they’ve raised a little more than $100,000, with notes from people who remembered their time there.
But already, Alan said, he’s getting calls from real estate agents vying to buy out area residents and develop their land. The family is intent on keeping the property and returning the ranch to its former glory. As Alan sifted through the debris, he eyed a melted strip of aluminum.
“I guess we’ll have to make art out of this damn fire,” he said.
Lifestyle
A Bastion of Los Angeles Hippie Culture Survived the Flames
In Topanga Canyon on Saturday morning, suspended midair from an electricity line, hung the smoldering top of a utility pole. The pole itself had burned away. Its remaining crosspieces resembled a crucifix on fire. By the time Bob Melet videotaped this eerie scene, firefighters had managed to halt the advance of flaring patches that elsewhere had been whipped into infernos.
Barely 100 yards from the front door of Mr. Melet’s store, Melet Mercantile — a destination for fashion and interior designers who for decades have tracked Mr. Melet’s idiosyncratic tastes — lay the fire line at Camp Wildwood, a disused summer camp established in the 1920s and later turned into a resort and community center by two locals, Julia and Oka Stewart. To its west and along the Pacific Coast Highway, almost everything was torched.
“The canyon is a funnel that comes right past my doorstep,” Mr. Melet said by phone from a friend’s apartment in Corona del Mar, his evacuation point. “If it had reached me, it would have wiped out the entire town.”
The fact that it had not represented the miraculous survival of an ecosystem as fragile and anomalous as it is naturally untamed. An eccentric holdout of a countercultural ethos that once went a long way toward defining the Southern California lifestyle, Topanga lies at the western limit of an extensive system of canyons resembling a series of Cyclopean knife cuts slashed into the Santa Monica mountains.
Others among the 28 canyons — Laurel, Beachwood, Runyon — may be better known beyond the Los Angeles basin, largely for their place in rock ’n’ roll history and lore. While gradually over the decades those places succumbed to the irresistible forces of gentrification, Topanga Canyon has clung to its wildness, its renegade spirit and the durable aura it retains of a one-time redoubt of bootleggers and drug runners. Bisected by a single winding mountain road, Topanga straddles the mountains and links the sprawling suburbs of the San Fernando Valley with the blue vastness of the ocean.
“One of the things we’re proudest of in Topanga is the strength of the community,” said Stefan Ashkenazy, a long time resident of the canyon. By some standards, Mr. Ashkenazy’s exclusive hotel complex, Elsewhere — built on 39 hilltop acres of what was once a vacation ranch for the Howard Johnson family — could be seen as a harbinger of gentrifying forces. That it is not owes to his efforts to keep the hotel’s vibe communitarian and local (he has offered free lodging to the area’s ad hoc firefighting teams that call themselves Heat Hawks), and its imprint light upon the land.
“Believe me, I know how lucky we are to have this holdout,” said Mr. Ashkenazy, who also owns the four-star Petit Ermitage hotel in West Hollywood.
For Emmeline Summerton, a self-taught social historian whose Instagram account, Lost Canyons LA, has become an addictive source of Los Angeles history and lore, the story of Topanga Canyon is one of improbable survival — a thoroughly wild place less than an hour’s drive from the city’s business center.
“I’m not sure how much people outside Los Angeles know about it,” she said, referring both to the canyon itself — populated by coyotes, rattlesnakes, and mountain lions — as well as a community that has long worn its ornery countercultural reputation as a badge of pride.
“There is the local, small community and a very rural feeling,” Ms. Summerton said, one still largely under the influence of the first wave of New Age pioneers. There were free-love naturist hide-outs like Elysium Fields and Sandstone Retreat, she explained, along with Moonfire Ranch, a 60-acre sanctuary established in the late 1950s by Lewis Beach Marvin III, an animal-rights activist and heir to S & H Green Stamps, a once popular grocery store reward system.
“It was very much about people living off the grid, with solar and rainwater collection,” Ms. Summerton said, and about a tolerance for oddballs and eccentrics that hung on long after a succession of real estate booms permanently altered the character of other, less remote canyons. “A lot has changed and there’s a new breed of hippie-type people out there, influencers and wellness entrepreneurs, so, yes, it’s more exclusive and expensive than in the past,” she added. “But it’s still the one canyon where you get a sense of what it has always been.”
By this she meant a refuge for renegades and outsiders, for artists like Neil Young, who wrote his landmark solo album “After the Gold Rush” at his house there; for storied ’60s groups like Canned Heat, whose members once worked as the house band at the Topanga Corral club (which burned down not once but twice); for Linda Ronstadt in the days after she quit Stone Poneys, the folk rock trio, to go solo and make music with musicians who would later form the Eagles; for the American actor Will Geer to create an open air amphitheater set in a hillside and call it the Theatricum Botanicum, a name derived from a 17th century English botanical text.
To this day in Topanga Canyon there remains an itinerant community informally known as the “Creekers,” whose members live off the grid in encampments set along creeks in the hills behind the disused Topanga Ranch Motel; residents who ride horses to do their marketing at the Topanga Creek General Store; and naturists hiking canyon roads clad in little besides sun hats and sneakers.
This, of course, was before the wildfires.
Gone on the first day of the Palisades fire was the Reel Inn, a beloved Malibu fish joint opened in 1986 by Teddy and Andy Leonard at the base of Topanga Canyon. Also gone was Cholada, a bustling Thai restaurant whose takeout was both a staple of coastal dining and the source of catered meals for the art world honchos that regularly decamp to Los Angeles for the annual Frieze art fair. Gone, too, were the Topanga Ranch Motel, a bungalow style motel complex built in 1929 by William Randolph Hearst to house railroad workers, and the Malibu Feed Bin, a holdout from an era when this stretch of the California coast was still largely agrarian.
Entire hillsides and washes were reduced to ashes and, later that same afternoon so, too, was an entire stretch of multimillion dollar homes improbably perched oceanside where the canyons meet the water along Pacific Coast Highway.
“If you’re ever going to use the word surreal,” Mr. Melet said of the devastation, “it was surreal.”
What seemed almost miraculous, given the surrounding destruction, was that the fires failed to reach the Theatricum Botanicum, and left unscathed the Inn of the Seventh Ray, whose dining tables are set on stone terraces by a creek side and whose gift shop is filled with crystals and mystical arcana.
“So far Topanga has mainly been spared,” the actress Wendie Malick said by phone from her ranch set on a ridge above Topanga.
“The winds were in our favor,” she added. “Though we’re not out of the woods yet. Things can change on a dime.”
And, indeed, the cyclonic winds — biblical, raging, like nothing in memory — started up again on Monday.
“The fires didn’t get to us last week,” said Nick Fouquet, a French American designer whose Western-style hats are favored by celebrities including Tom Brady, Rihanna, J. Balvin and LeBron James. When the first alert came last week, Mr. Fouquet raced up the coast from his business’s headquarters in Venice to the geodesic dome in Topanga that he calls home and, aided by a band of locals pumped out his swimming pool to soak his house and its surroundings.
It was a scene being repeated throughout the canyon, Mr. Fouquet said, neighbors on a mission of “house triage,’’ putting out small burns before they could grow. Videos Mr. Fouquet sent this reporter from the early days of the fire showed crimson flames crowning a ridge less than a quarter-mile from his property line. “The wind, the firefighters, a myriad of factors have been on our side,” said Mr. Fouquet.
Among those factors were the triage efforts of a tight knit community that stayed put despite evacuation orders and that banded together — as it has consistently across the decades when the canyon was visited by the wildfires, earthquakes, mudslides and rockfalls that are a fact of life in a seismically unstable coastal desert perched at a continent’s edge.
“Topanga always felt like the ugly stepchild no one cares about,” Mr. Fouquet said, while acknowledging the role in his current reprieve of both firefighters and fate. “We’re used to doing things for ourselves.”
Lifestyle
Chantel Jeffries Gets Down 'N Dirty on South Africa Excursion
Chantel Jeffries is letting it all hang out on her most recent vacation … baring all on a trip to South Africa — sharing images of herself scrubbing down in a bathtub.
The model and actress posted a series of pics to Instagram Thursday morning … posing in a barely-there bikini — and even stripping completely naked to take a bath in her rental.
Of course, no celeb can go to Africa without taking a safari through the beautiful landscape … and, Chantel did just that — photographing a couple cheetahs laying together in the grass.
Jeffries definitely brought the right equipment to capture her whole trip … showing off a high-tech camera in one snap — perfect for photographing all the beauty the country has to offer.
She also shot off a few arrows from her quiver when given the opportunity … but, it doesn’t look like she was hunting anything.
Chantel’s been enjoying some much-needed time off in recent months … ’cause before she left for South Africa, she hit Aspen for a skiing trip — sharing some snaps from atop the mountain and even attending a snow polo tournament.
She went a little farther than Colorado for this trip … and, she’s clearly loving every minute of it!
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta is highlighting a splintering global approach to online speech
-
Science6 days ago
Metro will offer free rides in L.A. through Sunday due to fires
-
Technology1 week ago
Las Vegas police release ChatGPT logs from the suspect in the Cybertruck explosion
-
News1 week ago
Photos: Pacific Palisades Wildfire Engulfs Homes in an L.A. Neighborhood
-
Education1 week ago
Four Fraternity Members Charged After a Pledge Is Set on Fire
-
Business1 week ago
Meta Drops Rules Protecting LGBTQ Community as Part of Content Moderation Overhaul
-
Politics1 week ago
Trump trolls Canada again, shares map with country as part of US: 'Oh Canada!'
-
Technology5 days ago
Amazon Prime will shut down its clothing try-on program