Lifestyle
How Jack Sivan’s Nonconformist Men’s Wear Business Came to Be
Not long before dressing Mr. Essandoh, Mr. Sivan landed his first wholesale account with Ford General, a store in Chicago. In May, it will start selling pieces from Mr. Sivan’s burgeoning ready-to-wear line, which includes items like a double-breasted linen blazer ($1,155), striped linen pants ($575) and a matching military-inspired jacket ($685).
Mr. Sivan’s custom suits start at about $2,200; their prices vary based on fabrics and other factors. His business has taken over much of the living room in his apartment near Prospect Park, which has workstations with sewing machines and metal shelves where materials and clothing patterns are stored. There are also multiple mannequins that Mr. Sivan, 28, dresses in clothes he is making, which on a recent visit to the space included a pinstripe chore coat made of Italian shetland flannel wool and a brown coat that still had sewing pins in a pocket and the collar.
Most of Mr. Sivan’s customers have sought traditional suiting, but Mr. Essandoh has not been the only one to take interest in his skirted styles. Last September, at a pop-up shop Mr. Sivan opened in downtown Manhattan, a skirt suit was displayed in a window. “That brought in a lot of people, just all ages, all genders,” said Persephone Bennett, 29, an associate designer for Mr. Sivan. “They were like, ‘That is interesting to me and I want that.’”
Mr. Sivan, of course, started making skirted men’s wear long after other designers — Thom Browne, Jean Paul Gaultier and Yohji Yamamoto among them — introduced their own versions. His pieces are designed with a range of wearers in mind, he said, and tend to have curvier cuts that take inspiration from flared 1970s suiting and from women’s wear silhouettes.
“Each thing I’m making, maybe the decisions are small, but someone’s identity is in those decisions,” Mr. Sivan said. To help telegraph the inclusive nature of his clothes, people like Lauren Ezersky, a 70-something former fashion television journalist, and Nikhil Kapoor, a plus-size influencer, have been tapped to model them.
Lifestyle
Jimmy Kimmel’s Band Leader Cleto Escobedo III Cause of Death Released
‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’
Band Leader Cleto Escobedo III Cause of Death Revealed
Published
Jimmy Kimmel’s longtime bandleader, Cleto Escobedo III, died because his heart couldn’t pump enough blood to keep him alive, TMZ has learned.
We obtained Cleto’s death certificate and it lists cardiogenic shock as the immediate cause of death … with vasodilatory shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation and alcoholic cirrhosis of the liver as the underlying causes.
The document also says other conditions that contributed to Cleto’s death include sepsis, graft versus host disease, immunosuppressed, chronic kidney disease and pneumonia.
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Cardiogenic shock is a life-threatening condition that happens when the heart suddenly can’t pump enough blood to meet the body’s needs … according to the Mayo Clinic.
The doc says Cleto was cremated and the certificate makes note that he was an entertainer who played music for 40 years.
Escobedo had been noticeably absent from “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” for months after falling ill — before Jimmy confirmed his passing in an emotional Instagram tribute.
Cleto and Jimmy go way back — they grew up together in Las Vegas, and when Kimmel landed his late-night gig in 2003, he fought hard to make Cleto the leader of Cleto and the Cletones, saying he didn’t have better chemistry with anyone else.
Cleto was 59.
RIP
Lifestyle
Glen Powell is ‘The Running Man’ in the latest Stephen King adaptation : Pop Culture Happy Hour
Glen Powell in The Running Man.
Paramount Pictures
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Paramount Pictures
The Running Man is a new dystopian thriller starring Glen Powell as a man so desperate for money to care for his family that he volunteers to run for his life. As a contestant on a TV game show, he must survive for 30 days while being hunted by a group of highly skilled assassins and by his fellow citizens. Based on a Stephen King novel, director Edgar Wright brings in an all-star cast including Lee Pace, Colman Domingo, William H. Macy and Michael Cera.
Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopculture
Lifestyle
First look: Inside California’s new $600-million casino that’s bigger than Caesars Palace
Next time you’re driving the Grapevine and nearing the forest of oil rigs on the outskirts of Bakersfield, look for a six-story guitar.
That would be the Hard Rock Casino Tejon, whose opening on Thursday brings industrial-strength Indian gaming — and some Hollywood pizzazz — to a territory better known for cowboy hats, farmland and petroleum extraction.
The Tejon casino stands in the rural community of Mettler, near the convergence of Interstate 5 and State Route 99 — “a stone’s throw away” from Los Angeles, suggested Hard Rock Casino Tejon President Chris Kelley.
In effect, the casino is a $600-million bet by leaders of Hard Rock International and the Tejon Indian Tribe that they can grab a central role among the many Indian casinos in Southern California.
The property is the first full-scale gaming and entertainment destination in Kern County.
(Makenzie Beeney Photography for Hard Rock International)
A wind sculpture at the entrance of the casino.
(Cristian Costea for Hard Rock International)
The draw? Most notably, 150,000 square feet of gaming space — including 58 table games and more than 2,000 slot machines — putting it among the largest casinos in Southern California, on par with many along the Strip in Las Vegas.
And, of course, because this is a Hard Rock venture, there are pop music artifacts on display. Among them: the blue hooded velvet mini dress Sabrina Carpenter wore in her “Please Please Please” music video, signed guitars from Sheryl Crow and Bonnie Raitt, Beck’s tambourine and Natalie Cole’s orange high heels.
The casino also includes four restaurants serving Asian street food, tacos, pizza and American comfort food (especially Nashville hot chicken) — and a bonus feature. At select hours, Kelley said, staff will put up a divider to create Deep Cut, a fancier “speakeasy restaurant” that will emphasize steak and seafood.
“This is something no other Hard Rock Cafe has … a restaurant within a restaurant,” said Kelley, leading a tour in the days before opening.
Live-action table games include blackjack, craps, roulette and baccarat.
(Makenzie Beeney Photography for Hard Rock International)
Plans for the second phase of the project will include a 400-room hotel and spa on-site, along with a 2,800-seat Hard Rock Live venue designed to host concerts, sporting events and ultimately make Kern County a premier destination for travelers and fans. Officials declined to share a timeline for this next installment.
Though its global empire began with a London cafe in 1971, Hard Rock International has been owned by the Seminole Tribe of Florida since 2007. The company’s native ownership was “a major influence” on the Tejon tribe’s decision to team up, said Tejon Tribal Chairman Octavio Escobedo III. Hard Rock Casino Tejon is owned by the Tejon Indian Tribe and is managed by Hard Rock International.
For the Tejon tribe and its 1,523 enrolled members, the casino amounts to a new chapter in a saga full of challenges. In the 1850s, the Tejon were included in the creation of California’s first Indian reservation — which was then closed by federal officials in the 1860s. More than a century later, in 1979, the tribe was omitted from a U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs list of formally recognized tribes — an apparent mistake that took decades to correct.
When the Tejon did win federal recognition in late 2011, gaming plans materialized quickly. By late 2016, the tribe had set in motion the acquisition of the casino site.
The restaurant Deep Cut is billed as an “elevated steakhouse experience.”
(Makenzie Beeney Photography for Hard Rock International)
For the tribe, Escobedo said, the long-term picture likely includes developing a residential community — which the Tejon haven’t had for more than a century — as the tribe aims for “financial sovereignty.” Though he declined to specify the amount of money that would require, he did say “it’s going to take a tremendous amount of financial discipline to achieve that.”
So far, things feel promising. Escobedo said 52 tribal members have signed on to work at casino jobs and “I’d love to see that number double over the next year or so.”
Long before the Seminoles bought control of Hard Rock International, the tribe pioneered Indian gaming in the U.S., beginning with a bingo hall in Hollywood, Fla., in 1979. Through further investment and legal victories rooted in tribal sovereignty, tribes in 29 states across the U.S. have built hundreds of gaming operations, which together gross more than $40 billion yearly.
Beyond its possibilities for the Tejon tribe, the arrival of the casino means about 1,100 new jobs for greater Bakersfield, which lost a beloved entertainment venue in August when Buck Owens’ Crystal Palace closed after 29 years.
Owens, who died in 2006, was a longtime resident of Bakersfield and proponent of the gritty “Bakersfield sound” in country music. Besides artifacts from pop music, rock ’n’ roll and Tejon cultural history, Kelley said, “We are going to have some Buck Owens memorabilia. It just wouldn’t be right not to.”
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