San Diego, CA
There’s a better way to fund push for more filming in San Diego region
“Alternate budget plan in works after public outcry” (May 28): The article notes the City Council is supporting adding $200,000 to the proposed budget to restore a position devoted to promoting San Diego as a setting for movies and TV (as well as commercials, industrial videos, etc). I completely agree that these efforts bring significant revenues into the city (and county) economies, “One Battle After Another” being the most recent example. From 1976 until 2012, we had the San Diego Film Commission operating autonomously and as a nonprofit, bringing in such high-profile projects as “Top Gun,” “Simon and Simon” and “Anchorman,” to name a few. In 2012, the commission was incorporated into the Tourism Authority and disbanded during severe budget cuts.
Why can’t industries that benefit the most from TV and movie production — like unions, casting agents, production companies, studio facilities, equipment rentals, the Screen Actors Guild or the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences — collectively fund the $200,000 and resurrect the commission?
— Chuck Dunning, La Jolla
San Diego, CA
Taste of Barrio Logan returns for 3rd year with food, art and free trolley rides
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — The Taste of Barrio Logan returned this weekend for its 3rd annual event, giving attendees the chance to sample food from more than 30 restaurants across the neighborhood.
For $40, guests received access to food samples, free entry to art and cultural centers, and a free trolley that shuttled visitors from stop to stop throughout the district.
Alexandra Perez Demma, executive director of the Barrio Logan Association, said the event offers more than just food.
“What sets us apart is that you also get free access to art and cultural centers, the Chicano Park Museum, Bread and Salt, the Athenaeum, Quint Gallery, and then you also get a free trolley that takes you around the district as well,” Perez Demma said.
The trolley introduced attendees to both longtime neighborhood favorites and newer businesses. Perez Demma said showcasing those new additions is a key goal of the event.
“We have a lot of new businesses in Barrio Logan and so we really wanna showcase them and, you know, hopefully these are returning customers,” Perez Demma said.
The food tour featured a wide variety of offerings, from drinks and tequila to mole and pasta. One restaurant owner described her menu as rooted in family and migration.
The owner of Brujas Cocina described her food as “comida fronterisa,” or border town food.
“I take all the flavors of my family that they’ve adopted during the migration from where we’re from to San Diego,” she said.
Mario Cassineri, owner of Ciccia Osteria, served pasta with boscaiola sauce.
“With boscaiola sauce, which is a mushroom, our homemade sausage, and a pink sauce and a lot of Parmesan,” Cassineri said.
Cassineri said events like this one give small businesses a chance to connect with the broader community.
“We are a small business and we try to bring something to the community, bring something to the city, and it’s nice for the people to understand what they really can get in a little neighborhood,” Cassineri said.
Attendees gave the food high marks. When asked to rate the experience on a scale of 1 to 10, one attendee did not hesitate.
“I’m gonna say a 9!” she said.
With long lines at nearly every stop, the event may have introduced the neighborhood’s restaurants to a wave of new regulars.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
San Diego, CA
Mark Your Mornings: Cloak & Petal is Opening a Japanese-Inspired Café
Little Italy is getting a new coffee spot this summer, and it’s coming from one of the neighborhood’s most respected kitchens. Cloak & Petal – the MICHELIN Guide-recognized Japanese-inspired restaurant on India Street – is opening Black Mizu Café inside its space, and it’s shaping up to be one of the more exciting additions to the neighborhood in a while.
Designed to Linger In
The café takes up 1,000 square feet with 25 to 30 seats, plus extended seating into the Cloak & Petal dining room. It’s all indoors, but front windows that open outward give the space an open-air feel – the kind of spot that works equally well for a quiet solo coffee or a slow morning with nowhere to be.
Local Beans, Japanese Comfort Food, and ASA Baked Goods
Black Mizu will source beans from two local roasters – North Park’s Torque Coffee and Rancho Bernardo’s Compa Coffee Roasters – and the drink menu leans into Cloak & Petal’s Japanese identity with signatures like Cherry Blossom Matcha, Honey Yuzu Sparkling Matcha, and White Miso Caramel Latte.
The food menu from Executive Chef Robert Cassidy is the kind of morning spread worth building a routine around. Breakfast Bao with spam, chashu pork belly, or katsu chicken, a Breakfast Eggroll, Edamame Hummus Toast, and Tamago Sando – all complemented by baked goods from downtown’s ASA Bakery & Cafe. A brunch menu is expected to follow next spring.
In the evenings, the space shifts into a chef’s table and private dining experience for Cloak & Petal – a nice dual life for a well-designed room.
Japandi Aesthetics and a San Diego Soul
Managing Partner Cesar Vallin, a San Diego native who opened Cloak & Petal in 2017, describes Black Mizu as “built on ritual, consistency, and hospitality rooted in respect.” The design direction is Japandi – blending Japanese minimalism with warm Scandinavian simplicity – developed with Jennifer Guerin of JG Color Studios.
See you there!
A Japanese-inspired café rooted in craft and community, right in the heart of Little Italy – Black Mizu is one to watch this summer.
📆 Opening late August, early September | Daily 6:30 AM – 2 PM | Thursday – Saturday until 9 PM
📍 1953 India St, San Diego
ℹ️ Follow along Instagram for updates
See you there, San Diego!
San Diego, CA
San Diego businesses gear up for World Cup friendly matches at Snapdragon Stadium
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — San Diego is hosting two international soccer friendly matches at Snapdragon Stadium this weekend, giving local businesses a major economic boost as fans from around the world descend on the city ahead of the FIFA World Cup.
McGregors Bar and Grill is among the businesses capitalizing on the excitement, offering watch parties and preparing for larger-than-usual crowds drawn by some of international soccer’s biggest names.
Managing Partner Ian Linekin said the energy around the matches has been building steadily.
“We started early. We had a great crowd for the pregame for the Australia-Switzerland game. It’s been good,” Linekin said.
To meet the surge in demand, Linekin and his staff have been stocking up on supplies.
“We just order more food, we order more beer, we order more, more vodka and bourbon,” Linekin said.
The crowds are not limited to local fans. Linekin said international supporters have been making McGregors a destination as well.
“It was somebody in Australia… put together a flyer, found our logo, and planned a pregame party for this morning here,” Linekin said.
With the two friendly matches at Snapdragon Stadium serving as a preview of World Cup excitement, Linekin said he expects the atmosphere inside the bar to match the energy on the pitch.
“There’s gonna be, there’s gonna be chanting, there’s gonna be towels waved overhead, and yeah, it’s, it’s gonna be, be something to see,” Linekin said.
Beyond the food and drinks, McGregors has built its reputation on the overall experience it provides guests — something Linekin said has kept customers coming back for decades.
“That’s why we’ve been here for 30 years. We take care of people and we provide a fun, clean, safe place to come and enjoy yourself,” Linekin said.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
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