chain reaction
Transcription
chain reaction
BULLDOZING THE BEACHES: HOW A GIANT MOUND OF SAND JUST MIGHT SAVE YOUR LIFE JAN 2 0 1 5 (PG. 32) KALEY CUOCO-SWEETING { Buzz //// L E S S O N S I N W A T E R W A S T E //// R A W F O O D I E //// { CHAIN REACTION TOP: BRYAN CHRISTIE SMART & FINAL, L.A .’S OLDEST GROCERY STORE, WANTS TO BE YOUR NEW FAVORITE Illustration by J E S S E L E N Z LOS ANGELES JANUARY 2015 17 CIT Y THINK BUZZ CUTS I N 1914, WHEN sheepherding and tallow making were still growth industries in Los Angeles, enterprising business partners Jim Smart and Hildane Final set up their wholesale grocery store near the waterfront in San Pedro. Animal feed, patent medicines, and gunpowder were all hot items of the day, and competition in the grocery business was fierce. To reduce overhead, Messrs. Smart and Final invented the “cash-andcarry” concept. Instead of the long-standing method of pickup or delivery, customers could gather their own groceries and tote them to a register without the assistance of a clerk (that diligent, bespectacled shopkeeper you see in any cowboy movie). With its innovative approach and bulk offerings, Smart & Final went on to build a wholesale mini empire in the West by catering to local restaurants, mom-and-pop businesses, and budget-conscious customers. Sofa cushion-size hunks of cheese and kegs of laundry detergent may have replaced animal feed and gunpowder, but mega THE FINAL COUNTDOWN A Smart & Final warehouse in Santa Ana in 1915. A century later, the company is competing with Whole Foods and Costco for grocery domination supermarkets and warehouse clubs are as popular as ever. In 2013, Smart & Final made a tidy $3.2 billion in sales, though the chain is dwarfed by Ralphs (owned by Kroger, a national company that accounts for about 20 percent of the local marketplace, with $98.4 billion that year) and Costco ($102.8 billion). Unlike other warehouses, Smart & Final requires no membership. Now it wants a bigger bite of the apple— organic ones, to be exact. The company is rolling out fresh produce that’s club cheap but Whole Foods quality. (The specialty market generated $14.2 billion in 2013.) “It’s L .A . BY THE SLICE HOW DID WE SURVIVE HOSTING OUT-OF-STATE RELATIVES FOR THE HOLIDAYS? BY ANN FRIEDMAN Dropped them off at the Americana at Brand and sped away. It’s like adult day care 10% Bonded over shared smugness when checking the weather back home 10% Ditched our halfhearted effort to go paleo and ate an entire pan of stuffing 5% Told them that, sure, they could totally try to walk to the beach from here 25% Already made our 2015 New Year’s resolution: not hosting next year 50% a unique shopping experience,” says CEO David Hirz of Smart & Final’s formula. “No place else will you find the produce department of a farmers’ market, the variety of a club store, the low prices of a mass merchant, and the 1,800 items we carry to support small businesses.” In its ambition to be all things to all people, the company went public in September, raising $160 million to fund Smart & Final’s expansion. The chain has 200 locations in California (which includes its Cash & Carry brand), with 52 more extending as far as Oregon and Mexico. Twenty more stores will be added this year. The company’s stealth success comes from choosing out-of-theway neighborhoods that have a strong but underserved community. Cheap rent, lower operating costs, and higher sales volume allow the chain to, in the industry argot, maintain everyday low prices. On average this works out to be 12 percent to 16 percent lower than its competitors. So why aren’t we all shopping there? It seems the one item Smart & Final doesn’t have is an identity, which is why the company recently hired the marketing exec behind Kohl’s hip rebranding to give its image a makeover. The promise of healthful, affordable food for more Angelenos—that’s a start. ✒ GREG NICHOLS F I L M : Best known as Britta Perry on the cult TV hit Community, Gillian Jacobs (above) ups her geek cred as director of The Queens of Code, a short documentary about computer scientist Grace Hopper that premieres January 28 on fivethirtyeight .com. B O O KS : F. Scott Fitzgerald’s faded Hollywood years are the inspiration for Stewart O’Nan’s novel West of Sunset, which debuts January 13. M U S I C : Musician and co-owner of the local label Innovative Leisure, Hanni El Khatib knows solid garage rock. Moonlight, his psychedelic third album, comes out January 20. TELEVISION: Oscar-winning director and producer Lee Daniels is the force behind Empire, a juicy dramatic series (out January 7 on Fox) starring Terrence Howard as a powerful hip-hop patriarch struggling to hold together both family and fortune. With this level of talent, plus Timbaland scoring the soundtrack, the show doesn’t miss a beat. The CITY TICKER 18 9 W I N T E R T E R M S A N G E L E N O S C A N ’ T D E F I N E 1 . H Y P O T H E R M I A 2 . W I N T R Y M I X 3 . B A L A C L AVA LOS ANGELES JANUARY 2015 SMART & FINAL: COURTESY SMART & FINAL; JACOBS: SHUTTERSTOCK; GRAPHIC: GREG MABLY Buzz Buzz CIT Y THINK REBIRTH MARK CIT Y THINKER s executive director of the Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles, RojasWilliams sees street art as our city’s untold history. Murals are gemstones. They capture information and influences from all of the cultures that come here and reflect them outward. They show and express all of the feelings of people like me. I came from Chile 41 years ago for political reasons. I’ve been able to do things that I never imagined, not even in my wildest dreams. Murals are important because the stories they convey—the issues that are raised—aren’t written in books. They are a connecting bridge between the streets and the art institutions. A child can see a mural and ask, “What is this? What is it saying?” After a 2002 moratorium, a recent city ordinance made painting murals legal again—but that doesn’t mean L.A.’s walls are a free-for-all. In an ideal world we shouldn’t have a mural ordi- IF THESE WALLS COULD TALK Clockwise from top right: Ed Ruscha Monument by Kent Twitchell, who won a settlement after his downtown mural was whitewashed in 2006; They Claim I’m a Criminal by Man One in South L.A.; Pope of Broadway by Eloy Torrez in downtown nance regulating art. Unfortunately because of the sign companies, we have to. The regulation does protect muralists, but only when they register their works. If artists decide not to go through the process because they want their work to be there for a short time, that’s their right. But if the mural is whitewashed, they don’t have the right to complain. I wish more people were applying for permits because then we wouldn’t have to worry about a mural’s existence. People are under the impression that the city erases murals, but it does not. The murals are erased because the neighbors complain. The most prominent restoration work that will take place in 2015 is on Eloy Torrez’s 70-foot-high Pope of Broadway, at 242 S. Broadway. It was first painted in 1985. I’ve been working for almost five years to get funding for the mural, which is iconic. Anthony Quinn [the actor is featured in the piece] has been claimed by Latinos, Greeks, Middle Easterners, and Italians, so it is important to the diverse Los Angeles community here. Because of the resurrection of Broadway and councilmember José Huizar’s great efforts to improve that section of downtown ISABEL ROJAS -WILLIAMS EXECUTIVE D I R E C TO R Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles W H AT S H E ' S D O I N G Rojas-Williams is moderating a conversation at the L.A. Art Show. > L.A. Convention Center, January 18. L.A., Greenland USA chose to provide funding for us. We hope to be done with the mural’s restoration by 2016. 4 . H OA R F R O S T 5 . W H I T E O U T 6 . T H U N D E R S N O W 7. B L A C K I C E 8 . G R AU P E L 9 . F R O S T B E LT 20 LOS ANGELES JANUARY 2015 ED RUSCHA MONUMENT: THE MURAL CONSERVANCY OF LOS ANGELES; THEY CLAIM I’M A CRIMINAL: RAY MOND & ALEX POLI/THE MURAL CONSERVANCY OF LOS ANGELES; POPE OF BROADWAY: RICHARD VOGEL/AP PHOTO; ROJAS-WILLIAMS: NIGEL BUCHANAN L.A. IS CONSIDERED THE MURAL CAPITAL OF THE WORLD, AND ISABEL ROJAS-WILLIAMS IS ITS CHIEF CURATOR ✒ S H AY N A R O S E A R N O L D