Music video by Robin Thicke performing Magic. (C) 2008 Star Trak, LLC
#RobinThicke #Magic #Vevo
Music video by Robin Thicke performing Magic. (C) 2008 Star Trak, LLC
#RobinThicke #Magic #Vevo
Maxwell’s official music video for ‘Sumthin’ Sumthin”. Click to listen to Maxwell on Spotify:
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———
Lyrics:
If it’s cool we can do a little sumthin’ sumthin’
Let me grove with you so we can kick a little
sumthin’ sumthin’

As if he didnât already have a star-studded cast for his upcoming project, Oscar-nominated writer/director David O. Russell (American Hustle) has continued to expand his ensemble roster with the addition of nine new stars, according to Deadline.
RELATED:Â The Little Things Trailer: Denzel Washington Stars in New Crime Thriller
The mystery project, which is currently in production in California, will now also star Oscar winner Robert De Niro (The Irishman, Joker), Emmy winner Mike Myers (Inglorious Basterds, Bohemian Rhapsody), Emmy nominee Timothy Olyphant (The Mandalorian, Deadwood: The Movie), Oscar nominee Michael Shannon (Knives Out, The Shape of Water), Golden Globe nominee Chris Rock (Fargo, The Witches), Anya Taylor-Joy (The New Mutants, The Witch), Andrea Riseborough (Possessor, The Death of Stalin), Matthias Schoenaerts (The Old Guard, A Hidden Life) and Alessandro Nivola (The Art of Self-Defense, The Many Saints of Newark).
They will be joining a star-studded cast already comprised of Oscar winner Christian Bale, Oscar nominee Margot Robbie (I, Tonya), John David Washington (BlacKkKlansman, Tenet), Michael B. Jordan (Black Panther, Creed), Oscar winner Rami Malek (The Little Things, No Time to Die) and Zoe Saldana (Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2, Star Trek Beyond).
Russell will write and direct the project, which teams him with Bale for the third time after the two joined forces on The Fighter (for which Bale won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor) and American Hustle. It also marks a reunion between the director and Nivola and De Niro, with the former previously co-starring in American Hustle and the latter starring in Silver Linings Playbook and Joy and making a cameo appearance in Hustle. Further details about the plot and characters are still being kept under wraps but it is said to based on Russellâs original idea.
RELATED:Â The Adam Project: Filming Begins on Ryan Reynoldsâ New Netflix Film
The project will be produced by Arnon Milchan, Matthew Budman, and Anthony Katagas for New Regency.
(Photo Credits: Getty Images)
Over the past few days, dance blogs have been publishing articles with various spins on the title, âFlux Pavilion Says Goodbye To Dubstep.â Itâs a good article concept â a catchy title with a genre figure that has been at the top of his game over the past decade, with plenty of hits to his name like âI Canât Stopâ; âDo or Die,â Childish Gambinoâs sole foray into EDM; his remix of âCracksâ by Freestlyers; the list goes on.
I am no longer a dubstep person
â fluxpavilion.wav (@Fluxpavilion) January 11, 2021
But the reality of this tweet is a bit more nuanced. While the above tweet has 390 RTs and nearly 4k likes (at time of publishing), the preceding tweets which undoubtedly give it context are far less engaged with. In referring to himself as a âdubstep person,â Flux Pavilion referencing the sort of person whoâs always âtrying to persuade everyone that dubstep is still good [âŠ] just because someone said it was bad in 2013.â
Just because someone said it was bad in 2013
â fluxpavilion.wav (@Fluxpavilion) January 11, 2021
Flux isnât saying that dubstep is bad, either. Heâs just saying that heâs no longer the kind of person whoâs wasting energy on trying to convince anyone that itâs âstill good,â even though itâs been good this whole time.
As we approach the release of his new album, .wav, a week from today, I wanted to offer a perspective that other authors of the aforementioned articles might not have â and thatâs that Iâve had .wav for the better part of three months, and have been listening to it, and I can tell you his best is yet to come.
While .wav is not objectively a âdubstep album,â elements of Fluxâs core sound are still pervasive within the project, including familiar bass patches, synths, melodic arrangements, and keys. Not to mention one of the tracks on the album, an orchestral production fused with dubstep that is one of the finest bass tracks Iâve heard in a long time.
So for anyone whoâs been reading the recent articles and has been worried that Flux Pavilion is leaving the scene behind, hopefully this helps to assuage your worries a bit. He certainly wonât be the same Flux that weâve known for the past decade, but we canât expect someone to do the same thing for over 10 years and not get a little bored of it.
.wav, the new album from Flux Pavilion, is out January 21. Pre-save it here.
La Tierra cover by Eastern Mystik in an unique style of their own…
Original song – La Tierra by Juanes
#easternmystik #latierra #latinjazz #latinmusic #latinconcert #latinnight #envivo #envivoahora #someplaceelse #theparkhotels #music #salsa #cumbia #guajira #bollero #merengue #bosanova #music #musician #performingartist #musicforpeace #worldmusic #musicianslife #musicianlifestyle #vocalist #pianist #percussionist #bassist #bandartist #bandmusic #musicforlife #musicforlove #soulfullmusic #loveformusic
For live shows contact –
MARLENE ANTHONY – 7044298956

Talk Hole is the bi-weekly spoken column of New Yorkâs alt-comedy darlings Eric Schwartau and Steven Phillips-Horst, offering their oracular powers of cultural analysis on all corners of the zeitgeist (high, low, top, bottom). From a call in Brooklyn, Schwartau and P-H (as Steven is lovingly referred) prove talk is chic and drop references to hot trends, hotter temperatures, and scalding political debates. This time around, Talk Hole rings in the coup year.Â
ERIC SCHWARTAU: Iâm making tea, but Iâm also opening wine.Â
STEVEN P-H: Thatâs very coup vibes. Trumpâs getting impeached, but heâs also suspended from Twitter. Weâre storming the Capitol, but not getting a retroactive stimulus. Thereâs a coup, but Iâm launching a podcast. Weâre all being productiveâbut also taking a step back.
SCHWARTAU: Iâm glad weâre talking, because Iâm actually really confused about where things are at.
P-H: Same. Iâve had brilliant soliloquies in my head all weekend about the psychosexual pathologies of reactionary conservatism and woke liberalism, and how theyâve formed a raft for the tinfoil-hatted, sadistic fervor of MAGAchella and a stark realignment of institutional allegiances across the political spectrum. And then today I had 18 pounds of iced coffee, drunk a bottle of champagne, and recorded a podcast, and now I donât remember anything smart anymore.
SCHWARTAU: Congrats. Honestly, you should be so proud if just one person subscribes because I literally, like, couldnât. But I tried, like, maybe twice.
P-H: The real coup is getting someone to subscribe to your podcast.
SCHWARTAU: I saw you post, and I was like, âOh, I should do it now.â And then I went on Apple Podcasts and typed in âCelebrity Book Clubâ and I was like, âOh, thereâs a lot of celebrity book clubs.â Iâm gonna try Spotify tomorrow.Â
P-H: Sounds like you threw in the towel pretty fast. You never wouldâve made it to Nancy Pelosiâs office.
SCHWARTAU: I think I wouldâve gone back to the hotel around 3pm to lie down.
P-H: If I were MAGA, Iâd still be looking for parking. So you didnât even listen to my podcast trailer?
SCHWARTAU: I mean, you played it like three times for me in the car. Listen, I do love the podcast. I think it takes a lot of pressure off of me and our relationship, which is great.
P-H: Right. And now we donât have to do a podcast.
SCHWARTAU: Itâs nice to remember that we have lives outside of this column. We have lots of things going on. You have a podcast, I have, you knowâ[Holds up green notebook.]
P-H: I feel like Trump is probably experiencing something similar now that heâs finally off Twitter. Heâs like, âOh my god, these books I wanna read! My record collection! Iâm getting back into vinyl!â
SCHWARTAU: He ordered a cute little notebook off Amazon to write things down in.
P-H: Support your local small Amazon delivery perxon.
SCHWARTAU: It felt good to buy it. Like, bad good.
P-H: What are you gonna put in that notebook? Poetry? New Yearâs resolutions? Plans for the Biden administration to expand the surveillance state?
SCHWARTAU: Well, the first thing I wrote in it was: âAnnoying guy at the plant store saying, âAs a rule of thumb, any plant can be hung.ââ Itâs like, what rule of thumb are we talking about? How many thumbs are there?
P-H: I agree. Weâve only got two thumbs⊠there canât be that many rules of them.
SCHWARTAU: I also wrote, âTruly inspired by Taylorâs authorship. I canât believe Iâve never dug into her music.â Iâve suddenly discovered Reputation.
P-H: Youâre having the sort of brain lapse weâre all attempting right nowâlike Pelosi impeaching with only 5-7 business days left in the game. Itâs like, âLetâs just pretend none of this ever happened.â So in your own way, youâre just discovering Taylor Swiftâs 2017 album Reputation, as if the past four years havenât happened.Â
SCHWARTAU: I agree that Taylor and the coup are related. We are searching for something right now. As a nation, we want to feel like things are real. We have to take at least some stuff seriously because, well, what else is there?
P-H: I agree. I think weâre so ensconced in our digital selves that weâve lost the ability to parse fantasy from reality. Liberals have spent a lot of time prosecuting fantasy as if it were reality, and conservatives have spent a lot of time building an insane fantasy world that has no connection to reality. And weâre bored! People are so bored and sad. So this coup is a sort of fantasy MAGA chuds tried to make real because they live in a torrid feedback loop of big-tittied, gun-wielding, race-baiting Tomi Lahrens and finger-waving, Russia-hating Rachel Maddows whoâve convinced them that their identity, their masculinity, is threatened by âsocial justice.â By Moonlight winning an Oscar. By Kamala being president. Which it isnât. And the irony is, Kamala is a cop who likely wonât be great for social justice at all. Itâs cuckoo boots.
SCHWARTAU: Coup-coup boots.

P-H: Okay, so also, I know someone who almost coupâd.Â
SCHWARTAU: Iâm calling the FBI.
P-H: Iâm not sure they wanna help. So my friendâs sister is married to this guy whoâs kind of an angry, incel-ly Southern white guy from a conservative family, but heâs pretty boring. Voted for Hillary in 2016, then got 4Chan-pilled and voted Trump 2020. He told his wife he was going to, like, âvisit his dad in South Georgia,â and then she found his Delta ticket to D.C.âjust like, on the desktop.Â
SCHWARTAU: I would have gone with a mobile boarding pass.
P-H: So she confronts him and convinces him not to coup.Â
SCHWARTAU: Wow. She really said, âno coup for you.â
P-H: Apparently he still drove to the airport, but then had a change of coup and came home. But hereâs the thingâhe doesnât even think Trump won. Heâs not a conspiracy theorist. He said MAGA were âhis peopleâ and this is a culture war. This is someone who, up until 2016, was racist and sad in a way that was contained, but now feels so castrated by woke liberalismâso upset seeing Colin Kaepernick kneeling and Trader Joeâs called out for appropriating soy sauceâthat he wants to go to battle. And what does the winner of this culture war get? To ensure there wonât be a second season of Bridgerton?
SCHWARTAU: Okay, this columnâs New Yearâs resolution is to not mention a Netflix show.
P-H: And whatâs even more disconnected from reality is that these peopleâs freedom and security to go to Target and sit on their phones in parking lots and all the other indignities that make up American life are not threatened at all by Joe Biden being president.Â
SCHWARTAU: I was just looking back at photos from 2016, when everyone started going out and protesting the fact that, like, Donald Trump won. Everyone just got out there, and it was the Womenâs March but I was carrying a sign that said âGOLF SUCKSâ in one hand and âLENA DUNHAMâ in another. People want to feel like theyâre part of something, even if they donât know what it is theyâre a part of.
P-H: I think most peopleâs signs were a little more explanatory than yours. Iâm also bothered that weâre calling this non-coup âfascist violence,â but the mass shootings we used to have all the time arenât? Because those seem a lot more fascist-y and violent than the coup to me.
SCHWARTAU: Well, I get that youâre disappointed with the penultimate episode of Insurrection on HBO, but the season finale is next week.Â
P-H: I believe it was you who said nothing ever ends. Trump will be president forever. So will Hillary. But those shootings were all disaffected men, and thatâs fascism. Itâs psychosexual. It is a male, sadistic fantasy of domination. There are books about this. Iâve read pages of them.
SCHWARTAU: Sounds like Puerto Vallarta this winter.Â
P-H: I donât think I would get much reading done there.
SCHWARTAU: Seems like a good place to go if you get banned, though.Â
P-H: Speaking of, Iâm not really upset about Trumpâs Twitter ban, from a free speech point of view. Discerning fantasy from reality also means discerning Twitter from real life. Getting kicked off Twitter is like when youâre at the sauna and youâre blowing too many guys and theyâre like, âYou need to take a timeout.â Itâs good for the soul.
SCHWARTAU: Just wait until you get banned.Â
P-H: For what, posting my flat ass to main?
SCHWARTAU: Yes, after Biden passes the THICC Act.

P-H: The issue Iâm worried about is the word âterrorismâ already being used to justify Patriot Act 2: Domestic Disturbance.
SCHWARTAU: Directed by Dr. Jill Biden.
P-H: So thatâs what the âDr.â stands for.
SCHWARTAU: I think there has been this eye-for-an-eye rhetoric that has increased in the past four years, but itâs unsustainable because if youâre just putting everyone on do-not-fly lists, suddenly no oneâs using their Delta SkyMiles card, and then Visa canât start microloan programs for underprivileged influencers, and this country grinds to a halt.Â
P-H: Iâm not gonna lie, it is objectively funny to see a MAGA dad stuck at LaGuardia realizing heâs on the no-fly list and sobbing. But it will be less funny in 3 months when someoneâs sad aunt in Maine gets waterboarded for posting a meme in her knitting group that says âJill Biden has implants.âÂ
SCHWARTAU: I donât know. Ultimately, the hill Iâm not gonna die onânot Capitol Hillâis protecting random MAGA losers from being on do-not-fly lists.Â
P-H: A) Everyone should be allowed to fly everywhere. B) The gleefulness with which we are now seeking to label people as terrorists can only result in further division. This is what the U.S. government has done to Muslims all across the world for the past two decades. How many have been tortured and abused or jailed indefinitely for no other crime than just being Muslim or, like, knowing someone who went to Morocco once? All that renditioning hasnât stopped people from hating America, and it wonât stop aunts from hating Jill.
SCHWARTAU: I want to talk about the hill I really want to die on, which is Kamalaâs Vogue cover.Â
P-H: It was bad⊠in that it wasnât that bad? It shouldâve been worse.
SCHWARTAU: You know, itâs interesting because itâs that photographer whoâs very hot right now, Tyler Mitchell. Heâs doing this kind of style of having things not look cute. Itâs an anti-aesthetic, you might say.
P-H: Sure. I get it. Thereâs something very post-Midland Agency about itâwhere itâs not just âsexy uglyâ with good lighting but instead like, the whole thing is off.
SCHWARTAU: Itâs more TikTok, like youâve been putting on different outfits all day and clothes are all over the floor and now youâre standing in the kitchen eating peanut butter out of the jar in a giant ill-fitting blazer with no pants on and one smokey eye. And thatâs when the real shoot starts.
P-H: Her expression seems very hesitant. That wasnât giving me the unbridled confidence of a TikTok teen.
SCHWARTAU: When she would be photographed, Marilyn Monroe would take a red pen to the film negatives and she would X out the photos where she thought she looked bad so no one could ever use them, although I did see them in a giant coffee table book. Anyways, thatâs what Kamala shouldâve done. I just think, if your face looks badâŠ
P-H: Itâs all about the face. I think Patrik Sandberg tweeted this, but apparently the younger Vogue staffers had pushed for the Converse cover, and Anna [Wintour] actually wantedâdid you see the other image of her in the blue blazer? Anna had pushed for that to be the regular cover, and I think thatâs what Kamalaâs people wanted, too, because she does objectively look better in that photo. But the kids wanted the Chucks, to make her âalternative.â

SCHWARTAU: I mean, how much can a politician really inhabit some type of edgy contemporary aesthetic? Itâs fun when an Elizabeth Warren-type gets tricked into wearing Vaquera, or whatever, but itâs probably not great for their political career.
P-H: Iâd like to see Warren in Bode. That feels Cambridge-y to me.
SCHWARTAU: Ultimately, that photo was more of an aesthetic than a concept.Â
P-H: I think the fabrics were supposed to represent, like, the White House interior decor fabrics. Like, oh this is royal regalia. But the new girl in town is coming in and she wears Chucks because sheâs down-to-earth.
SCHWARTAU: I mean, she wonât be at the White House, sheâs the Vice President. Where does she go?
P-H: The Vice President lives in the Naval Observatory, which is such a funny thing, because itâs like, so youâre observing the Navy? What are you doing over there? Youâre watching ships.
SCHWARTAU: Sounds far from the subway.Â
P-H: I guess Iâm wondering what happened to basic aspirational fashion shoots. Couldnât she just be glam and look good?
SCHWARTAU: She probably should have gone more Michelle Obama. Everyoneâs always like, âWow, Kamala is so gorgeous.â Thatâs power.Â
P-H: But in a post-Trump world, the sanctity of politics is gone. I mean, the sanctity of Nancy Pelosiâs gorgeous podium was just besmirched. We canât have the fantasy of a glamorous politician anymore. We know that the emperor has no clothes. You have to put the emperor in Converse and off-the-rack Michael Kors.
SCHWARTAU: I think AOC has some glam left in her. It may seem like sheâs in her Reputation phase, but I actually donât think sheâs even released Red yetâbesides the lipstick. Sheâs still Fearless era.Â
P-H: Thatâs a really good point. Hopefully she has a lot of room to grow, because lately sheâs been annoying as hell.
SCHWARTAU: I mean, sheâs only been in Congress for like, two years.
P-H: I just felt like, when she tweeted the other day, [whispers] âIâm okay.ââ
SCHWARTAU: Very Taylor. Iâm sorry, Iâll stop.Â
P-H: Sheâs making it all about herself. Meanwhile, Nancy Pelosiâs poor podium is being dragged out and destroyed! The wood is chipping.
SCHWARTAU: So you want the podium to be like, âIâm okay,â instead? Wait, oh my god, thatâs such a viral Twitter account.
P-H: @nancyspodium: âWhere am I?â
SCHWARTAU: Poor girlâs probably in some backyard in West Virginia, sitting around a grease can fire, trying to look masc in front of her new captors.
P-H: We should rescue it when we go to Honcho next summer.
SCHWARTAU: Thatâs what our nation needs to heal. For someone to DJ atop Nancyâs rescued podium at a queer techno festival in the forest.
P-H: Which means we need a vaccine.
SCHWARTAU: I need a vaccine.
P-H: Can we talk about how fucking bullshit the, like, whoâs getting the vaccine is?
SCHWARTAU: My therapist is getting it, and I was like, why does this feel like a personal attack?
P-H: Your friend on our Drag Race Zoom watch party is also a Zoom therapist, and heâs getting it, too. What the fuck?
SCHWARTAU: Look, I mean, theyâve made the sacrifice of not having a column.
P-H: If youâve made the sacrifice to not seek fame and attention, then you deserve the vaccine.Â
SCHWARTAU: I do think maybe there should be a vaccine round for micro-influencers. I think it could really help inspire others.
P-H: Micro-doses for micro-influencers.
SCHWARTAU: Iâm just waiting for a vaccine subscription box.

P-H: I just saw a post from someone who got the vaccine, and they were like, âUm, everyone asking me why I got the vaccine has been a little invasive and you can actually just go to this government website and see if youâre eligible.â And itâs kind of like, well you posted about it.Â
SCHWARTAU: They were just expecting heart emojis and congrats.
P-H: People should have gender reveal parties, except itâs a âface revealâ where you finally take off your mask.
SCHWARTAU: My vaccination shower will be really intimate, just close friends and family. Gifts encouraged.
P-H: I do want to discuss Drag Race.Â
SCHWARTAU: Another thing that refuses to end.
P-H: And weâre eating it up because weâre so starved. Itâs pathetic. Itâs so drawn out now, and theyâre pulling all these ruses weâre supposed to be surprised by, for hours on end? I guess The Bachelor has been doing this to straight people for 15 years, but itâs testing my patience like nothing else.Â

SCHWARTAU: I like the fact that I have this community from my ongoing Zoom watch thing thatâs lasted for many months. Itâs not so much about whether Drag Race is good or bad at this point.
P-H: And this is why I think people have no aesthetic vocabulary anymore. Itâs all about political affiliationsâitâs about this community of like-minded queer folks getting together instead of actually consuming art that is good. Which is fine for Drag Race. I just canât believe after I made fun of gays thinking the Viking coup guy was hot by tweeting that gays like to forgive baldness, someone said to me, âWhy are you criticizing baldness?â
SCHWARTAU: Well, words matter, I donât know if youâve heard. But also actions matter, and sometimes those actions speak louder than those words that also matter.
P-H: So, what action do I take here⊠how do I show that bald lives matter?
SCHWARTAU: You might consider telling your own personal journey with baldness. If insecure bald folx only knew how many times youâve stopped a photoshoot to adjust your âwigâ or how ravenously jealous you get when you see my voluminous coif bouncing down Wyckoff, you could all heal together, as one nation, under bald. Â
P-H: Iâve been on Propecia for 14 years. My pain is my own.
SCHWARTAU: I think itâs less that people donât have the language, itâs just that language is so easily stripped from its context that it loses meaning. Like, your anti-baldness makes sense because I know youâre secretly bald, but someone can just screengrab you and be like, âThis hairy guy doesnât care about my bald life.â
P-H: Whereâs the vaccine for being a dumbass?
SCHWARTAU: I wanted to mention Fran Lebowitz because she has a new doc.Â
P-H: The level of connoisseurship!
SCHWARTAU: And she was an Interview Magazine columnist.
P-H: We are famously her spiritual successors.Â
SCHWARTAU: I always say it takes two gay men to equal one woman.
P-H: So true. Sometimes you see a woman, but itâs actually two gay men in a trench coat.

SCHWARTAU: So to summarize the doc, Fran is kind of a grumpy old New Yorker just being like, âItâs too loud. But thatâs why I live hereâbecause Iâm loud!âÂ
P-H: Thatâs so true. âItâs too loudâ is also why I live here. Weâre New Yorkers, weâre pissed about everything, but goddamnit, we wouldnât have it any other way! Kate Berlantâwhose new podcast I love, by the wayâ tweeted the other day, âWhen the vaccine hits, itâs gonna be hard to excuse not living in New York.â Which I getâthis is the greatest city on earth, baby!âbut I also take issue with. Iâm not sure New York is that different from L.A. at this point.Â
SCHWARTAU: I agree if that means we can stop talking about the differences between them.
P-H: But in the sense that post-vaccine weâll see the era of the Great Gatsby â20s, then yes, New York is the obvious choice. But why not Nairobi? Why not Buenos Aires? These are cosmopolitan cities with lower costs of living and arguably hotter people.
SCHWARTAU: Iâm not seeing a âWhen the vaccine hits, itâs gonna be hard to excuse not living in Buenos Airesâ tweet really doing numbers.
P-H: Give it a year.Â
SCHWARTAU: So, whatâs your New Yearâs resolution?
P-H: To moisturize my neck more.
SCHWARTAU: Oh, right, because thatâs the new face.
P-H: Yes. The neck is the face, and thatâs what weâve forgotten. Weâve spent so much time in a selfie cultureâthe face, the face, the self, the self. Weâve forgotten that the face is actually an extension of the body. And your neck is sitting there, kind of like supporting the whole goddamn show and being neglected.
SCHWARTAU: Thereâs an order to things. We canât go giving necks the same privileges as faces.Â
P-H: And you see how old and crappy it looks compared to my upper face. So we need to balance that out.
SCHWARTAU: Iâve just gotten very used to seeing my Zoom face with my appearance touched up.
P-H: You use a filter?
SCHWARTAU: I feel like everyone who uses Zoom does.Â
P-H: Where do we see that?
SCHWARTAU: Itâs in backgrounds and filters, or something.
P-H: Oh wow, this is new. I do look really glossy.Â
SCHWARTAU: Guess that neck cream can wait.
P-H: Okay, Iâm keeping that on. I did just get a prescription for Retinol for my face, so talk to me in four months and my face might really be smooth, maybe even too smooth.
SCHWARTAU: Okay, talk soon. See you in the Biden administration!
P-H: Or the civil war. Whichever has better filters.

With a nod to its past â serving classic family-friendly American fare with colorfully clad-carhop waiters/waitresses on roller skates back in the 1950s and 1960s â Twoheys Restaurant in South Pasadena has recently revived the nostalgic tradition by debuting a new Curbside Carhop â 21st Century style. The newly-opened Restaurant, that has been making memories in the San Gabriel Valley since 1943, continues its legacy as one of Southern Californiaâs well-known American eateries. Information: www.twoheys.com
âWe are proud to re-introduce the carhop dining concept that was first introduced by the Twohey  family decades ago. We believe that bringing back this tradition allows diners to visit more often while enjoying our old time favorite/new menu items and practicing safety protocols from the safe haven of their own cars,â says Co-Owner Tanya Christos.
Loyal customers now have the convenience of ordering breakfast, lunch and dinner from Twoheysâ ToGo Menus by calling 30 minutes in advance to place an order and reserving one of six designated parking spaces by calling (626) 284-7387 and pressing #1. Upon arrival at the Restaurant, customers need to call back and let the Restaurant know the number of the reserved car hop parking space. The Restaurant will bring the ToGo food to each car on a classic carhop tray that clips to the vehicleâs window for a âcontact-free,â but fun dining experience from the comfort of oneâs car. The Restaurant is open six days a week, except Tuesdays, from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Â
The legendary Restaurantâs Executive Chefs, Gerardo Talamantes, Sr. and Enrique Elias, have created three distinctive menus as part of the new take-out service that reflects both classic American fare from the original menu and new menu items including:
Breakfast ToGo: Â Classic Buttermilk or Old-Fashioned Pancakes, French Toast, Belgian Malted Waffle, and handcrafted Corned Beef Hash. https://www.twoheys.com/menu/breakfast-togo/
Lunch ToGo:Â The classic Original Stink-O Burger, Twoheysâ Original Onion Rings, Heckels Prime Rib Dip Sandwich and Fish & Chips. (https://www.twoheys.com/menu/lunch-togo/)
Dinner ToGo:Â Handcrafted Meat Loaf, House-Roasted Turkey Dinner and Southern Fried Chicken. https://www.twoheys.com/menu/dinner-take-out-delivery/
Cocktails ToGo:Â Meridian, Snake Trail, Seco Washout and Raymond Old Fashioned, https://www.twoheys.com/menu/cocktail-menu/
The popular neighborhood Restaurant also has its own soda fountain which serves Twoheys award-winning famous bittersweet, milk chocolate and caramel sundaes. The well-known eatery has added a new twist on the American diner experience with seven hand-crafted specialty cocktails such as the signature cocktail, the âStink-o-Tini.â
Simply Savory Meals ToGo:
Â
For family gatherings, Twoheys take-out Family Feast Value Meals ToGo, a selection of homemade meals with the freshest ingredients. Each are ideal for at home family dining of all sizes.
The Restaurant is also offering a selection of family-style Meals & Bundles ToGo using wholesome ingredients from scratch daily. Menu highlights include The Foursome, Backyard BBQ and the House Roasted Turkey Dinner.
Â
In celebration of love, Twoheys is pulling out all the stops with a special 5-course Twoheys Valentineâs Day Menu, featuring a Crab Tower Valentino, Classic Caesar Salad, and choice of Lobster Truffle MacâN Cheese or Cupid Stinko Surf & Turf followed by a decadent Flourless Chocolate Cake.
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For the perfect start to the weekend, patrons can now enjoy Twoheys Friday Night Lobster Feast. This
savory meal with choice of entrĂ©e: Twin Maine Lobster Roll, Lobster Truffle MacâN Cheese or Surf & Turf. The seafood feast includes salad, dinner rolls and ice cream sundaes for dessert.
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Creative Catering For All Occasions:
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In addition, Twoheys Restaurant offers their Food Truck with a choice of three Backyard Menu packages or a custom menu from any of Twoheysâ favorite menu items. As part of the Package, Twoheys provides  a state-of-the-art sound system offering endless music for those who wish to hold socially responsible distanced events. https://www.twoheys.com/our-food-truck/ Three Sisters Catering is another option for custom catering. https://www.twoheys.com/three-sisters-catering/ The companyâs team of culinary professionals pulls out all the stops to customize everything from intimate cocktail receptions to small off-site gourmet parties and events.
Unique  Gifts For Friends & Family:
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Twoheys retail items, beautifully wrapped gift baskets and gift cards, all make great presents for friends and family, first responders, teachers, neighbors and employees. Choose from a selection of items including bittersweet, milk and caramel toppings, Jones Coffee Roasters Twoheys Blend Coffee, Further Products hand soap and a selection of Twoheys logo apparel.
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ABOUT TWOHEYS RESTAURANT SOUTH PASADENA:
The award-winning Twoheys Restaurant opened October 10, 2020 in South Pasadena. Twoheys, pronounced â2eeâs,â originally opened in 1943 when owner Jack Twohey opened his first restaurant on Arroyo Boulevard in Pasadena. At that time, the restaurant had 37 seats and quickly became known as the premier hamburger place for the finest hamburgers, onion rings and hand-dipped fountain specialties. This former location featured memorable drive-up carhop service from the 1950s to the mid 1970s. The Little Stink-O, clothes pin and tear drop logo was trademarked by Mr. Twohey in 1943. It originated when he overheard a woman patron of the restaurant exclaim, âOh-Stink-O,â when a gentleman next to her was served a hamburger generously garnished with onions and pickles.
Throughout its illustrious history, Twoheys has welcomed well-known celebrities including American Actors Cary Grant, Mickey Rooney, Bill Murray, American Painter/Illustrator Norman Rockwell and Author/Screen Writer Ray Bradbury.
Twoheys Restaurant has previously received several awards including, Los Angeles Times âReaderâs Choice,â Los Angeles Magazine âBest Family Restaurant,â Pasadena Star-News âBest Of,â and Pasadena Weekly âBest Of.â
The new 5,200 square-foot restaurantâs interior, designed by Zoumas Design of South Pasadena and constructed by Peter Koulos Construction, brings together classic elements in a contemporary design â combining the warmth and nostalgia of a diner with a lunch counter and old-time soda fountain in a refined, open and bright space. The original Stink-o logo and signage has been updated for the 21stCentury with a youthful and whimsical design.
Located in the heart of the San Gabriel Valley, connecting Pasadena, South Pasadena, San Marino and Alhambra, California, Twoheys is situated at 424 Fair Oaks Avenue in South Pasadena, California 91030.  It is centrally located near the 110, 10 and 710 Freeways. For more information, call 626 284-7387, email info@twoheys.com or visit www.twoheys.com. Follow and Tag Twoheys @Twoheys_Restaurant on social media.
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Apparently, Betty White‘s superpower is to say the most perfect remark imaginable in any situation.Â
Case in point: Anthony Mackie, who plays Falcon in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, was a guest on The Tonight Show on Thursday, Jan. 15. During his visit, he told Jimmy Fallon that he is actually a huge fan of the classic 1980s sitcom The Golden Girls and loves watching it when he settles in for the night.
“Hallmark has the best TV programming from 9 p.m. to 2:30 a.m., and they show about eight episodes of The Golden Girls,” he shared. “And if you don’t know me, I am a Golden Girl kind of guy.”
After Jimmy praised the show’s stars for their ability to land a joke, Anthony was right there with him.
“Betty White is one of the most talented women,” the 42-year-old Altered Carbon alum gushed. “She had her own talk show, she was a professional dancer, actressâshe was amazing. Those four women were amazing.”
When the host asked if Anthony has ever gotten the pleasure of meeting Betty, the conversation took a turn for the spectacular.Â