Phil’s Bar from “Little Black Book”

Little Black Book Restaurant (12 of 36)

A couple of weeks ago, I got on a kick of tracking down locations from fave movie Little Black Book.  Now I should mention here, before I go any further, that the 2004 romantic comedy really isn’t all that good.  I can’t explain why I love it as much as I do, but I think my adoration stems from the fabulous soundtrack and the lead character, Stacy’s (Brittany Murphy), propensity to break out in song.  For whatever reason, I find myself watching and re-watching the flick on a fairly regular basis – I just cannot get enough of it!  So I was floored when I learned that, while set in New York, the vast majority of the movie was lensed right here in Southern California.  One of the locales that I was most interested in finding was the fictional Phil’s Bar, which, as luck would have it, turned out to be a Starbucks – one that I had visited countless times in the past.  It just took me a while to realize it.

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In Little Black Book (the storyline of which focuses on how past relationships can come back to haunt us), Stacy is shown walking with her new friend Joyce (Julianne Nicholson) by a place called Phil’s Bar, where they see Stacy’s current boyfriend, Derek (Ron Livingston), through the window.  Derek also just so happens to be Joyce’s ex-boyfriend and he is at Phil’s to meet Joyce, not Stacy, for a drink.  (Like I said, it’s really not that great of a movie.  Winking smile)  While the two women are observing Derek, they walk by a large building that looked to me like it might be a bank.  I sent some screen captures of said building to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and he recognized the place immediately as The Crocker Club in downtown L.A.

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The Crocker Club Little Black Book (2 of 13)

How in the heck Mike managed to recognize a building from a screen capture in which very little was visible is beyond me!  My hat is definitely off to him!

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The Crocker Club Little Black Book (7 of 13)

Several things were added to the site for the filming, including some foliage, a fake street sign with what I believe says “Washington St” and a building sign that reads “Hoboken Savings and Loan.”  Otherwise though, The Crocker Club looks exactly the same in person as it did onscreen.  Even the yellow fire hydrant and electrical box flanking the sides of the building are there in real life!  Love it!

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The Crocker Club Little Black Book (4 of 13)

And here’s where things start to get weird.  In Little Black Book, Phil’s Bar is shown to be located in a fairly ornate building directly across the street from where Stacy and Joyce are standing.  But I could find no such building across the street from The Crocker Club.

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I was at a complete loss, until I looked more closely at the scene and spotted the back of a logo on the window behind Derek – a logo that looked a lot like that of Tully’s Coffee.  (What can I say?  This stalker knows her coffee!)  Once the logo resemblance dawned on me, a light switch went off in my head and I realized that I had been to Phil’s Bar before – many, many times.

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As it turns out, Phil’s Bar is the Starbucks located at West 6th Street and South Grand Avenue in downtown Los Angeles.  (It occupies the corner space of an oft-filmed at building that I will be blogging about soon.)  That particular Starbucks happens to be just steps away from the Millennium Biltmore Hotel, where the Grim Cheaper and I have stayed on many occasions, so, I, of course, have patronized it often.  The storefront looks quite a bit different today than it did when Little Black Book was filmed, though, which is why I failed to recognize it.

Little Black Book Restaurant (1 of 36)

Little Black Book Restaurant (5 of 36)

What I did not realize until later (and what most-definitely added to my failure to recognize the location) was the fact that the image of the building that appeared onscreen was, for whatever reason, flipped.  (Yes, producers will sometimes flip their film in post-production to achieve a certain orientation.  Only one half of the Titanic was built for the filming of Titanic for instance.  For the scenes involving the portion of the ship that had not been constructed, James Cameron simply flipped the film during the editing process and, voila, it appeared to be a full vessel.  He even went so far as to print any sort of signage seen in those particular scenes backwards, so that when the image was flipped, the signs would appear in their correct orientation.)  As you can see below, when I tried to photograph the angle of Phil’s Bar that was shown in Little Black Book, things did not quite match up.  The lower portion of the bar exterior in the movie had a carved lip reaching from the sidewalk up to the bottom of the window, while the front of Starbucks did not.  The front doors of Phil’s Bar were also on the opposite side of the building from where Starbuck’s front doors are located.

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Little Black Book Restaurant (7 of 36)

When I ventured around to the other side of Starbucks, though, things did match up.  (And darn that scaffolding that ruined all of my photographs!)

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Little Black Book Restaurant (8 of 36)

Thanks to a little Pic Monkey magic, I was able to flip one of my photographs (check out the backwards watermark!  Winking smile) and, as you can see below, the result matches perfectly to what appeared onscreen.

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Little Black Book Restaurant (9 of 36)

The location pops up again in one of the final scenes of Little Black Book, in which Stacy is shown driving through what is supposedly downtown New York.  In an odd twist, the space was a Grand Central Coffee store during the time of that shoot, as you can see below.  When I first spotted the Grand Central Coffee sign, I thought that my initial identification of the Tully’s logo had been wrong, but then I came across this online listing for a Tully’s Coffee at that location.  I also came across a listing for a Grand Central Coffee at the same location, though.  So what I believe happened is this – either the driving-through-New-York scene or the Phil’s-Bar scene were pick-up shots, filmed months after Little Black Book had wrapped.  In the interim, either Grand Central or Tully’s (whichever was there first) closed down and the other café opened in its place.  That is just a guess, though.

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The very same storefront was also visible in the background of the 1999 hit Fight Club, in the scene in which The Narrator (Edward Norton) and Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt) blew up a computer store.  And while the café looks to have had a name beginning with a “G” at that time, I was unable to make out any of the other letters on the sign in the front window.

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In 2002, Tully’s appeared in the Season 3 episode of The West Wing titled “Posse Comitatus” as the supposed Washington, D.C.-area coffee shop where Josh Lyman (Bradley Whitford) discussed the president’s welfare reform bill with girlfriend, Amy Gardner (Mary-Louise Parker).

The Tully’s logos visible behind Derek in Little Black Book can clearly be seen in the episode.

In 2012, the Starbucks popped up in the Season 1 episode of Touch titled “Safety in Numbers,” in the scene in which Martin Bohm (Kiefer Sutherland) tried to talk to a homeless man named Walter King (Robert Patrick Benedict).

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For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramAnd you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Little Black Book Restaurant (6 of 36)

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for helping me find this location!  Smile

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Phil’s Bar from Little Black Book is actually the Starbucks located at 523 West 6th Street in downtown Los Angeles.  The building that Stacy and Joyce walked by in the scene, which is supposedly located across the street from Phil’s Bar, is The Crocker Club, which can be found five blocks away at 453 South Spring Street.  You can visit The Crocker Club’s official website here.

The “ALF” House

The Alf House (9 of 10)

One location that I have been asked about repeatedly over the years is the Tudor-style home where the Tanner family – Willie (Max Wright), Kate (Anne Schedeen), Lynn (Andrea Elson), Brian (Benji Gregory), and their Melmacian house guest, ALF (who was voiced by series creator Paul Fusco) – lived in the 1986 television series ALF.  And while I had never watched the show growing up, I became quite intrigued by the house and the fact that, in the 27 years since the comedy originally aired, it had never been found.  I would sporadically look for the locale whenever I had a free moment, yet it remained a mystery – until last month, that is, when a dogged fellow stalker named Rafal managed to track the place down.  In a heartbreaking twist, Rafal also discovered that the property had been demolished sometime in 2012 and a large Mediterranean-style dwelling built in its place.  As sad as I was to learn that the residence was no longer, I was also glad that its former location had, at least, been found and dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk it this past weekend while the two of us were in L.A.

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On ALF, the Tanner family lived in an absolutely adorable cottage said to be at 167 Hemdale Street in Los Angeles.  When I first saw images of the residence years ago, I was convinced that it was located somewhere in Pasadena.  I was so sure, in fact, that I would have bet money on it.  Then, in July, a fellow stalker named Mick led me to an ALF TV Fan Forum message board on which ALF-aficionados were discussing the property.  One poster named Tedm mentioned that Paul Fusco had stated in an interview that the Tanner house was located in the Pacific Palisades area.  So I did a bit of searching there, but came up empty-handed.  Then, on August 12th, Rafal visited the site and announced to all that after a grueling ten-hour search, he had found the residence.  Apparently, while watching an ALF episode the previous day, he started to wonder about the home’s location.  A Google search led him to the ALF TV Fan Forum where he came across Tedm’s comment about Pacific Palisades.  He spent the next ten hours searching the Palisades and its environs for an L-shaped property with a steep slanted roof, and finally found the right spot – at 708 Moreno Avenue in Brentwood.

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While looking at the site on Google Earth, though, Rafal noticed that some sort of construction seemed to be taking place and surmised that the residence had been completely leveled at some point in 2012 and a new, much larger home built in its place.

The Alf House (5 of 10)

The Alf House (6 of 10)

He was right.  As you can see below, aside from the tall hedge running along the western side of the property, not one shred of the ALF home remains.  What is most heartbreaking about this whole thing, to me at least, is that if the residence had been found just one year sooner, I would have been able to stalk it.

The Alf House (1 of 10)

The Alf House (2 of 10)

I did manage to dig up some photographs of the former residence on fave website Zillow.  As you can see, prior to its 2012 tear down, the Tanner house looked exactly the same as it did in 1986 when ALF was filmed!

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The charming two-bedroom, two-bath, 1,474-square-foot abode, which was originally built in 1926, was sold in February 2012 for $2.05 million.  I guess it should not come as a surprise that the place was torn down being that, according to Zillow, it was marketed as a “fixer” whose sole value was its location and 9,000-square-foot lot.

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The Tanner residence is currently still visible via Google Street View and Bing maps.  While stalking the place, I asked the GC (who was flabbergasted that I would stalk a property no longer in existence) where I should stand for the first photograph that appears in this post.  His response, “How about at home in front of your computer screen with a Google Street View image of the house pulled up!”  LOL

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The interior of the Tanner house was, of course, just a set built at the studio where ALF was lensed.  According to Wikipedia, the set was an intricate one constructed on a platform raised four feet off the ground which enabled Paul Fusco and second puppeteer Lisa Buckley to operate the ALF puppet from underneath the stage.  Numerous trap doors were installed in the flooring that allowed for ALF to pop up unexpectedly in various places.  Manning the puppet was such a grueling task that it often took 25 hours to film a 22-minute episode!  Of the process, Anne Schedeen said in the June 19th, 2000 issue of People magazine, “There was no joy on the set.  It was a technical nightmare – extremely slow, hot and tedious.  If you had a scene with ALF, it took centuries to shoot.”  Tensions ran so high, apparently, that on the night that the series finale was filmed in 1990, Max Wright walked off the set immediately after shooting wrapped without so much as a goodbye to any of his fellow cast members.  Yowza!  Today, Wright looks back fondly on the show and says, “It doesn’t matter what I felt or what the days were like.  ALF brought people a lot of joy.  They adored it.”  The countless fellow stalkers who have emailed me over the years inquiring about the Tanner house are a testament to that fact.  I am sorry that I did not have better news to share about its current state.  Sad smile

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For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramAnd you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Big THANK YOU to Rafal, from the ALF TV Fan Forum, for finding this location!   Smile

The Alf House (8 of 10)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Tanner house from ALF was formerly located at 708 Moreno Avenue in Brentwood.  It was bulldozed in 2012 and a much larger home now stands in its place.

The Hyatt Regency Valencia from “Little Miss Sunshine”

Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (17 of 28)

A couple of months ago, the Grim Cheaper and I sat down to re-watch fave 2006 dramedy Little Miss Sunshine and I just about fell out of my chair when I spotted the Hyatt Regency Valencia pop up in a brief scene.  I had actually stalked and blogged about the Santa Clarita-area hotel way back in November 2009 (you can read that post here) due to its appearance in Twilight.  Because the post was fairly brief, though, and had been published during the early days of my site, I figured it was most-definitely worthy of a redo.  So the GC and I headed right on over there last month while the two of us were in L.A. for a visit.

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The Hyatt Regency Valencia, which has actually been featured in countless productions thanks to its Anywhere, U.S.A. look and feel, boasts 244 guest rooms, 11 of which are suites, a pool, a gym, a business center, an outdoor fireplace lounge, a lobby lounge, three gardens, 12,000 square feet of meeting space, a day spa, and access to three different local golf courses.

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Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (19 of 28)

The hotel’s onsite eatery, Vines Restaurant & Bar, has become one of my and the GC’s favorite pit stops over the years; we often find ourselves dropping in for lunch or a cocktail whenever we are in the area.

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Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (7 of 28)

In Little Miss Sunshine, the Hyatt Regency Valencia stood in for the Scottsdale, Arizona-area Desert Courtyard Suites where Richard Hoover (Greg Kinnear) tracked down Stan Grossman (Bryan Cranston) to confront him about his defunct “Nine Steps” deal.  Several areas of the hotel were utilized in the short scene including the front entrance;

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Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (21 of 28)

the lobby;

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Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (4 of 28)

the lobby lounge, which was changed a bit for the filming;

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Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (10 of 28)

and the pool.  (I somehow failed to snap any pictures of the pool while I was stalking the Hyatt, so I snagged the one that appears below off of the hotel’s official website.)

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In the Season 4 episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation titled “Fur and Loathing,” which aired in 2003, the Hyatt Valencia stood in for the Las Vegas-area King’s River Hotel where PAF CON ( the Plushies and Furries Convention – yes, plushies and furries) took place.

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In the 2008 tween hit Twilight, the Valencia Hyatt masqueraded as the Phoenix-area hotel where Bella (Kristen Stewart), Alice (Ashley Greene), and Jasper (Jackson Rathbone) hid out while on the run towards the end of the movie.  And while the exterior of the property . . .

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. . . and the lobby were featured in the filming;

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the interior of Bella, Alice and Jasper’s suite was filmed elsewhere.  As you can see in these photographs as compared to the screen captures below, what appeared onscreen does not match the Hyatt’s actual rooms.

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In 2010, the Hyatt again popped up as the site of a convention on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, this time for vampire- and werewolf-wannabes in the Season 11 episode titled “Blood Moon.”  And while one of the hotel’s hallways;

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outdoor fireplace lounge;

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and a ballroom were used in the filming;

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the interior of the room where Michael Wilson (Thad Luckinbill) was attacked was just a set.  As you can see below, it looks nothing like the Hyatt’s actual rooms.

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In the Christmas-themed Season 9 episode of NCIS titled “Newborn King,” which aired in 2011, the Hyatt Regency Valencia masqueraded as The Freemont Inn, where Navy Captain Jake Marsden (Marc Aden Gray) was killed.

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One of the hotel’s suites (I think Room 334) also appeared in the episode.

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As I mentioned in my March 2012 post about the Florida-area house where Erin Hannon (Ellie Kemper) lived during two Season 8 episodes of The Office, the Hyatt Regency Valencia masqueraded as the Palmetto Suites Tallahassee, the supposed Sunshine State hotel where the Dunder Mifflin gang stayed for a few weeks while setting up a chain of Sabre retail stores in the Season 8 episodes titled “Tallahassee” and “After Hours.”  Quite a few areas of the Hyatt were utilized in the filming, including the front exterior;

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the lobby;

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the lobby lounge, where a fake gift shop was set up for the shoot;

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several rooms, including Room 243 where Cathy (Lindsay Broad) stayed, Room 244 where Jim Halpert (John Krasinski) stayed, Room 248 where Erin stayed, and Room 249 where Dwight Schrute (Rainn Wilson) stayed;

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two hallways;

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and Vines Restaurant & Bar.

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According to the Visit Santa Clarita website, episodes of Parenthood, CSI:New York, Make It or Break It, Las Vegas, Big Love, and The Unit have also been filmed at the Hyatt Valencia, but, unfortunately, I am unsure of which episodes in particular.

Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (12 of 28)

Valencia Hyatt Little Miss Sunshine (11 of 28)

For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramAnd you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Hyatt Regency Valencia from Little Miss Sunshine is located at 24500 Town Center Drive in Valencia.  You can visit the hotel’s official website here.

Mitch’s House from “Baywatch”

Mitch's House Baywatch (5 of 5)

A couple of weeks ago, a fellow stalker named Michelle posted a comment on my site asking me to track down the house where lifeguard Mitch Buchannon (David Hasselhoff) lived with his son, Hobie Buchannon (first played by Brandon Call and then later by Jeremy Jackson), on the immensely popular 1989 television series Baywatch.  Ironically enough, I had already stalked the residence about a year prior, but had yet to blog about it.  Back in July 2012, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I had embarked upon a Venice Canal stalking adventure, during which he pointed out countless waterfront homes that had been immortalized onscreen – so many, in fact, that I had to grab my iPhone and start taking notes!  One of the dwellings that he showed me just so happened to be Mitch’s house.  Because we stalked over fifty different locales on that particular day, though, I had completely forgotten about it until I received Michelle’s query.  So thank you, Michelle!

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As I mentioned in my October 22nd, 2012 post about Lana Clarkson’s former home, the Venice Canal area is an absolutely gorgeous little waterfront idyll that was founded by real estate developer Abbot Kinney in the early 1900s.  (You can read a more in depth history on the Canals here.)  What better place for the world’s most iconic fictional lifeguard to live?  In real life, Mitch’s house boasts three bedrooms, three baths, 1,665 square feet of living space, 0.06 acres of land, and it’s own private dock.  The property, which was originally built in 1980, last sold in May 2001 for a whopping $900,000.

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Mitch's House Baywatch (4 of 5)

As you can see below, the dwelling is quite picturesque.  I mean, it looks like it belongs on a postcard or something, especially with the two small boats docked in front!

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Mitch's House Baywatch (1 of 2)

I have never actually seen an entire episode of Baywatch (which is shocking being that, according to IMDB, the show aired in 148 different countries and on every single continent excluding Antarctica during the height of its popularity!), so I had to rely on Michelle for information about Mitch’s home.  According to her, the Venice-area residence was used in establishing shots throughout the series’ first nine seasons, at which point Mitch (and the production) moved to Hawaii.

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Unfortunately, quite a few changes have been made to the exterior of the property since filming took place back in 1989, the most odd of which being the removal of the rather large rear chimney.  Why on earth someone would remove a chimney is absolutely beyond me.

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Mitch's House Baywatch (2 of 2)

Thanks to fellow stalker Richard, author of Emergency!: Behind the Scene, I learned that the interior of Mitch’s house was a set.  Said set first existed at Culver Studios, where the series’ inaugural season was lensed.  When production moved to a former-McCulloch-Chain-Saw-warehouse-turned-studio located at 5433 Beethoven Street in Playa Vista during Season 2, Mitch’s house set went with it.

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Richard also alerted me to the fact that images of the home’s real life interior are posted on Zillow.  Two are pictured below.  As you can see, the actual inside of the residence is vastly different from Mitch’s house. You can check out some more images of the property here.

For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramAnd you can check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Michelle for challenging me to find this location and to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for tracking it down!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Mitch Buchannon’s house from Baywatch is located at 469 Sherman Canal, on the Venice Canals, in Venice.

Happy Labor Day!

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I would like to wish all of my fellow stalkers a very happy Labor Day!  Sorry to have been M.I.A. for the better part of last week, but I was having serious server issues which resulted in finally having to move my website over to an entirely different hosting company.  I am hoping that all of the bugs are now worked out.  Either way, I do promise to be back tomorrow with a whole new post.  Smile