The Lost Horizon Apartment Complex from “Major Crimes”

The Lost Horizon Apartment Complex from Major Crimes-10

I have long been a fan of the television series Major Crimes (as well as its parent show The Closer) and though I love pretty much every single episode that airs, I do have a definitive favorite – Season 2’s “There’s No Place Like Home.”  For those who have not seen the episode (and you really should!), it centers around a group of retirees who live together in an apartment complex known as Lost Horizon.  The complex was so integral to the storyline that it almost served as a character, so I, of course, was dying to stalk it.  While I made an attempt at tracking it down back when the episode first aired in 2013, there was virtually nothing to go on (no street signs visible in the background, no evident address numbers, etc.), which caused me to grow frustrated rather quickly and give up.  Then in November, I got inspired to begin the search once again after tracking down the Econo Inn & Suites from CSI: Crime Scene Investigation (another locale I had long been on the hunt for) and, thanks to a helpful crew member, was successful this time around.

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In “There’s No Place Like Home,” the LAPD Major Crimes squad investigates the murder of the landlord of the Lost Horizon apartment complex, or as the residents like to call it “Shangri-La.”  The complex’s tenants are a close group of former crew members of a long-running 1970s television series named Prognosis: Homicide.  As the story goes, the Prognosis: Homicide location manager, a man named Norman, purchased the Shangri-La so that the friends could live out their golden years together.  Sadly, Norman passed away soon after the former co-workers moved in, leaving the building to his hateful nephew, Ed, who immediately began allowing the complex to deteriorate.  In a case of life imitating art, Ed winds up dead and the friends find themselves at the center of a murder investigation.  In addition to the engaging, rather tongue-in-cheek storyline, the episode flourished thanks to a stellar guest cast that included such show biz legends as Tim Conway, Paul Dooley, Ron Glass, Doris Roberts, and Marion Ross.  You can read an article that series creator James Duff wrote about the filming of it here.

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In the episode, it is said that Lost Horizon is located at 1066 North Hastings Boulevard in Los Angeles, but it can actually be found at 2400 South Shenandoah Street in Mid-City.

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The complex turned out to be nothing like I had expected.  It is actually part of a little 3-acre compound that sits completely hidden from the street.  One could easily drive right past it without realizing it was there.

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The compound, known as Casa Rocha, is made up of several tiny bungalows, homes, and an apartment building, all of which can be reached via a small roadway off of Shenandoah Street.

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Provenza (G.W. Bailey) and the gang were shown walking down that roadway in Major Crimes.

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An aerial view of the complex, in which the areas that lie within it are denoted with a pink overlay, is pictured below.  The entrance roadway is also marked.  As you can see, the property is situated in a sort of upside-down L-shape.

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I became very disappointed upon arriving when I realized that the area of the complex that appeared in Major Crimes (the apartment building portion of the property) was located at the very end of the roadway, in the eastern corner of the compound, and did not appear to be at all accessible.  A nice resident happened to see us taking photographs out on the sidewalk, though, and was kind enough to invite us onto the premises for a closer look.  I so love it when that happens!

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I just about came out of my skin with excitement when I spotted the “Lost Horizon” signage that had appeared in Major Crimes posted at the apartment complex’s entrance.

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The Lost Horizon Apartment Complex from Major Crimes-8

I am guessing that the signage was not original to the property, but something brought in for the filming of “There’s No Place Like Home” and that the residents ended up liking it and asked for it to be left in place.  (Being that the building has such a tropical feel, I find it only fitting that sun beams are visible in my photographs above and below.)

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The complex was made to appear run down for the beginning scenes of “There’s No Place Like Home.”

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By the end of the episode, though, the Prognosis: Homicide group has fixed the place up and bought it back to its pre-Ed former glory.

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The ending scenes provide a much more realistic view of what the complex actually looks like.

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The compound’s rear parking area also appeared in “There’s No Place Like Home.”

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I am 99.9% certain that Ed’s apartment was just a set, though.

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As I later learned, Casa Rocha is actually a historic property.  The land where it now stands was originally part of the Rancho Rincon de los Bueyes Mexican land grant that was allocated to Bernardo Higuera and Camilo Lopez on December 7th, 1824.  In 1865, a man named Antonio Jose Rocha constructed an adobe home named Casa de la Rocha on the property.  Amazingly, that residence still stands to this day and is Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #13.  It is pictured below.  You can read a more in-depth history on the house here and on the Rancho Rincon de los Bueyes land grant here.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Los Angeles magazine and Discover Los Angeles.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Casa Rocha, aka the Shangri-La/Lost Horizon apartment complex from the Season 2 episode of Major Crimes titled “There’s No Place Like Home,” is located at 2400 South Shenandoah Street in Mid-City.

The Pink Motel from “Vanderpump Rules”

Pink Motel Cadillac Jacks Vanderpump Rules (17 of 22)

The latest season of Vanderpump Rules might have been the most epic yet.  With Stassi Schroeder making only occasional appearances, I had a fear that the show was going to lose all of its allure and most of its steam, but that was not the case.  Kristen Doute brought the crazy like never before and the fact that Ariana Madix had a larger role made Scheana Marie’s onscreen time almost bearable.  I loved pretty much every second of Season 3, especially the ‘50s-style photo shoot that took place in the final episode, which was titled “Dethroned.”  The photo shoot was held at the Pink Motel, a historic locale that I had the pleasure of stalking back in June 2012.

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The Pink Motel was constructed by a Pennsylvania native named Joseph Thomulka on San Fernando Road in Sun Valley in 1946.

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Pink Motel Cadillac Jacks Vanderpump Rules (18 of 22)

According to a 1990 Los Angeles Times article, Joseph painted the 20-room property bright pink so that it would “get noticed.”  In the piece, his son Monty Thomulka says, “He was driving out here from Philadelphia, coming cross the middle states, looking at motels.  He wanted something that people would remember.”

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Pink Motel Cadillac Jacks Vanderpump Rules (21 of 22)

Joseph built a small diner, also painted a rose hue, on the site in 1949 and dubbed it the “Pink Café.”

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At the time that the Pink Motel and Pink Café were built, San Fernando Road was a bustling thoroughfare that lead from Los Angeles to Santa Clarita.  The construction of Interstate 5 changed all of that, though, and while the hotel and restaurant continued to operate for several decades, it was at a much slower pace.

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Monty took over the property from his parents in 1969 and still runs it to this day.   Operating both a hotel and a restaurant proved to be too much work, though, and he found that he could make more money renting the diner out solely for filming.  So he closed the Pink Café to patrons in 1989.  Today, the eatery, renamed Cadillac Jack’s, sits frozen in time  – ketchup, mustard bottles and table settings in place at each seat – waiting for its next close-up.   The Pink Motel continued to operate as a hotel for many years, but it, too, is now available solely for filming.  An average of sixty shoots take place on the premises each year!

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Pink Motel Cadillac Jacks Vanderpump Rules (8 of 22)

When we visited the property in 2012, the caretaker happened to spot us taking pictures through the windows of Cadillac Jack’s and, amused at my excitement over seeing the place in person, asked if we wanted to come inside.  My answer was a resounding yes!  (The photographs below were taken by Mike, from MovieShotsLA.  He, too, was invited inside the diner to snap some pictures when he visited the place and was kind enough to share them with me.)

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Pink Motel Cadillac Jacks Vanderpump Rules (17 of 22)

I cannot even describe how cool it was to be able to tour Cadillac Jack’s interior and stand in the footsteps of so many past filmings!

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Pink Motel Cadillac Jacks Vanderpump Rules (22 of 22)

The Pink Motel and Cadillac Jack’s were featured extensively in the Vanderpump Rules “Dethroned” episode.

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The shoot made use of pretty much every square inch of the property, including the hotel’s swimming pool which was added to the site in 1959.

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The motel’s usual pool, which is fish-shaped, was featured in the 1987 skateboarding movie The Search for Animal Chin and subsequently became a popular destination for skateboarders.  Since the motel ceased operations, the pool has been left drained and is now rented regularly for skating events.  It is also often utilized for film and photo shoots in its dry state, as was the case with Vanderpump Rules.

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You can check out the images from the Vanderpump Rules photo shoot here.

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Cataloging all of the Pink Motel and Cadillac Jack’s onscreen appearances would be virtually impossible, but I will list of few of the highlights.  In 1974, the site popped up in the Season 1 episode of The Rockford Files titled, “Caledonia – It’s Worth a Fortune!” as the spot where Leonard Blair (Richard Schaal) got beat up.

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In 1982’s Grease 2, Michael Carrington (Maxwell Caulfield) tutored Stephanie Zinone (Michelle Pfeiffer) over a hamburger (with extra ketchup!) at Cadillac Jack’s.

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The Pink Hotel was used in the Season 7 episode of MacGyver titled “The ‘Hood,” which aired in 1991, as the spot where Kelly Dobbs (Nancy Sloan) was held captive.

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Mary Anne Spier (Rachael Leigh Cook), Dawn Schafer (Larisa Oleynik) and the gang hung out at Cadillac Jack’s in the 1995 movie The Baby-Sitters Club.

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The eatery was used extensively in Mandy Moore’s 1999 “Candy” music video.  Both the exterior . . .

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. . . and the interior of the property appeared in the video.

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And I, of course, just had to pose for a picture in the booth where Mandy sat in “Candy.”

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The pool was also used in the shoot.

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In the 2004 comedy The Whole Ten Yards, Jimmy the Tulip (Bruce Willis), Oz (Matthew Perry) and Jill (Amanda Peet) grab a bite to eat at Cadillac Jack’s, which is said to be located in Oceanside.  While there, Jimmy knocks out a rude patron and teaches the patron’s son a little lesson about manners.

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In a later scene, the trio check into the Pink Hotel along with a gangster they have kidnapped.

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In the Season 2 episode of fave show The O.C. titled “The Rainy Day Women,” which aired in 2005, Sandy Cohen (Peter Gallagher) and his ex-girlfriend Rebecca Bloom (Kim Delaney) got stranded for a night at the Pink Motel.

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In 2006, the motel was where Off. Debra Morgan (Jennifer Carpenter) and Sgt. Angel Batista (David Zayas) tracked down Ice Truck Killer imitator Neil Perry (Sam Witwer) in the Season 1 episode of Dexter titled “Circle of Friends.”

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The Dexter crew returned to the Pink Motel in 2013 to shoot Season 8’s “A Beautiful Day,” in which Debra hides out at the property with Andrew Briggs (Rhys Coiro).

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At the end of the 2008 comedy The House Bunny, Shelley Darlingson (Anna Faris) did a photo shoot for Playboy at the Pink Motel.

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Cadillac Jack’s was used throughout the music video for CeeLo Green’s hit 2010 song “F**k You”/”Forget You.”

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You can watch the “Forget You” version of the video by clicking below.

The first season of the 2010 television series The Booth at the End was shot extensively at Cadillac Jack’s.

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In the 2011 flick Drive, Driver (Ryan Gosling) and Blanche (Christina Hendricks) hide out at the Pink Motel.  Only the interior of one of the rooms appeared onscreen, though.  Director Nicolas Winding Refn says in a Movieline article, “The motel was hard, because so much action goes on.  It was called the Pink Motel, which has been used in a lot of movies.  But I really liked the motel rooms, so I decided not to do any exterior shots so nobody could know where we were actually shooting.  It’s a very classic old hotel, it looks like something from the ’50s or ’60s.  The day we shot there, which was the first time we shot anything, was the hottest day in L.A., so it was pretty unbearable.  I was told afterwards [that the Valley is hot], nobody told me about it!”

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Cutie Matt Bomer did a photo shoot for a 2012 issue of GQ Italia at the diner.

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In 2014, the pool was used for Major Crimes’ Season 3 promo shots.  For whatever reason, though, a different motel was superimposed into the background of the finalized images.

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I actually never would have figured this one out had it not been for Phillip P. Keene, who plays camera tech Buzz Watson on the series.  I randomly spotted Phillip shopping at the J.Crew in Pasadena last August.  I did not approach him, though, as I already had a photograph with him and do not like approaching actors inside of stores.  Well, about an hour later, I literally almost kicked myself over the whole thing.  I had been trying to track down the motel from the Major Crimes promo shots ever since they had been released and realized I could have asked Phillip if he remembered the location!  So I immediately tweeted him and, miraculously, not only did he respond, but he started following me!

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The Season 5 episode of Dance Moms titled “Wild Wild West Coast, Part 2,” in which the Abby Lee Dance Company girls shot a music video for the MattyB song “Turn Up the Track,” took place at Cadillac Jack’s and the Pink Motel.

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The interior of Cadillac Jack’s was also featured in the video.

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You can watch the “Turn Up the Track” video by clicking below.

The property was also featured in The House of Sand and Fog, High Road, and Pirates of Silicon Valley, as well as in episodes of Columbo, Las Vegas, Highway to Heaven, Murder, She Wrote, Law & Order, and Simon & Simon.

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for sharing some of his photos with me for this post!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: The Pink Motel and Cadillac Jack’s from Vanderpump Rules is located at 9457 San Fernando Road in Sun Valley.  You can visit the property’s official website here.

Burning Man’s House from “Major Crimes”

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My friend Owen and I share an uncanny synchronicity.  The other night I received an email from him which said the following, “837 Beacon Ave., L.A.  You may want to stalk this place after you watch the Season 7 premiere of Parks and Recreation.”  I had yet to see the episode, but immediately looked up the address via Google Street View and just about fell off my chair.  The very same house had also appeared in that week’s Major Crimes and I had made a mental note while watching to track it down.  As I said, uncanny!  It was as if Owen had read my mind!

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The reason Owen thought I would be interested in stalking the residence should be apparent to those who read my site regularly.  As you can see below, the property is abandoned and there is nothing this stalker loves more than an abandoned site.

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Major Crimes Abandoned House (6 of 18)

In the Major Crimes episode that I had watched, Season 3’s “Special Master: Part Two,” the Major Crimes Division gang tried to catch a serial murderer/rapist known as “Burning Man” who was killing women in abandoned houses all over L.A.  They finally manage to locate him at his abandoned childhood home in what is said to be Boyle Heights.  In reality, though, the property is in Westlake.

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The interior of the residence also appeared in the episode.

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In the Season 7 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “2017,” which aired the day after “Special Master: Part Two,” April Ludgate (Aubrey Plaza) and Andy Dwyer (Chris Pratt) stumbled upon an open house at the property while driving through Pawnee, Indiana’s “creepy Warehouse District.”

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I loved the fact that the owner was holding open houses every day in the episode.  He was really motivated to sell!  Winking smile

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While touring the interior, Andy states that the residence has the “fairly standard layout” of 12 closets, 3 bomb shelters, 5 dumbwaiters, 2 and 3/8 baths, and no kitchens.”  Ah yes, and there is also a staircase to nowhere and a fire pole on the premises.  Once the couple learns that the pad used to be a holding cell for assembly line workers from the Pawnee Doll Head Factory who had gone insane, they spontaneously decide to purchase it.  Sold!

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In real life, the property, which was originally built in 1895, boasts 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, 3,264 square feet of living space, and a 0.18-acre plot of land.  And I am guessing that it does actually have a kitchen.

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Though the property is abandoned in real life, I think it is in better shape than its façade would have one believe.  Granted the place is not turn-key by any means, but it’s not dilapidated, either.  I am also fairly certain that the windows are boarded up in order to protect them and not due to being broken.

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Owen also let me know that April and Andy’s new home had appeared in several other productions over the years.  In the Season 8 episode of The X-Files titled “Via Negativa,” which aired in 2000, the house serves as the supposed Pittsburgh headquarters of the Third Eye cult.

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The interior of the property also appears in the episode.

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Detective Michael Raines (Jeff Goldblum) and his team arrest some murder suspects at the house in the Season 1 episode of Raines titled “The Fifth Step,” which aired in 2007.  Only the interior of the residence is featured in the episode.

 

In the Season 2 episode of The Mentalist titled “The Scarlet Letter,” which aired in 2009, the home masks as an apartment building where the stepmother of a murder victim lives.

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The interior of the dwelling was also utilized in the filming, though obviously altered to appear as if it was comprised of separate apartment units.

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That same year, the property was featured in the movie Blood and Bone as the boarding house where Isaiah Bone (Michael Jai White) stays after being released from prison.

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The interior of the home also appears in the movie.

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As you can see, it is in much better shape than one would expect.  The woodwork is gorgeous!  All the place needs is a little Magic Eraser and it would be amazing!

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For more stalking fun, follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, for finding this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Burning Man’s house from Major Crimes is located at 837 Beacon Avenue in Westlake.

The Mercantile from “Major Crimes”

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During a recent stalking adventure with Mike, from MovieShotsLA, the two of us passed by a unique building in Hollywood housing a restaurant named The Mercantile.  While we did not have time to stop in that day, I made a mental note to revisit it for a meal at a later date.  So I was absolutely floored to see the place pop up last week in the Season 3 episode of Major Crimes titled “Letting It Go.”  I immediately texted Mike and told him we had to re-stalk the eatery as soon as possible and we ended up doing just that this past Thursday while I was in L.A. for a brief visit.

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The Mercantile was originally founded in November 2009 by restaurateur George Abou-Daoud, who also opened Delancey pizzeria, aka Tom’s Bistro from Parks and Recreation which I blogged about here.  Abou-Daoud owns so many area eateries that he is often referred to as the “unofficial mayor of Hollywood.”

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The Mercantile Major Crimes (5 of 26)

The Mercantile is housed in a two-story 1928 Spanish Churrigueresque-style building that boasts spectacular sculptural detailing.  I fell in love with the place upon sight.

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The Mercantile Major Crimes (8 of 26)

The interior of The Mercantile is just as picturesque.

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I would give my eye teeth for the reclaimed wood table pictured below.  I so want it for my apartment!

The Mercantile Wood Table

The combination gourmet market/restaurant/wine and cheese bar offers a pretty spectacular menu (50+ wines by the glass!), but, sadly, Mike and I did not get a chance to eat while we were there.  I am definitely planning a re-visit with the Grim Cheaper in the near future, though.

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The Mercantile Major Crimes (15 of 26)

You can check out a photograph of what the exterior of the building looked like prior to The Mercantile opening here.

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In the “Letting It Go” episode of Major Crimes, The Mercantile was where Detective Amy Sykes (Kearran Giovanni) took rape victim/murder suspect Corporal Laura Day (Nikki DeLoach) for a cup of coffee to sober her up.

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As you can see below, The Mercantile’s name and signage was visible in the scene, which is how I recognized it.

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The Mercantile was also very briefly featured in the Season 3 episode of Scandal titled “We Do Not Touch the First Ladies” as Darcy’s Cafe, the spot where David Rosen (Joshua Malina) went to meet a reporter and wound up being kidnapped.

Speaking of Major Crimes, I am dying to track down the motel that was used in the series’ Season 3 promotional photographs.  Does anyone happen to recognize it or know where it is?  I have a feeling that the structure might have been digitally altered for the picture, but I would love to find it nevertheless.

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For more stalking fun, be sure to follow me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Los Angeles magazine online.  And 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 Mercantile, from the “Letting It Go” episode of Major Crimes, is located at 6600 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood.  You can visit the eatery’s official website here.