Scully’s Bar from “Parks and Recreation”

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (24 of 28)

I thought I would take a break today from Behind the Candelabra/Liberace locations to blog about a spot that I spent what seems like forever trying to track down – Clancy’s Crab Broiler in Glendale, the Irish-style bar that has appeared a couple of times on fave show Parks and Recreation.  I can’t actually take credit this particular find, though.  After several months of unsuccessfully cyberstalking pretty much every Irish pub from Pasadena to Santa Monica trying to identify the site, I finally managed to locate a P&R crew member a couple of weeks ago who told me where filming had taken place.  I could not believe that the bar wound up to be in Glendale – right in my own former backyard – and dragged the Grim Cheaper over there for lunch while in L.A. two weekends ago.

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Clancy’s Crab Broiler was originally founded almost four full decades ago by Jack Williams and his son, Jeff.  While growing up in the San Fernando Valley, Jeff had helped his father out in the small Tujunga–area fast food eatery that he had owned since the early 1950s.  It was not until 1972, though, upon graduating from the University of Southern California with a degree in business, that Jeff decided to pursue a career in the restaurant world.  Jack’s partner had just gone bankrupt and Jack subsequently took over full ownership of the eatery.  Jeff stepped in to help his father out once again and wound up flourishing.  It was not long before he had his eye on a storefront on Brand Boulevard that he thought would be the perfect location for a seafood place.  Clancy’s opened its doors shortly thereafter in 1975 and at the time could seat 72 patrons and served mainly fish and chips.

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (28 of 28)

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (7 of 28)

After a fire damaged the original Clancy’s in 1983, Jeff and Jack moved the establishment a couple of blocks west to a larger site on Central Avenue, where it still stands to this day.  The new location, which is run by a staff of 85 (!), seats 300 people, feature two full bars, a billiards area, and a banquet room!  The restaurant is actually made up of two parts – the large bar area which is named the Blue Whale Bar . . .

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (8 of 28)

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (17 of 28)

. . . and the large sawdust-on-the-floor dining room.

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Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (23 of 28)

Today, Jeff, who was named Restaurateur of the Year by the California Restaurant Writers Association in 1999, and Jack own five area restaurants, including The Black Cow Café on Honolulu Avenue in Montrose, which was featured in fave movie The Wedding Singer.

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (19 of 28)

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (20 of 28)

The GC and I grabbed lunch in the Blue Whale Bar and I have to say that it was phenomenal!  While I opted for the restaurant’s Cobb Salad, which was fabulous, I think I actually chose poorly, because the GC ordered a bowl of Clancy’s famous Boston Clam Chowder and I can honestly say it was one of the best things I have ever tasted in my life!

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (15 of 28)

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (16 of 28)

Clancy’s Crab Broiler has popped up twice on Parks and Recreation.  It first appeared in the Season 1 episode titled “The Banquet” as the supposed Pawnee, Indiana-area Scully’s Bar where Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) and Mark Brendanawicz (Paul Schneider) went to “hit on chicks.”

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It was then featured in the Season 3 episode titled “Ron & Tammy: Part Two” as O’Shay’s, where Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) and Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott) threw a pizza party for local Pawnee policemen.  Both the interior . . .

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. . . and the exterior of Clancy’s were used in that episode.

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During lunch, our super-nice server filled us in on some of the other productions that have been lensed on the premises, including 2003’s American Wedding, in which Clancy’s stood in for the supposed Grand Rapids, Michigan-area pub where Jim Levenstein (Jason Biggs), Kevin Myers (Thomas Ian Nicholas), Steve Stifler (Seann William Scott), and Paul Finch (Eddie Kaye Thomas) regularly hung out.

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On an American Wedding side-note – fellow stalker Mikey, from the Mike the Fanboy website, was an extra in the flick!  That’s him below.  Smile

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Clancy’s was where Michael Scott (Steve Carell) took Holly Flax (Amy Ryan) for lunch in the Season 5 episode of The Office titled “Business Ethics” in 2008.

In 2009, the site popped up in the Season 2 episode of Denise Richards: It’s Complicated titled “Funbags or Die”, in the scene in which Denise’s father, Irv Richards, shot a commercial for Clancy’s, one of his favorite restaurants.

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Clancy’s was where Elizabeth Halsey (Cameron Diaz) posed as a journalist to meet with a standardized test worker named Carl Halabi (Thomas Lennon) in the 2011 comedy Bad Teacher.

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In the Season 8 episode of Criminal Minds titled “Nanny Dearest”, which aired in 2013, Clancy’s masqueraded as the Seattle seafood restaurant (complete with rain!) where Tara Rios (Yara Martinez) worked.

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In the Season 2 episode of Secrets and Lies titled “The Racket,” which aired in 2016, Danny Voss (Kenny Johnson) attempts to kidnap Melanie Warner (AnnaLynne McCord) from outside of Clancy’s.

You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

Clancy's Crab Broiler Parks and Recreation (25 of 28)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Clancy’s Crab Broiler, aka Scully’s Bar from Parks and Recreation, is located at 219 Central Avenue in Glendale.  You can visit the restaurant’s official website here.

Rent-A-Swag from “Parks and Recreation”

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (10 of 15)

Back in early May, fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, emailed me to let me know that he had just tracked down Rent-A-Swag – the supposed Pawnee, Indiana-area high-fashion rental store for teenagers owned by Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) on fave show Parks and Recreation. So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on out to stalk it – Starbucks in hand (but to be fair when do I not have a Starbucks in hand? Winking smile) – while visiting Los Angeles this past Memorial Day weekend.

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While watching the Parks and Rec Season 5 finale, which was titled “Are You Better Off?”, Owen had spotted an address number placard with a missing digit (120-9) on the exterior of the Rent-A-Swag storefront. His eye was immediately caught by that missing digit and his interest piqued, so he decided to begin searching for the locale. Thankfully, the hunt was an easy one and he wound up finding the shop at 12059 Ventura Place in Studio City.

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And while Owen and I had both assumed that the 5 had been removed during the Parks and Rec shoot in order to thwart the efforts of us stalkers, that does not appear to have been the case. As you can see below, the digit is missing in real life, too, which I was shocked to discover!

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (5 of 15)

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (6 of 15)

In real life, the Rent-A-Swag storefront is vacant and looks to have been so for some time, which is probably how it came to be used on Parks and Recreation. The 4,000-square-foot space, which is currently divided into two separate units, most recently housed a branch of the US Postal Service. In January, EaterLA reported that the property was rumored to be the site of the future Valley outpost of the popular mid-city restaurant Joan’s on Third. And while Joan’s founder Joan McNamara did talk about opening a cafe in a former post office on Ventura Place in this April 2012 Los Angeles Times article, as you can see below, the site is still presently available for lease, so that venture appears to have fallen through.

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (2 of 15)

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (1 of 15)

Unfortunately, the GC and I showed up to stalk the site on Sunday morning, smack-dab in the middle of the highly-popular Studio City Farmers Market which takes place directly in front of Rent-A-Swag, so I was not able to get the greatest of photographs.

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (3 of 15)

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (13 of 15)

Rent-A-Swag first showed up in the Season 5 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Pawnee Commons” and has been featured fairly regularly ever since.

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In “Pawnee Commons”, Tom rents out a space, which he states in a later episode is located on Durham Avenue, to house his latest brainchild – a store in which he will lease his expensive threads to tweens. Of the new venture, he says, “I started a business where I rent my fancy clothes to teens so their parents don’t have to buy them nice things they’ll just grow out of. So if you see a 14-year-old kid wearing a Louis Vuitton cravat, you know who to thank – me . . . and Louis Vuitton, for making some dope-a*s cravats.” LOL In “Pawnee Commons”, Tom enlists his Parks and Recreation Department co-workers to help him get the space, which is in pretty dire straits, ready for the grand opening. The real life interior of the store, which you can see pictures of here, was also used in the episode, as well as in several episodes since.

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The group’s first go at the renovation turns out rather dire, as well, so they wind up remodeling it twice in the episode.

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The final result is pictured below.

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In an odd twist, while scanning through Season 5 episodes of Parks and Recreation to make screen captures for this post, I discovered that the other side of the Rent-A-Swag storefront (as I mentioned earlier, the space is currently divided into two separate units) was used as the Pawnee VideoDome/XXX Adult DVD Emporium in the episode titled “Bailout”.

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (9 of 15)

In “Bailout”, Councilwoman Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) petitions the city council to declare Pawnee’s local video store, Pawnee VideoDome, a historical landmark to prevent its impending closure. Leslie succeeds, but the site winds up re-opening as a pornographic video shop – owned in part by the government. LOL

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The real life interior of the space was also used in the episode.

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I was shocked to learn, while doing research for this post, that the very same location was used in another of Owen’s favorite shows – Seinfeld. The Rent-A-Swag storefront popped up briefly in the Season 4 episode titled “The Trip (2)”, which aired in 1992, as the spot where Jerry Seinfeld (Jerry Seinfeld) and George Costanza (Jason Alexander) watched as two policemen arrested a man for attempted robbery. At the time, the space housed the Bicycle Shack bike store and looked quite a bit different than it does today. Although, structurally still the same, since the time that Seinfeld was filmed, a large awning has been added, significantly altering the look of the place.

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The location also appeared in 1994’s Beverly Hills Cop III, in the background of the scene in which Det. Axel Foley (Eddie Murphy) jumps out of a car to escape from Jon Flint (Hector Elizondo).

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You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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

Rent-A-Swag Parks and Recreation (7 of 15)

Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

Stalk It: Rent-A-Swag from Parks and Recreation is located at 12059 Ventura Place in Studio City.

Kelly Gulch from “Parks and Recreation”

Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (3 of 11)

Right next door to Pat’s Topanga Grill, which I blogged about on Tuesday, is an oft-filmed-at residence known as Kelly Gulch.  Fellow stalker Mike, from MovieShotsLA, had mentioned the property to me back in early December while the two of us were in the midst of our hunt for the Topanga Canyon house where Paula (Sissy Spacek) lived in Four Christmases (which I blogged about here).  Because Kelly Gulch has been featured in countless productions over the years (far more than I could ever chronicle in a single blog post), including fave show Parks and Recreation, he thought it might be a good location for me to stalk.  So I did just that, late last December, right after the Grim Cheaper and I grabbed breakfast at Pat’s.

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Kelly Gulch was constructed by Michelene (who goes by Mike) and Frank Kelly in 1978.  The couple had moved from Los Angeles to Topanga Canyon with their two young children in 1970.  Quickly realizing that their 750-square-foot bungalow was not large enough for a family of four, they wound up purchasing an 8.5-acre plot of oak-shaded, creek-side land, that Frank had found in the classified ads, for $20,000 in 1976.  Two years later, Frank started building a picturesque three-bedroom log cabin, from a “Real Log Homes” kit, on the site.  The residence, which they dubbed “Kelly Gulch”, took a year to complete.  A detached one-room writer’s studio and a large, two-story, 1,152-square-foot, standalone barn that doubled as a workshop/studio apartment soon followed.

Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (1 of 11)

Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (4 of 11)

Fate took a hand in 1984 when a location scout stopped by a Topanga Canyon real estate office looking for a log cabin in which to shoot Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter.  The real estate agent pointed him in the direction of Kelly Gulch and the rest is history.  According to a Topanga Messenger article, a whopping two hundred productions have since been lensed at the remote residence!  Its most famous appearance, though, remains in Friday the 13th.  In fact, due to that appearance, in which it stood in for the Jarvis family home, the property has become a landmark of sorts to horror film buffs.

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Both the interior and the exterior of the cabin were used extensively in Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter and, according to the same Topanga Messenger article, filming on the premises took a full three months to complete!

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The large Victorian house located next to the Jarvis home in the movie was just a prop building that was constructed for the shoot.

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In mid-2012, the Kellys decided that they needed to move to a place with less upkeep and put their beloved Topanga cabin on the market for $1.675 million.  They subsequently moved to the seaside city of Camarillo.  According to Redfin (on which you can check out some fabulous interior photographs of the home), Kelly Gulch was sold on December 31st, 2012 for $1,515,000.  When asked by the Messenger if she would miss being a part of regular filmings, Mike said, “Not really.  There were 14- to 16-hour days and Frank and I could never leave the property during a shoot.  As we’ve gotten older, we couldn’t do it anymore.”  And even though hundreds of celebrities have set foot inside her home over the years, she stated, “The only thing that ever impressed me was the check.”  LOL

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The property seems so incredibly rural and remote, it is hard to believe it is located on a bustling canyon road right next door to a restaurant.

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Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (10 of 11)

Sadly though, as you can see below, not much of it is visible from the street.

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Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (9 of 11)

The gate, which looks like something from a movie set (and who knows – it might be! Winking smile), was pretty darn cool to see, though.

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Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (7 of 11)

In 1986, the cabin popped up in Murphy’s Law as the home of Ben Wilcove (Bill Henderson), where Jack Murphy (Charles Bronson) and Arabella McGee (Kathleen Wilhoite) sought refuge.

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The interior was also utilized in the filming.

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The Friday the 13th franchise returned to Kelly Gulch to film a few brief scenes for the 1998 sequel titled Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood.  Although the majority of the flick was lensed in Alabama, the scene in which Robin (Elizabeth Kaitan) is killed was filmed at the Topanga residence.  You can check out a photograph of the room that segment was shot in here.

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According to the Camp Blood website, Kelly Gulch was also used in the scene in which Jason is shown looking up at the house.  You can see a photograph of that particular angle of the house here.

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Kelly Gulch was where the group of teenaged campers hid out after accidentally killing Billy Harley (Matthew Hurley) in 1989’s Pumpkinhead.

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The interior of the cabin was used in the filming, as well.

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In 1994’s My Girl 2, the residence is where Vada Sultenfuss (Anna Chlumsky) tracked down her mom’s first husband, Jeffrey Pommeroy (JD Souther).

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A different interior was used in the filming, though.

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In the 1996 movie Eraser, the cabin was where a federal witness named Allison hid out and was later murdered.

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The interior of the residence was used in the filming of that movie, as well.

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In the 2000 thriller Ed Gein (a true story that inspired the movie Psycho), the cabin was where the Anderson family lived.

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The interior was also used in the movie.

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Kelly Gulch was where the body of Jessica Garner (Elena Fabri) was found in the Season 2 episode of Medium titled “Judge, Jury and Executioner”, which aired in 2005.

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In 2008, the cabin was where Vincent Chase (Adrian Grenier), Eric Murphy (Kevin Connolly), Johnny ‘Drama’ Chase (Kevin Dillon), and Turtle (cutie Jerry Ferrara – sigh!) were put up during the filming of Vince’s new movie Smokejumpers in the Season 5 episode of Entourage titled “Pie”.

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The interior also appeared in the episode.

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In the Season 2 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Hunting Trip”, which aired in 2009, Kelly Gulch stood in for the Slippery Elm Park ranger station where Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman) hosted his annual hunting trip – and got shot in the head.

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The interior of the house was also used in the episode.

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You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for telling me about this location!  Smile

Kelly Gulch Friday the 13th (2 of 11)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Kelly Gulch, from the “Hunting Trip” episode of Parks and Recreation, is located at 1801 North Topanga Canyon Boulevard in Topanga Canyon.

Ben and Leslie’s New House from “Parks and Recreation”

Leslie and Ben's New House - Parks and Recreat (6 of 6)

Back in October, while watching the fabulous Season 5 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Halloween Surprise”, I became just a wee-bit obsessed with tracking down the Anywhere, U.S.A.-style home that Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) leased with her longtime boyfriend, Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott – whom I just saw the other day at my local Target, but I digress).  I had a pretty strong inkling that the residence was most-likely located in the Sherman Oaks area, in the same vicinity as the dwelling used as Diane’s (Lucy Lawless’) house on the series, where most of the “Halloween Surprise” episode had taken place.

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  Luckily, while watching “Halloween Surprise”, I had spotted what I thought was an address number of 4620 on the curb in front of Leslie and Ben’s rental, so I immediately started searching through all of the 4600 blocks in Sherman Oaks.  Sure enough, I found the place just a mile or so south of Diane’s home.  Woot woot!  It was not until two weekends ago, though, that I finally managed to drag the Grim Cheaper out there to stalk it.

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In “Halloween Surprise”, Leslie takes her BFF Ann Perkins (Rashida Jones) to look at a home she is thinking of renting because, as she explains it, “Ben is coming back from D.C. in ten days and we are moving into a house together.  He would move in my place, but it’s a scary, nightmare, hoarder nest.  His words.  And Ann’s.  And the official report filed by the Health Department.”  LOL  While there, Leslie decides to lease the place (despite the fact that it does not have her desired “trampoline room”), but those plans get thwarted when Ben is offered a new job in D.C.  When Leslie later returns to the residence to tell the agent that they will no no longer be taking the place, Ben shows up and (SPOILER ALERT), in a tear-inducing moment, proposes to Leslie on bended-knee.  And while the property has yet to appear in any other Parks and Recreations episodes and it was never actually made clear in “Halloween Surprise” if the newly-betrothed couple did actually lease the place or not, I am assuming that they did.

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Leslie and Ben's New House - Parks and Recreat (2 of 6)

While the house, which was originally built in 1938, looks very much the same in person as it did onscreen, I was not expecting it to be so large.  Because the angle featured in the episode was a tight one, showing only one side, I assumed that it was a fairly modest residence with only one or two bedrooms.

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Leslie and Ben's New House - Parks and Recreat (1 of 6)

In actuality, though, the house boasts four bedrooms, four baths and a spacious 2,688 square feet of living space.

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Leslie and Ben's New House - Parks and Recreat (5 of 6)

And while I would have bet money on the fact that the real life interior of the property had been used in the episode, that was actually not the case.  As you can see in these photographs of the home, aside from the massive stone fireplace, nothing about the actual interior matches what appeared onscreen.

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You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

Leslie and Ben's New House - Parks and Recreat (3 of 6)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Ben and Leslie’s new house from Parks and Recreation is located at 4620 Wortser Avenue in Sherman Oaks.

Jerry’s House from “Parks and Recreation”

Jerry's House - Parks and Recreation (5 of 12)

As the song goes, it’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas and what better way to celebrate than by blogging about holiday-themed locales on each day leading up to the 25th? Hope y’all enjoy them! And now, on with the post! Two Thursday ago, while watching fave show Parks and Recreation, I became just a wee-bit obsessed with the charmingly picturesque home belonging to Jerry Gergich (Jim O’Heir) and his shockingly gorgeous family – wife, Gayle (Christie Brinkley), and daughters, Millicent (Sarah Wright), Gladys (Katie Gill), and Miriam (Maliabeth Johnson) – in the Season 5 Christmas-themed episode titled “Ron and Diane”. I mean look at the place! It’s like it was ripped right out of a Hallmark commercial or something! A-DO-RABLE!

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Thankfully, this one was an easy find. I thought the residence looked slightly familiar and had a vague recollection that I had seen photographs of it online while on the hunt for the Boy Meets World house back in mid-November. So I dashed over to my favorite locations library, Malibu Locations, to search for colonial-style residences in the Studio City area (the same parameters I used to track down the BMW abode) and, sure enough, I came across a listing for the place almost immediately. Fortunately, an address number of 11800 was visible in the listing photos, which made finding the home from there a snap. Yay! So I ran right out to stalk the place just a few days later.

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In real life, Jerry’s house, which was originally built in 1939, boasts three bedrooms, three baths and 3,126 square feet of living space. As you can see below, the residence is absolutely idyllic in person – so much so that I am shocked it has not been used in more productions.

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Oddly enough, while the house is nestled on what appears to be a gargantuan plot of land, in actuality the property only measures a scant 0.31 acres according to fave website Zillow .

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Jerry's House - Parks and Recreation (6 of 12)

Jerry’s house is featured quite extensively in the “Ron and Diane” episode, as the site of the Gergich family Christmas party where the Parks and Rec Department gang are all guests – well, except for Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari), April Ludgate (Aubrey Plaza) and Andy Dwyer (Chris Pratt), whom Ann Perkins (Rashida Jones) has banned from attending, and Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) and Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman), who are at the Indiana Fine Woodworking Association Woodworking Awards. LOL

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Jerry's House - Parks and Recreation (9 of 12)

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Jerry's House - Parks and Recreation (12 of 12)

The real life interior of the home, which you can see photographs of here, was also used in the episode.

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I so love the fireplace video that played in the background on Jerry’s TV during the party, by the way. Smile

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Oddly enough, an entirely different house – one located at 4203 Bellaire Avenue in Studio City – was used as Jerry’s residence in the Season 4 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Sweet Sixteen”.

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You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER. And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

Jerry's House - Parks and Recreation (7 of 12)

Stalk It: Jerry Gergich’s house, from the “Ron and Diane” episode of Parks and Recreation, is located at 11800 Kling Street in Valley Village.

Diane’s House from “Parks and Recreation”

Diane's house Parks and Recreation (8 of 10)

Back in mid-November, a fellow stalker named Vinnie tweeted me to ask if I knew the location of the house belonging to Diane Lewis (whom I had no idea was played by Lucy Lawless, by the way!) – aka the spot where Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman) fixed a pothole – in the Season 5 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “How a Bill Becomes a Law”.  As luck would have it, fellow stalker Owen, from the When Write Is Wrong blog, had tracked down that particular abode and texted me its address on October 2nd, the very same night that the “How a Bill Becomes a Law” episode first aired.  So I passed along the info to Vinnie and the following day he tweeted me to let me know that he had visited the location and that the pothole patch was still visible!  Well, believe you me, once I heard that, I was bound and determined to stalk the place just as soon as humanly possible.  So I dragged the Grim Cheaper right on over there a few days after Thanksgiving.

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Finding this location was a snap for Owen because he had done some previous cyber-stalking on the very same street (Margate Street in Sherman Oaks) a couple of years ago while searching for the house where Pam Beesly (Jenna Fischer) and Jim Halpert (John Krasinksi) bought a lamp in the Season 4 episode of The Office titled “Fun Run” (which I blogged about here).  As it turns out, the “Fun Run” home is located almost directly across the street from Diane’s dwelling.  In fact, you can see a sign for Margate Street in the background behind Jim and Pam in the episode.  Love it!

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In real life, Diane’s house, which was originally built in 1955 and is absolutely adorable in person, boasts three bedrooms, two baths, 2,095 square feet of living space, and a 0.20-acre plot of land.  You can check out some interior photographs of the place on an old real estate listing here.

Diane's house Parks and Recreation (2 of 10)

As fate would have it, while we were stalking the house, the super-nice owners came out and chatted with us about the filming of Parks and Recreation and a few other productions that had been shot in the neighborhood.  They also mentioned that they had met fellow stalker Vinnie while he was stalking the place just a few days prior.  Smile

Diane's house Parks and Recreation (10 of 10)

In the “How a Bill Becomes a Law” episode of Parks and Recreation, Chris Traeger (Rob Lowe) decides to implement a 311 phone line at the Parks Department so that Pawnee citizens can report any municipal-related problems that they might be having.  While manning the line, Ron takes a complaint from Diane about a pothole that has remained unfixed for months on the street outside of her home.  He responds to that complaint by saying, “Well, Diane, for potholes, you want to speak with Public Works . . .  I understand you’ve tried them four times – government is inefficient and should be dissolved.”  LOL LOL LOL  Gotta love Ron Swanson!  Ron then decides to take matters into his own hands and heads over to Diane’s house to fix the pothole himself, along with a little help from Andy Dwyer (Chris Pratt).  As you can see below, Diane’s residence looks pretty much exactly the same in person as it did in the episode.

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Diane's house Parks and Recreation (5 of 10)

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Diane's house Parks and Recreation (6 of 10)

I was, of course, most excited to see the pothole patch that Vinnie had told me about, though.

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Diane's house Parks and Recreation (1 of 10)

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Diane's house Parks and Recreation (7 of 10)

I find it so incredibly cool that a vestige of the filming was left behind for all of us stalkers to appreciate for years to come.  LOVE IT!

Diane's house Parks and Recreation (9 of 10)

The house also showed up in the Season 5 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Halloween Surprise”, in the scene in which Ron apologizes to Diane for ruining her daughters’ Halloween.

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While the real life address number of Diane’s residence is 13155, crew members dropped the first 1 to make it 3155 for the filming of the “How a Bill Becomes a Law” episode.  Nothing unusual about that – house numbers are often changed for a film shoot.  But in an odd twist, that number was changed even further – to 155 – just a few episodes later for “Halloween Surprise”.  The Parks and Rec producers must think us stalkers aren’t paying attention or something.  Winking smile

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The owners of Diane’s house also informed us that the residence across the street was used in the “Halloween Surprises” episode, in the scene in which Ron breaks Diane’s daughter’s tiara.

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Parks and Recreation Halloween House (3 of 3)

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Parks and Recreation Halloween House (2 of 3)

You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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

Diane's house Parks and Recreation (3 of 10)

Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Diane’s house from Parks & Recreation is located at 13155 Margate Street in Sherman Oaks.  The house where Ron broke Diane’s daughter’s tiara in the “Halloween Surprises” episode is located across the street at 13162 Margate StreetThe residence where Pam bought a lamp in the “Fun Run” episode of The Office is located next door to the “Halloween Surprises” house at 5306 Longridge Avenue.  And Oscar’s home from The Office is located just around the corner at 5232 Longridge Avenue.  Quite a popular neighborhood for filming, I’d say!  Smile

Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center from “Parks and Recreation”

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One location that had been lingering at the top of my To-Stalk for more than a few months was Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, which stands in for Pawnee Saint Joseph Hospital, where Ann Perkins (Rashida Jones) works, on fave show Parks and Recreation.  I found this locale thanks to Mike, from the always-fabulous Franklin Avenue blog, who recognized the site way back in 2010 when it popped up in the Season 2 finale of P&R titled “Freddy Spaghetti”.  And while I did drag the Grim Cheaper out to stalk the place in early June, because I had failed to bring along any screen captures, I could not for the life of me figure out which angle of the building was used on the show and we ended up leaving after just a few minutes.  I promptly added Providence to my Re-Stalk list, though, and, after doing some celebrity stalking in the area this past Monday afternoon with my girl Miss Pinky Lovejoy, of the Thinking Pink blog, I dragged her right on over there to properly stalk the place.

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Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center, which was originally founded in 1943 by the Sisters of Providence Health System, is the largest hospital in the entire San Fernando Valley, boasting 431 beds.  The location is also one of the largest employers in the SFV, with over 650 physicians and a staff of almost 2,500 on its payroll.  The hospital is located directly across the street from The Walt Disney Studios and, in fact, has a very large Disney connection.

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  Walt Disney himself turned over the first official piece of sod during Providence’s groundbreaking ceremony, provided funding for its construction, commissioned his animators to create artwork for the interior décor, and even served on the hospital’s original Advisory Board (all of which you can see pictures of on the Started by a Mouse website here).  And sadly, after collapsing in his home on November 30th, 1966, he was taken to Providence where he remained for the next two weeks before passing away on December 15th.  According to the Started By a Mouse website, during his hospital stay, Walt “plotted out designs for his property in Florida [Walt Disney World] on [Providence’s} acoustical ceiling tiles.”  Walt’s older brother, Roy O. Disney, also passed away at Providence, five years later – almost to the day – on December 19th, 1971.  But the connection does not end there.  Just recently, in 2010, the Roy and Patricia Disney Family Cancer Center (named in honor of Roy O.’s son, Roy E. Disney, and his former wife), was founded.  According to the Providence website, the state-of-the-art, four-floor, 55,000-square-foot facility provides cutting-edge care to “treat the body, mind and spirit of each patient” and utilizes both Western medical technologies, such as radiation and chemotherapy, as well as Eastern, including acupuncture, meditation, fitness, yoga, and herbal remedies.

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Parks and Recreation and Walt Disney are hardly Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center’s only claims to fame.  Due to its proximity to both The Walt Disney Studios and NBC Studios, the hospital has seen its fair share of celebrities come through its automatic doors.  Pop star Justin Bieber was taken there in January 2011 after suffering from an allergic reaction while filming an episode of CSI;  Lucy Lawless was rushed there in October 1996 after falling off a horse while filming a skit for The Tonight Show; and John Ritter tragically passed away there on September 11th, 2003, as did Corey Haim on March 10th, 2010.  (As you can see in the photograph below, some filming was actually taking place while Pinky and I were stalking the hospital, but we did not see any crew members whom we could ask about it.  All of the filming signs were marked “BOP” and for the life of me I cannot figure out what that acronym stands for.  Any ideas? UPDATE – the Providence Found blog tweeted me to let me know that the television series Body of Proof was filming at the hospital the day we were there.  Thanks, Providence Found!)

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On Parks and Recreation, Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center pops up pretty much weekly in establishing shots of Pawnee Saint Joseph Hospital, or Saint Joseph’s Medical Center as it is also sometimes referred to.

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The interior of Pawnee Saint Joseph Hospital, though, is, of course, just a set.

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Oddly enough, though, while Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center is used for all establishing shots of Pawnee Saint Joseph Hospital, a different location – St. Vincent Medical Center, located at 2131 West 3rd Street, just north of MacArthur Park, in Los Angeles – stood in for the place in the Season 1 finale of Parks and Recreation, which was titled “Rock Show”.

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Some actual filming of that episode also took place inside of St. Vincent Medical Center.

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Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center was also featured in the Season 2 episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians titled “Kris the Cheerleader”, as the place where Kris Jenner underwent emergency knee surgery, although a different side of the building was shown than what is regularly shown on Parks and Rec.

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Filming of the “Kris the Cheerleader” episode also took place inside of the hospital.  And I have to comment here that, wow, that show is bad!  It was painful just scanning through a single episode to make screen captures for this post!  Winking smile

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The Providence Found blog let me know that in 2010’s Due Date, Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center was “Pacific Mercy Hospital” where Sarah Highman (Michelle Monaghan) gave birth and the place that Peter Highman (Robert Downey Jr.) spent the entire movie trying to get to.

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The interior of the hospital also appeared in the movie.

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Providence Found also informed me that Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center stood in for “Los Angeles Hospital” where Julia Fitzpatrick (Jennifer Garner) discovered that her boyfriend, Dr. Harrison Copeland (Patrick Dempsey), was married.  The catwalk over the hospital’s healing garden was used in the film.

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As was the GI waiting area.

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On a stalking side-note – My buddy E.J., of The Movieland Directory website, who is easily one of the best researchers and wittiest writers I know, recently penned a book about Old Hollywood titled Unscripted: Hollywood Back-Stories, Volume 1.  I highly recommend checking it out!  You can purchase an e-copy of the book (it is currently only available digitally) on Nook here and on Kindle here.

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You can find me on Facebook here and on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And be sure to check out my latest post – about a nightmare experience at the DMV – on my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It: Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center, aka Pawnee Saint Joseph Hospital from Parks and Recreation, is located at 501 South Buena Vista Street in Burbank.  You can visit the hospital’s official website here.  The area shown in establishing shots on Parks and Recreation is the exterior of Providence’s emergency room, which is located off Buena Vista Street, while the Alameda Street entrance was the entrance shown on Keeping Up with the Kardashians.

Pickwick Bowl from “Parks and Recreation”

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While watching the Season 4 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Bowling for Votes” back in June, I wondered aloud about at which bowling alley filming had taken place.  The Grim Cheaper, who happened to hear me, looked up from his ever-present laptop and said, “That’s Pickwick Bowl – part of Pickwick Gardens – in Burbank.”  Well, I just about fell right off my chair over the fact that he had recognized a filming location (that literally never happens!) and immediately grabbed my iPhone to look up photographs of the place to see if he was right.  Sure enough, he was!  Thanks, honey!  So the two of us ran right out to stalk the alley – and do some bowling – just a few days later.  And I have to say that we had an absolute blast while there!

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Pickwick Gardens, which, in its earliest incarnation, housed a trailer park and swimming pool, first opened in the 1940s and was known as Pickwick Swim Park.  There are rumors that the place was named after the “Mr. Pickwick” character from Charles Dickens’ first novel, The Pickwick Papers.  As legend has it, the complex’s original logo featured a cartoon representation of Mr. Pickwick and some Disney imagineers, who worked just down the street, created a replica of it – in the form of a ghost hanging from a chandelier – for the ballroom scene of Disneyland’s Haunted Mansion ride.  Whether that is true or not remains to be seen, but it certainly makes for a good story.  Smile In the 1950s, the complex was sold to new owners who changed the name of the place to Pickwick Recreation Center and added an ice skating rink, a 781-space drive-in movie theatre (which has since closed), a restaurant named the Five Horseman Inn (which has also since closed), and a bowling alley.  The Pickwick Pool was, sadly, filled in sometime during the 80s and the area transformed into a spacious, two-and-a-half-acre garden, which is used today as a wedding and event venue and after which the complex is now named.

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On an interesting filming side-note – the Pickwick Drive-In Theatre was where a forlorn Danny Zuko (John Travolta) sang the song “Sandy” in the 1978 classic Grease.  The drive-in was sadly shuttered and demolished in 1989 in order to make way for a strip mall, which reminds me of one of my favorite lines from the movie You’ve Got Mail. In an email to Joe Fox (Tom Hanks), Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) writes, “People are always telling you that change is a good thing, but all they’re really saying is that something you didn’t want to happen at all has happened.  My store is closing this week.  I own a store – did I ever tell you that?  It’s a lovely store and in a week it will be something really depressing, like a Baby Gap.”  And while the Pickwick Drive-In strip mall does not currently house a Baby Gap, it does feature a Pavilion’s grocery store, an El Pollo Loco, a Staples, and a dry cleaner – all of which are just as equally depressing.  The one plus?  There is a Starbucks.  Winking smile You can check out some photographs of what the Pickwick Drive-In Theatre used to look like here.

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I honestly cannot more highly recommend stalking Pickwick Bowl!  The GC and I spent the entire afternoon there and had such a fabulous time!  Although I was a little bummed out that the bar did not have champagne.  After I came back from inquiring about it, the GC said, “Did you actually think that a bowling alley would serve champagne?”  Um, yes, yes I did!

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Besides being a filming location, Pickwick Bowl is also something of a celebrity hot spot.  Adam Sandler rents out the entire complex each year for his Happy Madison holiday party, at which he has hosted such guests as Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes (and Suri!), AJ Michalka, Aly Michalka, Kate Hudson, Brett Ratner, Penelope Cruz, Jackson Browne, Maria Bello, Kevin James, Bryan Greenberg, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Tom Green, Rob Schneider, Demi Moore, Nick Swardson, and David Arquette.  Man, what I wouldn’t give to score an invite to that thing!  Smile Nick Jonas and Miley Cyrus were also spotted bowling at Pickwick back in February of 2011.

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Pickwick Bowl, Parks and Recreation-1000255

In the “Bowling for Votes” episode of Parks and Recreation, Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott) holds a focus group to see how Pawnee citizens feel about city council candidate Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler).  One particularly crusty man in the group named Derek (Kevin Dorff) announces that he would not vote for Leslie because “she doesn’t seem like the kind of person you could go bowling with.”  Leslie, of course, becomes absolutely fixated by the man’s statement and convinces Ben to host a bowling night for her campaign at “Ricky’s Rock N’ Roll Bowl”, to which she invites Derek in an attempt to win him over.  That, of course, does not happen and Ben ends up punching Derek in the face after Derek calls Leslie a b*tch.  Gotta love P&R!

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While at the alley, Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman) tells Leslie that Ricky’s Rock N’ Roll Bowl has his “favorite restaurant in Pawnee”.  LOL

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And I just have to say here that I love, love, love that Tom Haverford (Aziz Ansari) showed up carrying a Louis Vuitton Ellipse MM as his bowling bag!  A man after my own heart, I swear!

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And I am not at all ashamed to admit – despite the fact that several people were laughing at me! – that, while at Pickwick, I bowled granny-style, just like Tom did in the episode.  And I scored more than a few strikes doing so.  Smile

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Be sure to “Like” IAMNOTASTALKER on Facebook here and “Friend” me on my personal page here.  You can also check out the IAMNOTASTALKER About Me page here and you can follow me on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And don’t forget to take a look at my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

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Stalk It: Pickwick Bowl, from the “Bowling for Votes” episode of Parks and Recreation, is located at 1001 Riverside Drive in Burbank.  You can visit the bowling alley’s official website here.

Mitch Hiller’s House from “Enough”

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One location that I have been absolutely obsessed with for what seems like ages now is the ultra-modern beach house where Mitch Hiller (Billy Campbell) lived in the 2002 thriller Enough – which I just recently discovered is the very same spot that stands in for the exterior of the Indianapolis loft belonging to Chris Traeger (Rob Lowe) on fave show Parks and Recreation. Mike had long known where the property was located thanks to a former co-worker of his whose husband was on the Enough crew.  So, while we were in the Marina Del Rey-area on Saturday (which, as I mentioned yesterday, was completely dreary and overcast – I thought it was supposed to be summer, folks!), he took me right on over to stalk the place.  And I am very happy to report that it is just as spectacular in person as it was onscreen.  Looks like this stalker may just have herself a new dream house!  Winking smile

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The Enough house, which was originally constructed in 1996 out of glass, cement and weathering steel, boasts four bedrooms, five baths, an upstairs office, an elevator, a gourmet kitchen, a detached two-car garage, private balconies off of each bedroom, floor-to-ceiling windows, a media room, and sweeping views of Marina Del Rey’s Grand Canal and the Pacific Ocean.  There seems to be some discrepancy online over the abode’s square footage, though, as Zillow (and most property record sites) report it as measuring 5,758 square feet, while the pad’s real estate website claims it to be “almost 3,000”.  From viewing the place’s exterior, I would guess the 3,000 measurement to be the better bet.  And while the dwelling was just recently for sale for a whopping $4,850,000, it appears to have since been taken off the market.

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In Enough, Slim Hiller (Jennifer Lopez) stalks her abusive ex-husband Mitch and sets up an extensive trap to kill him at the home.

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And while I would have bet money that the real life interior of the home was used in the filming, that does not appear to have been the case.

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As you can see below, the real life property is not nearly as open as its onscreen counterpart and its ceilings are not nearly as high.

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The actual home also has a more polished and less industrial look than what appeared in the movie.  So while I love, love, love the exterior of the place, I have to say that I much prefer the onscreen design of the interior to the reality.

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And while we were there, I, of course, just had to sit where JLo sat at the end of the flick.  Smile

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As I mentioned last week in my post about the loft where Chris lives on Parks and Recreation, the exterior of the Enough house also popped up as the exterior of Chris’ pad in the Season 3 episodes titled “Indianapolis” and “Road Trip”.

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Mike, who, as I have mentioned countless times before, knows the City of L.A. and its surroundings like the back of his hand, also pointed out that retired Laker Rick Fox and then wife, actress Vanessa Williams, used to live right across the canal from the Enough house at 5518 Pacific Avenue.  The home was sold to new owners, though, sometime after the couple divorced in 2004.

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And while we were stalking the Enough house, Mike and I discovered a gorgeous garden named Channel Pointe located directly across the street.  Apparently gardens like the one pictured below are quite common in Marina Del Rey (which is quickly turning out to be one of my favorite cities in Los Angeles).   Love it!

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Be sure to “Like” IAMNOTASTALKER on Facebook here and “Friend” me on my personal page here.  You can also check out the IAMNOTASTALKER About Me page here and you can follow me on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And don’t forget to take a look at my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

Big THANK YOU to Mike, from MovieShotsLA, for telling me about this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

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Stalk It: Mitch’s house from Enough is located at 5417 Via Donte in Marina Del Rey.  Rick Fox and Vanessa Williams formerly lived across the canal in the home located at 5518 Pacific Avenue.  And the Channel Pointe Garden can be reached from Via Donte, directly across the street from the Enough house.

Chris’ Apartment from “Parks and Recreation”

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I realize that I am on serious Parks and Recreation overload here, but today’s location is one that I could not not blog about being that I am absolutely OBSESSED with it!  What is the location you ask?  The supposed Indianapolis-area ultra-modern loft that Chris Traeger (Rob Lowe) owns on the series.  I became just a wee bit consumed with the pad the first time it popped up during Season 3 of P&R.  One look at its high ceilings, open floor plan and towering staircase and I literally went weak in the knees and started drooling.  Oddly enough, though, I did not recognize the place even though I had once previously stalked it.  There I go having yet another blonde moment!

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Way back in December of 2008, Mike, from MovieShotsLA, and I went on a quest to track down the liquor store from L.A. Confidential, which we had heard was located on Larchmont Boulevard.  (As it turns out, it wasn’t – the L.A. Confidential liquor store is actually on South Cochran Avenue.  You can read my post on it here.)  During the hunt, we spent hours driving back and forth down Larchmont looking for the store’s facade and also stopping in to speak with several different area shop owners, trying to gather some intel.  And while no one had any information on the liquor store, one helpful person informed us that the movie Funny People had recently spent several weeks filming at the Larchmont Lofts on the corner of Larchmont Boulevard and Melrose Avenue.  So Mike and I, of course, went to take a look at the building and snap some pics.  We did not venture inside, though, nor did I ever see Funny People, so I had no idea what the interior of the actual apartment units looked like.

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Flash forward to a couple of weeks ago when fellow stalker Justin asked me to track down some Parks and Recreation locales, one of which was Chris Traeger’s apartment building.  At the time, I was not even sure if the location was a real one.  Chris’s loft is so darn sleek and shiny that I figured it might just be a set.  But I started to do some digging anyway and eventually discovered (thanks to fave website OnLocationVacations) that Chris’ pad was real and that it was located in none other than the Funny People building!  Talk about a small world!  Once I found out that information, I, of course, immediately began searching for rental rates being that Chris’ apartment is pretty much my dream home.

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The three-story, ultra-modern Larchmont Lofts building was first completed in 2008.  Its 21 loft-style units were originally slated to be sold as condominiums for $750,000 to $1.25 million a piece.  Not a’ one of ‘em was purchased, though, according to fave website CurbedLA, and the spaces were eventually leased out as apartments.  Rates currently start at a whopping $3,000 a month for a 1-bedroom, 1-bath, 1,200-square-foot flat.  Um yeah, like the Grim Cheaper would ever go for that!  What I wouldn’t give to live there, though!  Sigh!

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Chris Traeger’s apartment first popped up in the Season 3 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Indianapolis”.  Interestingly enough, though, while the front entrance and interior of one of the units were used in the episode, the exterior establishing shot was of a different location altogether, one that is no stranger to the screen.  The exterior of Chris’ building is actually the exterior of the residence where Mitch Hiller (Billy Campbell) lived in the 2002 movie Enough, which Mike, from MovieShotsLA, stalked a while back.  You can take a look at his photos of the property here.

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In the “Indianapolis” episode, Leslie Knope (Amy Poehler) and Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman) travel from Pawnee to Indianapolis to accept a special commendation on behalf of the Parks Department.  While there, they meet up with Chris, who, at that point in the show, lived in the area.  A brief scene from the episode was filmed in the Larchmont Lofts lobby, which you can see behind me in the photograph below.

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In “Indianapolis”, Chris is shown to live in Unit #207, which is one of the Larchmont Lofts’ three-story townhomes.

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As you can see below, the interior of his apartment is nothing short of STUNNING!  Love, love, LOVE it!

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Especially the large, open-air staircase.  Sigh!

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Chris’ apartment also appeared in the Season 3 episode of Parks and Recreation titled “Road Trip”, in the scene in which Chris hosts Leslie and Ben Wyatt (Adam Scott) on an overnight at his home.  You can check out some interior photographs of the Larchmont Lofts building – including a three-story townhouse unit like Chris’ – on Curbed LA here.

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And I, of course, just had to pretend to buzz Chris from the intercom while I was there.  Smile

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In Funny People, Larchmont Lofts is the building where Ira Wright (Seth Rogen), Leo Koenig (Jonah Hill), Mark Taylor Jackson (Jason Schwartzman), and Daisy Danby (Aubrey Plaza, who, ironically enough, plays April Ludgate on Parks and Recreation) live.  The exterior of the building shows up quite a few times in the flick.

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As does the interior of one of the building’s two-bedroom flats.  As you can see below, the inside of Ira, Leo and Mark’s apartment in the flick closely resembles that of Chris’ apartment on Parks and Recreation – minus the awesome staircase, which is only a feature of the building’s three-story townhomes.

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Be sure to “Like” IAMNOTASTALKER on Facebook here and “Friend” me on my personal page here.  You can also check out the IAMNOTASTALKER About Me page here and you can follow me on Twitter at @IAMNOTASTALKER.  And you can check out my latest post – about low-carb tacos – on my other blog, The Well-Heeled Diabetic, here.

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Until next time, Happy Stalking! Smile

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Stalk It: Chris Traeger’s apartment building from Parks and Recreation is actually the Larchmont Lofts, which is located at 5700 Melrose Avenue in the Larchmont Village area of Los Angeles.  You can visit the complex’s official website here.  And to contribute to the Lindsay-Wants-to-Live-at-the-Larchmont-Lofts fund, you can click here.  Ha ha, just kidding.  Winking smile