Kate’s Apartment from “Picture Perfect”

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I wish I could say I’ve never met a Jennifer Aniston movie I didn’t like, but that is not the case.  In fact, the opposite is more true – I’ve rarely met one I truly did enjoy.  Picture Perfect fits into the “didn’t like” category.  If you haven’t seen the film, this review Paul Tatara wrote for CNN perfectly encapsulates the not-so-titillating storyline.  The 1997 romcom did manage to get a bit more interesting years after its release thanks to a 2010 Elle magazine interview with Jen’s costar Jay Mohr in which he had this say to say when asked about his most awkward interaction with a female celebrity – “Being on the set of a movie where the leading woman was unhappy with my presence and made it clear from day one.  I hadn’t done many movies, and even though they screen-tested some pretty famous guys, I somehow snaked into the leading role.  The actress said, ‘No way!  You’ve got to be kidding me!’  Loudly.  Between takes.  To other actors on set.  I would literally go to my mom’s house and cry.”  The interviewer immediately surmised the female celebrity Mohr was referring to was JA, but he refused to confirm or deny the hunch.  It did not take long for him to spill the tea, though.  You can listen to various interviews he’s since given on the subject here and here.  Jen’s animosity toward the comedian apparently stemmed from the fact that she wanted then boyfriend Tate Donovan to play her love interest, Nick, in Picture Perfect, but Mohr snagged the role instead.  As he tells it, she made him pay dearly for the purported slight.  The duo’s onscreen chemistry definitely attests to some friction.  Aniston, as plucky ad-exec Kate, really plays the whole being-annoyed-at-Nick-thing a little too well throughout the film.  Her disdain for him is palpable in practically every scene and the movie kind of suffers for it, to the point that it is not really believable when she inevitably falls for him at the end.  Regardless, when I came across the address of Kate’s apartment from the flick in the book Manhattan on Film, I added it to my stalking itinerary for my April 2016 trip to the Big Apple and headed over there one (rather rainy) morning while in town.

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In Picture Perfect, Kate calls a charming building situated on the corner of West 21st Street and 8th Avenue in Chelsea home.

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With its red brick edifice, arched detailing, carved columns, and teal-paned entrance doors, the structure is – dare I say it –  picture perfect.  It is not hard to see how it came to be used as the residence of the movie’s young, free-spirited, bohemian heroine.

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In real life, the 5-story complex, which was originally built in 1900, boasts 13 units, a roof deck, a ground floor nail salon, and an elevator.

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The building shows up twice in Picture Perfect.  It first pops up in the scene in which Kate coaches Nick, who is posing as her boyfriend for a work event, on the ins-and-outs of their fake relationship.

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The site then appears again toward the end of the movie in the scene in which an on-top-of-the-world Kate leaves her apartment to head to work after very publicly “breaking up” with Nick.  Little does she realize, though, how much she’s going to miss him.

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For whatever reason, at some point after the movie was shot, a secondary door situated just west of the one Kate was shown exiting in the scenes, was added to the building.  As you can see in the photographs below as compared to the screen captures above, the white limestone-framed entry with the arched glass awning that stands to the left of Kate’s door was not in existence when Picture Perfect was lensed.

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The interior of Kate’s apartment was just a set, which I learned via Mohr’s podcast was built on a soundstage at Silvercup Studios in Queens – a soundstage that Jen walked into on the first day of rehearsals and then promptly and loudly announced to Illeana Douglas (who played Aniston’s friend Darcy in the film) right in front of Jay, “Six guys they screen-tested.  Six!  The one f*cking guy I hate, that’s the one they hire!”  Yikes.  In the immortal words of Cher Horowitz, “That was way harsh, Tai!”  The scenes shot inside of the apartment set were some of the last of Picture Perfect to be lensed and by that time Jen had decided she liked Jay and instead switched her vitriol to director Glenn Gordon Caron, though Mohr never forgave her for the hell he experienced during the tumultuous shoot.   Who knows if Jay’s account of the situation is true, but, for reasons I am not going to get into here, I tend to believe it is.  You can check out what the interior of one of the apartments in Kate’s building looks like in real life here and here.  The actual units are much less colorful and far sparser than their onscreen counterpart.

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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: Kate’s apartment building from Picture Perfect is located at 301 West 21st Street in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood.

The High Line from “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills”

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I absolutely love the great outdoors.  In fact, alongside Starbucks and stalking, there’s pretty much nothing I enjoy more than being outside.  So when I read about a former-elevated-train-track-turned-urban-park in NYC prior to my trip to the Big Apple last April, I knew it was a spot I had to check out.  At the time, I did not realize the place was a filming location, but since returning home, I’ve seen it pop up in several productions, including fave show The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.  So I figured it was definitely worthy of a blog post.

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The High Line saw its beginnings in 1929 when the city of New York decided to build an elevated railway via its West Side Improvement Project.  Completed in 1934, the High Line viaduct, as it came to be known, was part of New York Central Railroad’s West Side Line and was mainly used to transport food products from factories to warehouses.

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Thanks to the rise of the trucking industry, the High Line saw a vast decline in use beginning in the 1950s and was shut down altogether in 1980.  Portions of the elevated track had been torn down in the interim and while many New Yorkers lobbied for the rest of railway to be razed, as well, others fought the demolition.  As the debate over what to do with it lagged on, the site was left to deteriorate, sitting abandoned, overgrown, and weed-strewn for decades.

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In 1999, neighborhood denizens Joshua David and Robert Hammond joined forces with other preservationists to establish Friends of the High Line in the hopes of turning the former railway into a public park.  The group’s plans were eventually approved and in 2006 work on the project began.  The High Line was completed in three stages, opening sections in 2009, 2011, and 2014.  Today, the 1.45-mile span, which stands 30 feet above ground, is a bustling oasis, visited by more than 5 million people each year.

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The picturesque site boasts more than 600 varieties of plants;

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countless benches and chaises for lounging;

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a walking path;

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and views of both the Hudson River . . .

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. . . and the streets of Chelsea.

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Considering its beauty, it is not surprising that the High Line has been featured in countless productions since its revitalization – so many productions, in fact, that it would be impossible for me to chronicle them all here.  But I have compiled a list of a few of the highlights.  As I mentioned above, the park popped up in an episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.  In Season 7’s “Going Commando,” Kyle Richards and her daughter Sophia Umansky took a walk there during a visit to New York.

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In 2008, before the site’s transformation was complete, it was featured in the Season 5 premiere of CSI: NY titled “Veritas” as the spot where Mac Taylor (Gary Sinise) and Stella Bonasera (Melina Kanakaredes) searched for a mimosa pudica plant.  The episode provided a great visual of how different the High Line looked prior to its reimagining.

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Louie (Louis C.K.) goes on a rather depressing “non-date” at the High Line with Janice (Kelly McCrann) in the Season 2 episode of Louie titled “Bummer/Blueberries,” which aired in 2011.

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In the Season 4 episode of Glee titled “Makeover,” which aired in 2012, Rachel Berry (Lea Michele) and Brody Weston (Dean Geyer) dance and frolic on the High Line during a musical montage set to Sheryl Crow’s “A Change Would Do You Good.”

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John Reese (Jim Caviezel) takes Sofia Campos (Paloma Guzman) to the High Line in the Season 2 episode of Person of Interest titled “Masquerade,” which also aired in 2012.

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The park pops up briefly in the 2013 thriller Side Effects.

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Abbi Abrams (Abbi Jacobson) and Illana Wexler (Illana Glazer) visit the High Line to discuss a plan of attack after losing Kelly Ripa’s jacket in the Season 2 episode of Broad City titled “Coat Check,” which aired in 2015.

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Harper (Zoey Deutch) and Charlie (Glen Powell) confer about “Parent Trapping” their bosses while walking on the High Line in the 2018 Netflix romcom Set It Up.

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: The High Line, from the “Going Commando” episode of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, runs from Gansevoort Street to West 34th Street, between 10th and 12th Avenues, in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood.  You can visit the park’s official website here.

The “Sex and the City” Starbucks

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One of the best things about starting this blog is the people it has put me in contact with – a myriad of fabulous individuals who share my unique affection for filming locations.  One such fellow stalker, a New Yorker named Gary, has gifted me with countless Big Apple locales since we first started exchanging emails way back in 2010.  Most of Gary’s knowledge comes from driving a cab for three years.  The job took him all over NYC, made him familiar with its nooks and crannies, and he now knows the city like the back of his hand.  He has also come across quite a few filmings during his tenure in New York and, thanks to his hawk-like memory, can recall where each took place.  One such filming was of a Sex and the City episode that Gary witnessed being shot at the Starbucks at 16th Street and Eighth Avenue.  Well believe you me, when I read the words “Sex and the City” and “Starbucks,” I practically came unglued and added the locale to my NYC To-Stalk list.  And while Gary could not remember which episode the scene appeared in, it did not take me long to figure it out.

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In Season 4’s “The Good Fight,” Carrie Bradshaw (Sarah Jessica Parker) heads to the Eighth Avenue Starbucks for some respite after getting into a huge fight with then fiancé Aidan Shaw (John Corbett) over the lack of space in their newly shared apartment.  (You can watch that fight here.)  While there, she says, “I used to think those people who sat alone at Starbucks writing on their laptops were pretentious posers.  Now I know – they’re people who have recently moved in with someone.  As I looked around, I wondered how many of them were mid-fight, like myself.  The hard thing about fighting in relationships as opposed to Madison Square Garden?  No referee.  There’s no one to tell you which comments are below the belt or when to go to your separate corners.  As a result, someone usually gets hurt.  And it seems the closer a couple gets and the more stuff they have between them, the harder it is to figure out exactly why they’re yelling.  When it comes to relationships, I couldn’t help but wonder, what are we fighting for?”  Despite the fact that I have re-watched the entire Sex and the City series a copious amount of times, I often forget how ingenious the writing is.  When the Grim Cheaper and I first moved in together, we had Aidan and Carrie’s exact same fight.  In preparation for our move – and the tiny closet at our new apartment – I had thrown out countless outfits that I loved.  So when the GC showed up with six (six!) medium-sized boxes filled solely with white undershirts, I practically had a meltdown.  Thankfully, we survived our tiff (after five of those boxes of undershirts were thrown out, of course), but Carrie and Aiden did not.  They broke up just two episodes later.

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Most of the Starbucks scene was shot looking in through the property’s south window.

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Though the café’s exterior remains unchanged from its onscreen appearance in 2002, I somehow failed to snap a photograph of the correct window.

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You can check out Google Street View images of it below, though.

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While very little of the Starbucks interior was shown in “The Good Fight,” it is apparent that the space has been remodeled since filming took place and looks a bit different today.

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In the scene, Carrie sat at a tall shared table in the middle of the café.

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That exact table is no longer there, but a similar one currently stands in the same spot.

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I was excited to see that the seating that runs along the south window, which was visible in the scene, remains intact.

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It was raining when we showed up to stalk “The Good Fight” Starbucks and, as a result, the place was exorbitantly crowded, which made it a bit difficult to snap pics.  The deluge is also the reason I did not pose for my normal photograph out in front of the locale.  And although I hate rain pretty much more than anything, as I said that day to fellow stalker Owen, of the When Write Is Wrong blog, “I’ll take rain in New York over sun in Palm Springs any day!”  Smile

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

Big THANK YOU to fellow stalker Gary for telling me about this location!  Smile

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Until next time, Happy Stalking!  Smile

Stalk It:  The Starbucks from “The Good Fight” episode of Sex and the City is located at 124 8th Avenue in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood.