
Art Deco gets star treatment in new photobook
Tom Carroll spoke with Robert to understand why Art Deco in Los Angeles needed its own book and why L.A. doesn't get the Art-Deco respect it deserves.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
4 hours ago
- Los Angeles Times
New Guide Book shows a different side of Los Angeles
Well, there's a new book by LA tour guide Adam Papagan called 'Behind the Scenes in Los Angeles: A Pop Culture History Tour' that can refill your hopper of spots to check out. Tom Carroll met up with Adam on a public street that overlooks the backlot of Universal Studios to understand why it's important to document popular culture.

Wall Street Journal
7 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
Scott Joplin's ‘Bethena': The Syncopated Sound of Sorrow
When I first heard Scott Joplin's 'Bethena,' I was a college freshman and my friend Robert was playing it on the piano in a common room. The college's century-old Steinway was appallingly out of tune, and the performance was periodically interrupted by peals of laughter from the adjoining dining hall. I was nonetheless captivated by the strange emotional intensity of this music. It had the intimate, narrative, singable style of a Chopin waltz, with an occasional jazzy minor seventh that marked it as a later creation. But unlike the openly emotive Chopin, this music led separate outer and inner lives. Its exterior was placid, untroubled, matter-of-fact. But in its moments of translucence that exterior was revealed as a mask for a deep melancholy, a melancholy made more agonizing by its inexpressibility. This piece was a dark embodiment of the tensions inherent in ragtime. What is ragtime? It was an age, for one thing: the time from about 1895 to 1915 when black and white American music cultures began to mix on a national scale. During this era, black musicians for the first time rose to become superstars. As they did, the lines dividing musical genres, and the social rules demarcating which genres were appropriate for which venues and for which kinds of people, began to blur. The sounds of ragtime, which in the 1890s could be found only in the brothels and dive bars of St. Louis and Kansas City, would be played for first-class passengers as the Titanic foundered in April 1912.


American Military News
10 hours ago
- American Military News
‘Cheers' star George Wendt's cause of death confirmed
A cause of death has been confirmed for 'Cheers' star George Wendt, who died on May 20 at the age of 76. The beloved actor died from cardiac arrest, according to a death certificate released by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health and obtained by TMZ. The certificate cites congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease and hypertension as underlying causes of Wendt's death, with significant contributing conditions of kidney failure and high cholesterol. Wendt reportedly died peacefully in his sleep at his home, and cremated eight days later. 'George was a doting family man, a well-loved friend and confidant to all of those lucky enough to have known him,' his family said in a statement. 'He will be missed forever.' Best known for his role as Norm Peterson on 'Cheers,' Wendt appeared in all 275 episodes of the NBC sitcom, which ran from 1982 to 1993. The six-time Emmy Award nominee later went on to headline 'The George Wendt Show,' appear in countless movies and craft a stage career that took him to Broadway in 'Art,' 'Hairspray' and 'Elf.' ___ © 2025 New York Daily News. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.