Tag Archives: restaurant

Kendra Wilkinson and Hank Baskett date night at Mastros Steakhouse

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Kendra Wilkinson and Hank Baskett were spotted leaving Mastro’s Steakhouse and Kendra spoke to the paparazzi about her show and the rumors of it being cancelled. Kendra is always… Kendra! “Like” us on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Kendra Wilkinson and Hank Baskett date night at Mastros Steakhouse

Olivier Martinez Confirms Engagement to Halle Berry

While Halle Berry continues to clash with her past boyfriend, Gabriel Aubry, she can at least find major solace in what appears to be a bright future: The actress really is engaged to French actor Olivier Martinez! Rumors of a proposal first popped up in January , but neither actor nor actress commented on it at the time. The press simply went on the word of a jeweler who claimed to be responsible for the engagement ring. But at the the opening of his restaurant in Miami last night, Martinez responded to a question about his impending by making it very clear: “Yes, of course it’s true.” However, giving props to his ring’s actual designer (Robert Mazio), Martinez did correct one aspect of the earlier story: “There is a jeweler taking credit for doing the ring and it’s a lie! They have nothing to do with this.” Either way, we send our very best wishes to this beautiful couple.

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Olivier Martinez Confirms Engagement to Halle Berry

REVIEW: Jiro Dreams of Sushi Explores the Drive to Make Beautiful Things That Are Edible Too

Is it possible to love a piece of dead fish more than you love people? That’s the question asked, implicitly if not directly, by David Gelb’s documentary Jiro Dreams of Sushi , a portrait of 85-year-old sushi master Jiro Ono that is itself as meticulous and carefully formed as a piece of nigirizushi . The movie’s title comes from an interview with Jiro, who speaks of waking up in the middle of the night with new ideas for perfecting and enhancing his craft. Then we see him standing stiffly behind the bar at his Tokyo restaurant, waiting with an air of placid annoyance for a customer to consume one of his precise and studied creations: With his hands, he has made a dream you can eat. And he wants you to know it. Gelb’s documentary is tactile in the same way. In fact, it’s so strictly visual – as opposed to sensual – that unlike most well-made movies about food, it may not send you walking out hungry. A food-critic friend and I were discussing this phenomenon: It could be, as my friend posited, that sushi, though among the most beautiful of all consumables, is just “not very food porny.” And it’s true: I left Jiro Dreams of Sushi wanting not to eat, but to make jewelry, preferably with the most colorful, carefully polished beads or stones available. Jiro, as he himself tells us in the film, has been mastering the art of making sushi nearly his whole life. For years he has run Sukiyashi Jiro, a 10-seat sushi restaurant in Tokyo, and though the place is just a modest – if elegant – dinerlike strip, it was the first restaurant of its kind to be awarded three Michelin stars. His eldest son, Yoshikazu, works in the restaurant with him, and though it’s strongly hinted that his skills are nearly as well-honed as those of his father, Jiro shows no signs of being ready to pass the torch along. A younger son runs another sushi restaurant on the other side of town, an enterprise Jiro talks about with gibing pride. He himself, as it turns out, struck out on his own before he was even a teenager, supporting himself any way he could. When his younger son decided to start the restaurant, Jiro told him he had better succeed, because he had no home to go back to. He derides the idea of parents who reassure their children they can always come home. “When parents say stupid things like that,” he says, “the kids turn out to be failures.” That gives us a few clues to his parenting style. And yet Jiro’s grudging love for, and pride in, his children shines through, even though it’s something he’d rather not advertise. (At one point he concedes, “I wasn’t much of a father,” and no mention is made of the children’s mother, though we see her in a photograph or two.) That’s one of the strengths of Gelb’s understated technique – he never tells when he can show, letting Jiro do most of the talking, though we also hear from Tokyo restaurant critic Yamamoto (who informs us plainly that in the dozens of times he has eaten at Sukiyabashi Jiro, he has never had a disappointing meal) and the fish dealer who proudly supplies Jiro with those all-important raw ingredients (although Jiro, who used to do all the marketgoing himself before suffering a heart attack, now leaves the daily shopping to Yoshikazu). Mostly, though, we see Jiro at work, sometimes supervising his devoted but slightly cowed restaurant workers, but more often just making the stuff: The precision of his hand movements is something to behold, as he forms a small dollop of rice into a suitable bed for a piece of glistening salmon or mackerel. As he cuts through a slab of tuna, the pieces fall away in thick, red ribbons – this is what velvet would look like if you could slice it. Jiro’s quest for perfection is all-consuming and, the film suggests, won’t be quelled until he draws his last breath, or until his limbs stop working, whichever comes first. At its simplest level, Jiro Dreams of Sushi is a portrait of a master. In its deeper layers, it explores what drives us to make things: Beautiful, jewel-like things, or things that delight our palate – or, in this case, both. Follow Stephanie Zacharek on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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REVIEW: Jiro Dreams of Sushi Explores the Drive to Make Beautiful Things That Are Edible Too

Enrique Iglesias dines and hides at Fogo de Chao

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Enrique Iglesias dined and ignored the paparazzi by hiding from them while leaving Fogo de Chao restaurant in West Hollywood. “Like” us on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Enrique Iglesias dines and hides at Fogo de Chao

Paris Hilton celebrates her birthday at Beso restaurant

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Paris Hilton continues to celebrate her birthday eleven days later by throwing a dinner party at Beso restaurant. Paris looked beautiful and worked the entrance of Beso as if it was a fashion show runway! “Like” us on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Paris Hilton celebrates her birthday at Beso restaurant

Benicio Del Toro dines at Madeo restaurant

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Benicio Del Toro was spotted leaving the famous Beverly Hills restaurant Madeo. Benicio chatted with the paparazzi as he walked to his car and spoke about last night’s Oscars telecast, Angelina Jolie, and Jennifer Lopez. “Like” us on Facebook @ facebook.com 596CA8F1

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Benicio Del Toro dines at Madeo restaurant

Race Matters: Restaurant Favored By Orange County Young Republicans Settles Lawsuit With Black Customer Racist Receipts

A California steakhouse is paying a hefty price for hate heaped on a paying customer, SMH. A federal lawsuit filed by a successful African-American businessman against a Newport Beach steakhouse that repeatedly listed him on credit card receipts as “McStinkyNi**er,” “McNi*Sh*t” and “McCottonwood” has been mutually dismissed, according to records at Ronald Reagan Federal Courthouse in Orange County. Court files show that lawyers representing plaintiff Mark McHenry and Landmark Steakhouse of Corona del Mar agreed to a stipulated settlement of the lawsuit on Feb. 2 — a month before the case was scheduled to be heard by a jury. No terms of the settlement were revealed. But you can guess any payment to McHenry is going to be financially substantial. It is against federal law for a public business to brazenly discriminate against a customer based on race. And there was this: The 10-month-old case ended after McHenry’s lawyers at Reed Smith LLP in Los Angeles uncovered an additional 12 inflammatory examples of racists comments and after U.S. Magistrate Judge Victor B. Kenton rejected the restaurant’s strenuous attempts to thwart the lawyers from inspecting 167,000 other customer receipts to check for a systematic, widespread use of racial epithets. In a deposition, Mario Marovic, a partial owner of CDM Restaurant, Inc. which includes Landmark Steakhouse, said that he does not “discriminate against any group of people on any basis whatsoever.” The court files reviewed by the Weekly show that Marovic was shocked by McHenry’s allegations, conducted an investigation and ultimately blamed the racist incidents on a bartender, Michael Cederoth. Though Cederoth did not confess, Marovic believed he’d given “inconsistent” answers during interviews and fired him a week after the lawsuit was filed, according to court records. A customer during dozens and dozens of visits, McHenry had considered the restaurant enjoyable, took friends there and was a generous tipper. After one visit he returned home, saw an inflammatory receipt and discovered older receipts were similarly despicable. When confronted, restaurant employees including manager Dustin Caratello repeatedly apologized and attempted to downplay the bigotry, according to court records. At the time of the McHenry incidents, the Orange County Young Republicans chose Landmark Steakhouse as their “favorite spot” for monthly drink mixers. Sorry but this guy deserves his payday — we’d be damned if we spend $55 on some steak to be called the N-word. Source More On Bossip! How Precious! Jay And Bey Release The First Pictures Of Blue Ivy Carter!! Who Looked More Bangin??? Rihanna Vs. Kelly Rowland (2012 Grammy Awards) The Ultimate Swirl: Brothas Who Made White Dudes Mad [Photos] Galleries: Amber Rose, Wiz Khalifa, Kim Kardashian, Sanaa Lathan, Serena Williams, Kelly Rowland And More At Clive Davis Pre-Grammy Gala [Photos]

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Race Matters: Restaurant Favored By Orange County Young Republicans Settles Lawsuit With Black Customer Racist Receipts

Tom Hardy, Chris Pine Get Physical In ‘This Means War’ Clip

Reese Witherspoon tries to decide between the two secret agents in a brand-new clips. By Kevin P. Sullivan Chris Pine, Reese Witherspoon and Tom Hardy in “This Means War” Photo: 20th Century Fox It takes only two short clips from “This Means War” to show you exactly what kind of movie it is. On one hand you have a woman, played by Reese Witherspoon , torn between two men she genuinely likes. It’s nothing that far out of line with what you expect from your average romantic comedy. On the other hand, you have the influence of McG and two of Hollywood’s top action stars, Tom Hardy and Chris Pine , playing her love interests and secret-agent best buddies. Things, as you can imagine, get a little messy. As part of “MTV First: This Means War” , we debuted two new clips from “This Means War,” and they both give a very good taste of what’s in store in the movie that hits theaters on Valentine’s Day. The first finds Pine’s character, FDR, crashing a date between Hardy’s Tuck and Lauren, played by Witherspoon. Lauren goes to the bathroom to collect herself after the surprise encounter, while back out in the restaurant, the former best friends use every ounce of their professional training to beat the crap out of each, destroying the restaurant in the process. The other clip takes on a much more relaxed tone, showing off the lighter side of the movie. Lauren confides in her best friend, Trish, played by Chelsea Handler, and attempts to make a decision between the two suitors. Unbeknownst to her, both FDR and Tuck listen in. Are you excited for “This Means War”? Leave your comment below. Stick with MTV News as we roll out more from our exclusive “MTV First: This Means War” interview with Reese Witherspoon! Related Videos MTV First: This Means War

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Tom Hardy, Chris Pine Get Physical In ‘This Means War’ Clip

Slash and his family dine at Matro’s Steakhouse

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Gun N’ Roses guitarist, Slash dined with his lovely wife Perla Ferrar and their kids! Perla had a special message to share with the paparazzi involving her son! Check it out! Follow Hollywood.TV on Facebook @ facebook.com

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Slash and his family dine at Matro’s Steakhouse

My name is Sarah, I’m 16 years old from Canada and my…

My name is Sarah, I’m 16 years old from Canada and my Bieber experience was on December 21st at the “Home For the Holidays” concert in Toronto, ON. This isn’t a story about meeting Justin, but it was my first time ever seeing him in concert, which was an experience good enough for me. I get Justin’s tweets sent to my phone and a few weeks or so before the concert Justin announced on his Twitter that he was having something special planned for Canada. The second I read that tweet I started crying because I could possibly have the chance to see him in person. He didn’t announce where, when or any details, but knowing he was coming was good enough for me. That day at school I couldn’t concentrate because I kept day-dreaming about possibly seeing him. About a week after that Much tweeted that he would be coming to Toronto (where I live) but they weren’t giving any details about this “secret” concert. My dreams were a little crushed but I kept Beliebing. A couple days after that Much tweeted again that they would be announcing how to get tickets. I started freaking out and called my best friend who already knew about the concert, and we started planning how to get tickets and got really excited about the possibility of going. They finally said that tickets would go on sale on Sunday at 4pm on the Saturday before. I had a really bad flu (so I should’ve slept pretty easily that night) but I woke up every hour because I was so nervous about not getting tickets. At around 3:45pm on Sunday my Dad, Mom, Brother and I set up seven computers in the kitchen to try and get through to get tickets. Not a single computer at my house got through, but luckily one of the ones at my best friends house did and we got tickets in the balcony that were 5th row. I was so happy I cried my eyes out. Every night until the concert I couldn’t sleep because of my excitement. The night before my mom had to give me sleeping pills because she knew I’d be up all night if I didn’t take them. The day finally came and school went by extremely slowly. After school my best friends mom picked me up and we went to her house to get ready. We wore JB santa hats, shirts, tattoos and bracelets. The car ride down was pretty fast and we went out for dinner after picking up the tickets. After dinner we went into the line up to get into Massey Hall and met some other Beliebers, then shortly went inside to find our seats. They were an amazing view and right beside the stage. I couldn’t believe I was going to be so close to him. We then went and bought some of his merchandise and made our way back to our seats to wait for him. 45 minutes after the concert was supposed to start, Scooter came on stage saying that he was running a bit late but would be on shortly. I asked one of the security guards how long the concert would be so I could tell my dad when to get us, and she said about an hour. Finally Justin came on stage and sang “Baby” I cried and sobbed the entire song because I couldn’t believe I was seeing him with my own two eyes. The concert ended up being two hours long, and Justin was asked to finish off multiple times, and he would respond with things like “I’m not done yet, Elf. You guys want another song right?” . The concert was so special because no one else would be able to see one like this and he even picked people in the audience to choose what song he would sing next. It was honestly the best night of my life. I got home and didn’t go to sleep until about 2am because I was still in shock from seeing him. It was the best day of my entire life and I am so thankful I was one of the lucky fans to get tickets. I will never forget this day, and will never give up on my dream of meeting him. Justin taught me to “believe” and “never say never” which I have been doing, and which have helped my dreams come true.  Thank you so much Justin for this amazing experience.  I hope to see you on your Believe tour this year. – @sarahluvsjus10 Read more from the original source: My name is Sarah, I’m 16 years old from Canada and my…

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My name is Sarah, I’m 16 years old from Canada and my…