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Pasadena Now began by reporting on musical events, restaurant reviews, and other local news within Pasadena, California in 2004, and within three years had expanded to cover business and other topics. Macpherson is the magazine's editor and publisher, and Merill is the magazine's Events Editor and Chief Photographer.
Old Pasadena is the historic core of Downtown Pasadena; it has a multitude of fine shops and restaurants (Italian and Japanese restaurants are especially numerous here). The attractions in the area involve shopping, dining, and entertainment. There are two parks, the historic Del Mar Station and Castle Green, and the headquarters of Parsons.
The Hat is a Southern California fast-food restaurant chain specializing in pastrami dip sandwiches. [1] This eatery, once local only to the San Gabriel Valley, [2] has been offering its "World Famous Pastrami" to Southern California residents since 1951. [3] [4] Its customers consume 13 to 15 tons of pastrami per week. [5]
As Pasadena Humane explained in their video, their Animal Control Officer originally helped the tortoise's family get him out of their home. At 28 years old and 200 lbs. we're sure that wasn't an ...
When Compass Group acquired Restaurant Associates in 1998, Acapulco became owned by Bruckmann, Rosser, Sherrill & Co., a private equity firm that had an ownership stake in Restaurant Associates. [4] Bruckmann, Rosser, Sherrill & Co. used Acapulco as the starting point of Real Mex Restaurants, acquiring such chains as El Torito and Chevys Fresh Mex.
A car struck a power pole at 2:30 a.m. Saturday on Foothill Boulevard at Sierra Madre, killing three of the six people inside and disconnecting power to over 500 homes and businesses.
Two Pasadena doctors are facing allegations from the California Medical Board that they negligently prescribed painkillers and other potentially dangerous narcotics to patients.
The Rose Bowl Aquatics Center opened in 1990 in the former site of the city's defunct Brookside Plunge. The project was funded with a $4.5-million city loan and $2 million in private donations, including a crucial final $430,000 from Pasadena neighbor, Eugene Scott, who was also Vice-Chairman of the Board of the Rose Bowl Aquatics Center and one of its founding directors.