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01.08.2025
34 Minuten
Thirty years ago high schoolers dressed down, and then came the
movie Clueless. In her yellow plaid kilt and many other colorful
and stylish outfits, Cher Horowitz, the good-natured if
meddlesome high-schooler played by Alicia Silverstone, made
audiences laugh with her, love her, and envy the looks created by
costume designer Mona May.
“Everybody dressed grunge in 1994 when we were preparing the
movie, and the movie set a new rule of dressing. You know, I
created a whole other fashion landscape,” May tells Lyn Winter,
host of Rodeo Drive –The Podcast, in a special episode to
coincide with the 30-year anniversary of the movie and the launch
of the third annual week-long Rodeo Drive Celebrates Fashion
program spotlighting the unmatched craftsmanship and innovation
in fashion on the legendary “street of dreams”.
May is joined by Beverly Hills Mayor Sharona R. Nazarian PsyD,
who shares her fond memories of the film, her personal love of
fashion, as well as pride in the leading role played by Beverly
Hills in Clueless, which was shot in multiple locations including
the Electric Fountain, the Witch's House and, of course, the
iconic street of high fashion - Rodeo Drive. “I think what makes
Rodeo Drive so special is that people still want to be able to
come and walk here as Cher did in the movie, that it's still
relevant. The stores are still spectacular. I mean, where else
can you find Frank Gehry and Louis Vuitton coming together to
make these beautiful buildings come to life? It's just so
exciting,” says Mayor Nazarian.
May also shares her journey to becoming a costume designer and
getting her big break with Clueless, followed by work on movies
including Romy and Michelle, Never Been Kissed, Wedding Singer,
Enchanted, House Bunny, and Stuart Little.
May was born in India and then moved with her family to Europe
and then New York. She studied fashion before moving into costume
design, and met Clueless writer/director Amy Heckerling while
collaborating on a pilot about two party girls in New York
City.
“The pilot didn't get picked up, but we formed this incredibly
creative relationship. Amy is an incredible writer, an incredible
artist. She loves fashion, so we were like two birds together. So
when she wrote Clueless, she called me and said, ‘I really want
you to do this film. I need a very different point of view,
something that's going to last a long time’.”
May created a timeless look for the teens in the movie that took
cues from L.A.’s sunny spirit and its greenery and flowers, from
fashion icons, and even from the period of the book that inspired
the movie, Emma, by Jane Austen. Think, empire waists and cap
sleeves. Her goal was to make the young actresses feel
“quintessentially feminine” while empowered. Then there was
Cher’s unforgettable plaid skirt. On eyeballing “Jean Paul
Gaultier yellow,” recalls May, “We had the vision. And it was
perfect, because she became the queen bee, yellow sunshine, and
completely the queen of the school.”
Now a new generation is getting to enjoy the film once again.
As she welcomes Clueless fans both young and old, Mayor Nazarian
says of the film, “It just makes you feel really good. It uplifts
you, and we need that now, I think. Everybody needs
it.”
This special edition of Rodeo Drive – The Podcast is presented by
the Rodeo Drive Committee with the support of Beverly Wilshire, A
Four Seasons Hotel.
Executive Producer and Host: Lyn Winter
On behalf of the Rodeo Drive Committee: Kathy Gohari
Scriptwriter and Editorial Advisor: Frances Anderton
Editor and Videographer: Hans Fjellestad
Theme music by Brian Banks
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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21.04.2025
33 Minuten
Jennifer Smith was halfway through high school when she visited
California with her parents and decided to stay. A decade later,
she conceived and launched C Magazine, a must-read publication
that highlights the people and places that make California the
Golden State. Then came the 2025 wildfires, destroying her Malibu
home and those of many friends in her C community. Did that dim
the lights on the California Dream? Not for Smith.
“After a couple of tears, I was ready to rebuild,” she tells Lyn
Winter, host of Rodeo Drive The Podcast, adding, “when you wake
up every morning with that ocean outside as your backyard, and
you hear the waves crashing, and at night you see the glistening
moon over the waves and the sea, it's just so magical that you'll
just do anything to keep having it.”
Now Smith celebrates 20 years of C Magazine with the publication
of a book of stories drawn from past articles: California: Dream
State: Stylish Living from Canyon to Coast (Rizzoli, Fall 2025).
Winter spoke with Smith about the deep allure and mythology of
the West Coast, the evolution of fashion, art and culture over
the last two decades, and about making a successful print
magazine in the digital age. For Smith, it started with landing
her first cover, featuring model Carolyn Murphy, thanks to a
chance meeting over at a sushi counter in Malibu.
“We just started talking, and I said, ‘I'm launching a magazine
about California. Would you ever consider being on the cover?’
And she said, ‘of course I would.’ And then we had Kirsty Hume as
our second cover, because she knew Carolyn did it. And then all
of a sudden, I got Cindy Crawford, and then I got Claire Danes,
and then it just, from there we kept going and going.”
Smith explains that the key to success in publishing today is
being more than a magazine. The C-team curates events together
with advertising partners, many on Rodeo Drive, like the
memorable dinner for 25 at Harry Winston, at which guests on the
street of dreams were each presented with a silver domed dessert,
recalls Smith.
“And inside the silver dome was actually a piece of jewelry for
each of the guests. So everyone was just expecting to see some
piece of cake, and there was some million dollar bauble, and they
all got to wear it. So they were dripping in jewels and eating
their dessert, and we had the best time.”
As much as she loves the city, Smith feels the call to the wild.
The book contains sumptuous photos of lives lived well in the
canyons, the coast, mountains and desert. The only challenge was
picking from more than 200 issues of the magazine. She and her
team looked for timeless stories “that stood out to us and that
we would want to celebrate and see again and again.”
Stories that made the cut include a feature on Kelly Lynch and
Mitch Glaser in their weekend home “that was just so cool with
this mountain, rocky, jagged, beautiful;” and the hat maker Nick
Fouquet, in his “amazing house in Topanga that is very cool and
architectural.”
The current issue of C Magazine, compiled just after the recent
fires, was designed as a love letter to California. ”I'm forever,
endlessly in love with it,” she concludes.
Season 5 of Rodeo Drive – The Podcast is presented by the Rodeo
Drive Committee with the support of The Hayman Family, Two Rodeo
Drive, Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, and the Beverly
Hills Conference & Visitors Bureau.
Season 5 Credits:
Executive Producer and Host: Lyn Winter
On behalf of the Rodeo Drive Committee: Kay Monica Rose
Scriptwriter and Editorial Advisor: Frances Anderton
Editor and Videographer: Hans Fjellestad
Theme music by Brian Banks
Production Assistant: Isabelle Alfonso
@rodeodrive
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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03.12.2024
39 Minuten
Rodeo Drive has gone wild. Visitors to the luxury street have
fallen in love with eight colorful, life-size sculptures of
animals – Wild Kong, Standing Bear, Panda and Crocodile –
designed by the French artist Richard Orlinski, and part of this
summer's “Rodeo Drive Celebrates Fashion”.
But sculptures are only part of Orlinski’s multifaceted output.
He was the artist of record at the 2024 Olympic Games in Paris,
he mixes up art with music and stand up comedy, and he has
partnerships with international brands including Lancome, Hublot,
Puma, and Disney. Now he has written a book – Pourquoi J'ai Cassé
les Codes, or “Why I Broke The Codes” – about his life of going
against the grain.
He stopped off recently in Beverly Hills, and talked with Lyn
Winter, host of Rodeo Drive - The Podcast, about his
unconventional approach to art and life, starting with why he
chose to celebrate wild animals in his sculpture.
Animals, he says, have much to teach humans, as they “obey a
virtuous circle,” and kill only for food, while humans kill for
nothing. He spoke about his personal experience with a violent
father, which also laid the ground for his future self: “I
realized very early that I have nobody to trust, so I was very
alone. And when you like that, you're angry, and you want to
succeed.”
He says that his fighting spirit helped him deal with initial
rejection from the Parisian art world, and develop his mass
appeal with a sense of freedom to do his own thing. “I'm not like
a niche artist,” he says. “I'm popular, but popular in a good
way. I create an emotion, even a bad emotion, but it is emotion.”
Orlinski explains his admiration for Andy Warhol, why he opened
his own chain of Orlinski galleries, and how he treats art more
like fashion - with seasons, and a branded experience that is
meant to be fun for people of all ages. The future of art
display, he says, is big spaces, where visitors can eat, spend
time, and enjoy a multisensory experience. “The competition is
always the same. So you have to create, invent something new, and
I think the artist and the galleries and the people in this
industry need to create something like that.”
He also talks about his book, Pourquoi J'ai Cassé les Codes,
which has been a hit with the French public. It’s a self-help
guide of sorts, delivering life lessons from his own experiences.
“Many people are very thankful about this book, because it helps
them to change, to listen to the little voice inside, to follow
their dreams.”
While seven of Orlinski’s wild creatures will leave Rodeo Drive,
one work will remain permanently on view. Which one might that
be, asked Winter.
“I think it's the Kong with a big heart, and written on the heart
is ‘Rodeo Drive’, responds Orlinski. “It fits with the place, and
it was made for it. This is the only piece that was really made
for it.”
Season 5 of Rodeo Drive – The Podcast is presented by the Rodeo
Drive Committee with the support of The Hayman Family, Two Rodeo
Drive, Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, and the Beverly
Hills Conference & Visitors Bureau.
Season 5 Credits:
Executive Producer and Host: Lyn Winter
On behalf of the Rodeo Drive Committee: Kay Monica Rose
Scriptwriter and Editorial Advisor: Frances Anderton
Editor and Videographer: Hans Fjellestad
Theme music by Brian Banks
Production Assistant: Isabelle Alfonso
Listen, subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Visit the website: https://rodeodrive-bh.com/podcast/
Join us on Instagram @rodeodrive
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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15.10.2024
47 Minuten
For over 100 years Women’s Wear Daily has been the bible for the
fashion industry, and its archives include numerous hidden
contributions of Black designers and models. Now that history has
been gathered in a stunning new book, BLACK IN FASHION, by Tonya
Blazio-Licorish and Tara Donaldson, showcasing the indelible
influence of Black culture on a global scale.
On Episode 5 of Rodeo Drive-The Podcast, host Lyn Winter spoke
with the authors about the book and the revelations they found in
the WWD archives.
“Fashion has a flawed public history because it hasn't included
all the voices,” says Blazio-Licorish, also a visual culture
historian and editor with PMC Media Archives. “We were always
there, and not just there in marginal roles, but in important
roles, in roles that were shaping fashion,” adds Donaldson, most
recently WWD's executive editor and Head of Diversity, Equity and
Inclusion at Fairchild Media.
Dating back as early as the Harlem Renaissance, the Black
community was making its mark on clothing and style, from Black
dolls for young Black children, early fashion shows, business
associations, and fashionable scenes like at The Cotton
Club.
The authors single out early “influencers” such as Josephine
Baker, who even had a hosiery color named in her honor, the
dancer Katherine Dunham, who was all the rage in 1940s France,
and then the Black models, including Pat Cleveland and Bethann
Hardison, who shook up global fashion at the famed 1973 Battle of
Versailles.
The late André Leon Talley recalled this momentous event in
conversation with the authors before his passing. “You could
almost just reach out and touch the energy they gave in the air.
It was like quiet thunder, and because everyone saw that and felt
that at the battle, French designers – Givenchy, Yves Saint
Laurent – they started wanting black models.”
Black fashion has been intertwined with politics – and BLACK IN
FASHION explores how clothing reflected the moment:
“During civil rights, that time was really about respectability
politics,” explains Donaldson. “It was coming in your Sunday
best, to assert dignity. It was a kind of a polite request for
human rights. By the time you get to the 70s, the mood changes,
the look changes…then the Black Panther movement, it's more
powerful, it's more assertive…You have the leather jackets, you
have the turtlenecks, you have the berets. And then we see that
evolve even into the 2020s. And there's the branded T-shirts,
Black Lives Matter.”
Finally, the story is still unfolding. Black designers are still
not getting the high level industry jobs they deserve, argue
Blazio-Licorish and Donaldson, and are even ambivalent about
being labeled as Black.
So Blazio-Licorish says they finished on a question: “We
purposefully left the conversation open to, who's next, who's
now, and what do they have to say about where fashion is going to
go?”
Season 5 of Rodeo Drive – The Podcast is presented by the Rodeo
Drive Committee with the support of The Hayman Family, Two Rodeo
Drive, Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, and the Beverly
Hills Conference & Visitors Bureau.
Season 5 Credits:
Executive Producer and Host: Lyn Winter
On behalf of the Rodeo Drive Committee: Kay Monica Rose
Scriptwriter and Editorial Advisor: Frances Anderton
Editor and Videographer: Hans Fjellestad
Theme music by Brian Banks
Production Assistant: Isabelle Alfonso.
Listen, subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Join us on Instagram @rodeodrive
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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31.07.2024
47 Minuten
Watchmaking may date back two centuries but in the hands of
Maximilian Büsser, it has been revived as a contemporary art
form. Büsser is the founder of MB&F, or Max Büsser and
Friends, which he describes as a “horological concept
laboratory.”
Now MB&F has opened a gallery on Two Rodeo Drive, filled with
his collective’s kinetic art and mechanical art devices, like
World Sky by Breakfast Studio with whirring discs that spin
between functions: camera, mirror, and weather report; and the
MB&F’s Architect HM11, inspired by an organic Charles
Haertling house in Colorado, and comprising multiple “rooms.”
“We deconstruct traditional, beautiful, high end watchmaking and
reconstruct it into sculpture, which gives time,” Büsser tells
Lyn Winter, on the latest episode of Rodeo Drive - The
Podcast.
Büsser shares his journey from being a directionless teen in
Switzerland to reaching the top of the watch business at
Jaeger-LeCoultre and Harry Winston, and then realizing he needed
to “find his true north.”
“I started imagining this fairy tale, I was going to have my own
little company, where I would create only what I believed in. I
didn't want any investors. I didn't want anybody telling me about
growth and profits and all that stuff. It was all about, we're
going to create some incredible watchmaking, even though we know
there are no clients out there for it.”
Now MB&F has built a strong clientele willing to pay top
dollar for the company’s unusual timepieces. But it was not
always easy. Büsser reflects on the financial ups and downs, life
lessons learned along the way, and the things he wished he had
told his father. Finally, he revels in the joy of crafting
mechanical instruments with a group of “friends” who share his
obsession with “balance wheels,” “perpetual calendars” and other
analog components of horology.
Winter closes by asking if there is a future for such an old
world craft, and Büsser talks about the appeal of his company’s
products to young people.
“MB&F is all about, ‘Live your dreams’. Do whatever you
believe in. It is possible. Look at us. It seemed totally
impossible, but we managed. And so it resonates strongly with a
younger client base, and I love it.”
Season 5 of Rodeo Drive – The Podcast is presented by the Rodeo
Drive Committee with the support of The Hayman Family, Two Rodeo
Drive, Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, and the Beverly
Hills Conference & Visitors Bureau.
Season 5 Credits:
Executive Producer and Host: Lyn Winter
On behalf of the Rodeo Drive Committee: Kay Monica Rose
Scriptwriter and Editorial Advisor: Frances Anderton
Editor and Videographer: Hans Fjellestad
Theme music by Brian Banks
Production Assistant: Isabelle Alfonso.
Listen, subscribe, rate and review on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or
wherever you get your podcasts.
Visit the website: https://rodeodrive-bh.com/podcast/
Watch moments from the series on YouTube
Join us on Instagram @rodeodrive
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Über diesen Podcast
Rodeo Drive, now world-renowned, began as little more than a
bridle path. Pioneering designers, hoteliers and entrepreneurs
transformed it into a rival to New York’s Fifth Avenue — with
sun, palm trees and Hollywood sizzle. Rodeo Drive-The
Podcast brings a taste of this famed three-block stretch
in Beverly Hills to listeners around the world.
Welcome to Season 5 of Rodeo Drive - The Podcast! Tune in for
more fascinating conversations with leading international figures
in fashion, design and architecture, hospitality, media and
entertainment. Hear Cameron Silver on the revival of the caftan,
Sophie and Didier Guillon of La Maison Valmont on bringing
ultra-luxe skin care to the capital of beauty culture, Maximilian
Büsser on his “radical” watchmaking adventure with his
horological friends, and much more. Guests will share personal
stories and insights with host Lyn Winter, who brings you behind
the scenes on the world’s best-known three blocks in retail.
Listen, subscribe, rate and review on Apple Apple Podcasts,
Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
Season 5 follows four seasons of conversations with fashion,
design, art, architecture and entertainment luminaries,
retailers, collectors, chroniclers, makers and creators,
including Mattia Agazzi, Nicolas Bijan, Joan Juliet Buck,
Ruth E. Carter, Nicole Chapoteau, Michael Chow, Anne-Lise
Cremona, Carolina Cucinelli, Jeffrey Deitch, Simon Doonan, José
Eber, Pari Ehsan, Sara Gay Forden, David Foster, Steven Gaines,
Robert Hayman, Stephen Jones OBE, Iris Ko, Jay Leno, Humberto
Leon, Ming Liu, Faye McLeod, Amanda Mille, Booth Moore, Wolfgang
Puck, Stefano Ricci, Dame Zandra Rhodes, Royal Kennedy Rodgers,
Antwaun Sargent, Dirk Schönberger, Tamtam, Kathy Vance, Rayni
Williams, Sergio Zambon, and Alyssa Payne and Sebastian the
Standard Poodle.
Season 5 of Rodeo Drive – The Podcast is presented by the Rodeo
Drive Committee with the support of The Hayman Family, Two Rodeo
Drive, Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel, and the Beverly
Hills Conference & Visitors Bureau.
Watch moments from the series here and on YouTube. Check back in
regularly for what’s next in the series.
Contact
Lyn Winter, Inc., (213) 446-0788, rodeodrive@lynwinter.com.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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