The first thing you saw was the sign: an arc of three fish fashioned from red neon, blinking from left to right. Centered in ...
Centered in blue neon just below: “Reel Inn,” the name of the invitingly ... It is also among the most collectively felt. In a town famous for its sprawl and lack of cohesion, a place where ...
Los Angeles also has restaurants that are iconic symbols to which visitors flock. The Reel Inn, on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, was both. For 36 years, Teddy and Andy Leonard have owned and run ...
The Reel Inn, a longtime restaurant in Malibu, was just one of the businesses lost on Pacific Coast Highway following the Palisades Fire. The restaurant, built on decades of hard work and ...
In a town famous for its sprawl and lack of cohesion, a place where so much of life unfolds in private silos—in cars, residences, and disparate enclaves separated by extreme topography—the Reel Inn ...
“It’s like Armageddon,” Canyon Bakery owner Patrice Winter said. “That’s all I can say. What they’re showing on the news is really real; they’re not sensationalizing any of this.
Teddy and Andy Leonard watched helplessly from their nearby home as cameras posted on the deck of the Reel Inn Malibu showed blazing fires approaching the back of their famous fish shack.
The Reel Inn, an iconic restaurant in Malibu, has been destroyed by the Pacific Palisades brush fire, the restaurant confirmed. In a statement posted to Instagram stories, Reel Inn said ...