The class has produced directors of opera and ballet, plus a TV news meteorologist. Also, two Inland Empire spots for frozen custard are listed, the Dodger fan base around St. Louis is characterized as “annoyingly large,” a new angle to Rancho Cucamonga’s cityhood is offered, local references in the new movie “The Guilty” are cited, and a rap supergroup is headed to Ontario. All that is in my Wednesday column.
Category Archives: Around Rancho Cucamonga
Column: Millionaire spends 3 nights in RC hoosegow
Friday’s column begins with an unexpected local angle to a national story and continues with a Pomona joke from a 1950s “Burns and Allen Show” episode, more about Inland Empire nonfiction books and a short item with a 909 slant from Alaska.
Column: Comic’s fabled train to Cucamonga delighted listeners
I revisit the topic of Cucamonga mentions in old cartoons by pivoting to Jack Benny, who probably did it first. A Riverside reader shares her interactions with the artist Magu. And I highlight what the mayor of LA once did for the IE. All that is in Wednesday’s column, as I begin a post-vacation catch-up.
Column: When Bugs Bunny made cracks about Cucamonga
Bugs Bunny and friends made jokes now and then about Cucamonga — sparingly, but memorably. I once compiled a list of six references. But now two more have come to my attention, so I go through the whole thing again, for completeness’ sake. That’s the subject of my Wednesday column.
And, as noted at the end, I’m on vacation, returning to your newspaper/news site on July 4.
Column: Filippi Winery may be sold, remade into destination
With the head of Filippi Winery wanting to retire, the future of the winery and the property is in question. The city of Rancho Cucamonga, which owns the land, is seeking developers to operate the winery and add complementary uses, including a hotel, restaurants and more. That’s the subject of Sunday’s slightly newsy column.
Column: This giant orange story may have appeal
On a lark, I write about a woman in Rancho Cucamonga whose orange tree has some mighty large oranges. (It doesn’t have any larks.) Also, more reader jokes about Rancho Cucamonga, while we’re on the subject, and a short farewell to a bookstore owner in Pomona, all in Friday’s column.
Column: In any language, ‘Rancho Cucamonga’ is funny
Gathering together some odds and ends, I share reader responses to recent columns on Rancho Cucamonga’s name, drive-in theaters, the Harada House and more, all in Wednesday’s column.
Column: Shedding more light on Rancho Cucamonga’s originsÂ
Following up on my recent column on Rancho Cucamonga’s first mayor, I return to the topic of how the city with the funny name got its funny name. That is Wednesday’s Christmas Eve Eve column.
Column: First mayor of RC departs city he helped found
It’s rare that you get to talk to the first mayor of a city, at least without the aid of a spirit medium, but I was able to sit down recently with Jim Frost, who led Rancho Cucamonga from 1977-1980. He talks about his family’s roots in Etiwanda and the incorporation of Rancho Cucamonga in my Dec. 9 column.
Column: Nothing shaking for Quakes in canceled season
They’re not yelling “Play ball!” at LoanMart Field in Rancho Cucamonga. Minor League Baseball was canceled nationwide on June 30. I visit the home of the Quakes to hear about it, and then write about the first summer without baseball in the city in nearly three decades, for Wednesday’s column.