View allAll Photos Tagged CarlsJr
Former Smith's Food King Supermarket. This was Smith's second attempt at Southern California. They built several SuperStores in the Southern California Region, however they were quickly closed down and divested to the different major chains, etc. This store became a Lucky Sav-on Combination Supermarket, then converted to an Albertsons Sav-on Supermarket in or around 1999, when Albertsons took over the Lucky Supermarket chain. This Albertsons still retains the original Lucky Decor of which walls and teale blue, and orange lettering. Also in this shopping center is a Wal Mart Department Store with a McDonalds Restaurant, and other misc. shops, plus Carl's Jr. restaurant. This Albertsons is located at 14601 Lakewood Blvd. in Paramount, Southern California. California, one of XX photos of this location. Photo of Carl's Jr. Restaurant.
We stopped at this fast food restaurant to grab a quick lunch when we saw this quarter rainbow appeared in the sky. Of course, I had my phone with me.
It's amazing how beautiful pollution can be in the right kind of light... Parking lot of Carl's Jr. in Orem, Utah.
Coalinga, CA.
Hasselblad 500c 645. Fujifilm Pro400H.
Negative Lab Pro v2.3.0 | Color Model: Frontier | Pre-Sat: 3 | Tone Profile: Linear | LUT: Frontier
This man has the body of a Greek God who descended from Mount Olympus to join us, poor average mortals.
Francesco Cura aka Francis J Cura
Jose Macias speaks to demonstrators gathered for a Fight for $15 protest outside of McDonald's restaurant at Harrah's hotel-casino in Las Vegas, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2016. Demonstrators in more than 300 cities nationwide gathered at fast-food restaurants to demand minimum wage be raised to $15/hour. Photo by Jason Ogulnik.
"Document some evidence of human ingenuity that would otherwise go unnoticed. Do it without including any humans in the picture" - Michael Wolf
This is the fourth Instruction for the Street Photography Now Project, written to inspire fresh ways of looking at and documenting the world we all live in. Photographs you contribute should be new work made in response to the Instruction.
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Photo by Werner Weiss, from the Werner Weiss Collection, Acc#2013.6.
i think this sums up the paradox of two main messages in contemporary american culture: be impossibly skinny; eat superfatty hamburgers.
(no this is not about using sex to sell or the evils of advertising or brainwashing or the "immorality" of paris hilton's outfit or censorship. it's an observation of the unintended ironic jewel that was created when carl's jr. decided to hire the superskinny paris hilton to sell their insanely fatty burgers.
unfortunately, this irony seems to be lost on a few more people than just paris herself. i guess people are just used to hearing the same argument...)
The Million Dollar Theater at 307 S. Broadway in downtown Los Angeles is one of the first movie palaces built in the United States. It opened in February 1918. It is the northernmost of the collection of historical movie palaces in the Broadway Theater District and stands directly across from the landmark Bradbury Building.
The Million Dollar was the first movie house built by entrepreneur Sid Grauman. Grauman was later responsible for Grauman's Egyptian Theatre and Grauman's Chinese Theater, both on Hollywood Boulevard, and was partly responsible for the entertainment district shifting from downtown Los Angeles to Hollywood in the mid-1920s. Sculptor Joseph Mora did the elaborate and surprising exterior ornament, including bursts of lavish Churrigueresque decoration, multiple statues, longhorn skulls and other odd features. The auditorium architect was William L. Woollett, and the designer of the twelve-story tower was Los Angeles architect Albert C. Martin, Sr.. The office building long housed the original headquarters of the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. (source: Wikipedia)
NOTE: For those who would like to view this and my other photos LARGE, please click "slideshow" at the upper right hand corner of my photostream. Thanks
This could be better viewed LARGE, but no promises here :)