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What happened to the Burgie Beer UFO of Melrose Avenue?

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In the 1980s, my favorite part of Los Angeles was Melrose Avenue, between Fairfax and La Brea. The stores were like mini pop culture museums: Wacko sold dime-store curiosities and terrific art books, La Luz de Jesus gallery was one of the first lowbrow art galleries, The Last Wound Up sold wind-up toys, Wanna Buy A Watch had cool old wristwatches, Golden Apple Comics was in its prime, Maya had cool Asian jewelry, Flip and Aardvark were crowded with racks of vintage clothes.

On Saturday's and Sundays, Melrose was thronged with pedestrians, and it was great fun to meet and greet people. Melrose was a rare public social scene for Los Angeles.

One of my favorite stores was Off The Wall, which sold amazing commercial display items. The Burgie Beer UFO in front of the store was a welcoming sight, and I thought of the little guy inside the flying saucer as the mascot of Melrose.

Like all cool scenes, Melrose Avenue eventually started to suck. As crass stores selling junky clothes and chain outlets started moving in, the orginal stores like Wacko, Soap Plant, and La Luz de Jesus moved out. By the early 1990s, Melrose was nearly unrecognizable. I stopped going. There's never been a place in LA as good as Melrose Avenue.

Over the years, I occasionally wondered what had happened to the Burgie UFO. I figured it was sitting in the living room of some middle-aged LA celebrity. But I was wrong. I stumbled upon it last week in the town of Takayama, Japan (population 94,000).

I almost missed it. My family and I were walking back to our ryokan after getting caught in a torrential downpour while hiking in the hills. We were all soaking wet, and we were tired and hungry for dinner. I saw an illuminated Reddy Kilowatt mascot in a storefront window across the street and snapped a photo. Carla said the place looked interesting, but I told her it was probably just a light bulb store. She said we should at least peek in the window.

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Carla was right. It was a pop art store. It was dark inside. We peered through the glass and saw lots of movie robots, vinyl figurines, vintage toys, and framed artworks. It was kind of like a mini Melrose. We were leaving the following morning for Kyoto and I was sad that I wasn't going to be able to check it out.

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I took a couple of photos through the window.

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We were about to leave, but I tried the door and was surprised to discover it was unlocked. A young man popped out of another room and introduced himself as Tatsuhiko Enomoto ("Eno"), the manager of Tomenosuke Syoten. He explained that it was an art store / gallery started by a Japanese writer and collector named Shinji Nakako. He was very friendly and spoke English, so we had a nice talk about the gallery and he invited me to take photos.

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In the back, I saw a Burgie UFO. "That looks just like the one I used to see on Melrose in Los Angeles!" I said. Eno said, "The owner got it from a place called Off The Wall." I was stunned to see it 6,000 miles from Los Angeles, looking exactly like I remembered it 25 years ago when it twirled around on the sidewalk.

It's great to know that my mascot of the Golden Age of Melrose Avenue found a happy home in one of the most beautiful towns I've ever visited. My curiosity has been satisfied and my heart is lighter with the thought that a piece of Melrose is still alive.

Here's a video that shows Tomenosuke toys going for a ride around Takayama, followed by some photos I took.


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52 Comments Add a comment

etmthree #1 2:48 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Those plastic dinosaurs!

I think those were souvenir items from the 1964/5 World's Fair in NYC. I had one -- not a great toy, but the experience of buying it from a machine that manufactured it on demand AS YOU WATCHED! made it memorable.

It eventually got brittle and was gradually destroyed in combat with other, more cross-linked dinos.

Rudy Coby #2 2:58 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

AWESOME Article! I was wondering where that little UFO ended up!

Melrose Avenue at that time was the coolest place on Earth - it was never the same after the unofficial Mayor of Melrose Bill Liebowitz and the Golden Apple moved on.

Jack #3 3:02 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Awesome find! But you know what I continually find amazing? Even in 2010 non-U.S. cultures care more and know more about U.S. culture than we here in the U.S. do.

Don’t know if it’s bad or good, but at least someone cares and these artifacts that be preserved.

jungletek #4 3:02 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Some really cool stuff in there, that sort of thing is right up my alley.
I'd have definitely gone and checked it out, were I in the area.

clea #5 3:03 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

What a wonderful gallery - and story! It's great to see the Big Loo! Also, about those plastic dinos... they might very well be from one of those 60's molding machines. We had one in Detroit back then, i think at the Rotunda, and holding your own smelly and still warm dinosaur was unforgettable.

Antinous / Moderator #6 3:03 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I was terrified of my Garloo when I was a toddler.

Raum187 #7 3:03 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I love this store!!

Stayed in Takayama in 2008 and was shocked to discover such a place in a little town in the mountains.

Spent ages there. The young guy (most likely 'Eno') knew the back story behind each item - really interesting.

Bought a couple of Fafi figurines. Kind of weird to buy Fafi stuff in the mountains in Japan.

cinemajay #8 3:05 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Thanks for sharing Mark, so cool!

Joel Fletcher #9 3:17 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

How cool to see American sixties robots like Big Loo and Robot Commando in a Japanese store! As for Melrose Avenue, it was indeed great in the eighties. I have a few vintage photos of classic Melrose stores for viewing here:
http://www.joelfletcher.com/weird-los-angeles.html

Halloween Jack #10 3:17 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

That's a really excellent collection of stuff that they have for a shop in a relatively small city.

JSLindberg replied to comment from Jack #11 3:20 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I've read commentators on Japanese culture who say the same thing. My family and I have both made the same observation of other countries that we have visited including England (despite the well-preserved ruins all over the place) and Sweden. I don't think that any society places a high value on recent cultural artifacts. Some distance in time, space or culture is needed to appreciate what you had.

Anon #12 3:21 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Titmouse Animation studios in Hollywood has one of the Burgie UFOs on the front desk in their reception area.

Me, I just have a couple of Kamen Rider figures and a Cyberman head.

Anon #13 3:26 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I may be conflating two promotions, but Sinclair Oil Company (I believe) in the 1960's in the US had a mascot dinosaur.
http://www.sinclairoil.com/history/historys_p1.htm

I remember a traveling exhibit, maybe sponsored by Sinclair, maybe on truck trailers, pulled up in a shopping center parking lot in some Atlanta suburb.

It had large (well, they towered above me) model dinosaurs and an injection molding machine (or machines) that would create souvenir dinos on the spot. My younger brother and I had several identical to some shown on the glass shelf.

They came out of the machine all warm and colorful and we played with them for years, until they went the way of most kids toys.

Donald Petersen #14 3:27 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Now there's an earnest toy company motto from an innocent, bygone age: "It's a Wonderful Toy! It's Ideal!"

franko #15 3:30 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

i'm not familiar with LA or even this section of melrose avenue, but i believe that this same section is the one where larry's leather shop in tim barela's fictional "leonard & larry" comic strip was located, too. i'm certain the address was on melrose, and much of the comic strip took place in the 80s & early 90s. if this was a happening area at the time, i'm willing to bet it's the same.

Anon replied to comment from etmthree #16 3:38 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I was thinking the same thing. My grandfather worked for Sinclair Oil and they had a great dino exhibit.

Anon #17 3:40 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Great story and lovely photos!

fricative #18 3:48 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Yep, the dinos are World's Fair souvenirs from a Mold-A-Rama machine.

I'd give my right arm for that wallpaper behind them!

Anon #19 3:49 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

So happy to see everyone so excited about the plastic dinosaurs! The Milwaukee County Zoo still has a whole bunch of the machines scattered throughout the grounds. You can go to the gorilla section and get a gorilla, a bat one in the small mammal section, etc.

I had a whole shelf full while growing up.

free101girl #20 3:51 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Ah, those were the days. I lived a few blocks off Melrose in the mid-80s and it was exactly as you say. How cool, and somehow appropriate, that Burgie ended up in Japan.

cjp replied to comment from Anonymous #21 3:52 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

You have a Cyberman head? I'm coming over immediately to play. I'll bring my sonic wrench.

free101girl replied to comment from Joel Fletcher #22 3:53 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Wow, that photo of Soap Plant and Wacko really takes me back. Thanks for that!

cjp replied to comment from cjp #23 3:54 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

That's right. Wrench. Not screwdriver. They're very rare.

Roger Wilco #24 4:02 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Man, I spent a lot of time hangin' out on Melrose in those days. On one end there was a local hair salon where you could buy lose joints for 10 bucks and on the other was Pink's chili dogs. Everything in between was a hell of a show. Great find!

i_prefer_yeti #25 4:53 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Loads of love for Mssrs. Biskup, Baseman, and Ledbetter in that joint.

What a great place, gotta put it on my must-visit map. Thanks, Mark!

themark #26 5:35 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I visited Takayama and the Wajima penninsula about 4 years ago but missed that little gem. I guess you guys were hiking the temple path when you got soaked. We went in summer when it was agonizingly humid. Did you also visit Shirakawa-go? What an awesome sight from the surrounding hills.

bobhughes #27 5:54 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I want that neon reddy kilowatt so bad. So. Bad.

FreakCitySF #28 6:01 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I had just discovered them last week. A friend told me the Terminator is a Stan Winston original. Stan Winston loaned the Terminator for a sci fi exhibit a number of years back. The owner decided to keep the statue and tell Winston it was stolen.

I don't know if it was rumor or not but a similar statue sold for over 100K last year.

Anon replied to comment from Roger Wilco #29 6:34 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

10 bucks a joint?

Man, were you ripped off!

sla29970 #30 6:36 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Whoa, Big Loo! He's how I learned Morse code. But here he's missing his nipple darts.

dhalgren #31 6:43 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Melrose & the 80's was the place to roam on Saturday's. What a place lost to Time. I never left Melrose until I stuffed my face at Pink's.

Dude I want that red bike! Whatever it is called, it is sweet!

Thank you Mark. This store was an awesome find.

foobar #32 6:54 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

This is a wonderful story. Thank you for brightening my evening.

Andy Social #33 7:10 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I loved Melrose in the 80s, but I've been too disheartened to return ever since they replaced the Burger That Ate LA with a Starbucks. Starbucks on Melrose. *sigh*

On the other hand, my son is now a fan of Wacko, even if they don't have their old floor from their days in the alley. Love that the UFO is still on display somewhere.

Anon #34 7:55 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

FAN-FREAKIN-TASTIC!

phlogiston #35 8:51 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

oh, those dinosaurs and the memories they dredged up. I recognized them immediately and was taken back to the late 60s. The smell was unique when they came out of the machines. must search eBay...

alfredalexander #36 8:54 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

was slightly disappointed that you didn't mention Bleeker Bob's record store, but great article!

Talia replied to comment from Jack #37 9:06 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

IMHO, a lot of what's considered "U.S. culture" is U.S. REGIONALIZED culture. IE, its only of note to a certain segment of the population.

The country's so big, so diverse, and so regionally different, we spawn all sorts of interesting things. :) This means some cultural aspects will go largely unrecognized. But that's part of the beauty of who we are as a country. Gotta love it, all the diversity.

And its fascinating to me when these regional aspects of culture wind up with international recognition. I guess that's just another byproduct of people traveling, interacting, sharing their experiences with one another.

bwcbwc replied to comment from Anonymous #38 9:25 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

I think the Sinclair company took their show on the road after the NY World's Fair. I'm pretty sure they were the sponsors of the exhibit there.

Nadreck #39 11:23 PM Wednesday, Jul 21, 2010 Reply

Reminds me of the time I got dumped into Azio-Wakamatsu, Japan and the local Americana store had a couple of University of Waterloo Computer Science leather jackets that were a couple of years old and being sold for five times what they cost from the University Tuck Shop.

AdamButcher #40 4:10 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

Why is there little-to-no record of the Burgie Beer Man on the internet?

Google and Google Image search bring up a few tiny jpegs, Wiki makes no mention...I'm wondering where he came from and where did he go?

The reason I'm so curious is that Melrose and the Burgie Man remind me so much of the Mr Jones curiosity in Daniel Clowes' "Like A Velvet Glove Cast In Iron". It's eerie.

Can anyone shed any light on this?

Sputnik #41 5:18 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

There indeed WAS a travelling Sinclair exhibit going around in the mid sixties. My brother and I saw it when it was at the King of Prussia Mall ("The LARGEST MALL IN THE WORLD!", at least in 1966) and each got a new, still warm, plastic injection molded Sinclair dinosaur. Later, in the mid ninties, I was pleased to see those injection molded dinosaur machines in the basement of the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago, where I immediately bought two. And they immediately broke and crumbled into dust, just like the ones we got in the sixties!
Ah, injection molded memories.

Anon replied to comment from Anonymous #42 5:58 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

Yep, that was Sinclair Dinoland, and it visited Belmont Hills Shopping Center in Smyrna, just outside of Atlanta. I still have my dinosaurs too.

drkptt #43 7:42 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

I remember the Mold-A-Rama machines at the service plazas on the Florida Turnpike as a kid in the '70s. Here's a great story about their history and the last Mold-A-Rama service/sales man keeping his grandfather's business alive in Florida.
http://www.tampabay.com/features/humaninterest/article1015315.ece

catsford replied to comment from etmthree #44 8:20 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

I also got these dinosaurs from the 64-65 World's Fair. What a great memory...I was seven, just before my dad left for Vietnam. I think you could get them at some Sinclair stations too because I remember seeing them made more than once (in those hot injection machines) but then again, maybe my brother and I just liked them so much we had them made more than once while we were at the fair. I rode the "Small World" ride about a hundred times I think.

Ryan #45 9:03 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

You can still buy those dinosaurs out of a machine at the Chicago Museum of Natural History. I have a T-Rex on my desk from there.

Anon replied to comment from Anonymous #46 9:40 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

The Titmouse Burgie came from off the wall.

Roger Wilco replied to comment from Anonymous #47 10:20 AM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

haha...i know. they were expensive but they were fat and good and frequent fliers got a discount on haircuts :)

Jack replied to comment from Ryan #48 11:44 PM Thursday, Jul 22, 2010 Reply

I think you mean the Museum of Science and Industry. They still have those Mold-A-Rama machines and they are amazing!

faithmanon #49 7:33 AM Friday, Jul 23, 2010 Reply

I used to get my Manic Panic from someplace down there (can't remember where, I was way too high - Wacko?) but I shopped at Retail Slut and hung out and bought comics at La Luz. Those were the days my friend.

Anon #50 7:56 AM Friday, Jul 23, 2010 Reply

I love stores like that but I wonder how they survive. I never see anyone buying those collector kitsch items. What and where would you put them anyway?

Andy Social replied to comment from alfredalexander #51 5:57 PM Friday, Jul 23, 2010 Reply

Oh, wow. My friends and I would spend so much time at Bleeker Bob's twenty-five years ago. Ah, vinyl...

Anon #52 2:43 PM Friday, Aug 6, 2010 Reply

Hi how much is the burgie beer flying saucer....??

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