Los Angeles Times

Catwoman has a new foe: Rude fashionist­as

Store’s clientele has become the bane of Fairfax

- STEVE LOPEZ

On Fairfax Avenue, where young shoppers camp for days outside a skateboard apparel store and nearby merchants scream about the ruckus, Catwoman is on the case.

“We love all people,” Catwoman said Monday morning while sharpening her claws, “but they have to go.”

Julie Newmar, the Tony Awardwinni­ng actress whose many roles included a purring, slinky Catwoman on the “Batman” TV series, owns real estate on Fairfax. This is the storied street that for generation­s was the heart of L.A.’s Jewish community — lined with delis, bakeries, Jewish music stores and judaica gift shops — but in recent years has transforme­d into a hip hub of urban street wear and trendy eateries.

She and her litter of tenants have been up a tree about the crowds and the trash they leave behind.

“I have a tenant who had to close, another who hasn’t been able to pay the rent for three months,” said Newmar, 84, who showed me a spread of letters she’s fired off to city officials imploring them to do something. “It’s a cancer. I’m not against anyone, but you can’t destroy this wonderful neighborho­od called Fairfax.”

The store in question is Supreme, which has been around for years and has outlets in New York, London and Paris. As far as I can tell, the marketing strategy is to create hysterical demand by occasional­ly releasing limited supplies of new hoodies, jackets, shirts and other apparel for $100 and more, and crowds march in as if they’re under hypnosis.

Supreme drew crowds at a downtown L.A. pop-up bazaar last summer, collaborat­ing with Louis Vuitton to peddle clothing and bags with price tags into the thousands. The Times reported, in a near certain sign of the apocalypse, that bandannas were going for $370.

The next big “drop,” as Supreme calls its latest offerings, will be this Thursday on Fairfax, which means

young shoppers with fat wallets have already begun assembling as if summoned by a cult leader. For some, it’s not just about wearing the clothes, but grabbing all they can and reselling to the consumptiv­ely addicted at a ridiculous profit, similar to the way ticket scalpers operate.

Newmar reached out to me through her publicist after Wehoville.com ran a story under this sassy headline: “The Hip Punks in Line for the Dope Merch on Fairfax Are Driving the Neighbors Crazy.”

Newmar told me her father owned property at the intersecti­on of Fairfax and Rosewood Avenue as early as the 1940s, and she took over the business while still dancing and acting. When I rolled up Monday morning, young folk were milling about, it smelled like a bud farm was on fire, and two dozen people stood in line near Fairfax High School as Supreme security guards watched over them.

That’s right. It was Monday, and the store wouldn’t open until Thursday. But there they were, our future, prepared to live like homeless people for a shot at the latest designer T-shirts.

The Supreme gear worn by the kids on Fairfax looked unremarkab­le to me. But I’m someone who didn’t see much difference between Levis and Wrangler back in the day, so I may not be your best red carpet correspond­ent.

At a coffee shop called Open Space, manager Jonathan Klein said the headaches have become migraines in the last year or so, with fisticuffs, piles of trash, the commandeer­ing of sidewalks and parking spaces, as well as other mayhem.

“I had one kid who OD’d in my bathroom,” said Klein, one of Newmar’s tenants. He said he called 911 and doesn’t know if the kid survived.

“I’ve broken up fights,” said a merchant who stopped in for coffee.

But Klein said Newmar and others have been pushing back for months, and he saw signs on Monday that the complaints might finally have been heard.

“It’s a new security team,” he said, pointing to a battalion of uniformed guards outside his shop.

Klein said he’d been told Supreme would begin cracking down on customers, telling them anybody caught camping outside would not be allowed to enter the store when the doors open Thursday.

Word was spreading quickly. A 24-year-old named David told me he stood in line, then gave his name and phone number to Supreme representa­tives who said they’ll call him when it’s his turn to shop on Thursday. He said he liked the sound of the new system, which meant he didn’t have to sack out in the neighborho­od for three nights, but he was withholdin­g judgment until he gets his call.

David, by the way, told me he was studying business in college but dropped out because he’s already making a handsome living as a clothing flipper. He said he buys between $2,000 and $10,000 worth of Supreme merchandis­e at Thursday drops, keeps a couple of items and sells the rest. For how much? He bought the Supreme pants he was wearing for $128 and could have sold them for $400, he said. His $110 sweatshirt would go for $250 and his $52 hat for $100. You can buy and sell online, he said, or on the street, with no shortage of takers.

Ron Castro, manager of a Fairfax clothing store called Clsc, said he used to play the game in college. He’d buy three Supreme hats, keep one, sell the others and make a tidy profit.

The owner of Clsc, Asi Ifrah, marveled at the Supreme business model.

“These kids are basically the wholesaler­s,” he said of Supreme, which got a $500million infusion from Carlyle Group last year and was valued at $1 billion.

Carlyle is a private equity giant that has invested big in defense contractin­g and aerospace. It has been known to buy companies, pump up their value and sell them, so the young Supremes on Fairfax may think of themselves as hoodie culture rebels, but they’re more like capitalist soldiers, working for the man. No offense to Catwoman, but saving the world from evil plots may be a job more suited for Batman.

Jordi Hernandez and Teejay Williams got numbers 8 and 4, respective­ly, for the Thursday drop, then took a break in Williams’ Mercedes-Benz C240. Williams said he picked it up after getting into an accident in his BMW.

“I have clients who are artists and rappers,” said Hernandez, who told me he makes between $400 and $2,000 at every drop.

Williams said he and Hernandez flip other clothing lines too, so it’s steady work with annual profits of between $50,000 and $100,000, depending on how coveted the drop items are.

Hernandez and Williams seemed impressed that one of the actresses who tangled with Batman on the TV series was a Fairfax landlord, and they admitted things get out of hand at times. But they think the new system will help.

Supreme representa­tives have been talking to city and Fairfax officials and local merchants for several weeks, according to a store spokesman. He said a meeting of all the parties was held Monday while I was snooping around on Fairfax.

“We want to be good neighbors to everybody,” said the Supreme spokesman, who attributed some of the neighborho­od’s problems to homeless people rather than customers. But he admitted the number of Supreme followers has grown in recent months, so there’s a new rule on the street.

“No camping,” he said, “and no lining up before Thursday.”

Great, but what took so long?

L.A. City Councilman Paul Koretz said in an email that his staff has been on the case for months, “but there are legal challenges in holding a company responsibl­e for the actions of its customers.”

Koretz said Supreme has agreed to add security, limit the lines, clean up the streets and maybe help beautify a pocket park in the area.

So we’ll see how it goes. Constant change is part of the bargain in this crazy town, where the new collides with the old, neighborho­ods are transforme­d as some cheer and others cringe, Catwoman takes on skateboard­ers and nobody knows what next week might bring. L.A. is never dull and ever diverse, and for those of us who love living in a place with that kind of energy, it takes work for all of us to get along.

I wondered if Catwoman — whose felonious feline forays were often foiled by Batman — would consider Supreme’s promised cooperatio­n to be at least a partial victory for the forces of good. So I drove to her cottage in Brentwood to find out.

Newmar welcomed me into her parlor, where her computer was open to the Supreme website and copies of her letters and notes were spread across her desk.

I told her about the new security team and the camping ban, but rather than gloat, she was catlike in her aloof disregard.

“We all want to make money, but you’ve got to have some responsibi­lity,” said Newmar. “I say get rid of them. Just go to a warehouse downtown or to a vacant lot.”

I asked if she thought the new rules would help.

“You can’t put lipstick on a pig,” said Newmar, very much the cat watching the mouse’s every move, ready to pounce as needed.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SHOPPERS line up Monday outside Supreme on Fairfax Avenue in L.A. to be assigned numbers to enter the street-wear store Thursday for its merchandis­e “drop.” Previously, people waited outside for days.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SHOPPERS line up Monday outside Supreme on Fairfax Avenue in L.A. to be assigned numbers to enter the street-wear store Thursday for its merchandis­e “drop.” Previously, people waited outside for days.
 ??  ??
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SUPREME has drawn complaints about its customers’ behavior from Fairfax Avenue tenants occupying properties owned by actress Julie Newmar.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SUPREME has drawn complaints about its customers’ behavior from Fairfax Avenue tenants occupying properties owned by actress Julie Newmar.
 ?? Kevin Winter Getty Images ?? JULIE NEWMAR in 2014. Her roles have included Catwoman in the “Batman” TV series.
Kevin Winter Getty Images JULIE NEWMAR in 2014. Her roles have included Catwoman in the “Batman” TV series.

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