Los Angeles Times

Happy Foot Sad Foot sign getting the boot

Silver Lake podiatry clinic must move out in September

- By Roger Vincent

There’s something about the revolving sign on Sunset Boulevard that pulls you in, this tacky talisman for Silver Lake that sticks in people’s minds.

It’s a before-and-after ad for Sunset Foot Clinic, with a cartoonish drawing of a mournful foot character clinging to crutches on one side and a limber, smiling foot on the other.

But this is no ordinary commercial signage.

Local legend says that if the turning panel shows you the “happy foot” as you approach, you will have a good day. But if your first glimpse is of “sad foot,” you might want to turn around and go back to bed.

The sign, which has been there since about 1985, even prompted a nickname for the neighborho­od around Sunset and Benton Way: “HaFo SaFo,” for Happy Foot Sad Foot.

Now, the display’s days are few. It will disappear when the clinic hotfoots it to a new location in September.

Some people are already mourning its loss because it reminds them of an earlier era when Silver

Lake was considered bohemian and attracted creative types who couldn’t afford to live in more prosperous parts of the city.

“The Happy Foot Sad Foot sign leaving is going to be sort of tragic because it’s such a connection to a kooky, weirder time in the neighborho­od,” said artist Billy Kheel, who has created felt ornaments and twosided pillows that mimic the sign.

“I keep the happy foot side toward me,” Kheel said, “just because it’s charged with this superstiti­ous power.”

The keeper of the totem for the last dozen years has been Thomas Lim, a podiatrist who grew up in the San Fernando Valley and studied at UCLA. After completing a residency in New York, he decided to hang out his shingle in Los Angeles and bought the practice on Sunset Boulevard, where he is the main physician.

“That sign was a happy accident,” Lim said. “I didn’t realize how iconic it was.”

Then patients started conversati­ons about it, including one who announced that he would be leaving directly for Las Vegas after his appointmen­t.

“I wasn’t sure if I was going or not,” the man told him, until he was emboldened by seeing the favorable side of the sign.

Other people walked in off the street to ask if they could buy T-shirts emblazoned with the goofy anthropomo­rphized feet. Lim doesn’t sell merchandis­e, but has noticed other entreprene­urs hawking HaFo SaFo shirts, lapel pins and other footy items online. He doesn’t mind.

“It’s like Sriracha,” he said, referring to the popular hot sauce that has never been trademarke­d by its creator, Vietnamese immigrant David Tran. “Let it grow on its own.”

Lim’s lease on the Sunset Boulevard spot wasn’t renewed, he said, so the practice will move about a mile and a half to the intersecti­on of Virgil Avenue and Beverly Boulevard. The city considers revolving signs distractio­ns for drivers and no longer allows them to be erected (the existing sign was grandfathe­red into regulation­s), so Lim can’t replicate the kitschy come-on in his new location.

He may miss out on attracting patients such as Carol Richards, who lives nearby and decided about a year ago, “I’m going to try the happy foot sad foot” for help with calluses, she said.

She likes Dr. Lim and also has affection for the revolving billboard that is so old that it lists a phone number without an area code.

“I love it because they don’t make signs like that anymore,” Richards said. “To me, it’s comforting.”

Former Silver Lake resident Angela Chvarak Jung calls the sign “a great symbol” of the community.

“It’s almost like artwork,” said Jung, who is herself an artist. “Like a cultural symbol that moved in the air.”

She and her boyfriend dressed in costume as happy foot and sad foot for Halloween a few years ago “because we just loved it.”

The panels of the beloved sign are too big to affix to his new office, Lim said, so he may donate them to a museum, if one will have them.

The revolving sign will soon advertise a new tenant that will take over the clinic space, said Dipak Patel, an owner of the property that is dominated by a Comfort Inn hotel.

“My son is opening a restaurant,” Patel said.

His son, Avish Naran, is a chef trained in Napa Valley who described his restaurant concept as “refined Indian bar food” in a video he posted online.

Patel said the menu’s items may include “pizza, ribs and pastas with an Indian twist.”

“I’m happy for my son, but kind of sad the tenant is leaving also,” Patel said.

The happy-sad motif will live on in the new restaurant’s advertisin­g.

The eatery has yet to be named, but its new advertisin­g panels in the revolving sign will somehow reflect the theme that the corner of Sunset and Benton is known for, Patel said.

“We’re trying to incorporat­e what was, for so many years, the happiness with the sadness.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? SUNSET FOOT Clinic in Silver Lake has a revolving sign with a cartoonish drawing of a mournful foot character clinging to crutches on one side; the reverse side features a limber, smiling foot.
Photograph­s by Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times SUNSET FOOT Clinic in Silver Lake has a revolving sign with a cartoonish drawing of a mournful foot character clinging to crutches on one side; the reverse side features a limber, smiling foot.
 ??  ?? CAROL RICHARDS is treated by Dr. Thomas Lim at Sunset Foot Clinic, which is moving because its lease wasn’t renewed.
CAROL RICHARDS is treated by Dr. Thomas Lim at Sunset Foot Clinic, which is moving because its lease wasn’t renewed.

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