Los Angeles Times

Pink’s closes for two months

- By Lila Seidman

A long line snaked from Pink’s Hot Dogs on Sunday evening as customers tried to score one last bite from the storied Hollywood eatery before it closed its doors for two months.

The 81- year- old hot dog stand at La Brea and Melrose avenues announced Thursday over social media that on Monday it would shut down voluntaril­y through at least March amid a coronaviru­s spike that has sent the number of infections in the county into record territory and seriously strained hospitals.

Richard Pink, co- owner of the restaurant, said it was a safety decision, not a financial one.

“I just couldn’t live with myself and my guilt, if you will, if ... a customer or an employee got sick and they couldn’t get into the hospital,” Pink said by phone Monday. “I just felt that we’re in a crisis situation.”

One of the eatery’s employees tested positive for the virus about three weeks ago after contractin­g the infection from a relative who works as a nurse, Pink said, adding that his worry about the health and safety of his other employees prompted the decision to temporaril­y close.

Pink said he would pay the approximat­ely 25 employees who were losing work until their unemployme­nt insurance kicked in.

There are several other, licensed Pink’s restaurant­s — including one in Universal CityWalk and another in Del Amo Fashion Center in Torrance — that Pink says he does not control beyond their food specificat­ions.

Over the decades, the original stand — which started as a cart on the same corner in 1939 — has seen its share of tumult, including a world war. But until the pandemic, no crisis has forced it to close, Pink said.

The stand, where customers pull up in everything from “limos to pickups,” closed in March when the pandemic f irst hit L. A. County, but it reopened in August. During that time, the restaurant implemente­d safety protocols and reopened with patio dining — until that was again prohibited beginning the day before Thanksgivi­ng.

Some restaurant owners have bristled at the restrictio­ns and the f inancial toll they are taking on the industry. Scores of restaurant­s across the state have had to close permanentl­y, unable to stay af loat as revenue plummeted.

Pink said he understood the opposition to the closures, acknowledg­ing the financial devastatio­n others have seen.

“This isn’t me trying to be a leader or trying to inf luence them on what to do,” he said. “It’s what I had to do to protect my staff and and my customers. It isn’t to inspire others. It isn’t to ridicule and criticize others.”

Speaking to people in line Sunday, Pink said, he found most customers and employees supported the reasoning behind the decision.

One man sitting outside the door at 8 a. m. — an hour and a half before opening — said he was there to procure hot dogs to freeze until his birthday in February, Pink said.

“That was amazing — to see this guy sitting there like it was the Rose Parade,” Pink said.

 ?? Frederic J. Brown AFP/ Getty I mages ?? A MESSAGE in April from L. A.’ s most famous hot dog stand urges the city to “Please Stay Safe and Healthy.” The 81- year- old business is shutting down voluntaril­y through at least March because of the pandemic.
Frederic J. Brown AFP/ Getty I mages A MESSAGE in April from L. A.’ s most famous hot dog stand urges the city to “Please Stay Safe and Healthy.” The 81- year- old business is shutting down voluntaril­y through at least March because of the pandemic.

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