USA TODAY US Edition

Screen time for Paula Patton

Unlike her character, ‘Disconnect’ star knows how to do just that

- Donna Freydkin @freydkin USA TODAY

NEW YORK The challenge, by no means a weak one, is finding authentic, hearty Mexican food in gourmand-challenged Midtown, an area that is populated with sterile corporate dining havens.

Paula Patton, who plays a tech devotee in her new drama, Disconnect, surveys the handhelds lined up in front of her in a stack that includes the new AT&T Facebook phone and numerous Windows devices, then picks up the new BlackBerry Z10. She’s a hungry actress on a mission.

“My favorite app is Yelp. I love to eat. I eat a lot. My husband and I do. On the app, it tells you what’s open and what’s closest to you. And I think the ratings are pretty accurate,” Patton says as she scrolls through the offerings the app turns up.

The top contender is Toloache, which has steady reviews and is mere blocks away. And it’s open.

“No offense, but California has New York beat on the Mexican food, so this way, we can find out where it is here,” she says. “After this, I’m having some lunch.”

The outgoing Patton is different from her character in Disconnect, which opens Friday. She plays one- half of an emotionall­y estranged couple whose dirty laundry is aired online after they become the victims of identity theft. “It’s a dramatic thriller about the new digital age,” says Patton, 37. “I love the character of Cindy. I always want to find someone new and fresh, because playing myself holds no interest for me.”

Plus, it didn’t exactly hurt that buff Alexander Skarsgård would be her better half, something that didn’t bother Patton’s own husband, crooner Robin Thicke. “I knew Alex would be my husband. It’s a win-win. My husband is a pretty confident man. We share and read whatever each one of us is doing. It’s not like we’re making Fifty Shades of Grey. This is about a couple that’s very disconnect­ed.”

To avoid that same fate, she and Thicke limit their screen time at home. Patton says she unplugs when she’s with son Julian, 3, and leaves whatever gadget she’s using in her purse. And they regulate Julian’s online time as well, allowing him to play a few favorite apps, including Monkey Lunchbox, in small doses. Mostly, she uses the Internet for research and to do a little shopping, and her phone to memorializ­e her son’s cutest moments.

“I think we need to take some pictures. Feel that. Work it. Get it,” she announces, holding the Samsung Galaxy digital camera in front of her. “I mostly take photos and videos of my son.”

She adds: “I don’t Google myself anymore. It’s a bad idea. The couple of times I’ve done it, it ended up with me having a hangover the next day and a week of hating myself.”

Patton is equally tough with her toddler and says she’s the stricter parent. “But we’re on the same page. I tell my son that I’m doing this because I love you. Your son might be annoyed for a second, but he loves you just the same. He’s my best friend. I can take him anywhere.”

 ?? TODD PLITT, USA TODAY ??
TODD PLITT, USA TODAY
 ?? ABOVE BY PHIL BRAY, LD ENTERTAINM­ENT; RIGHT BY TODD PLITT, USA TODAY ?? There’s a short circuit in communicat­ion between Derek and Cindy (Alexander Skarsgård and Paula Patton) in Disconnect, out Friday.
ABOVE BY PHIL BRAY, LD ENTERTAINM­ENT; RIGHT BY TODD PLITT, USA TODAY There’s a short circuit in communicat­ion between Derek and Cindy (Alexander Skarsgård and Paula Patton) in Disconnect, out Friday.
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