is a social media producer who turns the newsroom's reporting into stories that live in your hand.
It's 11 p.m. on a Saturday, and a grocery store in North Hills is the place to be. The scene is quintessential Filipino fanfare: a DJ, a station for custom Seafood City jerseys and a whole roasted pig glistening under heat lamps.
When Filipinos say community gathering, they really mean it. It reminds me of the Santo Niño fiestas from my childhood. The religious part is different, but everything else is the same: the food, the music, the feeling of everyone showing up for each other. Here I am, in my 30s, standing in a chain Filipino grocery store I used to visit only to pick up things for my grandma. Sometimes I move through my own community without really seeing it. This night pulled me back to my roots., a Filipino classic from the '70s that my lola, my Auntie Baby, and probably your lola all know by heart. Stick around and you'll catch the Black Eyed Peas'rattling the freezer doors while the whole crowd sings like it's an inside secret the rest of the world hasn't figured out yet.If you're enjoying this article, you'll love our daily newsletter, The LA Report. Each weekday, catch up on the 5 most pressing stories to start your morning in 3 minutes or less.Dennis Block submitted a filing in eviction court that a judge called “fabricated.” He’s now facing potential discipline from the California State Bar.UFW hasn’t received direct information about the allegations, but it’s serious enough to the organization to pull back from Chávez, who co-founded the union.From the Central Coast to San Diego, millions of Californians are under heat advisories and warnings this week. Here's what you need to know.Welcome to Late Night Madness, where Seafood City has turned the mundane act of grocery shopping into the most authentic Filipino street food party in town.And if you're wondering when you can jump into the dance circle yourself, the next Late Night Madness events are scheduled forWhat started as a test event at Seafood City's Daly City location last September has evolved into a cultural phenomenon. But if you've never stepped foot in a Filipino grocery store, here's what you need to know.Patricia Francisco, director of digital marketing and events at Seafood City, has noticed something remarkable:"We're seeing a growing number of non-Filipinos coming. A lot of them have never tried these Filipino classic dishes." Justin Gonzalez, known as Jut, is the event host and marketing consultant for Late Night Madness. He puts it more directly:"Food is bomb. DJs are bomb. It's a really fun time. Everyone's going to be super smiley." The store extends its hours until midnight. Local Filipino DJs turn the aisles into a dance floor. The backdrop? Cabbage, bananas, jackfruit. Justin Gonzalez, host and marketing consultant for Seafood City's Late Night Madness events, hypes up the crowd at the North Hills location.But Late Night Madness is just the latest evolution of what Seafood City has represented since its founding in 1989. The first store opened in San Diego as a space where Filipino immigrants, who were uncomfortable in American stores, could shop for familiar ingredients and products. "They wanted to buy soy sauce and fish. But being that their English wasn't that good, they were very intimidated to go into regular American supermarkets," Gonzalez explained. Nearly four decades later, Seafood City continues bridging generations and cultures through food, music, dance and a shared sense of community.An assortment of Filipino grilled skewers, including pork barbecue, chicken and isaw, rest on banana leaves at Seafood City's Late Night Madness event in North Hills.Before the DJ takes over, make your way to Grill City, open all the time, no event ticket required. And here's what most people miss: Sizzle City is tucked in there, too, all the way at the front. No big signs, no menus telling you to pile on the rice and pancit. Just order at the counter, and get sisig. It’s a true Filipino street food classic done right. It arrives in a sizzling cast-iron skillet with crispy fried pork belly, tender pieces of pork mask, a sunny-side-up egg cracked right on top. The kind of dish that doesn't need to explain itself. A cast-iron skillet of sisig, topped with a fried egg, calamansi and a red chili pepper, served at a Filipino restaurant.The rest of Grill City holds up the same way. Lumpia Shanghai: crispy, tightly rolled with that specific crunch you grew up on. Pork lechon so fluffy, with a salty, brittle skin. Chicken or pork barbecue skewers, charred and glistening in all the right ways. For the adventurous, a whole grilled squid, tentacles and all. The hot bar ranges from crowd-pleasing lobster balls, fish balls and takoyaki to the more committed choices: pork liver, ear and intestine. The stuff that separates the curious from the people who actually want to eat.On top of the classics, Late Night Madness features exclusive items you won't find during regular hours, including the popular"overload" line. Imagine loaded fries, except the vessel isn't fries. It's lumpia. Or chicharron. Or chicken skin. Topped with cheese sauce and bits of longganisa: a sweet, garlicky Filipino breakfast sausage.Honestly? I felt the same. It was surprisingly satisfying — like nachos at a Dodgers game, only with a Filipino flair. But somewhere between the cheese sauce and the photo I was taking of it, I found myself thinking about the sisig I'd just had at Grill City. About how it needed nothing. There's a reason Italians don't put cheese on seafood — not because cheese is bad but because the sea already provided an abundance of pure flavor. The right lumpia dipping sauce operates the same way: spiced vinegar, raw garlic, cracked pepper. Every pairing intentional, chosen not to embellish but to draw out what was already there.L.A. has Lord Maynard Llera of Kuya Lord, the 2024 James Beard Award winner for Best Chef in California, who already proved what Filipino food can be when you let it speak for itself. The overload line is fun. But I hope it's a detour, not a direction. The traditional flavors have always been enough. They don't need the cheese.Dance battles break out throughout the night, with winners taking home exclusive merchandise. Perseus Ancheta, 34, a North Hills local attending his first Late Night Madness, jumped into the battle for a Yoshinobu Yamamoto Dodgers shirt giveaway. His wife showed him videos from past events on Instagram, and his expectations were more than met.A crowd member competes in a dance battle for L.A. Dodgers swag during Late Night Madness at the North Hills location.Then there are the shots, not alcohol, but something arguably more challenging: suka, a Filipino vinegar sauce. What started as a joke at the Eagle Rock location has evolved into a viral phenomenon."It was more earthy than I thought it would be," he said."And it stung the back of my throat, and it stayed with me for a while, so I had to get some melon juice." When asked if it made him feel proud to be Filipino, Clucario doesn't hesitate:"It oddly did. Like a lot of things do. That one is pretty top of the list."For Gonzalez, who grew up in Southern California as what he calls an"American Filipino," the events represent something deeper. "I've struggled with not embracing my Filipino heritage my whole life," he says."And now I get to be one of the community leaders for American Filipinos. "The beautiful thing about the Filipino community is that you don't have to learn Tagalog. If you have a taste of the Philippines from this event, then you can understand the depth of what Filipino culture is." I thought about that as I watched a dance battle break out between the cabbage and piles of jackfruit where generations collided, strangers became family and the produce aisle became a dance floor. The event is free with tickets through the SFC Plus app. You come to LAist because you want independent reporting and trustworthy local information. Our newsroom doesn’t answer to shareholders looking to turn a profit. Instead, we answer to you and our connected community. We are free to tell the full truth, to hold power to account without fear or favor, and to follow facts wherever they lead . Our only loyalty is to our audiences and our mission: to inform, engage, and strengthen our community. Right now, LAist has lost $1.7M in annual funding due to Congress clawing back money already approved. The support we receive from readers like you will determine how fully our newsroom can continue informing, serving, and strengthening Southern California.Housing & Homelessness
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
The Late Late Show With James CordenThe Late Late Show With James Corden breaking news and the latest updates about The Late Late Show With James Corden at Deadline Hollywood.
Read more »
City of San Diego residents support push to make free beach & bay parking permanent city lawMax Goldwasser is ABC 10News' weekend evening anchor and forecaster. During the week, he reports on stories as an MMJ.
Read more »
How Arsenio Hall Shook Up Late NightHis show became the epicenter of early-nineties cool, with the decade’s biggest names, from Tom Cruise to Bill Clinton, stopping by to earn street cred. Jennifer Wilson reports.
Read more »
WNBA reaches late-night verbal CBA agreement to likely save 2026 season after contentious fightThere will be a 2026 WNBA season … tentatively.
Read more »
BTS Will Make Late-Night Return on ‘The Tonight Show’BTS will perform two songs and sit down for an interview on 'The Tonight Show' in their first late-night appearance in five years.
Read more »
5 Seafood Spots With Bigger Fried Shrimp Baskets Than Anywhere ElseYour ultimate source for expert nutrition tips and health advice, covering wellness, healthy recipes, cooking hacks, food news, style trends and shopping.
Read more »
