How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Pete Holmes

How to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Pete Holmes


Pete Holmes understands the art of conversation โ€” especially the way to get people to open up about their secret weird tendencies.

Itโ€™s what helped Holmes, known for his youth pastor aesthetic and wholesome jokes, build his more than 20-year-long comedy career (his next show is Jan. 21 at Largo at the Coronet) and create his semi-autographical HBO series โ€œCrashing.โ€

Sunday Funday infobox logo with colorful spot illustrations

In Sunday Funday, L.A. people give us a play-by-play of their ideal Sunday around town. Find ideas and inspiration on where to go, what to eat and how to enjoy life on the weekends.

In 2011, Holmes launched โ€œYou Made It Weird,โ€ an interview-style podcast that delves into topics like the meaning of life, mental health, art and everything everything in between. More than 1,000 episodes later, he is celebrating the 14th anniversary of the show and has recently signed with podcast network Lemonada Media (which is also home to Julia Louis-Dreyfusโ€™ โ€œWiser Than Me,โ€ โ€œThe Sarah Silverman Podcastโ€ and โ€œHasan Minhaj Doesnโ€™t Knowโ€).

โ€œIโ€™ve never for a second considered stopping, which is a good sign that youโ€™re doing something youโ€™re supposed to do,โ€ says Holmes, whose guests have included John Mulaney, Maya Rudolph, Anna Kendrick, Kenan Thompson and Henry Winkler. Once a week, Holmes co-hosts the show with his wife of eight years, Valerie Chaney.

His nervous system also assures him that heโ€™s found the right project. While Holmes says he feels โ€œtenseโ€ before his stand-up sets, thereโ€™s a sense of comfort in sitting face to face with someone and simply having a conversation. โ€œWhen Iโ€™m doing my podcast, especially in person, thereโ€™s very, very little tension,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s the thing in show business, Iโ€™ve found, that winds me up in a bad way the least.โ€

Hereโ€™s how Holmes would spend an ideal Sunday in L.A. with Chaney and their 7-year-old daughter, Lila.

This interview has been lightly edited and condensed for length and clarity.

8 a.m.: Visit a coffee shop with a sense of humor

My daughter and I are both morning people, which really works out because her mom is not a morning person. So we get up early and weโ€™ll color, make breakfast, that sort of stuff. But if we were all getting up together โ€” which is what my wife would want to do even though she doesnโ€™t like it โ€” we would go to Bru in Los Feliz. I love recommending Bru to people because itโ€™s in an โ€œI Think You Should Leaveโ€ sketch. Tim Robinson is leaving a job interview and heโ€™s pulling the door, but itโ€™s one that you have to push, and he doesnโ€™t want to look stupid so he keeps pulling it. They actually have a little plaque up that says something cool about it without being too obvious. I like drinking espresso by itself, Val likes oat milk lattes and Lila would get a steamed milk because she wants to feel like a grown-up. Itโ€™s very cute.

10 a.m.: Read at least seven childrenโ€™s books at Skylight

Afterward, weโ€™d go to Skylight Books, which is nearby. I can tell you from experience, theyโ€™re incredibly generous with allowing you to read your kids seven books without any trouble. On principle, Iโ€™ll buy at least one of the books on our way out, because thatโ€™s exactly what people are talking about when theyโ€™re like, โ€œShop local.โ€

11 a.m.: Drink a terrible dark green juice

Then weโ€™ll walk to the Punchbowl and Iโ€™m gonna get a terrible dark green juice that nobody wants and would make a goat go blind. I love it because Iโ€™m 46 and now I eat almost exclusively for how itโ€™s going to make me feel. So itโ€™s very uncool but thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m doing. My wife and daughter are going to get a smoothie called the honeybee, which is very sweet and delicious.

Noon: A pancake for the table at Kitchen Mouse

We would go to Kitchen Mouse in Highland Park. Itโ€™s really hip. The last time I was there, I ran into Phoebe Bridgers. Literally rock stars are at Kitchen Mouse and thereโ€™s a little kids area where my daughter can play with like a fake hamburger and a child she just met. I get the same thing every time: the breakfast sandwich and a snickerdoodle pancake for the table. If you and I went to breakfast together, I would never ask, โ€œDo you want a pancake for the table?โ€ because I donโ€™t need you to be my accomplice. I know you want a pancake for the table because guess who wants pancakes? Everyone. This is going to reverse the juice that I had earlier, but itโ€™s going to be worth it.

2 p.m. Enjoy an Angry Samoa donut at the park

We have friends who live in Highland Park, so weโ€™d visit them and weโ€™d all take a walk to Donut Friend, and eat the donuts at the little park nearby. The park has giant bugs and a tube slide. When youโ€™re 46 and have kids, sitting down is your heroin. Not to keep mentioning veganism, but Donut Friend has really good vegan donuts. You gotta get the Angry Samoa, which is a Girl Scout cookie.

I once went to Donut Friend while I was tripping on LSD and it was the funniest thing thatโ€™s ever happened to me. I think it mightโ€™ve been my birthday and I was coming down. Iโ€™m not a crazy person. I just couldnโ€™t believe that there was another person standing there with all of the donuts in the world. It felt so overwhelmingly loving that they were like โ€œWhich donut can I give you?โ€ I was just floored by the generosity. I was probably making an aโ€” of my myself like laughing in that sort of hippie way. Not like a drunk way but like a benevolent alien who couldnโ€™t believe that this planet had donuts. They gave me one and I wish I couldโ€™ve seen myself eating it. My wife was there. She doesnโ€™t do psychedelics, so she was just watching me, sort of babysitting me, to be honest. While Iโ€™m eating the donut, she was just laughing so hard at just how happy I was. I wouldnโ€™t do that on a normal Sunday. Thatโ€™s a rare thing for me, but thatโ€™s a true Donut Friend story.

4 p.m.: Feel fancy at the Huntington

The greatest hack of parenting is the Huntington. Speaking of Phoebe Bridgers, she mentions in her track โ€œGarden Song,โ€ jumping over the fence [at the Huntington], which I always think is a cute detail. I think they filmed โ€œBeverly Hills Ninjaโ€ at the Japanese Gardens there. One of my favorite L.A. things to do is the white glove tea service. Itโ€™s not that expensive and you just feel fancy. Weโ€™ll also stop at the Chinese [garden] and get noodles there because every step of the way thereโ€™s just constant eating.

7 p.m.: Vegan food done right

If it were just Valerie and I, I would want to go to Crossroads [Kitchen]. I love it to death. When the pandemic happened, they would text us and ask if we were OK and if we needed food. We were like โ€œWhat do you got?โ€ and the manager brought it over. If anyoneโ€™s wondering if thatโ€™s like a famous thing, I really donโ€™t think so. I really just think theyโ€™re really about serving the community because Iโ€™m not famous like that [laughs]. Weโ€™ve been there enough, weโ€™ve had enough conversations and itโ€™s a real staple for us.

Itโ€™s a vegan restaurant and Iโ€™ve had meat-eating friends say that their carbonara is their favorite. Itโ€™s not like one of those vegan places thatโ€™s trying to trick you or deep-fry their way around things. Theyโ€™re just actually making you eat really delicious things that just happen to be like artichokes. Iโ€™ve had so many birthdays there and you can tell this is where people who are looking for the best food in L.A. are going.

9 p.m.: Catch whatever is playing at Largo

My favorite thing that I get to do once a month is Largo at the Coronet. I literally once had a dream about a magical venue that feels safe and the crowd is always good and you just felt warm. Like if twinkle lights became a venue. Thatโ€™s Largo. Itโ€™s the only place where if somebodyโ€™s visiting L.A., I would say just go to Largo. It doesnโ€™t matter whoโ€™s performing. One night it might be me, the next night it might be Chris Fleming, and then it might be Sarah Silverman. Then it might be improvised Shakespeare, and then it might be a live podcast. It doesnโ€™t matter. If Flanny [Mark Flanagan] booked it, itโ€™s exceptional. Heโ€™s from Belfast and heโ€™s sort of mythic.

11 p.m.: Eat at Norms

Norms is literally one block away from Largo, and if Val and I were really having a kid-free night, she, Flanny, and I would go there to eat our celebration. Judd Apatow does the show a lot and he loves food, so heโ€™d be there too. You get a milkshake or you get some fries, but itโ€™s open for 24 hours. I think L.A. gets a bad rep for not having diners. Granted in New York, theyโ€™re everywhere.

Midnight: Enjoy โ€œblue couch timeโ€

It doesnโ€™t matter what time it is when we get home, we have to watch at least one episode of something. โ€œ30 Rockโ€ or right now weโ€™re watching โ€œBlack Rabbit,โ€ but thatโ€™s not a good wind down show. Our couch is blue so we call it โ€œblue couch timeโ€ and itโ€™s a ritual we just donโ€™t miss. It doesnโ€™t even matter what weโ€™re watching. We just want to be on that couch, even if itโ€™s just for 12 minutes. I canโ€™t go from the car to the bed. I want to go from the car to something else, then to bed. Thatโ€™s why houses have entryways or a mud room. Thereโ€™s supposed to be a threshold that you cross over, take off your coat and your shoes. Youโ€™re entering a new space. For us, itโ€™s the blue couch.



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