Like many coffee shops it serves breakfast all day.[4] The restaurant also serves "blue-plate specials," complete meals that vary daily.[5]
Pann's includes an angular edifice and large plate glass windows and has been described as having "the classic coffee shop architecture".[5][6] It was designed by Helen Liu Fong, who also designed the Holiday Bowl, Johnie's coffee shop, and the original Norms Restaurant.[7] She included tropical landscaping in the design,[8] and was part of the firm of Armet & Davis that one commentator refers to as "the Frank Lloyd Wright of 1950s coffee shops."[5] Pann's is currently owned by George and Rena's son Jim Poulos.[9] Rena Poulos died at age 100 in 2017.[10]Ed Begley, Jr. told a story about running into César Chávez at Pann's in the 1980s.[11]
Pann's was featured in a story in the Los Angeles Times, "Going on a hunt for Googie architecture," which noted the restaurant's tilted roof and sign, tropical plants and exposed stone walls indoors and out, and glass windows wrapping around the restaurant.[2] Pann's celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2008.[2]
Recognition
Winner of the Los Angeles Conservancy Preservation Award[5]
Pann's has operated under a number of snappy mottoes, including "Just Food, Service and Rock & Roll."[5]
The restaurant has been featured in films such as xXx, Next, and Bewitched[2]
Contrary to popular belief, Pulp Fiction was not filmed at Pann's; it was filmed at another restaurant owned by the Poulos family, Holly’s, in Hawthorne.
^ ab"Pann's (Los Angeles): 6710 La Tijera Blvd. Go there for breakfast any time of the day, but the menu has everything. This is the real deal since 1958 and the Fifties design is eye-opening. Several films and TV shows have been filmed here. The biscuits are memorable, but go hungry and order everything you can on the breakfast menu. I have the t-shirt." Chere, Rich (2009-02-02). "Some favorite restaurants while on the road with the Devils". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved 2009-02-11.
^"Begley Jr. was involved 'from a great distance' with César Chávez and the United Farm Workers union. 'I didn't buy grapes for 30 years,' he remembers. 'I never knew if the boycott was on or off, so I wouldn't take any chances.' Then the extraordinary happened. In 1987, Begley was at Pann's Restaurant on Sepulveda Boulevard. 'I was sitting there having a bowl of oatmeal when these two dudes got out of a very, very modest car, they came into the coffee shop, and it became clear to me that one of them was César Chávez. I kept thinking, Where's the entourage one would expect from an internationally known labor leader? I went up to him, I said, 'I don't want to bother you, I just want to say hello, my name is Ed Begley. I've been adhering to the grape boycott for years now, and I just want to say if there's any way I can be of help, let me know.'" Morris, Steven Leigh (2003-03-20). "History in the Remaking: Ed Begley Jr.'s harvest of fame". LA Weekly. Retrieved 2009-02-11.