
Long before Starbucks colonized every corner and Friends made Central Perk an icon, the coffeehouse was Vienna's radical experiment in democracy: a marble-tabled sanctuary where artists, writers, and revolutionaries could linger for hours over a single cup, debating the future of art and politics. Recognized by UNESCO in 2011 as Intangible Cultural Heritage, the Viennese coffeehouse was far more than a café. It was a democratic salon where ideas moved as freely as the endless newspapers passed between Thonet chairs. When Nazi persecution scattered Vienna's Jewish intelligentsia across the globe in the 1930s, they carried this tradition to an unlikely new home: Los Angeles.