August 30, 2025 - Vito DeCandia, Owner of Angel City Pizza in Venice, Ca from NY and a home and an LA home to ShareCokeWithWill, joins WPC for a conversation on the years long friendship they formed.
As a born-and-bred New Yorker (from Long Beach), Vito DeCandia was literally brought up in a pizzeria. He was stretching dough by the age of 12. His lifetime of baking eventually led him to the West Coast, where his wife was from. Two years ago, he opened Angel City Pizza [https://www.angelcityla.com/] in Venice, where he continues to make what he knows: NYC style slices, squares, and even Grandmas!
For Vito, pizza is more than just a business — it’s a calling. Born into a family of pizzaiolos, Vito’s roots in the industry stretch back to the 1960s when his uncle opened a pizzeria in New York. His father, fresh from Italy, soon joined the family business, solidifying a legacy that Vito was destined to carry forward.
But running a pizzeria wasn’t always the plan. “I didn’t originally come out here to open a pizzeria,” Vito admits. “This business, no matter what it is, always, always brings you back.”
When the wildfires tore through Los Angeles, he knew exactly what he had to do. “I lost my mom to a fire. So anytime something like that happens, that’s right where my mind goes first.” Within a day, he provided pizza and community for those who needed it most.
Vito showed Will that same kindness for years — but that kindness mattered most when everything fell apart. After giving up his home in Venice Beach and losing everything in the pursuit of Paramount, Will found himself homeless. During that time, Vito DeCandia, at Angel City Pizza, made sure Will ate whenever he walked through the door — no questions, no judgment, just love.
Separately, Will formed a deep friendship with Tommy Bina at the historic Canyon Country Store — a landmark tied to music, counterculture, and creative history. Through hours of honest conversation about life, art, faith, and the next generation, the two realized they shared a common belief: the real work ahead is for the kids, not the industry.
From those two relationships came one mission — not to chase Hollywood, but to build for the next generation.
So the Share Coke with Will podcast will launch in two locations:
* Angel City Pizza (with Vito) — rooted in fatherhood, community, humor, and the Gen Z crowd right next door at Venice High School.
* The Canyon Country Store (with Tommy) — rooted in legacy, storytelling, healing, and the cultural lineage of Laurel Canyon.
Two hosts.
Two homes.
One message: Take care of the kids first.
As the podcast grows, Will plans to bring in:
* Griffin Johnson (10.5M on TikTok) — through their shared management.
* Three-time Grammy winner J. Ivy — Will’s longest creative collaborator.
* And continuing alignment with Jaime King, who stood alongside WPC during the Paramount movement.
What was once intended to be a Gen Z division inside a major Hollywood studio is now becoming something more real:
Lucelle Studios — built through Ocala, Florida and Piney Woods School in Mississippi — where young people will learn, create, and rise.
So what do you get when you mix:
* a former film producer,
* a three-time Grammy-winning poet,
* a Gen Z cultural voice,
* and a New York pizza craftsman…
split between Laurel Canyon and Venice Beach…
You get a group of people who Share Coke
and tell the truth —
about the dream they almost landed,
the studio they didn’t get,
and the movement they’re building anyway.
Sometimes Plan B is really Plan A in disguise.
Because you don’t have to own a studio
to change a generation.