Felix Solis to Star Opposite Niecy Nash in ABC’s Proposed “The Rookie” Spinoff

Felix Solis is reporting for duty…

The 50-year-old Puerto Rican actor will star opposite Niecy Nash in ABC’s proposed spinoff from The Rookie.

Felix SolisSolis will guest star alongside Kat Foster in a two-episode arc in the current fourth season of The Rookie, which will serve as a backdoor pilot for the potential spinoff of the series starring Nathan Fillion.

The yet-untitled project will expand beyond the current Los Angeles Police Department and revolve around the FBI.

The potential new series comes from The Rookie creator/executive producer Alexi Hawley, executive producers Terence Paul Winter and Mark Gordon and studios eOne and ABC Signature.

The planted spinoff, co-created and written by Hawley and Winter, follows the premise of The Rookie, which stars Fillion as John Nolan, the oldest rookie in the LAPD.

In the two embedded pilot episodes, Officer John Nolan (Fillion) and the LA division of the FBI enlist the help of FBI trainee Simone Clark (Nash) when one of her former students is suspected of terrorism following an explosion at a local power station.

Solis will play Special Agent Matthew Garza, a 20-year veteran of the FBI who has been a true believer in the “Agency way” his whole career. A senior agent on the cusp of being promoted to a leadership role, Garza is tough, smart and filled with a little too much self-importance.

The Rookie and the spinoff will exist in the same universe, allowing characters to move back and forth.

Solis was most recently seen as Omar Navarro in Netflix’s Ozark and in the recurring role of Ray Vera in Charmed.

Camille Guaty to Appear on ABC’s “The Rookie”

It’s a rookie moment for Camille Guaty

The Puerto Rican and Cuban American actress is set to appear in a multi-episode arc on ABC’s The Rookie.

Camille Guaty

Guaty will play Sandra De la Cruz, a businesswoman with nefarious connections who has been the target of a murder attempt.

Her character will be introduced in the Sunday, January 17 episode titled “La Fiera.”

Created by Alexi Hawley, The Rookie stars Nathan Fillion as John Nolan, the oldest rookie at the Los Angeles Police Department.

The series, which also stars Mekia Cox, Alyssa Diaz, Richard T. Jones, Titus Makin, Melissa O’Neil and Eric Winter, is produced by Entertainment One (eOne) and ABC Signature.

Guaty is known for her starring role on VH1’s dramedy series Daytime Divas, where she played Nina, an award-winning journalist and one of the five co-hosts on the popular talk show, “The Lunch Hour.”

She can most recently be seen guest starring on The Good Doctor, as well as in Netflix film Nappily Ever After, directed by Haiffaa Al Mansour, and A Futile and Stupid Gesture, a biopic on Doug Kennedy, the man who started National Lampoon, where Guaty plays his wife.

Peña Appears in New “Gangster Squad” Trailer

Michael Peña’s about to go all gangsta…

The 36-year-old Mexican American actor is set to appear in the highly anticipated film Gangster Squad.

Michael Pena

As seen in the just-released trailer, the upcoming crime film chronicles the Los Angeles Police Department’s fight to keep Mickey Cohen and the east coast mafia out of LA in the 1940s and 1950s.

Peña, who will be starring as Cesar Chavez in a biopic about the legendary Latino labor leader and civil rights activist, portrays detective Navidad Ramirez in Gangster Squad.

Along with Peña, the cast includes Sean Penn as Cohen, Ryan Gosling, Josh Brolin, Emma Stone, Mireille Enos, Anthony Mackie, Nick Nolte and Giovanni Ribisi.

The film is set to be released on September 7, 2012 by Warner Bros. Pictures.

Mexican Painter/Sculptor Turns Confiscated Guns Into Art

Victor Hugo Zayas is taking an artistic shot at raising awareness about Los Angeles’ crime problem.

The 50-year-old Mexican painter and sculptor has created a series of sculptures made with weapons collected by the Los Angeles Police Department, many of them belonging to criminals.

Victor Hugo Zayas

“The Los Angeles chief of police gave me the chance to use two tons of them,” says the Tijuana-born Zayas, who emigrated to the United States 30 years ago, about the guns that were recovered by police as part of the City of Los AngelesGun Buyback Initiative.

Zayas has been developing his artistic talents since he was a teenager, expressing his vision in paintings and metal sculptures once inspired by astronomy and more recently by lethal weapons.

Five years ago he got the idea to make sculptures out of guns that the Los Angeles Police Department recovered, but it wasn’t until last year that he was given four barrels of dismantled weapons to use for his sculptures, which he displays throughout California.

“A lot of people think that the images are too strong, especially if they have been hurt by crime,” said Zayas, who in the future will exhibit the works in the entry hall of the LAPD.

Victor Hugo Zayas

“The reaction has been very positive and sad at the same time,” said the artist, who in the last two months has shown 12 of his 17 sculptures created with parts of handguns, rifles and shotguns at the Laguna Art Museum.

The exhibition was dedicated to victims of crime and guests included about 100 people who’d experienced some form of violence.

“The idea is that this group of sculptures should become a kind of peace symbol, because transforming something so negative into something so positive, well, people connect with that immediately,” he said.

One of the works, a portrait made from 200 dismantled weapons that included ar-15 rifles online, shotguns and pistols, is dedicated to Zayas’ good friend Efrain Castro, who was murdered last year.

“My friend was a peaceful man, even timid, who was really in love with the girlfriend he had been going out with for eight months, until one day a man called him on the phone at his house and demanded to know why he was going out with his wife,” he said about his friend, who later died from a blow to the head by the woman’s husband.

Gregorio Luke, curator of the Zayas exhibition, told Efe that he hoped the sculptures would inspire sculptors and authorities in other cities with high crime to work together and do the same.

“We see here that art is a form of alchemy,” Luke said. “It is a powerful alchemy that transforms, no, not base metal into gold, but something more important, which is death into life,” he said.