Explain Los Angeles geography

More specifically Los Feliz has the single hipsters and Silverlake the couples. Atwater and Echo Park were headed that way too when I left a couple of years ago.

I lived in Los Feliz in college, it was a fun place.

There’s a great joke in Little Shop of Horrors that doesn’t make sense unless you know L.A. geography:

Audry: “You’re going to be another Luther Glendale!”
Seymour: “Pasadena.”
Audry: “Burbank.”

Also there’s Elizabeth Taylor’s joke:

Reporter: “Miss Taylor, how do you get ahead in Hollywood?”
Liz: “Take Fountain.”

This is not technically correct. Van Nuys, Reseda, and Sherman Oaks are all part of the City of Los Angeles, these are communities inside the City of LA.
Burbank, Long Beach, Glendale, La Canada/Flintridge City of San Fernando are all separate cities inside or near the City of Los Angeles.
The Hollywood Hills are what the HOLLYWOOD sign is mounted on. The Hollywood Hills are part of the Santa Monica Mountains which divide the Los Angeles basin from the San Fernando Valley.

This is as good a thread to ask as any…

We are going to a convention at the Marriott in LAX (W Century Blvd), and on Saturday or Sunday night (say, leaving around 7) my wife wants us to drive to see the Hollywood sign… about how long would that take?

Indeed. A lot of famous Westerns were shot out in the Valleybefore it was developed.

I haven’t lived there since 1989, but at that time there was still a farm operating out at the end of the valley just before the Santa Susanna pass. Before the rise of portable devices you needed a set of books to navigate all the streets in LA. It’s an enormous city, and county.

The Hollywood* Sign is not lighted (anymore, since the 30’s). Just what do you expect to see after sundown?

And take binoculars. They no longer allow hikers to get close to the sign. I understand they have motion detectors and the gendarmes will show up and give you a ticket or worse. Best view it from a distance. Or buy a postcard at Hollywood and Highland and tell everyone you saw it.

Didn’t used to be that way. Here’s a pic I took from behind the sign once (scroll down).

A former description of LA – “87 villages in search of a city”?

Take it from me, 20 miles at 3 in the morning takes only 15 minutes, tops. I used to return to North Hollywood from playing piano bar in El Monte at 3AM Sunday AM (bar closed at 2 then we went to breakfast at Sambo’s) and I had most (not all!) of the road to myself. Zippety-zip in my convertible with the top down doing 70MPH!

As **Musicat **says, there’s no point in going to see it at night.

If you go during the day you can get a decent view of it in the distance from Sunset and Gower. Google maps says that’s about half an hour from your hotel by freeway, but I would allow more like an hour to be safe. It’s a bit of a haul, and if you’re going up to Hollywood anyway, you might as well park and wander around a bit before heading back.

Yeah, the HollyWood* Sign ain’t no big thing. Take a Universal Studios tour, go jogging around Lake Hollywood (really – 3.3 miles in an alpine environment, in the heart of LA!), drive/bike thru Griffith Park, visit La Brea Tar Pits on Wilshire, gawk at the tourists gawking at you on Hollywood & Vine, visit Griffith Park Observatory, drive on Mulholland Drive, go to Canter’s Deli on Fairfax or Art’s Deli on Ventura Blvd., visit Farmer’s Market, go to Venice Beach, get lost in the Hollywood Hills, drool at the windows in Beverly Hills, enjoy Westwood, check out Santa Monica, put on sunglasses and pretend you’re a movie star like everyone else does…

My favorite view of the Hollywood sign (accesable to the public) is from the Griffith Observatory, which is well worth the trip on its own, but anywhere around Hollywood is far, time wise, from LAX.

Here are a couple of places you can see it from during the day anyway

If you choose to look at it from Mulholland Drive, you can take the 405 North from LAX exit at Mulholland and drive east. Even if it is after dark, you will have some amazing views of both the L.A. Basin and the Valley.

Close, but no cigar…

It was Bette Davis and the setup, reportedly by Johnny Carson, was " What’s the best way for an aspiring starlet to get into Hollywood."

Depending on how close you mean by close. For most people, this is still pretty darn close. The hike up Mount Lee is pretty easy as far as hikes go, since so much of it is paved. Providing they go during the day, I think the Hollywood sign is a great sight to see. For my money, there is something special about seeing something so iconic in real life (I felt the same way when I visited Dealy Plaza in Dallas.)

Be careful around the residential areas below the sign. The local residents hate tourists, they’ve been trying to get rid of them for years.

That would explain this story. :stuck_out_tongue:

The valley sucks because it’s about 20° hotter than the west side, It’s smoggier than hell, and there ain’t much that 's noteworthy. Hell, when I was growing up, I thought Chatsworth was nice!

If you approach the HollyWood* sign from a certain angle, due to the different setbacks of the letters, it spells HOLLYWODO. And the current sign was originally HOLLYWOODLAND, with hundreds of light bulbs, promoting the residential development just below many years ago. When the sign began falling apart in the 70’s, it was rebuilt without the lights and without the LAND. Hugh Hefner put up part of the money. It’s not true that he wanted it to read BUNNYWOOD.

It has been a favorite spot for pranksters, who have modified the sign on occasion to read things like HOLLYWEED. I’ve heard the authorities have put a stop to this with the motion sensors and hard-ass, no-trespassing enforcement.

Great descriptions for everything but this I found really cool.

I apologize beforehand for not remember any specific titles but a number of movies have included a very distinct scenic vista shot from up high on a mountainside looking out over some very crowded but beautiful California megalopolis. It’s usually at night and the gridded pattern of lights stretch out N,S,E and West for as far as the eye can see. It looks like a popular make-out spot, a Lover’s Leap that puts all others to shame. I’ve seen that exact same view in easily a half dozen or more shows. Is that too vague or does anyone know from where it was taken and what parts of (I’m assuming L.A.) it encompasses?

Just based on that description, I’d assume it’s taken from Mulholland Drive or thereabouts up in the Hollywood Hills.

By the way, I grew up in South (Central) LA and have also lived in areas like Monterey (not Park) Hills and cities like Azusa and San Dimas in The (Other) Valley. I have always hated The Valley. I hated the heat, and hated the perceived dirtiness, and I never wanted anything to do with it.

So, now I live in Van Nuys. The Valley has some perks, but I still hate most of it. :slight_smile: