Los
Angeles has so much to offer you don't want to waste any time
while you are here. The exciting city of Hollywood is
close by where you will find Rodeo Drive, Universal Studios, and
the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Learn about all of your
favorite stars and enjoy sights you won't find anywhere else on
earth. That is just the start. You can take a stroll
down the Santa Monica Pier, visit Warner Bros. Studios or
tour LA's Griffith Park. If that is not enough, you will
find museums, art galleries, and historic sights to visit and
enjoy. So while you are planning your vacation make sure
to allow enough time to see everything Los Angeles has to offer.
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Attractions and
Activities
Anaheim
Attractions - can be found at our Anaheim site All
About Anaheim
Farmers
Market - In July 1934, two entrepreneurs
envisioned a European-style open-air market where farmers would
sell their produce to local housewives. The idea was an instant
success: farmers agreed to pay the 50¢ daily parking fee; in
exchange, they got to display their wares on the tailgates of
their trucks. Soon after the marketplace opened, Blanche Magee,
a local restaurateur, drove by and saw a crowd of customers. The
next day she returned with a hamper full of sandwiches and soft
drinks, which she sold to the farmers and customers. Magee's
Kitchen and Deli became the Farmers Market's first
restaurant. It's still here today, along with more than 110
stalls and 20 restaurants. Close to CBS Television Studios, the
market is a major hub for stars and stargazers, tourists and
locals. 6333 W. 3rd St., at Fairfax, PHONE: 323/933-9211
Griffith
Park - Like
Central Park in Manhattan, Griffith Park is Los Angeles's great
escape. On any pleasant weekend, joggers, cyclists, and walkers
throng its roadways, and golfers play its four municipal courses
come rain or shine.
Hollywood
Walk of Fame -
All along this mile-long stretch of Hollywood Boulevard
sidewalk, entertainment legends' names are embossed in brass,
each at the center of a pink star embedded in dark-gray
terrazzo. The first eight stars were unveiled in 1960 at the
northwest corner of Highland Avenue and Hollywood Boulevard:
Olive Borden, Ronald Colman, Louise Fazenda, Preston Foster,
Burt Lancaster, Edward Sedgwick, Ernest Torrence, and Joanne
Woodward (some of these names have stood the test of time better
than others; many stars memorialize people who worked in a
technical field). Since then, more than 2,000 others have been
immortalized, though that honor doesn't come cheap--upon
selection by a special committee, the personality in question
(or more likely his or her movie studio or record company) pays
about $15,000 for the privilege.
La
Brea Tar Pitts -
About 40,000 years ago, deposits of oil rose to the Earth's
surface, collected in shallow pools, and coagulated into sticky
asphalt. In the early 20th century, geologists discovered that
the sticky goo contained the largest collection of Pleistocene,
or Ice Age, fossils ever found at one location: more than 600
species of birds, mammals, plants, reptiles, and insects. More
than 100 tons of fossil bones have been removed in excavations
over the last seven decades.
Mulholland
Drive - The
dividing line between the San Fernando Valley and Los Angeles
proper is one of the most famous thoroughfares in this vast
metropolis. Driving the length of the hilltop road is slow and
can be treacherous, but the rewards are sensational views of
valley and city on each side and expensive homes along the way.
From Hollywood reach Mulholland via Outpost Drive off Franklin
Avenue or Cahuenga Boulevard West via Highland Avenue north.
Rodeo
Drive - No longer an exclusive shopping street where
a well-heeled clientele shops for $200 pairs of socks wrapped in
gold leaf, Rodeo Drive remains one of Southern California's bona
fide tourist attractions. Just as if they were at Disneyland or
in Hollywood, tourists clad in T-shirts and shorts wander along
this tony avenue, window shopping at Tiffany & Co., Gucci,
Armani, Hermès, Harry Winston, and Lladro.
Santa
Monica Pier -
Eateries, souvenir shops, a psychic adviser, arcades, and Pacific
Park are all part of this truncated pier at the foot of
Colorado Boulevard below Palisades Park. The pier's trademark
46-horse carousel, built in 1922, has appeared in many films,
including the Sting. Free concerts are held on the pier
during the summer. Colorado Ave. and the ocean,
Union
Station -
This building is familiar to moviegoers the world over. It was
built in 1939 in a Spanish Mission style that subtly combines
Streamline Moderne and Moorish design elements. The waiting room
alone is worth a look, its majestic scale so evocative of movies
past that you'll half expect to see Carole Lombard or Barbara
Stanwyck step off a train and sashay through. 800 N. Alameda St.
Universal
Studios Hollywood -
Though you won't see much to do with real filmmaking, visiting
this theme park is an enlightening--and at times
sensational--introduction to the principles of special effects.
Seated aboard a comfortable tram (narrated, hour-long tours
traverse the 420-acre complex all day long), you can experience
the parting of the Red Sea, an avalanche, and a flood; meet a
30-ft-tall version of King Kong; live through an encounter with
a runaway train; be attacked by the ravenous killer shark of Jaws
fame; endure a confrontation by aliens armed with death rays;
and survive a simulation of an earthquake that measured 8.3 on
the Richter scale--complete with collapsing earth. Terminator
2-3D, based on the Arnold Schwarzenegger movies, mixes 3-D
with virtual reality and live action. Jurassic Park--The Ride
is a tour through a jungle full of dinosaurs with an 84-ft water
drop. Throughout the park, costumed characters mingle with
guests and pose for photos. CityWalk includes a slew of
shops, restaurants, and cinemas. 100 Universal City Plaza,
Universal City, PHONE: 818/508-9600
Venice
Boardwalk -
"Boardwalk" may be something of a misnomer--we're
really talking paved walkway--but this L.A. must-see, also known
as Ocean Front Walk, delivers year-round action:
Warner
Bros. Studios -
The engaging two-hour peek at this working studio involves some
walking, so dress comfortably. Somewhat technically oriented and
centered more on the actual workings of filmmaking than the
tours at Universal, the ones here vary from day to day to take
advantage of goings-on at the lot. Most tours take in the
back-lot sets, the prop-construction department, and the sound
complex. A museum chronicles the studio's film and animation
history. Reservations are required.