Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Next Week LA

Team Roadboy is off to LA


Next week we hit the highway for a quickie trip to LA. 


While I go to LA a lot, usually we do the typical tourist stuff; Disneyland, the beach etc. This time, however, we are going to try some new stuff.


Meredith and I are reserved for the MGM (now Sony Pictures) "by appointment only" backlot walking tour in Culver City. 


We are going to try some new restaurants and go back to a couple of old favorites. 


Meredith will visit the studio where a friend from college works and we are all going to Galco sodas where you can get just about any soda pop made in the world! 


Friday night we have tickets to the west coast taping of NPR's Wait Wait Don't Tell Me in Pasadena.


An architect with his two favorite artists on the road, never boring!


Roadboy's Travels © 2009



Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Bradbury Building


The Bullocks Wilshire Store


The Sunset Tower

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Southern California A Tale of Love and Hate

Installment Two: LA

Ok so now we move on to the Golden State Trip #2: Los Angeles or simply "LA". 

Locals draw fine lines between Orange County (I kind of like the City of Orange - and not much else - in the OC), East County, LA and its varied neighborhoods, the beach cities, and "The Valley", but to everyone outside of Southern California, its all just "LA".  

Me I have always had a total love hate relationship with LA. I ache for it.  I hate it.  LA is more than a place, it is a lifestyle. It is the only place in America where locals name freeways starting with "The".

For most visitors the essential trip to Southern California simply includes a day or two at Disneyland, Universal Studios, and maybe a trip to the beach at Santa Monica.

To me, visiting LA is waiting in line for a chili dog at Pinks. It is a morning spent wandering around the "World Famous" Farmers Market (with slices of pie from Du Pars available 24 hours a day). LA is an afternoon movie at the Chinese Theater, or gumming some mochi ice cream in Little Tokyo.  It is getting lost gawking at the stilt houses in the Hollywood Hills. It is a trip to the LA County Museum of Art and an afternoon at the Autry Western Heritage Museum.

Although nobody back east wants to admit it, LA has damned fine buildings.  I don't mean the modern ego based dreck like the Getty (gee whiz, why couldn't they have left the best last piece of open land in LA open?). Think of how much good the Getty complex could have done if it had been built somewhere where it repaired a damaged site, instead of subjugating a perfect one?  

No, I mean truly LA buildings.  The stuff that only works in Los Angeles.  Roadboy's Law #1: if you can pick up a building and move it from one city to another, and it works, then its a bad building. Buildings should be "of" the place where they are built.

So I marvel at wonders like the LA City Hall, the Mission Inn in Riverside, and the Bradbury Building downtown with it's eerie filtered light "sci fi" victorian steel interior.

Albert C Martin's Iconic LA City Hall

The Interior Rotunda of Riverside's Venerable Mission Inn 

I adore Bertram Goodhue's magnificent downtown LA Library and the Hollywood Bowl.  LA is the Formosa Cafe, the Hollywood Forever Cemetary, and the Observatory in Griffith Park. It is the old Wilshire Bullocks Store, the fountain in MacArthur Park, and the Wiltern Theater. It is arts and crafts houses in Pasadena, and deco masterpieces like the Sunset Tower and the LA Union Station.  To me all of that is truly "LA".

The LA Library

Feel free to blow off a visit to vapid Rodeo Drive (refer to my note about La Jolla in San Diego). Instead go stroll the 3rd Street Promenade in Santa Monica or visit Old Town Pasadena. Go to Venice Beach for an afternoon. I know I'm a hypocrite, I can't handle Mission Beach in San Diego, but I'm somehow just fine with Venice Beach. Go Figure?

Suggestions where to stay: The Checkers Downtown, Rennaisance at Hollywood and Highland, and the Magic Castle Hotel (Hint - it is the only way a non-member over 21 can gain access to the private Magic Castle).

All I ask is that you take some time and decide what the real LA is to you.

Then when you find yourself about ready to scream, point the car north and head for Santa Barbara  Update 2011: See my post for Santa Barbara and eventually William Randolph Hearst's "Castle" at San Simeon.

Roadboys Travels © 2008 / 2011