I've never particularly thought of Los Angeles equaling Hollywood, probably because I'd maintain that I'm not overly interested in the movie and TV industry that much. Or at least that's the way it seems to me most days. Give me a choice between watching something and listening to something, and I'll go with music over a film or show most any day. If Hollywood were packed with musicians it might be a different story for me.
Having said that, in my prior trips to the City of Angels, I have had my brushes with Hollywood and stars and some of it I guess was deliberate. I've been on the TMZ Celebrity Tour and it was truly awesome; we've eaten at Spago and spotted Jeffrey Katzenberg (one of the founders of DreamWorks along with Steven Spielberg and David Geffen) a couple of tables away from us; and yes, I have a celebrity encounter story with Keanu Reeves which I won't relate here but suffice it to say Keanu deals very, very well with complete strangers who don't necessarily know how to maintain personal space boundaries. He's as awesome as the TMZ Celebrity Tour in my book.
It had been about six years since we'd been to Los Angeles and on this trip we decided to devote a bit more time to movies, television and all that stuff than I have in the past on trips to the left coast. Diversification of experiences is good, folks! We looked into a motion picture studio tour; some kind of museum experience; a Hollywood food spot sometimes visited by celebrities; and the crown jewel for us: attending a taping of some sort of show. We were pretty sure based on an initial look that we could get to the first three by just paying admission somewhere; getting to the last one would rely a little bit on someone else saying "yes" to a request.
The weekend we arrived in town was Oscars weekend. We had no idea. If we had, we might have stayed in town. Instead, our itinerary took us to Palm Springs for a couple of nights before heading back to L.A. the day after Will Smith slapped Chris Rock. We drove straight from Palm Springs to Burbank, home of Warner Brothers Studios. And home of the Warner Brothers Studio Tour.
There are a number of studio tours available to the public in the Los Angeles area. We looked into Paramount (closed because of COVID), Universal (accessible only with a visit to the theme park), Sony and Warner Brothers. Warner won out because of their catalog. Sony has Spider-Man, Jeopardy!, Wheel of Fortune and The Goldbergs; Warner has DC Comics, Friends, The Big Bang Theory, Harry Potter and a lot of current shows we watch. OK, maybe not me, but our household in general. Despite our preference for Marvel over DC, Warner's shows and movies won out.
The Warner tour has basically three components to it: a tour of the lot on a sort of massive golf cart like vehicle past and through various outdoor filming locations and then driving by a bunch of sound stages; a sort of behind the scenes / how it's all done type exhibit; and a museum with DC and Harry Potter displays.
I figured there would be one or two moments that I'd feel some real connection to works of cinema that I loved on this tour. I did at one time, after all, religiously watch Friends sometime in the middle of the series. I came in after the departure of Marcel the monkey and stopped watching right before Chandler and Monica got married. I've also read all the Harry Potter books and watched all the movies (although admittedly not a huge fan of the movies - or J.K. Rowling really any more) and I've dabbled in the DC Comics movies. There had to be something of value here that would strike a real nerve, I figured.
I was wrong. It was actually way better than I possibly could have hoped. It wasn't all Friends and Big Bang Theory and Harry Potter. Which was really good.
In addition to being entertaining (I mean, why wouldn't it be?) there is a ton of useful information on the tour, from the history of the actual Warner brothers founding the company to all sorts of information about how movies are made and put together to general fan type stuff like original props and being able to sit on the couch at a reconstructed Central Perk and get your picture taken. I'm going to skip most of that, including the history, which actually shocks me because I've written about history of whatever it is we've seen everywhere we've been just about every opportunity I've had on this blog. I'll just say that I loved seeing the actual models of the X-1 and Liberty Bell 7 from the movie The Right Stuff (aka the greatest movie of all time); I appreciated the storyboard section of the museum because I think it's crazy that people actually do that still; and yes, I loved sitting on the Central Perk couch. We have a picture of us on the thing that I'm not posting here but I'm happy we have that picture.
Central Perk. Or a facsimile of a coffee shop that actually never was. |
The first reason I'm skipping most of the Warner Brothers Tour is because the golf cart on steroids portion of the tour absolutely blew every other part of this experience away.
The Warner Brothers property in Burbank is literally just one big recording studio featuring outdoor spaces created to look like cities or towns to film outdoor scenes and then interior sound studios to capture all other non-outdoors scenes. There are a series of offices and animation studios and shops on the campus as well but if you want to film anything using those buildings, you can do that too (hence like zero signage on all the buildings and offices that look like houses). It's also not exclusive to Warner Brothers films. If you want to shoot a scene for any movie on Warner's property, you can. Just pay the fee and put it back the way you found it if you need to modify the set in any way. We were told a story about a setup for The Last Samurai movie that took three months to get the scene just right for what ended up being about two minutes in the actual movie. Crazy stuff. On some level, I'm sure, a complete waste of money.
The majority of the places we were driven to were just fake streets or fake houses or fake town squares (complete with gazebo). The buildings and houses that make up these neighborhoods or communities or whatever they purport to be are generally not occupy-able. Maybe you can walk in the front door, maybe there's a room or two behind the façade or maybe there's a catwalk inside where an actor can poke his or her head out the window to talk to someone outside. It is amazing how generic these places are and it's incredible how many shows and movies they have appeared in. How do we not notice that we are looking at the same street over and over and over again? I guess they don't appear for long enough in enough different movies and shows that we can actually recognize the same place.
We were driven down a street called Hennesy Street that was used in Annie, Friends, The Big Bang Theory, Batman and Robin, Living Single, The Mask and National Lampoon's Vacation. We were also taken to a town square that was recycled from picture to picture to picture. I guess the generic-ness of both of these places makes them impossible to actually be distinguishable as unique places. It's pretty impressive. I mean, I know the people filming on these locations make small variations but it still seems like we should notice. I know any time I see a movie with a town square with a gazebo in it, I'm going to be checking to see if it's the place we visited on our tour.
Hennesy Street (top) and what could be any town in the United States (bottom), but isn't. |
So I'm a guy who claims (earlier in this very post) he doesn't care that much about movies or television and then goes gaga over seeing a model of an airplane and being near to where about 60 seconds of pretty well non-important to the whole movie plot footage from Argo was shot. So maybe I do love movies a little bit more than I claimed. Or being in Hollywood awakened something.
What happened on the Warner Brothers' lot kept going at the Academy Museum. There is so much stuff in that place for me to gawk at. I realized maybe a little bit just how many movies I love in this world.
The Museum is organized around a multi-story exhibit called Stories of Cinema which basically describes how films come together. It spends time on the finished product, the actors, the directors, the costumes, visual effects, sound, makeup, modeling, animation, casting and pretty much everything else that goes into making a motion picture. Sprinkled in and around that main narrative exhibit are other smaller (and I suppose changing) displays which we probably found less valuable than the main exhibit.
The Academy Museum, Los Angeles. |
I don't necessarily have a list of favorite movies beyond number one (The Right Stuff, in case you missed my worship of that three hour and 12 minute masterpiece earlier...) but if were to start to assemble one, I think I could get some ideas from my time in the Academy Museum. There are so many objects there related to pictures that have moved me. Storyboard from Grease. Storyboard from Escape From Alcatraz. Orc head from Peter Jackson's (awesome, amazing, fantastic) Lord of the Rings trilogy. The actual C-3PO and R2-D2 costumes used in the original three Star Wars movies (which, other than Solo - controversial take I know, are the only three really worth watching). Promotional models of the seven dwarfs to publicize Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. The actual fake shark from Jaws (Richard Dreyfuss is one of my favorite actors ever).
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, by the way, was the first movie I ever remember seeing in the movie theater. It was probably 1972 or 1973 and I'm pretty sure it was actually the first one I ever did see. I can't imagine my parents taking me to the pictures when I was younger than four.
We got some other great nuggets about the Oscars out of the Academy Museum. I mean, why wouldn't we? The first Academy Awards were presented in 1929 and covered the period from August 1, 1927 through July 21, 1928. It Happened One Night was the first film to win the "Big Five" (who knew there was such a thing?) awards of Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor and Actress and writing. In 1940, the cinematography category was split into films made in color and those made in black and white (wonder how long that lasted...).
Storyboards for The Matrix (Warner Bros. Studio Tour) and Grease (Academy Museum). |
Of course, what we wanted to know more than anything else is why the heck is it called an Oscar? We didn't get a definitive answer to this question. Instead we got a legend. Apparently, Academy librarian Margaret Herrick said, when she saw one of the statuettes for the first time, that the trophy looked like her uncle Oscar. Can this really be true? I mean, really? That's what the museum says. That's all I can say there.
Our Academy Museum visit was a morning event. We finished up just after noon. I get hungry about that time of day and was in no mood to kill my Hollywood buzz so we picked a lunch place with a Hollywood vibe: Pink's Hot Dogs. Not going to spend a ton of time on this one but Pink's is quite simply a Hollywood institution. They have been serving up hot dogs day and night since 1939. That's an awfully long time. They must be doing something right.
So why Pink's on a celebrity fueled Los Angeles binge? Well because sometimes the rich and famous (or just famous, maybe) go to Pink's for some food, although not when we were there on this trip. No Keanu Reeves, no Nicole Kidman, no Mario Lopez, no James Corden, no Quentin Tarantino. Although signed pics from most of these stars and more are on the wall of the restaurant. I have to say this was not my first visit to Pink's. I went there years ago at night and waited three hours in line to grab a couple of dogs. A Tuesday afternoon was a bit quicker - less than an hour from parking to moving on. I'd hazard a guess that star-spotting at Pink's is more productive at night than during the day. But the Mulholland Drive Dog with jalapenos tastes just as good in the afternoon as it does at night. Although check that...maybe not after a few beers. Definitely would taste better then.
Pink's. And their wall of fame. A younger Jimmy Kimmel on the second row. |
We needed Pink's. The wall of signed celebrity pics actually did keep our Hollywood buzz going. We didn't really expect to be chowing down on a hot dog and fries with Drew Barrymore or Patti LaBelle but hey...you never know. Pink's was a way stop on a drive to the main event for us on this trip: a live taping of a show. Yes, we made a request and yes, someone said yes.
Actually we made several requests. And someone said yes to one of them. American Song Contest? No response. Call Me Kat? Also no response. The Late, Late Show with James Corden? Also also no response. Jimmy Kimmel Live! YES!!! In all honesty, we probably got an affirmative response to the best option we requested. Actually, there's no "probably" about it. We got the best.
Two things about these in studio experiences. First, attending one of these takes a significant chunk of time out of your day. Not saying it isn't worth it because it totally is. But between traveling to Hollywood; being early because with L.A. traffic you never know; waiting in line; having the line be moved closer to the door; waiting in line more; clearing security and being admitted to the studio; waiting while everyone behind you is admitted; settling in; getting a bathroom break; and then the taping of the actual show itself, it can take hours.
Second, they are free. And that's honestly unbelievable. Here's something that people would likely pay a significant amount of money to do and it's totally free. You just have to be picked. And obviously since we got no response on three of the four requests we made to participate, that's not an automatic. There are many, many ways to part with your hard earned cash in Hollywood; attending the taping of a show ain't one of them. They even validate parking. That's actually kind of refreshing.
No pics inside the Kimmel Show so this is it for pics of this part of our Hollywood pilgrimage. |
We made our own luck with the quality of our Kimmel experience. We got there early before any of the signs for the audience line were in place and asked some people hanging around there how it worked and although they were apparently unaffiliated with the actual attending the show thing, they steered us absolutely right about where to go and wait. That effort translated into a number one spot in line and being one of the first to be seated which as it happened was in the second row of the studio audience with nobody in the front row in the two seats before us.
When we sat down we noticed a star on the floor of the studio about 10 feet away from us and a giant camera just to our left. The star had to be Kimmel's monolog spot, right? Turns out it was, so we pretty much got the best seat in the house. Despite our proximity to the host for the opening segment, we actually didn't hear a bunch of the words he said because of the applause in the audience, which drowned out parts of the jokes. Didn't come through that way when we watched the show when we got home. It wouldn't be the only thing different about the broadcast from our in studio experience.
One thing about going to see a show like this is that the quality of the experience can sometimes depend on who's joining the host for the night. We got Donald Glover and Machine Gun Kelly. Glover is a writer, comedian, actor, filmmaker, hip-hop artist and probably about ten or twelve other things who most notably for me portrayed the greatest Star Wars character ever (Lando Calrissian) in the fourth best Star Wars movie of all time (Solo - had to get that one in again). Super excited. I honestly couldn't have told you anything about Machine Gun Kelly (MGK for those in the know) before I got to Los Angeles last month. But hey, I like music of all sorts so I could go for a live performance to open up my mind a little more.
These aren't the droids you are looking for...at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. |
If there are potential audience members out there who have performance anxiety about being on a show like this, there's no reason to be at the Kimmel Show. That's because we were coached up ahead of time and told when and how to applaud and cheer and when to stand and sit. When Jimmy or guests enter, stand and go crazy but don't yell out anything specific or notable, no matter how well intentioned you might think you are being. No "I love you, Jimmy", in other words. Don't move out of your seat or you'll risk being forcibly removed (the forcibly was more implied than explicit). Don't stop clapping and cheering suddenly; bring it down slowly but DO bring it down. And most importantly, if you don't get the joke, laugh and applaud like you do anyway. It's Hollywood. Fake it!
Oddly enough, the first thing Donald Glover said when he sat down was "Do y'all stand for everybody? That was great!" Actually, yes. Yes, we do. That's exactly what we were coached to do. The guests have to know that, right? Right?
Glover was great. That dude has so much going on. I don't know how he keeps it all straight with all the creativity outlets he has. I'd love for there to be some more Lando movies. I can always dream. He and Billy Dee Williams are totally different from my perspective but I'll take either guy in the role.
So...Glover in and out. Machine Gun Kelly into the guest seat and let's get ready for a performance, although honestly, we couldn't figure out where he was going to perform. There didn't seem to be a spot on the set for that to happen but they DID build Jimmy's carpet, desk and guest chair after the monolog during the commercial break so maybe they had it figured out? I mean, they do this sort of thing all the time, I guess. But legitimately setting up for a musical performance would seem a lot more complicated than setting up a desk for some discussion.
After Kimmel's talk with MGK (I'm catching on...), he left Kimmel there alone in the studio and we were then told something to the effect of "now you are going to hear Jimmy talk about something you are not going to see" and the tape rolled on Kimmel doing the intro to the MGK performance. And that was it. Show over. No performance. If you watch the show (or any episode of the show, I imagine), you see a performance with enthusiastic audience clapping after. It wasn't us. We weren't there. So I still haven't seen Machine Gun Kelly perform live (and probably never will).
The actual shark from Jaws. The least scary part of that movie is when we see the entirety of this thing. |
It is difficult to say I was disappointed by anything about our experience at the Kimmel Show, including the lack of a musical performance. The whole thing was just awesome and really, really well done. But there had been a musician that I am truly into, I might have been a little stunned here. Good thing I don't have any MGK in my collection.
We walked through the spot where the musical performances happen on the way out towards Hollywood Boulevard and realized that we had actually heard the performance earlier in the day. When we first got where we thought the line might be, we heard banging of drums and other general concert-type noise coming from the building. We figured it must have been a rehearsal. Probably now we think it was the actual performance that ended up on the show.
I'll say a few last things about this whole experience. The Warner Brothers Studio Tour was awesome and eye-opening. Having the background that things are not always what they appear to be translated well into our whole weekend experience. That tour paired with the Academy Museum worked well. Finally, if you get the opportunity to go to a taping of a live show, do it. It's some interesting stuff and it's free. For us, Kimmel was I think about the perfect thing for us to do. Jimmy's on the same side of the aisle as us I think on most issues, he's genuinely funny and doesn't seem like a complete jerk. That last piece is important. I'm hoping I'm right.
No comments:
Post a Comment