West Hollywood Past and Present

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  • čas přidán 9. 04. 2011
  • The following video i put together is of West Hollywood past and present...from the days in the 1920s when it was named Sherman to Present day West Hollywood which became an official city on November 1984... 1.9 square miles of creativity =) enjoy!!

Komentáře • 78

  • @jgilc2691
    @jgilc2691 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Little did I know when sitting in the bars between April and May of 1982 that they too would become a You Tube video on how fabulous they once were. And how much they are missed! Ahhhh...West Hollywood!

  • @fob1xxl
    @fob1xxl Před 3 lety +16

    Lived in WE HO from 1964-1978. The changes that took place are startling. Gay friendly NOT gay friendly ! The rent on my first apt. on Laurel Ave was $140.00 mo. SAME APT. SOLD as a condo for over & $1million. My other apts. On Rugby Dr, and Westmount Dr. In the '74 and '78 era rented for around $240.00 mo. and sold as Condos in the $800,00-$900,00 range. I loved my life there. It was my safe haven. Now that my life is coming to an end, I will always be thankful for having made friends there and for finding out who I was. Too many friends gone. Too many tears .

    • @martinflores9322
      @martinflores9322 Před 2 lety

      Laurel & what?

    • @fob1xxl
      @fob1xxl Před 2 lety +2

      @@martinflores9322 on Laurel below Sunset and above Fountain.

    • @fob1xxl
      @fob1xxl Před 2 lety +1

      @@TruthBeTold121212 Thanks for your thoughts. It's called life.

    • @davidkrausell1741
      @davidkrausell1741 Před rokem

      @@fob1xxl What city do you live now?

    • @patr70
      @patr70 Před rokem +2

      @@fob1xxl Keep your head up. We're [all] in the same boat.. you're not alone 💖💖

  • @DearlyDepartedTours
    @DearlyDepartedTours Před 2 lety +3

    Great fun. Thank you.

  • @patr70
    @patr70 Před rokem +3

    I find it interesting that all throughout the 1980s, the Sunset Strip, just up the hill from Santa Monica Blvd., was the "Heavy Metal" hangout for many young people. Two different scenes that were Worlds apart.. yet practically side-by-side.

    • @mrxman581
      @mrxman581 Před 4 měsíci +1

      And there was a huge new wave and punk scene as well in the 80s.

  • @johndelavina3335
    @johndelavina3335 Před 5 lety +10

    This is great. Any photos or video footage, no matter how complete or incomplete, is great to see. I visited Weho in 1978 and moved here in 1982. So many things came and went - for better or worse. But I had and continue to have great times.

  • @randalljansta3469
    @randalljansta3469 Před 3 lety +4

    In the late 70s and early 80s I worked at Sidestreet, Koontz Hardware, Hamburger Habit. I loved going to the Blue Parrot, and other bars in the area. It was a great time in West Hollywood. Thanks for the memories.

  • @davidkrausell1741
    @davidkrausell1741 Před rokem +2

    So many people who used to visit all these places along Santa Monica blvd are now gone. Nothing is the same anymore. People or places everything changes and not for better sadly. I left LA after living there for fifteen years. I have no regrets. It's a new generation of people now.

    • @patr70
      @patr70 Před rokem +1

      It's the same in San Diego.. everything has changed especially the people.

    • @mrxman581
      @mrxman581 Před 4 měsíci

      Very true. I'm sure there are many less gay owned and operated businesses today compared to the 80s-90s. It seems to be gentrifying into a wealthier straight neighborhood.

  • @nataleefonsec4846
    @nataleefonsec4846 Před 3 lety +5

    I remember the abbey club 1998. Amazing memories. Not to mention the iconic RAGE club.

    • @patr70
      @patr70 Před rokem

      Yes.. all of the [awful] hot mess queens at the Rage. So many hot messes passed thru that place over the last 20 years.. although It might have been normal in the 80s and 90s.

  • @mmccartney6579
    @mmccartney6579 Před rokem +2

    I can't believe you left out Schwab's Pharmacy. I practically lived there in 1965, and parking cars at Whisky a Go Go while waiting for my "big break!" :)

    • @patr70
      @patr70 Před rokem +1

      Wow. So many memories. 🙄

  • @colt45peacemaker
    @colt45peacemaker Před 4 lety +3

    Remember Astro Burger, All American Burger.
    Gold coast closed some years ago and Circus Books closed this year.

  • @impumagirl
    @impumagirl Před 5 lety +8

    Actually Flippers was there in the 1979 and closed in 1983 it wasn't there very long but the internet makes it seem like it was. However the store that was there for years was an Esprit clothing store all the rich kids wore that stuff my mom couldn't afford it so I never got to shop there but wanted to so bad but when we went by on the bus I'd hope someone was getting off at that stop so I can look in the showcase window. Here is a picture of the Esprit store letters it's pretty sad it was there a long time yet this was all I found. Esprit moved there in the end of 1983 and refaced that place after Flippers closed. Esprit gave it that raw industrial cement storefront look they were way ahead f their time after all that look is still there today at the CVS. ... i809.photobucket.com/albums/zz19/HossC_2010/Noirish%20LA/LAEspritSign.jpg

    • @mooskanate
      @mooskanate Před 4 lety +2

      There's some footage of the ESPRIT store, interior and exterior, in the film L.A. Story (1991) with Steve Martin and Sarah Jessica Parker. Check out this article about that location, which includes Esprit.
      www.iamnotastalker.com/2013/04/15/now-clothing-from-l-a-story/

  • @incognitoyo8606
    @incognitoyo8606 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Revolver reopened in its original location after this video was posted.

  • @gizzykatkat9687
    @gizzykatkat9687 Před 4 lety +3

    I love West Hollywood!

  • @barryobrien7935
    @barryobrien7935 Před rokem

    The Four Star (circa 1965) was a very comfortable bar, safe from LA Police as this was unincorporated LA County controlled by sheriff’s dept. but you still couldn’t touch each other. LA city bars were subject to raids-YES-my how times have changed. I moved to Bay Area in 1977 and remember WeHo with fondness but could never deal with it now in my mid-eighties. I also lived in Los Feliz/Silverlake area (which I miss greatly)

    • @lukas01986
      @lukas01986 Před rokem

      The stories you must have having lived through this wonderful time. 👍🏼

  • @YourfriendChrisEspinoza
    @YourfriendChrisEspinoza Před 5 lety +4

    When I went to WeHo for the first time the day before pride, I wanted to feel how it's like being in WeHo as well as to preview pride. Also, I needed to get familiar with the streets of WeHo all thanks to Google maps as well as the official LA Pride Website. At least I wasn't lost during LA Pride.

  • @victoriamayo5774
    @victoriamayo5774 Před 7 lety +3

    Loved it thankyou

  • @daveaaron8209
    @daveaaron8209 Před 5 lety +7

    What I learned from this is weho was once cool and now....... well, sucks! And, yeah, that’s about it.

  • @Pureimagination200
    @Pureimagination200 Před 8 lety +5

    Born and raised in West Hollywood!

  • @gilbertmiller390
    @gilbertmiller390 Před 2 lety

    Great production Michael

  • @mineralt
    @mineralt Před 26 dny

    WeHo is in my top 5 places in the US and I am straight as an arrow ❤

  • @MeMeDaVinci
    @MeMeDaVinci Před 7 lety +5

    Enjoy the then and now photos....people forget quickly how things used to look.

  • @cyndykated358
    @cyndykated358 Před 2 lety

    I went to GirlBar in its heyday...you know I’m old..if I’m saying heyday! It was so easy to drive 20 miles on the weekends to these clubs...now I’m content to stay close to home...actually in my home...lol

  • @fakerating
    @fakerating Před 4 lety +5

    Around the 1890's, it was called the town of Sherman, named after Moses Sherman of the Railcars... then in 1925 it was a part of L.A. loosely informally called west Hollywood, but not a city. It was part of the County of L.A. until cityhood in 1984, when it became "The City of West Hollywood".

    • @mmccartney6579
      @mmccartney6579 Před rokem

      It was called Hollywoodland before it was Hollywood. Cheers! :)

    • @mrxman581
      @mrxman581 Před 4 měsíci +1

      ​@@mmccartney6579That was a different area further East.

  • @GUAMANIANable
    @GUAMANIANable Před 5 lety +3

    The Bekins storage building looks like a Mormon temple.

  • @Westby100
    @Westby100 Před 12 lety +1

    Bravo!

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 Před rokem

    That’s so nostalgic, makes me sad and happy too. Isn’t that strange? Thank you for posting this.

  • @2Brian
    @2Brian Před 12 lety +1

    Cool video, Micheal!

  • @michaelterence1662
    @michaelterence1662 Před 6 lety +9

    Thanks for the video. I lived in and around WeHo from 1977 to 2000, and enjoyed seeing the long-gone sights -- especially the Blue Parrot (my first gay bar), which became Revolver, which became East/West, which became Revolver again. Will it become the Blue Parrot again next?

  • @dougwest4440
    @dougwest4440 Před 5 lety +1

    Marquis theater at Melrose and Doheny, Scout group cabin on Robertson,Red car Doheny and Santa Monica,parents moved to
    Rangely Ave in 1922 ,great neighborhood to grow up

  • @bobbenson6838
    @bobbenson6838 Před 7 lety +2

    THANKS SO MUCH

  • @toddstewart1962
    @toddstewart1962 Před 2 lety

    Awesome

  • @GeorgeVreelandHill
    @GeorgeVreelandHill Před 3 lety +8

    WEHO was better in the 1980s.

    • @patr70
      @patr70 Před rokem

      Waaay Better. But.. so were the Men! It started to get messy in the early 90s.. and you can thank Madonna for that one and all the new influx of messy queens. 🤓

  • @mac2phin
    @mac2phin Před 4 lety +2

    You didn't show the Log Cabin on Robertson and Melrose.

  • @ronniebishop2496
    @ronniebishop2496 Před rokem

    Wouldn’t it make anyone sad to just watch your country go away and your world, disappear from sight and almost everyone and everything you know and love gone. That’s how I feel watching this.

  • @davidlarson9125
    @davidlarson9125 Před měsícem

    At 2:06 Palm is actually Hancock Avenue, it's correct in the photo that follows. Like many areas inhabited by gay men, the area of LA County known as West Hollywood, and then in 1984 the City of West Hollywood changed greatly. Incorporation brought local tax dollars, street improvements and the usual gayed-upness and then outright gentrification. Today WeHo retains it center of gayness albeit in an internet connected world that made bars and clubs less necessary. Unfortunately, some of these properties are very difficult to find suitable long-term tenants and portions of the streetscape suffer.

  • @robertbazan4194
    @robertbazan4194 Před 7 lety +12

    Woah!!! Something VERY wrong here. The guy who did this must be very young and, if he is going back all the way to the 20s 40s..then, jumps to the 80s 90s and today......THERE IS ONE VERY IMPORTANT PIECE OF THE PUZZLE MISSING! Where is the legendary ..celebrity filled STUDIO ONE? One of the world's most famous DISCOS...it reigned supreme for 19 years...in the former Factory building. ....which is now the factory again...STUDIO ONE and its equally famous BACKLOT was an experience above and beyond. This present generation is letting our Gay History fall between the cracks and they are oblivious. He shows The FACTORY in the 1980s and the present. It was NOT the Factory in the 1980s. It was in the early 1970s....but from 1974 until the early 1990s it was STUDIO ONE DISCOTEQUE ..... Odyssey and Rage, too were overlooked

    • @fob1xxl
      @fob1xxl Před 6 lety +2

      I know what you mean. I spent nearly 20 years going to Studio One, "'The Factory" is what it was called before it became "Studio One". Why he omitted that is anyone's guess.

    • @ricklosangeles5043
      @ricklosangeles5043 Před 6 lety

      This video should be edited to include "Studio One" and "The Backlot"

    • @harryfishback8173
      @harryfishback8173 Před 6 lety +1

      Is that where The rose Tatoo was? And the club was upstairs I think I remember 18 and over night back in the 80s used to see Will Wheaton there all the time.

    • @impumagirl
      @impumagirl Před 5 lety

      Yup they also hosted other clubs that would rent it mostly after hours like "Sanitarium" in like 1990 up til around mid 90's

    • @MirageCA818
      @MirageCA818 Před 5 lety +3

      Maybe the editor had a hard time finding pictures of the clubs during certain periods and the right info of the years they were open. I have yet to see a website that has all of this info. One would think they would have Gay History Of West Hollywood website by now its 2019.

  • @impumagirl
    @impumagirl Před 5 lety +2

    Actually Flippers was there in the 70's in the 80s it was Esprit clothing all the rich kids wore that stuff my mom couldn't afford it but when we went by on the bus I'd hope someone was getting off at that stop so I can look in the showcase window, here is a picture of all I could find of it but they are the ones who gave it that rew cement storefront look. i809.photobucket.com/albums/zz19/HossC_2010/Noirish%20LA/LAEspritSign.jpg

  • @garyt5582
    @garyt5582 Před 6 lety +2

    the odyssey was the place to be!

  • @bhanubhalla
    @bhanubhalla Před 13 lety

    What's the background music?

    • @MeMeDaVinci
      @MeMeDaVinci Před 7 lety

      Bhanu Bhalla The music is "Legend of Babel" according to the video notes.

    • @jillragaway7001
      @jillragaway7001 Před 6 lety +1

      He missed a huge 20+ year history of West Hollywood from the 60s and 70s, when 90069 was still just Los Angeles. He missed the lone train that rolled down the track/now median of Santa Monica Blvd, the 5 and dime, the Daisy, La Cienega Bowling Lanes, Propinquity, the Starwood, etc. I appreciate the work that went into it, but it's not a good representation of West Hollywood.

    • @robbjmc2
      @robbjmc2 Před 5 lety +1

      The original (non-Disco) version of this is from the Giorgio Moroder-conducted soundtrack to the 1984 re-release of Metropolis. This song was contributed by Moroder himself, but he also produced/included several great songs by Pat Benatar, Freddie Mercury, Bonnie Tyler, Adam Ant, Loverboy, Jon Anderson (of Yes) and more. I love the album -- worth a listen (it's here on youtube).

    • @robbjmc2
      @robbjmc2 Před 5 lety

      czcams.com/video/llgn9F4nJpM/video.html

  • @IMeMineWho
    @IMeMineWho Před 9 měsíci

    Um fine. But it Who is not just a gay area; it was also the Sunset Strip and Marilyn Monroe, the Rainbow and home to The Hollywood Vampires (Keith Moon, Alice Cooper, Ringo), the Whisky, the R oxy..first place NR played, home to the first HOB, etc.

  • @TheSeanm102
    @TheSeanm102 Před 6 lety +1

    1:29 is not the 1920s those cars are from the 1950s and 1:34 is not the 1940s the cars in the photo are from the 1920s

    • @jbarnhart2653
      @jbarnhart2653 Před 5 lety

      40's and 50's cars look about the same...I think he got the order wrong in the video. should have been obvious but I don't think he cares about that as much as the photo comparisons like with a lot of these vids,,,this ones kind of lazy and confusing in the first place.

  • @clevelandphil
    @clevelandphil Před 5 lety +5

    West Hollywood was nicer before they put holes In bathroom walls.

  • @JerichoMile4
    @JerichoMile4 Před 4 lety

    Uh...all the gay bars in West Hollywood ? 🤔