CBS Television City

Soap operas, game shows, sitcoms and new broadcasts. Carol Burnett and other legendary variety shows originated here.

Guiness World Records Museum

6764 Hollywood Blvd. Located in the historic Hollywood Theatre building originally built in 1938. Open daily. www.guinessmuseumhollywood.com

Hard Rock Cafe

6801 Hollywood Blvd. Rockstar memorabilia on display at this popular chain. www.hardrock.com/cafes/Hollywood-on-hollywood-blvd/

Historic Hollywood

The serious explorer can read Hollywoodland USA, Hollywood: Then & Now, This is Hollywood, The Movie Lover's Guide to Hollywood, The Ultimate Hollywood Tour Book, and Early Hollywood.

Hollywood Tower Apartments

6200 Franklin Ave. Renovated historic apartments with French-Norman architectural details appeal to those with a taste for glamour, romance, mystery and fine craftsmanship. www.thehollywoodtower.com

Paramount Pictures

5555 Melrose Ave. Longest continuously operating film studio in Hollywood. The original gates can be seen at Bronson entrance. www.paramountstudios.com (See TV TICKETS and FEATURED TOURS)

Plummer Park

7377 Santa Monica Blvd. (323) 845-0172. Part of Plummer Estate that Helen Hunt Jackson, author of Ramona, visited. Park includes recreational facilities. Farmers Market every Mon 9am-2pm. www.weho.org ...

RKO Studios

Corner of Melrose & Gower. Formerly owned by Joseph Kennedy, Howard Hughes, Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. Acquired by Paramount, the familiar globe is still visible and its stages are still in use.

Raleigh Studios

5300 Melrose Ave. Working studio dates back to 1914. Home of classic films such as Mark of Zorro, The Three Musketeers, In the Heat of the Night, and TV's Superman. www.raleighstudios.com (See EVENTS)

Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Odditorium

6780 Hollywood Blvd. Ripley's Museum offers over 300 different exhibits of the strange, unusual and bizarre. Look for the dinosaur on the roof. Open daily 10am-midnight. www.ripleys.com/hollywood

Runyon Canyon Park

2000 N. Fuller Ave. Historic city park. Hike the trails and explore the relics and ruins of a Hollywood estate. Pedestrian entrance end of Fuller St. www.runyoncanyonhike.com.

Samuel-Novarro House

2255 Verde Oak Dr. Lloyd Wright translates the textured pre-cast concrete Mayanesque block into pressed metal. The result hints at pre-Columbian Revival and Zigzag Modern composition.

Schindler House

835 N. Kings Rd. Rudolph Schindler's home, considered to be the first house built in the Modern style, now a center for study of 20th century architecture. www.schindlerhouse.org

Shakespeare Bridge

Franklin Ave. between Myra Ave. & St. George St. Joins Los Feliz, Franklin Hills and Silverlake neighborhoods. This beloved 1925 Gothic beauty is one of L.A.'s historic landmarks.

Storer House

8161 Hollywood Blvd. The second of four Hollywood area textile-block designed houses by Frank Lloyd Wright was built in 1923. www.storerhouse.com

Sunset Gower Studios

1438 N. Gower St. Formerly Columbia Pictures (1926-1972). It Happened One Night and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington were made here. New building at Sunset entrance houses iconic Technicolor.

Sunset Strip

Doheny Dr. to Crescent Hts. Once-favorite night spots such as the Trocadero, Mocambo and Ciro's were located here outside the city limits in unincorporated county land.

Sunset Tower Hotel

8358 W. Sunset Blvd. Completed in 1931, was originally home to such stars as Errol Flynn, Jean Harlow, and Clark Gable. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. www.sunsettowerhotel.com

Sunset Vine Tower

1480 Vine St. L.A.'s first "skyscraper," built following removal of 14-story height limit in 1960, was the skyscraper in Earthquake and now converted to spectacular apartments. www.sunsetvinetower.com

Universal CityWalk

100 Universal City Plaza. Los Angeles’ landmark urban entertainment, shopping and dining complex, located adjacent to Universal Studios Hollywood. www.citywalkhollywood.com
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