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Host segments filmed at a Los Angeles Kings practice at the Prudential Center during the 2012 Stanley Cup Finals Features the music video for "Rock' em Sock' em Techno" by BKS featuring Don Cherry. First video released by VSC (now Unobstructed View) Features the Los Angeles Kings' Stanley Cup celebration as a Blu-Ray-exclusive extra.
Located on 6 acres (24,000 m 2) of land (making it the largest luxury condominium property in Los Angeles), the towers host unobstructed 360° views of Los Angeles, the Hollywood Sign, Griffith Observatory and the Downtown Los Angeles skyline to the East and the Pacific Ocean to the West.
Later that year the Pritzker family acquired the home at 1261 Angelo Drive and the house was quickly demolished, despite efforts by the Los Angeles Conservancy to prevent its destruction. [3] [5] [12] The lot was appealing because of its location near Beverly Hills and the high vantage point that offered 180-degree unobstructed views of Los ...
The company name was changed to View, Inc. in November 2012 [6] and began shipping from its new factory near the end of the third quarter of 2012. [9] In 2015, the company's glass was installed at the new Overstock headquarters in Salt Lake City. [10] In 2019, the OAA installed View Dynamic Glass at its headquarters. [11]
The View merged with the Los Angeles Reader to form New Times LA in 1996. [4] The View had a print circulation of 75,000 at the time of the merger. [5] The Los Angeles Times described New Times' purchase of the View as its "newest weapon" in Los Angeles' alternative weekly "newspaper war," observing that the purchase showed that New Times had "upped the ante in its battle for newspaper readers."
The studio is built alongside the ocean coastline, enabling an unobstructed view of the sea. It comprises 35 acres (14 ha) of land overlooking the Pacific Ocean, [11] with 2,000 feet (610 m) of coastline frontage. The facility has 5 stages, 4 indoor and outdoor water tanks, street sets, and is a self-contained facility, with offices, scenery ...
The William O. Jenkins House— also known as the "Phantom House", the J. Paul Getty mansion and 641 South Irving Boulevard — was a Mediterranean-style property in Los Angeles, California, built for businessman William O. Jenkins (reputedly the "richest man in Mexico") in 1922 and '23.
The retaining wall behind the grave was removed, and the hill landscaped to allow an unobstructed view of Arlington House. [ 69 ] [ 72 ] Concerned that the grass on the burial plot would wither in Washington's hot summers, in the fall of 1966 the decision was made to replace the grass with rough-hewn reddish-gold granite fieldstone set in a ...