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"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind) " is a house music track by Kenny Dope's musical production team The Bucketheads , released in February 1995 by Positiva and Henry Street Music. It was later dubbed into the project's sole album, All in the Mind (1995).
J. J. Newberry is a historic two-story building at 6600 W. Hollywood Blvd. in Hollywood, California. It is known primarily for its architecture, location, and its 30+ year tenant, Hollywood Toys & Costumes .
The Hollywood Boulevard Commercial and Entertainment District encompasses twelve blocks and 102 buildings in Hollywood, California.The area, close in proximity to classic Hollywood's major film studios, contains an array of buildings and businesses that catered to the film industry and is generally known for its significant role in the history of cinema.
Hollywood's First National Bank Building, built in 1927 and opened 1928, was designed by Meyer & Holler, the same architectural firm that designed the nearby Chinese and Egyptian theaters. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Combining art deco and neo-Gothic styles, the building was designed to suggest the sense of fantasy in the area, [ 3 ] and at 13 stories and in ...
The theater that would become Fox Theater opened as Iris Theatre in 1918, after that theater relocated from 6415 to 6508 Hollywood Boulevard. The new theater, built in the Romanesque style by Frank Meline for P. Tabor, sat 1000 and was the second movie theater on Hollywood Blvd. [1]
Frolic Room is a historic bar located at 6245 W. Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California, near Hollywood and Vine and next to the Pantages Theater. It is known for its neon sign , its history with Hollywood , and its association with the Black Dahlia .
A 1.4-acre parcel of property in the woods near Lincoln, Mont., best-known as the former home of Ted Kaczynski, is for sale at $69,500, recently Unabomber Property for Sale: It's a Bomb Skip to ...
The Poverty Row area of Hollywood, bounded by Sunset Boulevard on the North, Gower Street on the West, and Beachwood Drive on the East, was a collection of small warehouses and offices where independent film makers gathered to buy "short ends" of film from the major studios, in order to create their "great American dreams".