A Bowl, A Barn & A Tower: How the Entertainment Industry was Born | Lost LA | S9 E4

Hollywood’s first studio was a barn. In this episode of Lost LA, Nathan explores the early history of Hollywood, tracing the unexpected places where the entertainment industry began. At the Hollywood Heritage Museum, he visits the barn where Cecil B. DeMille and Jesse L. Lasky produced one of the first feature films in 1913, a modest structure that helped launch a global industry. Nathan then heads to the Hollywood Bowl, a natural canyon that evolved into one of the most iconic performance venues in the world. Through decades of architectural redesign, acoustic experimentation, and community investment, the Bowl reflects Los Angeles’ long, standing relationship with music, performance, and public space. About fifty years later the 50-story Capitol Records building changed the landscape of Hollywood and the music industry. The historic building that flashes Hollywood on the roof in morse code has recorded voices like Frank Sinatra, Nat “King” Cole, Sir Paul McCartney and many others – shaping both the skyline and entertainment. From early filmmaking to live performance, these sites reveal how Hollywood grew from humble beginnings into a global cultural force. Learn more at https://bit.ly/3NNzJ4T Love PBS SoCal? Your support keeps the programs you love alive. Donate today: https://bit.ly/you-tube-donation ~~~~~~ Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://bit.ly/3wiFfZ2 Follow us: Instagram:   / pbssocal   TikTok:   / pbssocal   Facebook:   / pbssocal   Sign-up for our Newsletter: https://www.pbssocal.org/newsletter #HollywoodHistory #FilmOrigins #HollywoodBowl #LACulture #HollywoodOrigins #BirthplaceOfHollywood #HollywoodHeritageMuseum #CecilBDeMille #JesseLLasky