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Trip

Trip

Perched on the edge of Santa Monica, Trip is indeed a trip. From the outside, it looks like an everyday neighborhood bar, but the club is actually one of the Westside's leading hot spots, with nightly no-cover live music, comedy and burlesque.
The Redwood Bar & Grill

The Redwood Bar & Grill

A longtime haunt for politicians and journalists, this downtown bar hosts an endless parade of punks and roots rockers on its small, low stage, set against a festively nautical backdrop of fishing nets and mermaid paintings.
The Satellite

The Satellite

Once known as Spaceland and, before that, Pan, this Silver Lake bar continues to host before-they're-famous indie-rock bands alongside the occasional anti-comedian and film screening. Mondays are usually no cover.

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  • Fogo De Chao

    Fogo De Chao

    133 N. La Cienega Blvd. Beverly Hills, CA 90211
    310-289-7755

    http://www.fogodechao.com Churrascarias, southern Brazilian-style steak houses, are well established in Los Angeles. But Fogo de Chao, part of a Sao Paulo-based chain, is less a restaurant than a sizzling theme park of meat, a quarter acre of sword-wielding gauchos, smoldering logs, and soaring walls perforated with bottles of the heartier, more expensive red wines. It is a land of razor-sharp knives and double-weight forks, A-1 sauce and chimichurri, a salad bar longer than the Pasadena Freeway, and all the dripping, smoking flesh you can eat carved off swords at your table: $56.50, cash on the barrelhead. Refuse to leave until you get double portions of the grilled picanha. No Brazilian would settle for less. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • The Fonda Theatre

    The Fonda Theatre

    6126 Hollywood Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028
    323-464-0808

    http://www.goldenvoice.com/search/?q=Fonda%20Theatre&vid=262 The longtime Hollywood theater first opened in 1926 as the Carter DeHaven Music Box Theatre and featured such legendary performers as Fanny Brice, Jean Harlow, Clark Gable, James Cagney and Marlene Dietrich. In the ensuing decades, the theater had several name changes and reappeared in various incarnations. In the 1980s, the Spanish Colonial-style venue was renamed as the Henry Fonda Theater before undergoing renovations and reopening in the 2007 as the Music Box at the Fonda. In 2010, the name was shortened to the Music Box after the place was refurbished with glittery new fixtures and mural-size classical-style paintings. In 2012, there was yet another change, with the local concert promoters Goldenvoice taking over the Music Box and renaming it the Fonda Theatre. Currently, the Fonda hosts concerts, dance nights, awards shows and special events. The Kills, Gogol Bordello, Cults, the Dresden Dolls, Gang of Four, Ariel Pink, Os Mutantes, Television, Concrete Blonde, Jenny & Johnny, the New York Dolls and Turbonegro are among the diverse musicians who've graced the theater's large stage. Smoking is permitted only on the upstairs outdoors patio. The theater has several full bars. All ages. Street and lot parking. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Footsies

    Footsies

    2640 N. Figueroa St. Los Angeles, CA 90065
    323-221-6900

    http://www.myspace.com/footsiesbar Latino locals might still pop by this old Cypress Park bar for after-work Tecates and tequila shots, but for the most part, the Spanish-speaking stalwarts who used to frequent this beloved dive are all but gone since Dave Nuepert (Short Stop, El Chavito) took over a few years ago. Footsies, like Little Cave not far from it, has been gently gentrified, and it's maintained its charm post-makeover. It's done up in '70s Regal Beagle (the Three's Company's bar) kitsch: homey retro lighting, nude paintings everywhere, dark-red and wood furniture. For the most part, most nights, you'll find boho types in beards and American Apparel garb sipping PBR and cheap shots. DJ sounds range from soul to death metal and there's a jukebox, pool table and smoking area in the back. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Ford

    Ford's Filling Station

    9531 Culver Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232
    310-202-1470

    http://www.fordsfillingstation.net Ford's, whose chef-owner is Benjamin Ford, is a bar that happens to have ambitious, organic food as opposed to a restaurant that happens to have a bar attached, a gastropub where you can enjoy pretty decent cooking while being bounced around like a pachinko ball. If you manage to power your way to a barstool or to an actual table, you will find most of the usual Los Angeles gastropub classics. If you like the fried Ipswich clams at Jar, you will probably like Ford's rudely indelicate version. There is a hamburger tricked out with blue cheese and an onion compote, the requisite butter-lettuce salad with bacon, and a decent selection of cheeses and meats, some of them procured from Armandino Batali in Seattle, to help down the wine. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • The Foundry on Melrose

    The Foundry on Melrose

    7465 Melrose Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90046
    323-651-0915

    http://www.thefoundryonmelrose.com Foundry, a Melrose supper club run by Patina alum Eric Greenspan, is as relaxed as a place with a $80 tasting menu can be, with a spacious patio, a dining room weirdly commingled with the open kitchen, and a bar area dominated by laid-back piano music. Waiters rush by with little cast-iron pots of pork belly with fried eggs and fitted rounds of toast; rare, crisp-skinned salmon with shaved beets and puréed beets; and braised short ribs with an exceptionally airy horseradish-potato purée. The eclectic wine list is long and reasonably priced, the cheese plate is formidable, and on Tuesday nights, there's fried chicken. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • The Fountain

    5100 Fountain Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90029

  • Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills

    Four Seasons Hotel Los Angeles at Beverly Hills

    300 S. Doheny Drive Los Angeles, CA 90048
    310-273-2222

    http://www.fourseasons.com/losangeles/

  • The Fox & Hounds Pub

    The Fox & Hounds Pub

    11100 Ventura Blvd. Studio City, CA 91604
    818-763-7837

    http://www.thefoxandhounds.com Situated near Universal Studios in the heart of Studio City, the Fox & Hounds is a traditional British pub that belies its San Fernando Valley location. With a poster urging patrons to "Keep Calm and Carry On" and a large sign outside the bar commemorating the 2011 royal wedding ("Congratulations to William & Kate"), the place is veddy English. However, it's not too stiff-upper-lip, with framed portraits of the Clash's Joe Strummer providing a working-man's-hero contrast to the pub's royal fixation. The Fox & Hounds is a great place for expats and locals alike to catch all manner of European and American soccer games on the bar's various television screens. They take their darts playing seriously here, and other entertainment includes weekly trivia-game contests and live bands on weekends. Naturally, the Fox & Hounds specializes in typical British pub fare, including shepherd's pie, bangers & mash, cornish pastie, and fish & chips, along with breakfast (served all day), ploughman's salads, burgers, and an array of Britcentric desserts like treacle pudding and the notorious spotted dick. The full bar proffers a wide assortment of mostly imported beers and ales. The layout is quite comfortable, with a red-brick fireplace, a wood-paneled bar, a separate dining area and a leafy outdoors patio. Breakfast, lunch and dinner served daily. Food is available for takeout, and there's street parking and a lot in the back. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Fox Fire Room

    Fox Fire Room

    12516 Magnolia Blvd. Valley Village, CA 91607
    818-766-1344

    http://www.foxfireroom.com The Fox, as the regulars call it, looks like it hasn't changed a hair since the '70's: red booths and bar chairs, cheap wood everywhere, and a birthday chalk board behind the bar, the years of which are not mentioned, but most of which must surely date back 60s and before. There's not a lot of trendy twentysomethings here, which actually makes a nice refuge. This neighborhood bar has charming touches that make it feel homey too: funny, cartoon-covered cocktail napkins, flirty bartenders and cheesy fixtures and signs, all of which make a perfect backdrop for the bar's kickin' karaoke nights, heavy on the classic rock. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Frank

    Frank 'n Hank

    518 S. Western Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90020
    213-383-2087

    The full name is actually just Frank n Hank, not Frank and Hank's, as one might assume, and it's as divey as its lack of possessives might make lead you to believe. Within feet of other Koreatown fixtures, such as Orchid, where wealthy Westsiders pay dearly for table service and private karaoke rooms, Frank n Hank is the opposite: unpretentious and cheap. Head here for a post-karaoke cooldown and get tanked for less than $20. Inside, a simple row of barstools, a pool table and a juke box fill out a room smaller than your average studio apartment. The bar also features regulars who seem too comfortable not to have been coming here for many years, and the female proprietor, Snow, who's at her post every night of the week, seems to grudgingly accept her symbiotic relationship with them. Perhaps because of this large contingency of loyal but barely paying customers, she is extremely friendly to the young and solvent-looking. Her good cheer, the prices, the lack of crowding and the central location make this an excellent stopping point - as long as your love of pool supersedes your desire for trendy decor. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Franky

    Franky's Barber Boutique

    3323 W. Sunset Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90026-2117
    323-668-2088

  • Freak City

    Freak City

    6363 Hollywood Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028

    http://www.freakcity.la Even by loose Hollywood standards, Freak City is weird. Half retail store, half ultra-late night/very early morning rage space, Freak City is a mash up of dirty dance tracks, fake gold bling and neon-print onesies. The storefront sells the sort of chopped-and-screwed '90s fashions that were never mainstream enough initially to come back into style now. But around back, under the soft alley glow of a red neon sign, is the all-night party zone of the same name, with lounge-worthy couches and a decently priced full bar. The walls are still splattered with all manner of freakish decoratives and pieces of chain link fence, but the music is always danceable, there's hardly ever a line, and the people watching is out of this world. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Freddy Smalls

    Freddy Smalls

    11520 W. Pico Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90064
    310-479-3000

    http://www.freddysmalls.com There are indulgent comfort plates, like the Reuben's Gluttony with bone marrow and "Yorkie" pudding, or the Flash-Grilled Steak Tartare topped with a smoked egg yolk. And while excellent options, most of these meaty dishes aren't the most interesting ones on the menu, even for the particularly carnivorous. No, the interest lies principally in the vegetable plates, which channels the ethos of seasonability into bar food fare. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • French Market,

    7985 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90046
    310-871-7563

  • The Fretted Frog

    The Fretted Frog

    1200 N. Alvarado St. Los Angeles, CA 90026
    213-353-0734

    http://www.thefrettedfrog.com This self-described "alternative" music store and venue on Alvarado Street offers sales and repairs of acoustic guitars, banjos, ukuleles, mandolins and other fretted instruments. The Frog specializes in rare European guitars, including such brands as George Lowden and Cole Clark. The staff is friendly and knowledgeable about repair tips and music lessons, and the overall vibe is warm and inviting, especially compared to the elitism and officiousness at larger music stores. Best of all, the new shop is attempting to be Echo Park's equivalent to the legendary West Los Angeles music venue McCabe's. Live entertainment includes regular open mikes and acoustic-oriented music performances, and several big names in the alt-folk universe, such as Marianne Dissard and Francoiz Breut, have recently performed in the Frog's airy, homey main room. Metered street parking is available on Alvarado. All ages. No alcohol. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Froggy

    Froggy's Topanga Fish Market

    1105 N. Topanga Canyon Blvd. Topanga, CA 90290
    310-455-1728

    http://www.froggystopanga.com

  • Frolic Room

    Frolic Room

    6245 Hollywood Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028
    323-462-5890

    http://www.myspace.com/thefrolicroombar This classic dive bar on Hollywood Boulevard has a long and grand history that belies its small size. Adjoining the venerable Pantages Theater and in business for more than seven decades, the Frolic Room pulls in a diverse mix of theatergoers attending plays next door, sports fanatics, tourists, rock & rollers and, later in the evening, hard-drinking regulars. Colorful murals of movie stars on the walls attest to the bar's early Tinseltown glamor, and the iconic joint has been featured in such films as The Black Dahlia and L.A. Confidential. The Omaha band 311 commemorated it in their 2005 song "Frolic Room," and the dive's "badass" jukebox is widely recognized for its pleasing array of old-school hits and standards. Amid all of the upscale bars along the newly revitalized Hollywood Boulevard, the Frolic Room retains its classic, low-key ambiance. Full bar. Street parking. Ages 21 & over. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Fubar

    Fubar

    7994 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90046
    323-654-0396

    http://www.fubarla.com This WeHo gay bar may be on the small side, but the parties are big fun thanks to some of L.A.'s hippest promoters. Mondays bring the edgy man candy, Tuesdays karaoke and weekends a mix of drag queens and area bar hoppers. An alternative to the area's "circuit" scene, this is the place where fierce 'n' flaming types and more rugged boy's boys alike let it all hang out to sounds ranging from electro to alternative rock. Often shirtless bartenders and photo booth add to the revelry. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>

  • Fukuburger LA

    1634 N. Cahuenga Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028

    http://www.fukuburger.com

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