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Featured Bars/Clubs


http://www.sbe.com/katsuya This sleek and sexy West Hollywood party palace - once called Area, and before that, Prey - has seen many transformations, but its current guise provides a modern yet stylish backdrop for the celebrity crowd that frequents it. Part of the SBE nightlife stable that includes the restaurants Katsuya and XIV and clubs the Abbey and Colony, Industry has the Hollywood SBExcess you'd expect with a Miami-style twist: lots of white paint, bottle-service tables surrounding the dance floor and, of course, gorgeous, spray-tanned waitresses. DJs spin upbeat hip-hop and house melds, and promoters include well-connected kids seen on The Hills. There's a burger-bar setup near the VIP room, but few of the modelesque regulars take advantage. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.islacantina.com A Mexican steak and seafood lounge, Isla encourages eating, drinking and smoking, as is written on their front-door banner. To eat, there are meaty tacos, salads, Mexican chicken cordon bleu, chile rellenos, and dark-chocolate souffles. To drink: habanero pepper shots, sangria and premium cocktails. Smokers can choose from premium cigars, classic cigars and Davidoff cigarettes. On most nights there's a DJ. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.largo-la.com No other club in Los Angeles has quite the same vibe as Largo. Music events and comedy revues alternate on the booking schedule, but on most nights the two combine for a uniquely daft yet tuneful blur of unpredictable entertainment. The club was located for almost two decades in a small space on Fairfax Avenue (featuring performers like Nellie McKay, Larry David, Glen Phillips, Aimee Mann, Brad Mehldau, Tenacious D and the late Elliott Smith), but in 2008 proprietor Mark Flanagan relocated Largo to the venerable playhouse the Coronet Theater. In its current location, Largo's stage has featured many of the regulars from the old days, including Jon Brion, Fiona Apple, Sara & Sean Watkins, Robyn Hitchcock and Grant-Lee Phillips, along with such stellar visitors as Suzanne Vega, Nicole Atkins, and Sean Lennon & Charlotte Kemp Muhl. As ever, big-name comedians like Russell Brand, Sarah Silverman, Margaret Cho and Eddie Izzard frequently drop by. The West Hollywood room is a "sit-down theater with a strict no-talking policy." And, unlike at many nightclubs, the folks at Largo are also strict and literal about the posted showtimes, with no admittance to those who arrive late. The adjoining cafe is spruced up with arty feathered mannequins and black-&-white photos of the venue's storied past. Across a small courtyard lies the Little Room, an aptly named beer-&-wine bar that also hosts music and comedy. Paid parking is available next door, at 360 N. La Cienega Blvd., in the Baker Building. All ages. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.lolasla.com If you ever wondered where the apple martini - or appletini - was born, it wasn't on the set of Sex and the City or in Liberace's kitchen. It was (apparently) at Lola's, a romantic West Hollywood haunt that has consistently maintained a vibe of chic, low-key exclusivity throughout the years. A quick look at their exhaustive martini menu might explain why that is - more than 75 varieties of classic, exotic and quite frankly bizarre martinis are on offer, enough to keep even the most jaded martini fiends entertained for decades. There's the Ocean's 11, which is garnished with edible flowers. The Cirque du Soleil, which is made with sake, ginger and edible glitter. And for the daring, the Garlic Mashed Potato Martini. Happy hour is 5:30-7:30 p.m., with reasonably priced bar snacks (sweet potato fries, baked artichoke with emmental cheese), and selected cocktails at $5.50. Yummy contemporary American entrees (mac 'n' cheese, grilled pork chop) are on offer in the backroom in case you suddenly need something to soak up all the booze. The crowd is young, good-looking and actorish, perfect eye candy in case your date is a snooze. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.mickys.com In the heart of Boy's Town, Micky's caters to a mostly male crowd: Entertainment includes half-nude buff men, drag queens galore and blaring techno music. In addition to hot bods, they've got free appetizers on Friday afternoons and plenty of drink deals. After dancing those calories away, there's braised short rib tacos, pizza, pasta carbonera, and mango salad for the health conscious. It's like they say - on Micky's website anyway - "Drink triple. Dance Double. Act Single!" Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.oakfirepizza.com/i0709.html Oak Fire stays open late serving beet salads, tuna tartare, strong cocktails and pizza from a wood-burning oven. A nighttime hangout not far from popular bars and clubs, it's popular for social events and sports nights. They offer sandwiches, pasta entrees, and Chicago-style deep dish pizzas, which take 45 minutes to bake. Small bites include coconut shrimp, grilled artichoke, and four-layer dip. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
Though older than its downtown sister, the Standard on the Sunset Strip retains its own set of fans. And why not? Andre Balazs' original has an unmatched quirky cool; from its upside-down sign and its lobby (with live model behind a glass window by the check-in desk) to the groovy retro-style pool area and desert-photo-wallpapered "Cactus" lounge. Still, the Standard's Purple Lounge reigns for flashy Barbarella-like sex appeal and flamboyant club frolic. The room features swings large enough to lie down on, plenty of plush couches and spacey plastic chandeliers everywhere you look. But it's the violet light that makes it truly an otherworldly place to party. DJs lean toward electro and house rhythms most nights, and the patrons include a mix of Euro-flashsters, trendy tourists and Hollywood entertainment mavens. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.ragewesthollywood.com Arguably, Rage is the throbbing heart of West Hollywood's bustling gay-nightlife scene, a circuslike fun house that's not for the timid or refined. The two-story restaurant and dance club offers greasy-good grub and big, sweet cocktail concoctions, served up by beefy waiters and all backdropped by loud, pulsating beats and lights. Multiple dance floors pump out everything from pop-tart hits to diva house grooves and more, and it all gets the boy-toy and "circuit" stud scenesters in grind mode. Currently, music-themed dance nights include: "Urban" dance sounds on Monday (Network), Latin sounds on Wednesday (Fuego), electro and pop and everything in between Friday (Gamboi) and Saturday (Kinky Saturdays) and Sunday (Stereo). Rage's most flam-BOY-ant night is hands-down Tuesday, when the wigged wonder of the Dream Girls Revue offers the art of female impersonation at its fiercest. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.rainbowbarandgrill.com Rainbow Bar & Grill is an ode to rock, with autographed photos lining the walls, vintage guitars scattered about, and visiting bands performing in the dim, mostly red space. At this Italian restaurant, "the rainbow special" is a popular pizza, with cheese stretching out of your mouth after each bite. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.theroxyonsunset.com Since its opening in 1973, the Sunset Strip nightclub has presented a stellar array of musicians, comedians and theatrical revues, including Neil Young, Bob Marley, Rickie Lee Jones, Chuck Berry, Genesis, Bruce Springsteen, Miles Davis, David Bowie, the Clash, Prince, the Replacements, the Pharcyde, Jane's Addiction, Dolly Parton, the Dead Weather, the Dickies, Cobra Verde, Nellie McKay, the Ringling Sisters, Nirvana, the Sex Pistols, Pee-Wee Herman and the American theatrical debut of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. The Ramones filmed the concert scenes for Rock & Roll High School here, and Van Morrison, Social Distortion and Warren Zevon are among the notable personalities who've recorded live albums in the West Hollywood club. Apart from a full-service bar, the main room and its dark walls (which feature photos of past performers) are austere and functional instead of lavishly decorated, but that's because the focus is on the musicians onstage. The adjoining upstairs lounge On the Rox hosts parties, DJs and live performances and has been the site of numerous celebrity sightings, going back to John Lennon's and Harry Nilsson's notorious lost weekend in the mid-1970s. Both venues are all ages with separate full bars. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.saintfelix.net In this "post gay" world, where younger clubgoers are more accepting of others' sexual orientation — at least in a city like L.A. — it was only a matter of time before segregated clubs would begin to be a thing of the past. At Saint Felix in West Hollywood, gays and straights mingle as if they were never separated by a few blocks of Sunset Blvd., and the award-winning gastropub food will bring everyone together no matter what your sexual orientation. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
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