The Ambassador Hotel DEMOLITION and Tour RFK Assassination

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2023
  • INSIDE THE BUILDING - I was in the last group to tour the legendary Ambassador Hotel and Cocoanut Grove Night Club before it was DEMOLISHED. The Manson Trial Jury, Starsky and Hutch, Charlies Angeles, SWAT, and the movie Bobby!
    The Los Angeles Times says, "Scott Michaels knows where the bodies are buried!"
    Please consider supporting my work: / scottmichaels
    Paypal: iamscottmichaels@gmail.com
    Scott Michaels - the owner of Dearly Departed Tours in Hollywood and the original "Celebrity Death Guy." Originally behind the helm of the infamous Grave Line Tours, I owned and operated Dearly Departed Tours on the streets of Hollywood for 16 years.
    I coined the term Death Hag on my webpage, www.Findadeath.com has entertained people for almost 30 years. My collection of one-of-a-kind death related (Tragical) Artifacts include the legendary Jayne Mansfield Death Car and Mae West's teeth. Yes.
    On top of providing content here, I also the Dearly Departed Podcast with Mike Dorsey:
    www.DearlyDepartedPod.com
    Mailing address:
    Dearly Departed Tours
    1717 E. Vista Chino A7-619
    Palm Springs, CA 92262
    Available to purchase: Authentic Artifacts! Pieces of historic locations, documents etc: dearly-departed-tours-llc.squ...
    CAMEO - I'll make you a personal video message: www.cameo.com/scottmichaels
    #dearlydepartedtours #ambassadorhotel #cocoanutgrove #bobbykennedy #rfk #assassination #sirhansirhan

Комментарии • 261

  • @jliscorpio
    @jliscorpio 5 месяцев назад +118

    I was born and raised in L.A. When the Ambassador closed in 1989 I lived a block away and used to use the Post Office located in the Ambassador. After it closed they had a fixture sale (not the auction you spoke of in the video) it would have been before 1993. I didn't care about the sale itself, a friend and I broke away and toured the entire structure ourselves for hours. Every door was opened. We went through nearly every room, stealing door knobs, stationery out of the drawers, room service menus etc. There were multiple rooms that had clearly not seen redecoration in decades, those were the most interesting to me. We went through the Cocoanut Grove, the Pantry, you name it we saw it. Were we wrong for doing it? Sure. Any regrets? Not a one.

    • @DearlyDepartedTours
      @DearlyDepartedTours  5 месяцев назад +49

      This is the greatest. I'm so glad for you (and a bit envious too)!

    • @paulcarlsen4088
      @paulcarlsen4088 5 месяцев назад +5

      ? Did you say what happened to the clock? It’s a very cool design!

    • @Wooley689
      @Wooley689 5 месяцев назад +7

      No, you were, umm, preserving a piece of history. Yep, that's it preserving.

    • @staceymichaels9530
      @staceymichaels9530 3 месяца назад +2

      Glad You were able to tour the place, see some of the original architecture, and save some memories from there. You preserved a bit of history and are good for doing so in my opinion.

    • @loganstroganoff1284
      @loganstroganoff1284 Месяц назад

      Did you poop in any of the beds?

  • @cookingartguy2170
    @cookingartguy2170 5 месяцев назад +23

    I felt sick to my stomach watching those clips of the hotel being demolished. I know it was probably an albatross as you said, but can you imagine the business they would do today if they had stayed open? I know I would have stayed there for sure. I just realized something, Marilyn Monroe kind of began her career at The Ambassador, at the Blue Book Modeling Agency that you mentioned. That's really where her first notoriety happened and she began her trajectory. And Bobby Kennedy's career ended there. Interesting.

  • @denisesmith2745
    @denisesmith2745 5 месяцев назад +39

    I love this, Scott. My parents took my brother and my twin sister to California in 1965. We went to the Cocoanut Grove for dinner. Buddy Rich was performing and called out to my twin and I. He said, “hey twins! Come on the stage and shake it up”. We didn’t and I regret that.

  • @Stephenloizos
    @Stephenloizos 5 месяцев назад +16

    My wife and I and some friends snuck in the Ambassador in the late 90's one night. We got into the pantry and there was an x where RFK fell.

  • @danahsutton101
    @danahsutton101 5 месяцев назад +11

    We saw RFK give a speech at the Foreign Mall in Sacramento weeks before he died. Very sad time for our country.

  • @averiemaddox6493
    @averiemaddox6493 5 месяцев назад +24

    Hi Scott,
    So often we go through the demolishing of history here in Los Angeles. It is depressing! In this situation, the hotel was crumbling and falling apart. My question is why and how did it come to this? Is it because the hotel closed for business and once there was no revenue, there were no upkeep? Who owned it? So much history in this place! I wish someone had cared enough to renovate it and reopen it before it fell into disrepair. I wish I could have gone inside to see it.
    I have such a love of old Hollywood, history and architecture. I can’t imagine coming to this town and not being in awe of the history from Hollywood Blvd to Santa Monica beach, and yet some developer comes along and decides to tear down a timeless piece of history and rebuild a mausoleum. It’s maddening. And it seems we who love the past are usually on the losing end of that debate. 😞
    Thank you for sharing the photos of the interior of the hotel!

  • @TarheelTad64
    @TarheelTad64 5 месяцев назад +18

    Thanks Scott ,I never knew the Manson jurors stayed at The Ambassador .I still can't believe they tore down this landmark

    • @jeffchandler2521
      @jeffchandler2521 4 месяца назад +5

      The sad thing is nothing is sacred anymore.

  • @incog99skd11
    @incog99skd11 5 месяцев назад +15

    My parents home in Orange County was built in 1962 and it had the very same flooring in the kitchen as the Ambassador pantry. It was popular then and looked like a plastic terrazzo. Ours had a green tint to it which matched the forest green pile carpeting in the other rooms. Mid-century madness!

  • @ItsaKindOfMagic86
    @ItsaKindOfMagic86 5 месяцев назад +18

    Scott have you ever considered writing a book showcasing your collection of items, photos, new clippings and trivia of your deep well of knowledge on Hollywood and American history?
    It would be a great addition to anyone who enjoys reading all of that in a nice big book. You do great work and have a nice treasure trove of souvenirs. 🙂

  • @Bennifm
    @Bennifm 5 месяцев назад +15

    In Laurel and Hardy's 1933 film "Twice Two", Hardy's wife mentions going to the Ambassador. "Let's go to the Ambassador, where we can get something GOOD to eat!"

  • @catshotfourone7951
    @catshotfourone7951 5 месяцев назад +13

    I watched his speech that night live on TV I was 8yrs old, it was summer so no school and was allowed to stay up and watch while the rest of the family went to bed, my first time ever viewing late night television I'll never forget.

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 5 месяцев назад +6

      I heard it live on my radio in my bedroom. I was 16 years old and probably headed to Vietnam. I was devastated. I never went to Nam since I went to college and had a deferment.

    • @staceymichaels9530
      @staceymichaels9530 3 месяца назад

      @@incog99skd11 Thank God You didn't go.

  • @nicolehall694
    @nicolehall694 5 месяцев назад +13

    I'm grateful they used it so well in films like Bobby and That Thing You Do so it forever lives on film.
    It was truly a spectacular structure

  • @speedracerjeff
    @speedracerjeff 5 месяцев назад +29

    My grandfather was a cook at the Ambassador in the 70s. Such a shame they tore it down and changed the property. Such a rich history all gone today. Love The Aviator movie as well. I miss your little museum and the tours! I did a couple tours but never got to do the Manson tour.

  • @maddogmorgan8737
    @maddogmorgan8737 5 месяцев назад +11

    I stayed there in 1985 and they were filming a moonlighting episode [The Lady in the Iron Mask]. We were asked to be extras but sadly didn't make the final cut.

  • @NeenerBananas
    @NeenerBananas 5 месяцев назад +44

    My Senior Prom in 1977 was held at the Ambassador Hotel. We were in the same ballroom. I was too young to know how close to history I was. I lived in the San Gabriel Valley where Sirhan Sirhan lived and he purchased the gun a few miles from my house. Bobby was in El Monte a day or so before he was killed (riding in a open top convertible). You did a story about James Ellroy’s mother and her murder. I walked every day to school right past where her body was discovered. It was also the same High School (Arroyo H.S.) that Steven Parent had just graduated from the June before he was murdered by Tex Watson. I was a classmate of his younger brother.

    • @themerchantofengland
      @themerchantofengland 5 месяцев назад +10

      Hi from the UK, amazing stories, thanks for sharing.

    • @NeenerBananas
      @NeenerBananas 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@themerchantofengland Thank you! You’re very kind😊

    • @anthonyangeli256
      @anthonyangeli256 5 месяцев назад

      How do you know Sirhan killed Bobby? You believe the government? Don't be so naive friend!

  • @alexbryers9467
    @alexbryers9467 5 месяцев назад +8

    So sad that these beautiful historical buildings are just knocked down 😢

  • @donaldduncan7095
    @donaldduncan7095 5 месяцев назад +17

    I'll never forget the summer of 1984 when I spent two weekends going to the Ambassador to take the "EST" seminars. I would park my car across the street in the old Brown Derby parking lot, incredibly the hat shaped restaurant was torn down, but the floor and the brim of the hat still remained. I could see the entrance where many famous peopled walked, I still kick myself for not picking up some of the rubble before they cleared that area to build the strip mall that sets there now.

    • @Sattnin77
      @Sattnin77 4 месяца назад +1

      Why did they tear down the Brown Derby?

  • @m.e.c.1007
    @m.e.c.1007 5 месяцев назад +35

    Thanks for covering this. Sad how fast California is erasing their own history. Nothing of old will be left behind except for your little salvages of these special places.

    • @antonchigurh3794
      @antonchigurh3794 5 месяцев назад +6

      It is absolutely depressing . I grew up in Redondo in the early 70s. Luckily , the Rocket Ship park that we played at is still there. Although , the elementary school , Parkway is now gone. So much of Hollywood history is gone. I've always wondered what the Hollywood tourist industry is thinking. I guess they want to take people to a spot and say " this is where it used to be ".. I don't get it.

  • @stuckinmopro8533
    @stuckinmopro8533 5 месяцев назад +9

    Offering a tour and then being told that you can’t photograph where the most infamous event took place seems a bit like bait and switch to me.

  • @brober
    @brober 5 месяцев назад +7

    Great vid. Walked right in the front entrance in the early 90's. Told the lone security guard I was scouting locations. Spent two hours wandering around . The ballroom was creepy. I can still smell the cat piss. If anyplace was haunted it was The Ambassador Hotel. Was glad to get back outside.

  • @ThePursuitofHappiness1988
    @ThePursuitofHappiness1988 5 месяцев назад +8

    A real shame that it couldn’t be saved and turned into a museum with different floors exhibiting different eras in LA.

  • @GeeBee909
    @GeeBee909 5 месяцев назад +3

    When I worked for the Getty Oil Company we had our X-mas party at the Ambassador Hotel. Glad I was able experience it years before it's end

  • @donculver153
    @donculver153 5 месяцев назад +38

    Great to have you as a custodian of those historical pieces. If they could talk. As usual, you present with such a respectful and historian demeanor. Thank you Scott. Happy Holidays to you and Troy.

    • @DearlyDepartedTours
      @DearlyDepartedTours  5 месяцев назад +10

      Thanks, Donny. Unboxing on Christmas Eve! Looking forward to it x

    • @donculver153
      @donculver153 5 месяцев назад +6

      @@DearlyDepartedToursnothing special but better in your hands than mine. Like I said, you are a great keeper of the “STUFF” that keeps us Death Hags entertained. Merry Christmas Scott.

  • @ShannonLee1956
    @ShannonLee1956 5 месяцев назад +14

    God bless you Scott for not following the rules to give us something to see! You got heart!!!

  • @angelalopez3701
    @angelalopez3701 5 месяцев назад +8

    I understand you. When I am standing on such an historical spot I just get this feeling from my soul. When I touch walls of old buildings or antiques I get that feeling as well. I understand why you like to take with you a small piece of something/anything and just hold onto.
    I would have taken more artifacts and pictures too. My grandpa is buried at Calvary in ELA it’s a beautiful place I love to wonder. Example: I found Jelly Roll Morton a jazz musician who passed in Los Angeles in 1941. Then I dug up how he was such a horrible human no one,
    NO ONE went to his burial 🪦
    Hearing his jazz music and standing at his grave, reading his headstone is such a great experience to me. Thank you

  • @goldenhoneysilk
    @goldenhoneysilk 5 месяцев назад +15

    enjoyed the history of this story. I watched a movie of Bobby Kennedy, toward the end after the speech he made. I noticed he was walking in a different direction, till someone said no let's go this way which was toward the pantry ( wow ) that's where he got assassinated. up to this day makes me wonder if he kept walking the first direction he'd still be alive. am I wrong. came across the movie on RUclips. What a beautiful hotel it was back in the glorious days. thanks Scott. have a safe Merry Christmas and Troy too

  • @caroleeeubanks9286
    @caroleeeubanks9286 5 месяцев назад +20

    Thank you for information and pictures, Scott. The Ambassador was always so fascinating to me. Unfortunately, I never got to see it. But I did get to go on your incredible Dearly Departed tour. Which was very fortunate! I sat up front with you on the tour bus and looked through your morbid pictures album. Which of course, I had to take pictures of your pictures. It was the best four I've ever been on. That was in 2006.

  • @amykramer4515
    @amykramer4515 5 месяцев назад +8

    Very sad ending to a a huge piece of Hollywood history!!😔

  • @anthonyangeli256
    @anthonyangeli256 5 месяцев назад +15

    Absolutely great story Scott. I can hear the compassion in your voice as you tell how the destruction of this landmark was a total travisty in our history. I was a sophomore in highschool staying up late doing homework when Bobby was killed. They announced the next day he had died. Such a terrible time for America. Thank you Scott for an excellent job in telling this story.

    • @Elainerulesutube
      @Elainerulesutube 5 месяцев назад +3

      They should never have demolished this hotel. It should've been declared an historic site.

    • @anthonyangeli256
      @anthonyangeli256 5 месяцев назад

      @@Elainerulesutube the powers to be was responsible for this tragic destruction of this historic landmark. Not to mention the crime scene which was so controversial then as well as now. But I'm not the least bit surprised. The government is corrupt. Enough said.

  • @getoffenit7827
    @getoffenit7827 5 месяцев назад +4

    9 effing months on lockdown in a Hotel for jury duty...i wouldve been climbing the walls

  • @incog99skd11
    @incog99skd11 5 месяцев назад +3

    I was in the Coconut Grove in 1970 after Sammy Davis "remodeled" it. We saw Liza Minelli there. Bruce Dern was at the table next to us and my date was swooning. He was very handsome then and I could see why he was in movies. I still have a wrapped sugar cube from there. The wrapper is pink. Sad it was torn down. As site of the RFK assassination, it should have been saved. The LA Conservancy put up a big fight to save it but the powers that be wanted it gone.

  • @chrism1528
    @chrism1528 5 месяцев назад +7

    I drove by the shell of the building many times in the 2000s and was always sad that i'd never get to see the inside. Thank you for finally making it happen! Great work (as always)!

  • @dereknav400
    @dereknav400 5 месяцев назад +10

    I used to live right by there. I was new to California and moved into a studio apartment in Korea town. I was literally right next to it on Mariposa street back in 1997. I always was fascinated by the beauty of this huge complex and always wondered about the history.

  • @yvonnemar77
    @yvonnemar77 5 месяцев назад +6

    It was a goal of mine to see The Ambassador. Unfortunately, I never made it. I very much appreciate this video. Thank you.

  • @Blueskys1972
    @Blueskys1972 5 месяцев назад +7

    Cool and sad history. Another great video ❤ if only we had a time machine!!! 😊

  • @SHERRY0010
    @SHERRY0010 5 месяцев назад +18

    It’s very sad when they demolish history . For me, the destruction of the Viper Room is terrible . I visited LA in the early 1990’s, and went there one night. So many memories !
    I noticed they didn’t implode the Ambassador . They ripped it down instead . Was there a reason for that ? I bet that place was full of asbestos ?

    • @DearlyDepartedTours
      @DearlyDepartedTours  5 месяцев назад +14

      Viper got a reprieve for now. It will 100% be demolished in the near future, but it is still open. I'm surprised by that.

    • @SHERRY0010
      @SHERRY0010 5 месяцев назад +10

      @@DearlyDepartedTours hopefully there are others working to get it saved . Up here in Calgary, they’re ripping down many historic buildings, homes . To put in high density housing .

    • @tdpooh1972
      @tdpooh1972 4 месяца назад

      @SHERRY0010 - I was thinking the same thing about asbestos when Scott picked up that piece of ceiling to show it. Yikes!

  • @TheNewsAnchorYouTrust
    @TheNewsAnchorYouTrust 5 месяцев назад +5

    😮😅 No way! They were with the excavator on the top roof? They could have fallen through the ceiling 😮😮😮

    • @williesnyder2899
      @williesnyder2899 3 месяца назад

      @TheNewsAnchor: It’s a relatively safe practice. Demolition crews review floor plans and use only smaller equipment to systematically remove the structure. As you can see, one skid steer loader has a pneumatic chisel hammer on its front. The other has a standard bucket, perhaps with a grapple which serves to hold larger structural debris in place; that loader simply pushes or dumps refuse over the edge, never TOO close!
      These skid steer loaders are lifted to the roofs by crane, and often dump debris down the interior elevator shafts. Sometimes it’s possible to form a ramp of refuse from one floor to the one below, and drive down progressively as the demolition proceeds. Workers either use the fire exit staircases or a “man-basket” on a crane or boom lift to get to their worksite. A porta-potty can be lifted to the area for convenience, though maybe it’s not needed…
      Where I live I’ve seen a wide variety of methods of demolition. We have lost so many truly great old historic buildings that local newspaper writer Larry Millet wrote a book: Lost Twin Cities.
      When I was young I stood for hours in the cold to watch Carl Bolander & Sons, a very old St. Paul demolition contractor which is still in existence, demolish a Minneapolis building. A photographer from the Star Tribune took my name and photo; I received my small “15 (seconds!) of fame” the next day. (I shouldn’t save that edition . . . )
      Bolander, by the way, often used one of several awesome, magnificent tools for demolition; all made from old bulldozer “rippers” to which they’d connect very heavy chain for the overhead crane line and for the dragline winch as well. Bolander always used a chain to the dragline winch with their wrecking balls; increasing the siting and “impact” of the cast steel mass. After softening up the building with the ball, it would be disconnected from the two crane lines, and the ripper would be so-connected. With that implement, as heavy as the wrecking ball, but with massive curled tines, the weight would be dropped on fractured debris and then pulled loose by 50 tons of dragline winch power. Concrete would separate from rebar, columns would collapse, entire floors were raked down! It was quite fun to watch, especially if I didn’t care for the building…
      Bolander has also used the skid-steer loaders on the roof method. Most demolition contractors, Bolander included, now use high-reach excavators with shears, pincers, grapples or such attached. These are fun to witness also! Bolander would sometimes tear down old grain elevators, as this area was once the Pillsbury base. They would use a wrecking ball with the two chains to the two crane winches, lower the ball into the top of the concrete silo and use the dragline winch to raise and lower the wrecking ball, simply “sawing” the concrete with the very robust chain! A lotta power there! I have many still photos, but no film. Sadly, speaking again of HISTORY, I have not found any film of Bolander using their unique “ripper-on-a-string,” an implement which I once overheard a company worker answer another viewer’s question with “That THING Is REALLY HEAVY!!”
      Still . . . it is very, very sad to lose old bits of our past to landfills, hammermill debris grinders, and the brevity of frail human memory…

  • @dougdrage9300
    @dougdrage9300 5 месяцев назад +7

    Scott - just watching this. Did you notice in one of the THAT THING YOU DO exterior clips it appears there is a mural sized version of one of the LA CAVE PIGALLO matchbooks (upper left).
    Also my daughter worked there for LA unified school district- she sent me pix from inside - says they did preserve the coconut grove and some other stuff.

    • @DearlyDepartedTours
      @DearlyDepartedTours  5 месяцев назад +8

      I looked at that billboard and noticed the pattern similar to the matchbook but I will definitely look again! THanks for the tip!

  • @carolynnock6646
    @carolynnock6646 5 месяцев назад +7

    Thank you Scott, I love the film Bobbie, I was gutted when the Ambassador was demolished although I never have been to The States. I defo would have come on a Dearly Departed Tour had I been able. You are a hero of mine. I have met you, the best day. x

  • @alexdelarge9778
    @alexdelarge9778 5 месяцев назад +5

    I often think about places I wish I'd seen before they were closed or demolished and The Ambassador is definitely on that list, along with Barker Ranch and 100050 Cielo Drive. But at least I got to stay at the Alta Cienega Motel and see the Jim Morrison Room and watch Birds of Prey at the Arclight Cinerama Dome on Sunset. Both places were closed shortly after my visits.

  • @davidterrazas3779
    @davidterrazas3779 5 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome blog on the place,too much history to let it go unforgotten

  • @NetWit20
    @NetWit20 5 месяцев назад +4

    My Uncle Bob knew Sirhan Sirhan. He used to pick him up in his Lime Gold 1967 Mustang and take him to church at the First Church of the Nazarene in Pasadena. Uncle Bob was trying to take the young 24 year-old Palestinian kid under his wing. Sirhan was raised Palestinian Christian. I rode in that same Mustang to see the Queen Mary come into port in Long Beach a few months earlier.

  • @SarahM906
    @SarahM906 5 месяцев назад +3

    This was so interesting. I'm so glad I recently discovered your channel ☺

  • @chinacatgrace5396
    @chinacatgrace5396 5 месяцев назад +11

    Scott, I love your stories! Thank you!😘

  • @kathyhays9819
    @kathyhays9819 5 месяцев назад +3

    Just sad that those buildings of history has to be torn down. Again thanks for sharing so interesting.

  • @tricia-k21
    @tricia-k21 5 месяцев назад +8

    Thank you for another fantastic video! Always such cool content✨
    Btw, I love your background, light blue wall & the awesome retro looking painting.
    Love it😊✨

  • @cathpeterson1944
    @cathpeterson1944 5 месяцев назад +9

    sad The Ambassador is gone, was jaw-dropping gorgeous place in its day, awesome narrative Scott I luv these stories

  • @ageoff684
    @ageoff684 5 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for sharing all this never new or got to see this LA hotel
    Was very interesting and depressing
    But I am glad you preserved so much for us to view. Always love your videos you know so much history of LA love it!

  • @jamestakacs
    @jamestakacs 5 месяцев назад +3

    Did you ever do a program from The Biltmore? I stayed there twice. Another old Hollywood historic place.

  • @chrismcgill
    @chrismcgill 5 месяцев назад +4

    definitely a huge loss for that hotel to go. I'm sure there were many opportunities for it to be saved, but (for reasons I haven't researched) it wasn't.
    I'm a history nerd, so I'm glad you put together a vlog about your experience at the Ambassador because that building/property was super vital to the fabric of American culture and history. also, I'm slightly jealous of your brick and piece of floor from the pantry. so, don't think you don't have as much as you could've gotten from the property because almost none of us have even one item.
    thanks for what you do, Scott 🤙

    • @incog99skd11
      @incog99skd11 5 месяцев назад +1

      It was a colossal battle between the LA Conservancy and the City of Los Angeles School District. I followed it for years and it was just devastating they could not have found a solution without destroying the place entirely. Some proposals were to keep the room RFK last spoke as a room in the high school but they couldn't even leave that. I am sure the powers that be simply wanted the place gone so nobody could prove the government killed RFK.

    • @chrismcgill
      @chrismcgill 5 месяцев назад

      @@incog99skd11 your last point is what I'm leaning towards, too. RFK was probably actually going to do some transformational work for the people as president, and that's obviously a no-go for the "powers that be".

  • @ethantaube2512
    @ethantaube2512 5 месяцев назад +7

    Why didn’t they save the hotel and make it into a museum just like the 6th floor museum

  • @Johnaxl666
    @Johnaxl666 5 месяцев назад +6

    Shortly after it closed, Guns N' Roses filmed the video for "Patience" inside the hotel. You can see the hallway and the lobby

    • @minnae.1747
      @minnae.1747 5 месяцев назад +5

      Wow, didn't know that! That's cool.

  • @cjholmes4329
    @cjholmes4329 5 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks so much for this great tribute to an iconic landmark that is now sadly a thing of the past. I was born and raised in Los Angeles and was deeply affected by the assassination of RFK (I was 14 years old in 1968). I was however much more interested in the JFK assassination and have visited Dealey Plaza four times. I only wish i had taken the time to visit the Ambassador when it was still around... Your videos always provide great education and entertainment but this one might just be my favorite. Well done!

  • @TinCupChalice40
    @TinCupChalice40 5 месяцев назад +5

    In 1980 John F Kennedy High School in Granada Hills held our prom there. It was so memorable

  • @Casey-zp9kv
    @Casey-zp9kv 5 месяцев назад +34

    Calling preserving important landmarks of American history "ghoulish" is so ridiculous. Dallas has kept Dealey Plaza almost time-capsuled to how it exactly looked on the day of JFK's assassination in 1963, is that ghoulish? You can still visit the Gettysburg battlefield of the American civil war, just as many other battlefields are around today, Internationally, what about the ancient city of Pompeii in italy being dug up and preserved as a tourist attraction, a grave where thousands died, sorry its still not .ghoulish. These places like the Ambassador Hotel should be respected as historical monuments that people can forever visit and research.

    • @TheLightFish
      @TheLightFish 5 месяцев назад +2

      Lol it's Ghoulish... You know, like a ghoul...zombie-type ghost, etc

    • @asleepbydawn137
      @asleepbydawn137 5 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂😂😂 gool

    • @dianabeurman364
      @dianabeurman364 5 месяцев назад

      Agree

    • @peterm1826
      @peterm1826 5 месяцев назад

      LA has a nasty habit of Destroying
      History.

    • @matthewmoran4158
      @matthewmoran4158 5 месяцев назад +6

      Unfortunately, there are plans to ' reimagine ' ( I really can't stand that word ) Dealey Plaza , so you had better go see it while you still can.

  • @janetmaurer2888
    @janetmaurer2888 5 месяцев назад +4

    i love these kinds of posts...what an awesome look at history

  • @cindysmith2858
    @cindysmith2858 5 месяцев назад +4

    So sad so many old buildings are destroyed and especially ones of history. I live in a town of about 70 thousand and not near the popularity of this but they destroyed so many of our beautiful old buildings in something they called urban renewal back in the mid to late seventies. The Robidoux Hotel was our beautiful hotel that was demolished actually by blowing it up. 😢 my mother actually cried that day she stated so many memories and it’s just gone. So sad!!😢😢

  • @ronaldmiller2740
    @ronaldmiller2740 5 месяцев назад +4

    VERY SAD THAT THEY LET THIS GRAND OLD BUILDING GO!!! THERE ARE MANY OLD HOTEL LEFT TO THIS DAY,... THIS HOTEL IS HISTORY,, SAD AT THE AUCTION SEEING ALL THE HOTEL'S OLD BELONGINGS ALL BEING SOLD ,THIS HOTEL WAS BEING RAPED FROM HER PAST AND FUTURE TO BE IF PEOPLE CARED.. THANKS FOR MOST OF THE INFO,,..

  • @annesantos5104
    @annesantos5104 5 месяцев назад +1

    This was so interesting! I worked for several years on Wilshire Blvd., about 3 blocks from the Ambassador Hotel. I used to take a walk several times per week during my lunch break and always passed the hotel. It hadn’t been demolished yet, but was very run down and falling apart. It used to make me sad to look at it and think about its rich history, and what had happened to RFK that terrible day. The last thing I remember before our office moved, is the demolition of everything except the Coconut Grove. After that, I didn’t see it very often.
    Thanks so much for the tour, Scott. You have some great collectibles!

  • @thomashawkinson7017
    @thomashawkinson7017 5 месяцев назад +4

    Great work sir! You are a true historian. Tom H.

  • @edwardaustin740
    @edwardaustin740 5 месяцев назад +7

    Scott, you never cease to amaze me. I hope you continue to do so. I'm always in awe of the things you share with us.
    I appreciate it.

  • @willfade7994
    @willfade7994 26 дней назад

    I love this episode! When I was a little girl, my Dad and Stepmom had an apartment in LA that was walking distance from the Ambassador Hotel. My Stepmom worked in bookkeeping for a specialty clothing shop (men’s suits if memory serves) called G B Harb & Son. It was right across the street from the Ambassador Hotel there on Wilshire Blvd. I remember my Dad and I going for walks to meet my Stepmom for lunch and/or to get ice-cream at a Thrifty drug store just up the street on Wilshire and we’d always make a point to go look at the hotel. I don’t recall if we ever went in, but I think it was closed at that point (late 80’s). I remember thinking it was so beautiful. We’d eat ice-cream and my Dad would tell me stories about the Ambassador and celebrities, the death of RFK, etc. So many memories. I was sad to see it go because it will always remind me of my father and my childhood memories of living in Los Angeles.
    Thank you so much! I’m so glad you have some keepsakes from the hotel.
    🌹

  • @paean109
    @paean109 5 месяцев назад +6

    What a massive building to demolish. So much concrete. Incredible history Scott. Thank you for sharing your footage and photos.

  • @amyh8621
    @amyh8621 5 месяцев назад +6

    Absolutely fascinating. Thanks, Scott! More 6 degrees of Helter Skelter!

  • @themerchantofengland
    @themerchantofengland 5 месяцев назад +4

    Hey Scott. Thanks for sharing this, your passion for history is palpable, love what you do x.

  • @soniagardencourtreporter1173
    @soniagardencourtreporter1173 5 месяцев назад +3

    Really enjoyed the history of this fabulous place I never knew about!

  • @jf9488
    @jf9488 5 месяцев назад +4

    Sadly all of history in this country is under attack and is being erased. We have a few generations nowadays that don’t care about anything past 2010. Strange.

  • @kimsinclair9100
    @kimsinclair9100 5 месяцев назад +3

    Great history and story.

  • @cynthiakluck-johnson5895
    @cynthiakluck-johnson5895 5 месяцев назад +9

    Can you imagine if someone's wife had just gotten pregnant at the beginning of the Manson trial and they were serving on the jury, they could have been away from their partner virtually for the whole time? Wow.

  • @deirdrerosesharples7453
    @deirdrerosesharples7453 5 месяцев назад +5

    This is brilliant have Aviator on DVD sorry no my mum has it loves it, I bought for her few Christmas's ago, going to try watch again didn't realise it was the ambassador hotel coconut grove wow way cool, Martin Scorsese has such an eye for recreating historical places❤

  • @shiteforbrains7451
    @shiteforbrains7451 5 месяцев назад +3

    Love it!

  • @cynthiakluck-johnson5895
    @cynthiakluck-johnson5895 5 месяцев назад +4

    Morbid stuff like is pretty cool

  • @user-yg1mh1sz8n
    @user-yg1mh1sz8n 5 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for covering this. Ive been wondering what happened to this historical hotel. Love your programs Scott

  • @moonchildluvsbobcrane
    @moonchildluvsbobcrane 5 месяцев назад +3

    I have some Kennedy autographs. Another fascinating video Scott!

  • @ahnraemenkhera7451
    @ahnraemenkhera7451 5 месяцев назад +3

    About that Scheine family, Scott: are they related to the “GW”/“DW” Scheine that Roy Cohn was said to have become so enamored with, back in the McCathy era? Can’t recall the correct first name of this gentleman, but he’d made something of a name for himself publishing brochures & pamphlets in his day, said to have been of quasi-patriotic, Christian nationalistic tenor. Perhaps there’s a family connection?
    Not to say that I know, just that the surname “Scheine” brought-up that association with McCarthyism, CIA, HUAC & Roy Cohn, as you were recounting Robert F. Kennedy’s final hours.
    How differently-oriented the landscape is today is unfathomable, from 1968. Perhaps, if values of the society had remained the same or similar, whole problems which have become overwhelming now, could’ve been resolved back then, given a few brief years & careful planning.
    But it didn’t happen that way. The safety of gatherings now is risky, at best. The performance arts of music, dance, & semi-formal etiquette are forgotten. Nobody can really afford the clothes, the cars, the foods, the booze, the bands that made the era “come alive” anyway today. If they broke into foxtrot or swing, who even knows the steps & isn’t on a walker?
    Those buildings have nothing to host these days. It’s an A.I. Recession era, intellectually. No grand ideas, no particular innovation involving people-just objects; & certainly, no social skills for making any of it fruitful & worthwhile.
    Like the old swinging doorways of Wild West saloons, you can’t do business that way now. Gotta have a badge, entrance security, sign-in sheets, cameras.
    It was a time of upwardly progressive civilization, when The Ambassador & Coconut Grove & other venues were designed-with all the trimmings of the period being accessible & reasonably-priced.
    A “crowd” then, meant something eventful was underway-not every shopping center & freeway, every day, & endless wait lines.
    Quantity, quantity & massive quantities. Too bad, really. Dave Matthews’ Band sang it best: “Ants Marching.” Sorry for your buildings going away, though. I know something about losing old hometowns, old haunts, old homes. 💐🌲🕯🌲

  • @incog99skd11
    @incog99skd11 5 месяцев назад +2

    The very first Academy Awards were held in the Grove in 1929.

  • @MARTS54
    @MARTS54 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great video. Very informative. In 1976, I worked at the Equitable Building (located across the street from the Ambassador Hotel) at an advertising agency. The hotel was closed but a separate building of the hotel was open and had a restaurant. Occasionally we'd go there to have lunch (sandwiches, soups, salads). We'd also go to the Gaylord Hotel for lunch. They had a room where they served lunch specials. For celebrations or someone's first day on the job, we'd have lunch at the Brown Derby, located across the street.

  • @LeeTheVet
    @LeeTheVet 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video, Scott! Marilyn Monroe had an event there at the Cocoanut Grove inside the Ambassador Hotel, March 8, 1960, for the 17th Golden Globe Awards.
    She won as Best Actress for Some Like It Hot.

  • @charleysmall8910
    @charleysmall8910 5 месяцев назад +3

    I like all your videos and I am a Patreon. You said something about Dearly Departed Documentary Part 1. Are these documentaries online somewhere to watch?

    • @mykingdomforak9
      @mykingdomforak9 5 месяцев назад

      They're on his RUclips channel;
      the very one you're presently viewing.*
      *Tap the circular image of Scott.
      Or, you could otherwise, go to your RUclips spyglass, and type in his name and The Ambassador Hotel.
      🕯.

  • @cynthiakluck-johnson5895
    @cynthiakluck-johnson5895 5 месяцев назад +4

    Hahaha I wasn't thinking. When you talked about the Gaylord Hotel memorial for the Ambassador, my frazzled brain was like "Bobby Kennedy was an ambassador?" Lol such an old lady I am

  • @deirdrerosesharples7453
    @deirdrerosesharples7453 5 месяцев назад +2

    Watched Bobby many moons ago 👍👍

  • @henkhemming6674
    @henkhemming6674 5 месяцев назад +2

    it's amazing the Ford's Theatre where Lincoln was assassinated is still there,Americans tear down EVERYTHING even their own history,than you travel the world to see...old buildings with history 😳

  • @DeadSoulsSocialClub
    @DeadSoulsSocialClub 5 месяцев назад +1

    Scott - Another amazing video. Mesmerising in parts.
    I wasn't lucky enough to see the Ambassador before it was demolished, but I've visited the site a few times since (and the Gaylord & HMS Bounty opposite). Its one of those places where you can feel the history permeating through you as you stand at the location....(Well as close as you can from the street)
    I adore American history, and the Kennedy's are an important part of that for me, so this video really resonated.
    Keep up the great work Scott, and thank you. You'll always have my complete support.
    Jamie
    (Dead Souls Social Club)

  • @anonymousgirl799
    @anonymousgirl799 5 месяцев назад +1

    Los Angeles Magazine did an excellent story and exquisite pictorial of the remains inside The Ambassador Hotel in the 1990's. I wish I'd have saved issue.

  • @demah8655
    @demah8655 4 месяца назад

    So sad indeed that history is being erased. Great job on documenting The Ambassador Hotel & The Coconut Grove.

  • @brentstantonfun
    @brentstantonfun 5 месяцев назад +16

    I worked a two film shoots in and on the Ambassador grounds. Got to see the pantry. We made the Coconut grove into a Casino by adding slot machines etc. I’ve always been a Kennedy History fan. So on the 50th Anniversary of his death I went to the Kennedy School to the Large Memorial on the School Grounds right at the street…. I was pissed off!.. This School named in Kennedys honor, where history had been made, on the 50th Anniversary?!!!.. was Covered with trash, smelled of Urine, and was painted over with graffiti and the whole display had been allowed to entirely fall into disrepair. I’m sorry. Blame a school or city budget or what ever you like…. But in my day, the Students themselves would at the very least not have allowed this to happen to Their School!…. They would have had the pride to at least have had a volunteer clean up effort. …. I couldn’t believe the condition of the memorial… on the 50th Anniversary of his Death… Frankly I lost tons of respect and pride for living in LA that day.

  • @jimgross4784
    @jimgross4784 5 месяцев назад +4

    another great video, Scott! Enjoy your content so much. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to you and Troy! look forward to many more great videos in 2024!

  • @timbuege2624
    @timbuege2624 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you Scott for showing us your memories of the Ambassador and it’s impact on our national consciousness and culture. I have always wondered how authentic the spaces and feel of the hotel was in the various shows and movies. This hotel was indeed a treasure and it’s a shame indeed that it deteriorated to the point that it was demolished. Thank you for doing the wonderful stories that you do. I love your work and appreciate that you share your passion with all of us. God bless you and Merry Christmas!

  • @RosieTime_
    @RosieTime_ 5 месяцев назад +3

    The plate of death.

  • @robbiedetroitstigermanviny8883
    @robbiedetroitstigermanviny8883 5 месяцев назад +3

    You are the man!

  • @362chop
    @362chop 5 месяцев назад

    After what happened to Jack it boggles one’s mind how this could have happened again. Another mystery but this was casually dismissed. Great clip, I thank you.

  • @SurferJoe1
    @SurferJoe1 5 месяцев назад +1

    I got in there for a shoot (Leprechaun 3). The doors to the big hall where RFK spoke were chained, but I managed to peek in a little. The pantry was open, and on the spot where Kennedy bled a big 'X' had been carved into the floor. There's a similar marking (paint, I think) in the middle lane at Dealey Plaza, on the key spot. The Grove was where the shoot was going on; it was really cool, and the lobby and lounge from"The Graduate" (I which it was the "Taft") seemed pretty unchanged.

  • @Commander-McBragg
    @Commander-McBragg 4 месяца назад +1

    I stayed there in the seventies during a beauty pageant and a filming of the TV show Cannon. William Conrad said Hi to me and my mom, and there were beautiful women everywhere!

  • @Randene31
    @Randene31 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great story. I love all the memorabilia and the depth of knowledge.

  • @leesashriber5097
    @leesashriber5097 5 месяцев назад

    Scott, this was so amazing going back in time with you. I'm rather obsessed with the Kennedy's and loved the pictures of the Coconut Grove!!! Awesome job Scott and thank you. 😊

  • @GLK-London
    @GLK-London 2 месяца назад

    It has taken me 2 months to steel myself and watch this heartbreaking video. I stayed at the Ambassador in September of 1986 when on holiday from England I was heartbroken and astonished that somewhere with so much iconic history was destroyed. Sadly it often seems the way. I have an amazing book on its history that used to be on sale at the hotel. It has a beautiful gold cover and is full of remarkable photos of famous people from the last century who stayed and played there. Thank you so much for all your videos Scott, although this one was very bittersweet.❤

  • @keelanellisofficial
    @keelanellisofficial 5 месяцев назад +3

    Love this thank you

  • @garymangan2761
    @garymangan2761 2 месяца назад +1

    Love the movie clips you added in .wow .brilliant.

  • @jamesrsfo
    @jamesrsfo 5 месяцев назад +1

    Another great video, Scott. There is a 2001 movie called “Lost in the Pershing Point Hotel “. Starring Leslie Jordan. It’s an interesting watch if you get a chance to see it. It looks like they broke into the hotel, and just filmed it on the fly.

  • @EnjoyingTheSimpleLife
    @EnjoyingTheSimpleLife 5 месяцев назад +4

    As always Scott another amazing video Thank you Merry Christmas .