Friday 21 August 2015

The WB Water Tower

The bus stop was at
the back of the
Jimmy Kimmel
Studio
Yet again, today started with a crazy bus ride.

I got the number 2 from outside the hotel along Sunset Boulevard and then walked to the next stop for the next change. Along comes the bus, just a moment or two later, but as I walked up to the doors, the lady bus driver locked the doors, picked up her bag, and went and sat at the back of the bus... and there she stayed for around 15 minutes.

I wouldn't have minded quite so much, but LA bus stops rarely have seats next to them, or shade. So you tend to be left standing at the side of the road in baking heat until the next bus decides to turn up - or let you on...

The TV Studio side of Warner Bros Studios
When I finally got on the bus, I asked the driver which bus stop I needed to get off at for the "Warner Bros Studio Tour". She looked at me like I was insane. "Urr, when it says 'Warner Bros...?!".

This may sound obvious, but Warner Bros Studios is not a small place, and I knew the bus went all the way around it. So when the bus said "Get off here for 'Warner Bros Studios'", I asked her again if this was the right stop for the Studio Tour. "Uh huh", She said.
Buggs Bunny and Daffy Duck welcoming you to the Tour

But no. I had got off about 5 stops early by the TV Studios for the live shows (like Ellen. And with another bus not due to appear for at least 30 minutes, I decided to just walk it instead.

About 15 sweaty minutes later and I finally made it to the Warner Bros Studio Tour. I then got mistaken for being part of the LA City College Tour group and given the 'Blue Group Tour' (which I wouldn't have minded but I didn't really want to go around with the rowdy 18 year olds).

Queue Starts Here
Pre-Tour Intro & Film

I'd booked onto the 11am Tour (the first one that was available). First you get given a letter (A, B, C, etc.) and all wait in a line for them to take you through into a cinema room. 

Once in the cinema, a rather energetic gent came to give us a short talk about Warner Bros, and then put on a film showing the best bits of some of the WB creations. I won't lie, I got a bit emosh over Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings. Don't judge.

Central Perk!
Once that was finished, a door opened out came a few incredibly exuberant American tour guides. They were each also holding a letter (corresponding to ones that we were given earlier) and then everyone filed out one group at a time into the tour bus parking area where we all got introduced to our over-excited guide, called Jenny. We all then introduced ourselves to the other 10-ish people in our group. I think the others were just 5 x couples but I can't remember.

The Fire-Escape for the famous
Spider-man upside-down kiss
Jenny then shouted out tv shows to see which ones we liked as they tailor the tour to you. I think everyone was into "The Big Bang Theory" and "Friends", and there were a few I'd not heard of. I was the only one that watched "Pretty Little Liars".

We then started off the tour. It's a bit like a mini-city. They have
streets worth of house and shop fronts, with roads and pavements etc. The only things missing were door handles and lights - apparently they add them pre-filming as it helps to age the set to the right era. All the walls were made out of moulded plastic and most buildings are just one-storey - no 'upstairs' in there. Apparently if they have a scene where they need someone hanging out of a top floor window, they just set up some scaffolding inside and get the actor to climb up and stand on it.

Me & the WB Water-Tower
We went past the fire escape steps that hosted the famous upside-down Spider-man kiss for the first Spider-man movie (the one with Kirsten Dunst in it). The fake rain they use in movies has a little bit of flour or white paint in it to make it easier to be seen on camera, and they make extra big droplets too. When they turned Tobey Maguire (Spider-man) upside-down for this kiss, he kept choking because the water was going up his nose so they plugged his nostrils with cotton wool! That's why she only pulls his mask up past his mouth - else you'd be able to see his stuffed nose. They also had to use warm water, because Kirsten was wearing basically nothing and kept getting too cold.

Number 4, Privet Drive
Little Whinging, Surrey
We also saw the WB famous water tower. Jenny joked about how a rabbit lived in there but only came out on special occasions... Apparently they've got it where it is because it's visible from Universal Studios, so it's a nice little reminder of the competition for them. Haha!

The Harry Potter Museum: Nimbus 2000 
Next was the Batman and Harry Potter Museum - which is on-site. We had 15 mins to wander around and see the memorabilia so, naturally, I skipped Batman and went straight up the stairs to the Harry Potter section.

Dobby the House Elf
They had the Privet Drive sign, loads of the costumes (mostly from the later films), the Marauders Map, statues of Dobby, Goblins and a petrified Hermione (from Book 2), all of the sweets, wizard games and much more. I loved it.
The Sorting Hat

They also had the Sorting Hat and stool which you could have a go sitting on and being sorted - and it actually moved and talked like the real one in the films too (it probs was the real one!) I got sorted into Hufflepuff (still not sure how I feel about it but Becky recently showed me "19 Reasons Everyone Should Want To Be A Hufflepuff" which makes me feel better about my house). I wanted a picture of my sorting experience, but sadly there wasn't anyone around to do this for me.
The Letters! #NoPostOnSundays

Jenny told us that we had to look out for the golden snitch. Apparently it was hidden somewhere but I ran out of time so I didn't find it :(

Another street... This one has been used in lots of things,
including 'The Notebook'
We also went past all the work shops - they make loads of props and things on-site. All the moulded plastic walls etc. are made there. Jenny said it's much cheaper and easier for them to just build something to use for filming on site than to hire out somewhere and travel. There is a huge warehouse full of props which people can hire on the WB Studio website. They also have a fully working gas/petrol station on-site, and they use every bit of the whole site for filming - even the car park.
7
Lorries from other studios collecting props
(The two in the middle were from Disney!)

Next was a big studio where Jenny showed us how their tv-sitcoms work. We weren't allowed to take any photos in there - I'm assuming because of 'trade secrets' or something. They have these tiny sets with open fronts and a seating area for audiences who can watch while the episodes are filmed live. This does mean that audiences are often watching the same scenes over and over again, and that a 20 minute episode can take around 4-8 hours to film.

Bat-Mobile
They also play the adverts as they would be shown at the right places and check for any advertising conflicts - for example, if there was a scene where a character just got food poisoning from eating a pizza, it wouldn't look so good if they then put on an advert for Pizza Express...

The Batman Light
The studio audience have microphones over their heads too, which picks up their laughs. If you have an annoying or great laugh, they can turn your microphone down, or up respectively. The whole idea of having a live studio audience came from Lucille Ball (from "I Love Lucy") who was used to having a live audience and found it off-putting to act with no laughter as she couldn't judge what was working or not.
After this, we went to a big warehouse known as "The Bat Cave" where they had all the Bat-Mobiles. I'm not that into Batman so wasn't too bothered but it was interesting to see how some things worked. Apparently most of the cars were real and driveable.
We spotted Raj Koothrappali from the Big Bang Theory!
He's in the car!

Last was the Warner Bros Tour Museum, known as Stage 48 (which is part of the tour and I don't think you can visit separately). There we said goodbye to Jenny. Inside they have all sorts of memorabilia from various WB films and tv shows, and then there's an interactive bit where you can get your photo taken on the sofa in Central Perk, riding a Quidditch broom, or floating in the space suit from Gravity.

Actor's Trailers
I got through that section pretty quickly as most of the interactive bits are probably better to do if you're with people, and moved on to the WB gift shop. I was fascinated by the Harry Potter wands and one of the girls in the shop told me all about the reasons behind the designs of each different wand.
Every 'Friends' script

And that was it! All in all, it took about 1.5 hours. Definitely worth doing. I think it costs $62, but it was included in the LA Go Card!

Harry Potter Wands
"Ride on the Quidditch Broom"
- You can then take home a video of you riding it
The Harry Potter Wands of
Dumbledore's Army members

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