Daily Dispatch

‘Hollywood’ on new high

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THE famed Hollywood sign high in the hills over Los Angeles got a little higher on Sunday, when someone altered two of its letters to make it read “Hollyweed”.

Police said unidentifi­ed thrill-seekers had climbed up and arranged tarps over the two letter “O”s to make them look like “E”s.

Each letter is 13.7m high, so the feat would have required not just bravado but considerab­le athleticis­m.

The daring act may have been taken in celebratio­n of a measure approved in November, when California voters passed an amendment legalising recreation­al use of marijuana.

A police spokesman said surveillan­ce cameras might help them identify the culprit or culprits and the act was being treated as a case of trespassin­g.

It was not the first such incident since the sign was erected in 1923 – at the time as “Hollywoodl­and” – to advertise a local real estate developmen­t.

Perhaps not coincident­ally, the same lettering change to the sign was made exactly 41 years ago, when a California law relaxing penalties for marijuana use took effect.

That alteration turned out to be the work of a college art student, one Danny Finegood. Along with friends, he later returned to the sign on Easter Day 1976 to make it read “Holywood,” and they changed it again in 1990 to read “Oil War” in protest of the Persian Gulf conflict.

Finegood’s original handiwork, which he considered an act of environmen­tal sculpture, was done for an art class project, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Using sheets and ropes, he and three friends made the change – and Finegood received an “A” from his art teacher.

But while he might have inspired the latest act of hillside mischief, Finegood cannot be blamed for it. He died in 2007, aged 52.

Largely because of his work, however, Los Angeles officials increased security around the sign, installing a fence, alarms and eventually a closed-circuit surveillan­ce system.

It is not clear how someone made it through those barriers on Sunday, but Danny Finegood might well have admired their work. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? PRANKSTERS ON A HIGH: The famous Hollywood sign reads ‘Hollyweed’ after it was vandalised on Sunday. Police said unidentifi­ed thrill-seekers had climbed up and arranged tarps over the two letter ‘O’s to make them look like ‘E’s. Each of the letters is...
Picture: AFP PRANKSTERS ON A HIGH: The famous Hollywood sign reads ‘Hollyweed’ after it was vandalised on Sunday. Police said unidentifi­ed thrill-seekers had climbed up and arranged tarps over the two letter ‘O’s to make them look like ‘E’s. Each of the letters is...

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