
At over 1.5 miles long, the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles is a landscape of billboards, shops, boutiques, and trendy restaurants, bars and clubs. And so, it seems, it’s always been. But look back fifty years to 1966 and you will see that the Strip was a hub for the counterculture movement that captivated America’s youth and transformed a society.
As CHS begins the countdown to our commemoration of one of counterculture’s most memorable events, the Summer of Love, we remember the series of riots–from November 1966 to February 1967–that turned the Sunset Strip from a colorful scene into a wave of protests.
At the first “happening” on November 12, 1966, just prior to an imposed 10pm curfew for minors, a crowd gathered at Pandora’s Box, a club popular with teenagers, with “bell bottoms, tie dyed shirts, marijuana smoke, and loud rock and roll–it was small and cramped, full of energy that spilled out onto the Strip.”

As explained in the public events brochure for the WeHo Arts’ There’s Something Happening Here… On the Sunset Strip 1966:
To walk down Sunset Strip in 1966 was to see the sidewalk thronging with groovy guys, Beatle-haired teens, and flower children. Teenagers came to catch a glimpse of their favorite musicians, many of whom lived in Laurel Canyon, in part because of its close proximity to the Sunset Strip clubs.


Some businesses and residents were unhappy with the traffic and crowds. By late 1966, authorities began imposing a decades-old 10pm curfew law for those under age 18. Seeing this as an infringement on their rights, “Striplings” as they were called invited people to demonstrate at Pandora’s Box.
Reports very, but perhaps between 900 and 3,000 demonstrators, including celebrities Jack Nicholson and Peter Fonda, erupted in protest… As Cecilia Rasmussen wrote in an August 5, 2007 LA Times article, “the confrontation with police inspired musician Stephen Stills of Buffalo Springfield to write “For What It’s Worth”… Stills’ song, with its famous line “There’s something happening here” debuted during a short-lived truce on Christmas Day at Pandora’s Box and eventually became an anthem of the protest era.”



As things quieted down on the Strip in early 1967, Los Angeles established itself as the Southern Californian haven for Human Be-ins, Love-ins, Acid Tests, drugs, rock ‘n’ roll, and counterculture communities–particularly in the Laurel, Topanga, and Malibu Canyons. Experimentation and creativity ruled the dynamic L.A. scene. It would not be long before the generation of the Sunset Strip Riots at the dawn of the Summer of Love would stun the world with protests against a far-away and unpopular war.
Shelly Kale
Publications and Strategic Projects Manager
skale@calhist.org
Sources
Gordon Alexander oral interview, April 23, 2012, Glendale College, Glendale, CA. In Andrew Earnest Ligeti, Spatial Empowerment and the Los Angeles Counterculture, 1965-1967: The Search for Hallowed Ground in the City of Angeles, Master’s Thesis (December 2012), California State University, Northridge.
Mike Che, Domenic Priore, There’s Something Happening Here… On the Sunset Strip 1966, project brochure, WeHo Arts, October 2016.
Learn more about the WeHo Arts Project, There’s Something Happening Here… On The Sunset Strip 1966
Learn more about CHS’s 50th Anniversary Summer of Love celebration.