Hollywood Voicemail - Voice Mail Services

 

Your complete voice mail service
for only $9.95/mo Flat Rate !

Our Hollywood voice mail services can answer Your  phones, or we'll give you a new Local  or Toll Free  number.

You can listen to your Hollywood voicemail messages over the phone. We'll also deliver them to your email, so you can listen to them over your computer or any Internet devise.

That also means that you can store your voicemail messages forever, forward them to any email address and discard them.

Don't be fooled by competitors. Most require you to use a Toll Free number with their voice mail services. Why? Because it's all they have, and it's how they make their money - Usage! You pay for every minute of every call you receive, and for every minute of every call you make to pick up voice mail messages. At American Voice Mail, a toll free number is your choice.

We have 83 Central Offices throughout the US, providing Local voicemail and phone service to over 4,000 communities.

Look out for competitors who quote a low rate, and then charge you 13 times a year (4 week billing). What's THAT  all about? You sure wouldn't pay your rent that way.

And look out for others who charge a $25.00 set up charge! Wow! Our set up charge is only $5.00, and we have special corporate rates and quantity discounts.

   When we say Flat Rate, we mean Flat Rate.*

Call Today - Start Today

800.347.2861

Are your looking for our Virtual Office?

Customize your Hollywood voice mail by adding:

Call Transfer: Talk to your callers live. With optional free call screening, you'll decide whether to take the call or send it to voice mail. $4.95/mo.*

Automatic Call Distribution: Callers and voicemail messages are distributed equally to employees on a "round robin" basis, whether employees are in the same office or scattered around the world. Add $4.95/mailbox in the ADC group.

Question & Answer: Your  Hollywood voice mailbox can ask questions, record responses and even ask different questions depending on the answers given by your callers. Add $9.95/mo.

Automated Order Taking: By customizing your Question & Answer Voice Mailbox, you can provide your customers with the ability to place orders 24 hours a day. Add $9.95/mo.

Reminder Calls: Your voice mailbox can call you anywhere, anytime and deliver a voicemail message you earlier recorded for yourself.  Even wake up calls.*

Phone Book Listings: Hollywood voice mail phone numbers you get from us can be listed with the phone company, in your name or company name. You'll be listed in Directory Assistance now, and your number will be printed in the next phone book. Rates vary by phone company.

Call Today - Start Today

800.347.2861

Are your looking for our Virtual Office?

 

*Local transfers are free in flat rate areas. In measured areas, local calls are 2.9cpm. Local long distance is 4.9cpm and long distance is 6.9cpm. All services may not be available in all areas.

 

 

 

The Attraction of Hollywood, California

Hollywood is a district in Los Angeles, California, situated west-northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and movie stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a metonym for the cinema of the United States. Today much of the movie industry has dispersed into surrounding areas such as Burbank and the Los Angeles Westside, but significant auxiliary industries, such as editing, effects, props, post-production and lighting companies, remain in Hollywood.

Many historic Hollywood theaters are used as venues and concert stages to premiere major theatrical releases and host the Academy Awards. It is a popular destination for nightlife and tourism and home to the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In eighteen fifty-three, one adobe hut stood on the site that became Hollywood. By eighteen seventy, an agricultural community flourished in the area with thriving crops. A locally popular etymology is that the name "Hollywood" traces to the ample stands of native Toyon or "California Holly", that cover the hillsides with clusters of bright red berries each winter. But this and accounts of the name coming from imported holly then growing in the area, are not confirmed.

The name Hollywood was coined by H. J. Whitley, the Father of Hollywood. He and his wife, Gigi, came up with the name while on their honeymoon, according to Margaret Virginia Whitley's memoir. Another story refers the name to Harvey Wilcox, who bought land in the area for development of homes. His wife, Daeida, met a woman on a train who mentioned that she had named her Ohio summer home Hollywood. Daeide, who liked the name, gave it to their new development. The name first appeared on the Wilcox's map of the subdivision, filed with the county recorder on February first, eighteen eighty-seven.

One feature for Hollywood since the nineteen sixties has been its attractiveness for desperate runaways. Every year, hundreds of runaway adolescents leave their homes across North America and the world and flock to Hollywood hoping to become movie stars, as portrayed by the lyrics of the nineteen sixties Burt Bacharach song "Do You Know the Way to San Jose" whose lyrics include the words: "All the stars / That never were / Are parking cars / And pumping gas." Such individuals soon discover that they have extremely slim chances of competing against professionally trained actors. Many of them end up sinking into homelessness, which is a problem in Hollywood for adults as well as youth.

Some return home, while others linger in Hollywood and join the prostitutes and panhandlers lining its boulevards; others go to Skid Row in Downtown Los Angeles; and yet others end up in the large pornography industry in the San Fernando Valley. This side of Hollywood was portrayed in Jackson Browne's nineteen eighties song, "Boulevard", whose lyrics include reference to a notorious hustler hangout of the nineteen seventies, with the words: "Down at the Golden Cup / They set the young ones up / Under the neon lights / Selling day for night." This phenomenon is also portrayed in the books of Charles Bukowski.