Or like this...
If you want to see it from Henninger Flats, you'll have to hike up there yourself. I approached starting down from Mt. Wilson.
This bird also launched off of Mt. Wilson.
It's about four miles one-way to fake Fuji, if you take the singletrack from Wilson down to the old toll road. I don't recommend this route unless you really like fire roads but really hate starting at Eaton Canyon. Or you want to catch a long-distance view of Baldy with snow on top.
Anyway, after putting in the four miles, and dropping about two thousand feet of elevation, I reached the scruffy service road that goes up to the summit area.
Fake Fuji is marked on the USGS topo as 3681'. It is the little rise at the east end of a flat, tree-lined stretch of ridge about a quarter-mile in length.
On the summit I found a fire ring and a couple planks of wood. The view of Wilson and Harvard was clear.
At the west end of the flat the rough service road leads to some electronic equipment and solar panels.
Someone spends a lot of time up here building rock towers.
Looking across Eaton Canyon, there is a nice view of the ridge between West Fuji and Mt. Muir.
I sat in the grass under a tree and enjoyed a sandwich before heading back to Mt. Wilson. On the way down the non-biting flies were slightly annoying. But on the way up they left me alone, probably because the temperature had chilled a bit.
Also, FYI: at Mt. Wilson, the faucet next to the parking lot was working.
Garbage picked up and packed out: one wash cloth, five plastic bottles, one aluminum can, a metal clamp, a scrap of hard plastic, and four food wrappers.