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Merry Christmas, Merry Christmas will do.”Īt Bob Inn that night I ran into a Wendi. It’s a pretty simple power pop gem with the great line, “You don’t have to say you love me, I know that that’s not true. It is available on some compilation CD “Yuletunes.” “Merry Christmas Will Do” is still one of my favorite holiday tunes. And Mosquito, who is this time of year is literally a walking ugly Christmas sweater. A good place to sit next to girls like Chloe and whisper cerebral and visceral things in her ear.īob Inn is also where I talked about Christmas music with reclusive author Clive Javanski and Aidan (also bandmates in “UK Grief”). Sometimes they’re sitting at the leather booth on the east wall facing the bar. The last few times I’ve been there I’ve seen a different cute brunette girl with black-framed glasses. It seems as if the bar’s old timers sit on the north end of the bar, while young punks and hooligans and other tattooed youth are on the south end and at the pool table. I wasn’t sure what that meant but I brought her a can of Half Acre Daisy Cutter anyway.
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Once I met a cute punky girl there named Chloe who had silver and green hair and told me she had an antidote for “bad ass.” It’s a good place for some entertaining asides. And dive bars like this add to the atmosphere when they decorate for the holidays. It’s been featured in some of my writings. I’ve been there about a dozen times over the last few years. Across the street from the legendary Fireside Bowl. Due to the lack of debauchery myself and a few friends headed over to Bob Inn in Logan Square (some say it’s in “West Bucktown”). Last weekend Chicago was greeted with a winter blast. If you’re not there for Family Meal Monday, all year long on Friday and Saturday, you can get six tamales (from the Tamale Guy) for $12 and slices of pizza - cheese or big bad wolf - from Paulie Gee’s.December at a Chicago Dive Bar Liffey Posted on December 23, 2016 in their back patio - rain or shine - Spilt Milk hosts “accomplished personalities from Chicago’s culinary and beverage community.” You can find places like Longman and Eagle, Kasama, Bang Bang Pie, Seoul Taco and others popping in. One of the bar’s most exciting offerings is its Family Meal Monday, a program that runs through the summer in partnership with various Chicago restaurants. Good food is the proper way to end the night, and that’s how we’re ending the guide. One small round stool serves as the booth’s seating, but who has ever resisted the challenge of squashing four friends into a small space to take amusing photos? If you happen to notice hundreds of photo strips tacked up along walls, rest assured that there is, in fact, a photo booth in the back of the bar. The space is swimming in neon lights, illuminating the bar along the east wall, underneath the green velvet-wrapped booth, and in the honeycomb glass pendants hanging along the center of the narrow bar. The bar’s personality is imbued in its decor.
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For a high-quality cocktail bar, it doesn’t take itself too seriously. Good times are the name of the game here. You’re here for a nightcap and some unexpectedly good eats. – Party packages are available for groups of 20 people or more.Īfter a competitive bowling excursion, walk two blocks west on Fullerton, where you’ll land at Spilled Milk on the corner of California Avenue. Once you pay (it’s $4 to rent shoes), all you do is grab a ball and get throwing.
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Bring your crew through its dive bar entrance, racks of bowling balls and then into the 16-lane alley. Life as a music venue stopped in 2004 when it was rumored to have almost shut down for Chicago Park District uses until owners agreed to shift the space’s central focus back to bowling. Bands, including the Alkaline Trio, Shellac, The Blind Staggers, and Fall Out Boy performed there. The New York Times said, “high school bands with only three songs could share a bill with bands that had three albums.” At that time, the business put on about eight shows a week. From 1994 to 2004, it was considered one of the best punk-rock clubs in Chicago. And in the 90s, when bowling fell out of fashion in the neighborhood, it embarked on its live music era. Before it was a bowling alley, it served as an ice factory. While the look hasn’t changed much, its space has teetered between different personalities. What you see today is pretty much what it looked like decades ago. With a history dating back to 1941, this place doesn’t play by the standard rules of time. If you want to get a sense of what Chicago might have been like over the past half-century, bowl a few games at Fireside Bowl.