Jesse Lee (owner): “Robert Wayne Moore at one time or another has owned or operated every one of the honky tonks on the 400 block of the historic district of Lower Broadway. But it doesn’t necessarily make it cool - that’s the bar’s job.” Having spent a great deal of time there, however, we editors can in fact say that Hot Bird is cool. Taffer’s take on pulling from the neighborhood’s past: “In some cases, on Bar Rescue, we’ll attach ourselves to something that has local significance. I don’t know what prompted her after all these years to have it painted over. She said she had kind of rented the wall for the sign, but the owner of the restaurant never paid her for it and she was pissed. “Sadly, three years ago the owner of the building where the mural was painted it over. A friend of mine kept talking about how great it would be to use the name Hot Bird.
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When I decided to open the bar I was thinking of what name I should use. So when you looked at the garage, you saw this big mural. My bar used to be an old gas station, and one of the murals was on the building behind it. Just, like: “Four Blocks Back.” The barbecue place itself has been gone for 20 years, but the murals remained, and to the new people in the neighborhood, they became kind of iconic. The owner had these big yellow and black murals painted in several places in the neighborhood. It could be Lee Harvey Johnson.”įrank Moe (owner): "The name comes from a barbecue restaurant that used to be on Vanderbilt Avenue, which is just a few blocks away. I'll meet Australian people who'll ask me, ‘You mean to tell me mate, you own a pub in Dallas, Texas, called Lee Harvey's?’ It's funny, you can go to the other side of the world and people get it, but some of the younger kids here don't. It worries you about people learning history. They go, ‘What's it named after?’ And while it's just a name, they can't make the connection. “I'm more surprised by the people who don't understand the name. We like to walk up to the line but not step over it. Enough time has gone by to own what has happened. There's now a roller derby team called Assassination City. Dallas has always had such guilt about the assassination of President Kennedy, but it's gone through a huge transformation. Seth Smith (owner): “When we were coming up with names, it came back to me that about 15 years earlier, I had thought, ‘If I ever get a bar, I'll name it Lee Harvey's.’ I ran it past a few people and they were like, ‘Well you might make people mad,’ and I said, ‘I don't think I will.’ It usually gets a chuckle.
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As always, feel free to go off on us in the comments. Here are the 31 best bar names in America, in no particular order.
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Then we got carried away and worked with Foursquare again to figure out the most common bar names in America, which Taffer proceeded to kick the hell out of.īut enough backstory. And yes, they had to be great bars with great stories.Īlso, in an attempt to be even remotely scientific about it, we called Jon Taffer of Bar Rescue fame to critique what we came up with as we went - for good (“that is a great one”) or ill (“picking a name like that would probably make someone an idiot”). Nothing generic, no bars named (only) after owners, or streets, or neighborhoods, however great the bars may be. The rules were simple: the names had to be completely unique. Bifectas!īut, again, what makes a great bar name? To find out, we polled our editors and writers, pored over data from our friends at the city guide app Foursquare, made a bunch of phone calls to bar owners around the country, and wound up with the list below. If “bifecta” was a word, we’d say they hit the bifecta. Then there are those places that manage to be both great bars and have great names. Likewise, you can have a completely utilitarian handle and still have a great bar that runs across the ages like a liquor-scented perpetual motion machine. You can have the greatest, most singular, most place-appropriate, wink-wink evocative singsong goddamn happy drunken tap-dancing reverie of a bar name ever, but if the bar sucks, it doesn’t matter.