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Featured Bars/Clubs


Sick of relying on the kindness of strangers, the surly Bingo Byotches head to divey airplane-theme bar Flight 151 for Thursday trivia night. The whole affair is highly unstructured: Every 20 minutes or so, the bartender asks a question and the first person seated at the bar to correctly answer wins a buyback. On Tuesdays, the bar offers "Flip Nights" for those who love losing money but can't afford the trip to Atlantic City. Grab a seat at the bar and stare the dealer-bartender deep in the eyes as he tosses a quarter and decides your destiny (for the next five minutes, anyway). Call it correct and the drink is free; crap out and you pay full price. If you're lucky, you'll stumble out a few hours later with someone you don't know and all the money you came with. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.florios.com Fat men with nicotine-stained throats enjoy lounging in Florioas big cushy leather chairs, smoking Nicaraguan cigars, and spooning in platefuls of spaghetti. The wine list is long, but not too expensive. A strictly dining (no smoking) area is in the back. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.floydny.com Let's face it: Conventional bar games like pool, darts, and pinball are a little blasA(c). Knowing this, a few more forward-thinking watering holes have tried to up the ante. At the Nancy Whiskey Pub in Tribeca, for instance, patrons take turns at raucous shuffleboard matches; after four or five drinks, the venerable old-folks standby reaches "extreme sports" levels of difficulty and absurdity. Now there's Floyd, on an anonymous little strip of Atlantic Avenue that's not quite Cobble Hill and not quite Carroll Gardens, which proudly introduces Italian-style lawn bowling to the smashed bargoer. Nearly half of the roomy spaceawhich resembles a rural ski lodge, right up to the stuffed deer head nailed to the wallais taken up by the dirt boccie court. Floyd's owners named the place after Floyd, Iowa, and the easy Midwestern charm here is disarming. Swill a few cans of Old Milwaukee ($3) or munch on "beer cheese" spread on Keebler crackers ($4) while you watch people play; it's beyond comical to see Brooklynites who couldn't play boccie while sober attempt it while swinging back that third glass of bourbon. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.flutebar.com When youare feeling good and rolling in money, stop by flute and order champagne from their selection of more than 100 sorts. The bubbly is sold by the bottle or by the glass, and can come with crushed fruit on the bottom for a bit of pizzazz. The place is filled with cubbyholes designed for playing footsie. For those looking for something to nibble on while getting giddy, Flute offers finger foods and chocolate. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.flutebar.com When youare feeling good and rolling in money, stop by Flute and order champagne from their selection of more than 100 sorts. The bubbly is sold by the bottle or by the glass, and can come with crushed fruit on the bottom for a bit of pizzazz. The place is filled with cubbyholes perfect for playing footsie. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.theflyingpuck.com The Flying Puck is a New York Rangers shrine. Stained-glass murals looming above depict the team's 1994 Stanley Cup victory in one scene and a deified Henrik Lundqvist in another. And of course, even when the Rangers themselves aren't competing, there's always a hockey game playing on one of the bar's seven massive TVs. Beer choice is standard game-day fare--Bass, Guinness, and Bud--but the room is surprisingly regal with deep mahogany fixtures, carved columns, paneled ceilings, and ornate Old World tiles. All amenities befitting of #11, a Ranger fan's messiah. You'll find a painted portrait of him in here, too. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
Every day is game day on Flynnas many TV screens. The decor is average Irish schmaltz. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.fontanasnyc.com Three paintings--a fast car, a busty woman, and Dirty Harry--decorate the first of this enormous venue's three floors. Like the scruffy bands that play in the bar's underground performance space, Fontana's image is overtly rock 'n' roll. Beyond the primary bar located near the entrance, you'll find a chandelier room with massive ceilings and a movie-projector screen hanging above. Half a floor below, a pool table resides; the private party room is located entirely elsewhere. And even on slow nights, Guns N' Roses songs are always blasting on the speakers by your side. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.theforumnyc.com The Forum, one of the few lounges in Union Square territory, brings peace during the weekdays and boisterous partying on the weekends. Saturdays, for example, require plus-sized bouncers to monitor the swarms of cocktail-craving, dancing citizens. Come Monday, however, the 50-foot mahogany bar, columns, and antique white-stone bricks are experienced by a wholly different sect of people. By this, we mean sports fans: the ancient interior comes second to those plus-sized, flat-screen TVs. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.thefour-facedliar.com It's strange, the location of the Four-Faced Liar. Located in the grimiest part of Greenwich Village, where sex shops and Grey's Papaya line 6th Avenue, the Liar is incongruously modest, if not downright wholesome. The bar itself has the aesthetics of an antiquated living room--mahogany tables, navy-blue-and-off-gold paint job, books resting on raised shelves--mashed with a tiny game room's innards, like the Big Buck arcade game, foosball table, and flat-screen TV. Following suit is a modest crowd, combining dudes hoping to bro-down over some foosball with bookish post-grad types. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
Beers, beers and more beers. Fourth Avenue Pub is a place for beer lovers because they provide a rotating selection of 87 (yes, 87) beers for the lovely residents of Park Slope. With 27 beers on tap and 60 in bottles, this pub even offers free popcorn and the ability for you to bring your own food (BYOF?). The choices on drafts range from the Arrogant Bastard Ale to d'Achouffe Houblon Chouffee and everything in between. In bottles, make sure to pick up the Terrapin BFM Spike and Jerome's Cuvee Delirante. After grabbing a glass, plop yourself on the wooden benches inside or out in the garden backyard. With Fourth Avenue Pub's casual dive bar ambiance, be ready to possibly stay for at least a couple of drinks. --Briana Cheng Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.foxesny.com Yet another Long Island City topless club working the pink/purple decor with the mirrors and the black leather couches, Foxes is not related to the 1980 Jodie Foster teen movie in any way, although both feature hot white women adiscoveringa their sexuality. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
This neighborhood baras got a nice selection of appetizers, a TV, a pool table, and a laid-back atmosphere. If youare a young woman, youall get a lot of attention here. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.frankscocktaillounge.com The hot spot for Fort Greene locals to get down and boogie to R&B and hip hop. Frank's doesn't have the best decor, but it's music is second to none. Stop by for live jazz, or play some soul on the jukebox. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.freddysbar.com Eight or so years ago this Prohibition-era cop bar was charmingly reborn and redecorated by manager Donald O'Finn and friends with a mass of thrift-store tchotchkes, books stuck into built-in shelves, and televisions screening O'Finn's videos (reformatted old film and TV clips). In addition to sponsoring its own in-house literary magazine and providing a space for community activist groups like Develop Don't Destroy Brooklyn, Freddy's hosts some of the city's most original readings and performances: Sing and Win a Ham, and the much praised Cringe Reading Night of teenage diary excerpts. The future of this neighborhood treasure is uncertain, as it lies, according to O'Finn, "in the footprint" of Bruce Ratner's megalomaniac Atlantic Yards development. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
Swipe your fingertip, not your credit card, to get into the private back room, where members pick at sushi-like bites and indulge in single-malt scotch bottle service. The euro-chic managers may blow you off, but thatas all part of the scene: If they donat recognize your face, they donat need your business. Play along in this Philip K. Dickaesque club, and you might find yourself a swank good time, thanks to the always enterprising Lesort brothers, who own Opia, Lemon, and Nica's. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.freemansrestaurant.com Finding this obscurely located joint just east of Bowery off Rivington, propelling yourself down an alley that feels like something in a Jack the Ripper movie, and then finding a seat in a thronged dining room hung with stuffed animal heads is the challenge. The modestly inventive food tastes much better than it looks;We're thinking in particular of a gray poached chicken engulfed in carrots and celery;and sets you back less than you'd expect. The lamb sandwich and adult macaroni and cheese also merit commendation, although many of the seasonal dishes seem like bar snacks for the overpriced wines and cocktails. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.friarsclub.com Midtown's Friar's Club is a private, classic New York City club known for its celebrity roasts. Most of the membership is made up of celebrities and comedians. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.friendstavernny.com In its past life as a shore leave sailoras haunt, Friendas Tavern offered a respite to the rough and stormy seas. Now, as the oldest gay bar in Queens, it offers an alternative to Manhattanas snobbiness. The diverse neighborhood crowd is friendlyaand flirty. If thatas not enough stimulation, dancing, drag shows, video games, a pool table, and a good juke box are on offer as well. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
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