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Featured Bars/Clubs


http://www.manitobas.com Despite CBGB's new mantra as a tourist haven, the New York punk scene lives on at Manitoba's, owned by Dick Manitoba, minor rock God and former lead singer for Dictator. If there're no bands thrashing around, the rough-and-tumble jukebox picks up the slack, and the photo collection serves as a tour through punk's history. In these (sniff) post-election days, Manitoba's would be a likely place to ignite a surging anarchy movement. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.maracujabar.com A classic, comfy pub that takes its name from the Brazilian word for passion fruit, this bar features a house drink of Brazilian Cachaca rum and passion fruit juice. It's intoxicating, and anchors a reliably savory bar menu of cheese fries and meaty sandwiches. The outdoor garden and rear pool table see more crowds than the central space, which features a digital jukebox that skews heavily toward nu-metal. Fear not: the amiable crowd more than makes up for the occasional Evanescence three-peat. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.marcoandpepe.com When Marco y Pepe opened its glass doors three years ago, I nearly cried with joy. A Jersey City resident, I was tiring of the colorful, yet divey and meatheady, local bars and thirsting for a glass of wine. Good wine. Enter Marco y Pepe, a charming place with a generous wine list and imported beer, and a dinner menu featuring dishes like pan-roasted monkfish and wild boar. The outdoor seating is another perkatoo bad the sidewalk is slightly slanted, though. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
Marie may be melodramatic about her emotional state butain many waysawe're lucky it gave birth to this charming little piano bar. Heartwarming evenings spent around the piano singing Broadway tunes in between the odd cosmo or three are bound to produce a few new friends. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.themaritimehotel.com Every inch of this hip, new hotel, housed in the former headquarters of the National Maritime Union, is outfitted in a nautical themeafrom the deep cerulean blues of the bedding and curtains to the porthole-like windows in each of the 125 guest rooms. The Bigelow bathroom products and flat screen TVs are just a few amenities that prove just how luxe these accommodations are. Weather permitting, be sure to check out their dramatic outdoor bar and garden. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.themarkbar.com You could say the quaint red exterior of Mark Bar is enhanced by the mahogany interior and stained glass windows, but who cares? The real reason youare here is the Belgian and Danish daft beers and the pool table. Lest you start thinking this is an average pub, remember your proximity to Williamsburg, note the art on the walls (by local starving painters) and check out the hip clientele. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
The decor is pub-meets-a80s-theater-complex, and fits sadly well into the office building Markeras calls home. The canned musicas bad, and unless youare there for the food (admittedly tasty), the only reason to stop by Marker's is because work sucked and you really, really have to have a drink, or five, before leaving the building. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.marqueeny.com A massive two-floor nightclub that can hold 600 occupants shouldn't be that hard to gain entrance to, but such is the case at the Chelsea hotspot Marquee. The hype surrounding this onetime haven for models and model-izers might have died down, but the $20 door cover still holds strong for those without guest-list access. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.mars2112.com As the other theme restaurants drop like obsolescent dinosaurs, up springs a new one promising gourmet food and a free carnival ride. Mars 2112 delivers on the ride, at least-a four-and-a-half-minute jouncing in a spacecraft that deposits you on the red planet. Disgorged into cavelike rooms with strolling Martians and flickering video screens, my adolescent crew tasted pizza ruined with honey-mustard chicken, dry chicken fingers, and surprisingly decent (though skimpy) beef satays. My hamburger, ordered medium, was burned to a cinder in the thin atmosphere. Enjoy the ambience, skip the nausea-inducing space trip, and stick with the pastas. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
Approaching Mars Bar, you might notice young punk couples leaning against the wall, making out; inside, you might notice graffiti sprayed all over those same walls, letting you know who is promiscuous and who isn't. The glass bricks, once windows to the outside, are now instead canvases where cuss words come to meet in varying mediums: Sharpie, spray-paint, sticker. The room itself is a tight hallway housing a damaged wooden bar with doodles carved into it; the slashed stools have bits of foam falling out. Mixed drinks come in a smaller-than-usual glass (though there's always more gin than tonic), and beer only comes in a bottle or a can. The bar's exterior is a perpetually changing mural that once read, "The East Village Is Dead." Perhaps not. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.masondixonnyc.com It was inevitable: a mechanical bull in the East Village. Sign a waiver, step into the padded ring and prepare to be embarrassed in front of a raucous crowd. That's not the only Southern touch to this Lower East Side bar. The bourbon list is more 70-strong with bottles from distilleries large and small, including a selection of high-end limited edition bourbons like Jefferson's Presidential and Michter's 25 Year-Old Single Barrel Bourbon. Walking into this bar is like discovering a posh Southern roadhouse; hanging off the wood ceiling are a variety of elaborate chandeliers, some covered with red shades and others decorated with twisting antlers. Private booths are lined with metal horseshoes while cushier banquettes are complemented with rusty license plates. The kitchen puts out stick-to-your-ribs fare like mac and cheese, fried shrimp, cheese grits, baby back ribs and more. Flat-screen TVs provide plenty of entertainment on football Sundays when nobody is riding the bull.—Keith Wagstaff Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.maxfish.com Max Fish doubles as a gallery space for upcoming artists and the art rotates monthly. Apart from the standard bar set up, entertainment consists of a 2 pinball machines and a retro Miss Pacman arcade game. Plenty of light streaming in from the front windows and a severe Antonin Artaud meets Jean Michel Basquiat mural by Travis Millard covering the entire bathroom will ensure that you never fall asleep in this jolly little arty neighborhood hangout. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.mayahuelny.com Tequila and its close cousin mezcal are the focus of this cozy East Village cocktail den. The drinks were concocted by Death & Co. bartender Phillip Ward, so you know they're taken seriously. These aren't your standard margaritas; drinks like the Cinnsation (mezcal, mulled apple cider, cinnamon bark and Peychaud's Bitters) and the Cantinflas (mole bitters, tequila, mezcal, sherry and Grand Marnier) utilize fresh, homemade ingredients as well as top shelf liquor. If you want to get schooled in the ways of quality tequila and mezcal (which is made from the same agave plant as tequila), you can always order them in flights of three, which come with a complimentary sangrita. Soak up all that booze with small plates such as chorizo-stuffed shrimp and scallops or full plates like lobster ceviche and tamales filled with mole-braised chicken. The hacienda speakeasy vibe comes from the colorful Mexican tile, smiling Dia de los Muertos figurines and hidden-away stalls.— Keith Wagstaff Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.mcaleerspub.com Sure, they've got darts, and ESPN-ready TVs, but the real reason to come here is the house ale, blonde and amber, that's only $2.75 a pint. Not only does McAleer's induce alcoholism, they clog your arteries by serving fried and greasy bar food. You can grow to love this place. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
A dive bar for people your dad's age, McAnn's isn't without its charmadepending on how well you get along with Pops. They've got beer, they've got popcorn, the space isn't too dirty, and the people there have interesting stories to tell, if you have time to get another drink and settle in a bit. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
"This reeks of New York clandestine affair spot," my friend said as he sipped a bourbon and ginger ($7) at this sports bar on Port Authority's second floor. "Your wife or husband would never think to look for you here." This Charlie Brown Christmas tree of bars, located in the shadow of the fancily renovated Leisure Time Bowling Alley, is the anti-Cheers: No one sticks around long enough to know your name. It's packed with transients and those whose chances of mingling anytime soon are limited. Women share drinks over their gargantuan bags that take up almost two seats; an old man dozes off by an abandoned popcorn maker and a hand-scrawled sign that boasts "Beer, it's not just for breakfast anymore." Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.mccannspubnyc.com On Thursday, you can get a plate of spicy wings and a pitcher of domestic for a grand total of $10. Beat that! If Thursdays aren't your thing, stop by on Tuesday for a burger and a pint, also $10 total. Yes! Otherwise, this place has TVs to catch the game and a pool table for intermission. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
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