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Featured Bars/Clubs


http://www.200-fifth.com This Park Slope sports bar appeals to both the stroller set and the rowdy singles crowd, with a family-friendly restaurant in one room and a huge bar featuring 40 beers on tap in the other. Both rooms are consistently packed, so arrive before the dinner rush or kickoff. It's a unique spot to get sloshed on the six-beers-for-$9 special, chat up a single agent watching the game, or bring the kids to dinner. Just try not to do all at once. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.supremetradingny.com Mixing Manhattan superclub glamour with Williamsburg artiness, this new club/lounge/gallery/performance space is home to the infamous weekly post-punk Crashin In party, as well as various cultural events and happenings. The large, anonymous brick-walled dancefloor area is balanced out by intimate side niches, a billiard room and a cozy outdoor smoking garden. Three-dollar Budweisers and beautiful peopleaneed I say more? Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.31rockwell.com Saturday nights, this is the best place any gay man in Brooklyn can be. Most of the boys, twenty- and thirtysomething muscular types, are in a lively mood in the dank, narrow, cinderblock-walled storefront. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.68jaystreetbar.com This ex-check-cashing store is now a flashy yet simple bar. Itas also clad in the inevitable polished wood and metal that makes it match the equally polished aartya clientele. You know those people who often wear severe, $800 fashion frames and work in a gallery? Apart from the usual lineup of beer they also have a good solid wine list. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
The red lights give the Abbey a goth feel, until you see the deer hunter game, throwing counter-culture out the window. When DJs occupy the booth, the music varies from Brit pop to rock, and the jukebox caters to those who peaked during the early a90s while worshipping indie rock. The area around the pool table is often packed, so unless you arrive early, donat even think about it. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.abilenebarbrooklyn.com Although this Carroll Gardens hangout is named partly after the Texas town, don't expect cowboys and honky-tonk here. On a recent Sunday night the only country-western vibe came from an iPod that mixed Dolly Parton and Patsy Cline with Cat Power, Built to Spill, and other indie-rock favorites. Those tired of fighting for a seat at the always crowded Brooklyn Social nearby will be happy to see there's ample room to stretch out here: Church pews and tables run along one wall, 17 bar stools line the extra-long oak-topped bar, and '60s-ish vintage sofas and cushy benches are in back. Futuristic chandeliers that resemble glowing molecular models hang over the bar while candles give off just enough table light to play Connect Four, Yahtzee, and other games. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.myspace.com/alligatorlounge The facade of this bar slightly resembles a funeral home, but the aura inside is not as chilly. Dark wooden booths run along the perimeter of the spacious bar, making you feel like you're in an upscale pizza parlor and huzzah! Pizza they gots, as well as a cozy tiki-esque back room. This gator's more about the art of knocking back a few with friends over a game of pool, darts, or Big Buck Hunter II than the haughty pursuit of froufrou cocktails. If you're looking for an inexpensive dinner and a low-key meeting spot for friends in the 'Burg (without the attitude or hipster overkill), this li'l reptile's a good catch. Get a free slice of brick-oven pizza with every drink, which isn't quite as good as it sounds but tasty nonetheless. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.axis-newyork.com Formerly known as Manhole, Axis is a agay menas social cluba in Park Slope. Basically, itas a self-described fantasyland for anyone male, sexually adventurous, and not rigidly heterosexual. No alcohol is available but there is a free juice and soda bar. Axis New York joins forces with New York Jacks for JO parties regularly. Must be 21 to enter. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.bar4brooklyn.com The young local crowd at Bar 4 clearly has a penchant for martinis but the regular beer specials are certainly not to be ignored. DJs play 6 nights a week in this lounge decorated with a collection of antique sofas, under red lights. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.kitchenreis.com Opened as a wine bar in 1999, Bar Reis now serves beer and delectable cocktails (perhaps a chocolate martini?) in a dark, cozy environment that soothes the mind as well as the body. The setting is nothing less than romantic, especially the lofted patio area at the top of a winding wrought-iron stairwell. The spacious ivy-covered garden is perfect for warm weather. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.barcadebrooklyn.com Barcade's vast selection of old-school arcade games (including Galaga, Centipede, and Frogger) cost just one quarter per play, but the 20-odd microbrews will set you back a few more. This is a place of deceptively rare beer: the fruity, complex Heavyweight Biere d'Art is a much-adored local choice and tasty standbys such as the rich, frothy Rogue Mocha Porter keep the bar crowded every night. These, or the stiff well drinks, will ably fuel any Donkey Kong showdowns that happen over the course of the evening. The hall gets crowded quickly, though, so if you want to assert your prowess on a favorite game, plan accordingly. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.beanpostpub.com This down-home establishment may seem like your average neighborhood bar, but itas actually a drinkeras paradise. With 16 beers on tap and another 31 in bottles, and Bay Ridgeas largest frozen drink menu (including their own specialty aice postsa), the Bean Postas selection is mouth-watering. All the better to wash down some typical bar food (burgers, fries, etc.) while watching the game on one of their seven big-screen TVs. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.brooklynbeast.com The decor (Medieval Times) is somewhat incongruous with the menu, but isn't that the sort of thing that makes a neighborhood spot lovable? Its looks may indicate pub food, but the menu is made up of of small plates (some not that small, like half a grilled chicken with garlic confit), mostly Mediterranean inspired. An arugula salad with feta cheese and pickled fennel was trying a little too hard-the dressing on the arugula was too sweet, while the pickling on the fennel was too tart. Rather than balancing out, the dish was altogether overwhelming. But kinks aside, there is promise for the neighborhood: fair prices, laid-back but efficient service, and good ingredients. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
http://www.thebellhouseny.com Like many new Brooklyn venues these days, the Bell House was birthed out of a '20s warehouse. Naturally, a space this big lends itself to a variety of joyously disparate events (i.e. the Harry Potter Yule Ball, Super Japanese Game Show Melee, Radio Happy Hour) punctuated by a mix of veteran songwriters (recently John Oates) and sizable indie-pop acts (Beach House and such). The Bell House's key decorations are antiquated, sinuous chandeliers and a wood panel branded with a buffalo, both of which are indicative of the venue's tattered, vaguely Western, Prohibition-era aesthetic. Also notable is "Fight Club," a monthly craft-beer-and-cheese-tasting event. Read more about this New York bar or club >>
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