Posts Tagged ‘irish bars’

Irish Bars Anywhere

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

I have lived all over the country and in several parts of the Earth, and I am convinced that there’s not a major town anywhere on earth that doesn’t have one Irish bar. Irish pubs, as an important point, are one of the only cultural symbols whose importance is universally consistent they’re known around the globe as good places to get a drink, watch football, and meet friendly folks.

I have seen folks who hate folk music and haven’t met a single Irishman singing Irish pub songs at streetlevel while drunk on a Sun. afternoon. For a considerable time, I believed all Irish boozers were the same. You see, the Irish bars San Francisco has are virtually the same as the NY ones, and the Chicago ones are not much different. Fundamentally , even though it is tough to point to any one thing, there’s a certain Irish bar atmosphere that remains the same.

The walls are usually wood-paneled, the group is friendly and populated heavily with neighbors and regulars, and lager and whiskey are always the specializations. Continually there are live performers at night and at the least there’s sometimes an open mic night at least once a week.

Primarily based on this, I believed I knew what an Irish bar was like. Before I went to Eire I haven’t any real idea. You see, the promoting of Gaelic culture is the same as the selling of all other culture it picks up on some aspects that are straightforward to interpreted to sell around the planet and goes with them. In a similar fashion , Irish boozers do very well because everybody knows the Irish like to drink stout lager, eat potatoes fantastic bar food and have a raucous good time when drunk.

German bars inhabited by stereotypically dour Germans have not had the same success, though the Germans can drink just as well as the Irish.

The people are friendly after they get to know you, but when you most important step into a small Irish bar in an unfamiliar city, you are definitely made aware of the fact that you’re a stranger.