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Featured Bars/Clubs


http://www.dakotalounge.com Formerly known as Temple Bar, this joint is back in business with a new name. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
Formerly Little Pedro's, this incarnation returns to the room's roots, with decor evoking its start as a turn-of-the-century brothel. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.dasbunker.org This mid-city club was named the L.A. Weekly's Best Industrial Bar in 2011, and it's easy to see why. Walk into this dark world and you will encounter dancing demons, vampy vixens and, most shockingly, regulars who are as friendly as they are fiendish-looking. DJs spin the loudest, heaviest power noise and old-school industrial sounds in three separate areas; regulars know to convene on the much quieter outdoor patio. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.catalinadc3.com There are only a few ways to reach the DC-3, and each of them is picturesque. The combination restaurant, bar and gift shop is uniquely situated on the ground floor beneath the small control tower at Catalina Island's Airport in the Sky. Tourists and locals take shuttles and bus tours up the scenic mountain road to the airport, while the more adventurous hike or bike the steep trails that extend 11 miles northwest of the island's main town, Avalon. You also have to be adventurous to fly in to the small, bare-bones and aptly named Airport in the Sky (elevation: 1,600 feet), whose short, austere runway is located on a plateau that's surrounded by steep drop-offs and tricky wind currents. But once you do make it up the hill, you realize you're in of the most romantic and visually striking places in all of L.A. County. Wild buffalo literally roam the surrounding hills, and the dramatic ocean views are unbroken by most signs of human habitation. The menu at the DC-Grill is fairly standard, ranging from breakfast scrambles and burritos to burgers, tacos, salads and sandwiches, but certain Hollywood star couples are known to make the short plane trip across the channel just for the restaurant's large homemade oatmeal cookies. The DC-3 (also known as the Runway Cafe) is the only place on this part of the island to get a drink, although the bar is limited to beer and wine, with such standbys as Heineken, Bud and Corona. The dining area has the homey feel of a lodge with a warm fireplace, and the outdoor patio opens up to spectacular vistas of the island's untamed hills. The small airport is worth a look too, with its solitary, vintage hangar, dusty, unfenced runway and a control tower that evokes the Old West. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
https://www.facebook.com/DescansoBeachClub/info Situated right on the beach in Avalon on Catalina Island, this restaurant and bar features its own sun deck and 20s private cabanas. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.desertroserestaurant.com Angelenos have always been suckers for programmatic architecture, eager to eat chili in a chili bowl or munch on doughnuts under a 40-foot cruller, drink beer inside a bucket or consume fried chicken inside an abstracted KFC container. The giant milk bottle on Slauson and the big thermometer in Baker remind us that we exist. Now comes the 20-foot illuminated flower outside the new cocktail-oriented restaurant Desert Rose, towering over the sprawling dining patio, casting a healthy pinkness over agave-nectar margaritas and mojitos, chicken kebabs with hummus, and carpaccio drizzled with chile oil, and gooey crab cakes with tart avocado salad. The restaurant is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner; serves Italian pastas, pan-Asian dumplings and Middle Eastern grilled meats; and at least on opening week was populated by couples of every possible persuasion. In the 1930s, a Los Angeles architect would have found a way to fit the cocktail bar inside the giant, glowing rose. Seventy-five years later, we should be grateful, I suppose, to have a giant, glowing rose at all. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.dillonsirishpub.com At the corner of Hollywood's hustling vortex of Hollywood and Vine, Dillon's is a fun, less pick-uppy alternative to the velvet rope scene that surrounds it. A jock oasis that manages to be cozy, somewhat classy and yet casual all at the same time, the sprawling, two-level, wood-covered space offers numerous TV screens showing the game of the night, loud music on certain nights, a pool table upstairs and waitresses in plaid miniskirts. Thirty beers on tap and a large comfort-food menu (American and Irish fare) please Dillon's patrons, who range from sports buffs to post-movie/club/dinner drinkers escaping the boulevard. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.dimmakrecs.com Formerly known as Cinespace, this Hollywood club is now named after the label run by celebrity DJ Steve Aoki. It's become famous for its Tuesday night parties -- the hottest party in town for EDM lovers for almost a decade. The term "secret special surprise guests" gets frequently thrown around by dance clubs, but when Dim Mak touts 'em, you know they'll truly be biggies. Both on the decks and live on stage, often at the precise moment before they blow up, at the Mak you can catch everything from rockers (Bloc Party and The Kills) to DJ gods (Justice and MSTRKRFT) to pop-tarts (Gaga and Uffie) to hiphoppers (Will.i.am, aka Superblaq, who had such a blast, he went on to do more projects with club creator Aoki). If you come here with a jaded attitude, the long lines to get in, throbbing beats and dance-crazed, photo-snapping crowds probably will make it worse. But come here ready to rage, and you'll never be disappointed. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.dimplesshowcase.com If your idea of a fun night out is listening to tipsy and tone-deaf amateurs warbling their way through an Adele song – or, even better, doing the warbling yourself – Dimples in Burbank claims to be the oldest karaoke bar in the country. It's been open since 1982. The décor here is ‘80s-style red booths, vintage film equipment and props and plenty of screens to watch the succession of wannabe singers. The menu is mostly upscale bar food: appetizers like jalapeno poppers, cheese sticks and nachos, in addition to sandwiches, pizza and steak. You can get “2 buck beer” and “2 buck off appetizers” during happy hour. Monday is ladies’ night and Tuesday is men’s night. If you’re not too embarrassed to watch your rendition of “Chain of Fools,” the restaurant offers free DVDs to virgin customers. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.dipiazzas.com They offer a huge menu selection, including American dishes; you'll want to try the enticing fettuccine Alfredo, lasagna, shrimp and pastas. The chicken Parmigiana melt sandwich and the calamari steak will create lasting memories in your stomach. Plus, they sell Fernet Branca, which will cure your cholera. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.thedistrictloungeorange.com The District Lounge's 'cue is serious, and Reverend Morton's Savory Bar-b-que Savior Sauce-a relishy, sweet glop the District crew administers judiciously to all meats-could score a ribbon in a Kansas City cook-off. The tri-tip's middle is pink, its skin charred yet juicy, and it arrives about eight lengths to an order. Ribs plop off easily, and enough chewy meat hangs off the bone to fill you and create a separate hamburger. Chicken wings slap the tongue with their salty, mesquite burn and await a dunking into a thimble of great mustard-ranch dressing. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.districtwine.com Housed in the base of one of downtown Long Beach's high-rises, District Wine offers a sipping experience that's both casual and swanky, with its sizable wine list in a visually refined atmosphere. Dark wood panels line the floors, while colorful modernist paintings and leather chairs adorn the room. Behind a large rack sporting towering rows of dark-colored wine bottles is a comfy chaise lounge perfect for gathering with a group of friends and discussing subjects ranging from shoe obsessions to neuroscience-all while enjoying a delicious pino. Of course, if you're a connoisseur of more carbonated libations, there's also a well-rounded craft-beer list including Sam Smith Oatmeal Stout, Apple Floris from Belgium and an Organic Strawberry Ale. Obviously not in the same realm as the Budweisers and PBRs of the world, but these beers won't break the bank at around $7 a bottle. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.thedolphinbar.com Every part of town needs a go-to gay bar, and for the South Bay, the Dolphin Bar in Redondo Beach is that place. Catering to a devoted clientele, this watering hole — whose mascot is a tipsy upright dolphin, which is rather fitting given the animal's pansexuality — hosts such typical pub institutions as karaoke nights, drink specials and pool games. There’s also an Elvis impersonator, for what it’s worth, and the bar plays host regularly to birthdays and special events. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.dominicksrestaurant.com For most of its existence, Dominick’s was famous as the Hollywood restaurant that never looked open, a weathered, low building, neon permanently unlit, across from the small amusement park that later became the site of the Beverly Center. It was, or at least had a reputation as, the original Rat Pack hangout. And when it finally changed hands, it was made over into a neo–Rat Pack steakhouse, then a neo-neo–Rat Pack fusion place, then a couple of other things I don’t remember until it finally ended up as a pleasant, much-enlarged, neo-neo-neo–Rat Pack restaurant with late hours, a killer recipe for spaghetti and meatballs, a menu equally divided between tough-guy American-Italian cooking and girly, salady stuff, not to mention $15 Sunday dinners that come with the option of a $12 bottle of a house wine with the unfortunate name of Dago Red. Oddly, it is a very pleasant place to be, even when you are not watching young television stars grope one another, which you usually are. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
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