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Featured Bars/Clubs


http://www.tiki-ti.com With only 12 stools and a handful of tables, Tiki-Ti is about the size of a real tiki hut. But what Tiki-Ti lacks in size, it makes up for in drinks and personality. Original mixologist Ray Buhen passed off his secret recipes for tropical drinks to his son and grandson, who now serve up 86 of his exotic specialties. Note that the bar does not serve beer or wine. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.tiltedkilt.com At the Tilted Kilt, an orgy of plaid knickknacks and random bagpipery decorate the walls of three distinct rooms: a main dining hall, a relatively sedate fireplace area, and a corner room with a pool table and a punching-bag arcade game on which males can demonstrate their machismo and pound their chests. If you strip it down, Tilted Kilt is not so much an Irish or Scottish bar as it is another restaurant that proudly peddles male-oriented distractions of booze, boobs and ballgames. Every wall or smooth vertical surface has an oversized flat-screen TV mounted on it. All the visual stimuli may cause you to miss how positively polished the whole place looks, like a PG-13-rated Chili's or Olive Garden. The people you'd expect to see there are here: young couples, retirees, a good mix of the tattooed-up and the buttoned-down who, like you, don't mind a little sexism as long as the bar pours a good pint of Guinness. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.tongahut.com Tiki enthusiasts and vivacious valley girls and guys flock to this festive luau-like bar experience. The old bar (opened in 1958) was bought about 5 years ago and subtle changes were made, including the new "drooling bastard" fountain, a refurbished kidney-shaped drop ceiling, and a nice smattering of Polynesian masks and velvet paintings. It's kitschy but not tacky, cozy not crazy -- rare with these kinds of environments. Even the 7-foot-tall moai (Easter Island statue) seems at home. The hut is a happening hub most nights thanks to tasty concoctions -- The Tonga Lei, Ginger Flame, Tonga Punch, Rhumboogie, and Cum in a Hot Tub shot are witch-doctor lethal -- and a jumping jukebox filled with Exotica, Rockabilly, and Lounge plus a little 80's Rock, Classic Rock and R&B and Hip-hop. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.tonyssaloon.la It may be the diviest of 213's roster of revamped downtown bars (the company owns Golden Gopher, Broadway Bar, Seven Grand, Casey's Irish Pub and more), but Tony's is still a welcoming spot to imbibe. The area is a bit sketchy, but the bar has its own parking lot, and the room itself is old but handsomely yet tastefully redone. Gutted years ago, the space has a large back bar (brought over from a 19th-century saloon in Utah before 213 took over), shiny booths, soft lamp lighting and a great smoking patio complete with a ping-pong table. Hunter S Thompson gets nods in fixtures here (213's Cedd Moses, who's a fan, says the bar reminded him of Thompson's famed haunt, the Woody Creek Tavern in Colorado) and on the drink menu (there's a bounty of Thompson's favorite bourbons displayed behind the bar). Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.tonysda.com This Burbank bar has seen it all. In the '60s, Tony's was a classic Valley dive bar, attracting the kind of folks who'd start drinking at six in the morning. More than 40 years later, it's has been treated to a face-lift by its new owner, who just so happens to be named Tony. These days, Tony's Darts Away is less gin joint and more California craft-beer bar and restaurant, with over 30 local beers on tap, including a selection that rotates daily. Proprietor Tony Yanow's motto is "bringing the fine beers of California to the fine people of Los Angeles." Tony's also has a wide variety of regional wines. Tony's serves local sausages that come with a huge range of toppings, and the place has become a vegan destination as well, owing to four different kinds of meat-free sausages. Most everything at Tony's is sourced in California. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.topsburger.com The drive-thru hamburger is generally a sorry proposition, a junkyard of unhappy Happy Meals, of unstellar Famous Stars, of charnel-house malteds and grisly lumps of gristle, of TV-slick cheesy things and other restaurants so terrifyingly off-brand that you fear for your intestinal fauna. And then there is Top's, where the bacon-avocado cheeseburgers are grand, goopy things; the onion rings are pleasingly crunchy; and the shakes are as dense and sweet as a life well lived. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.sunsettowerhotel.com Inside the Sunset Tower Hotel, Tower Bar was inspired by old Hollywood: boxy lights, simple carpeting and wall art, high wood bar stools and flickering candles. Menu items include hot dogs, chicken pot pies, Mediterranean sea bass, chicken paillard, bacon-wrapped dates, soft lobster tacos and risotto balls. Connected to the restaurant, the poolside cafe offers panoramic city views. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.tribalcafe.com The Echo Park cafe features an astonishing variety of Mexican, Asian and vegan dishes and supremely healthful, purifying fresh juices. Colorfully decorated with paintings by neighborhood artists, the restaurant hosts arty indie, underground, electronica and multiculti musicians, as well as several ongoing weekly open mikes. All ages; $6 donation for most performances Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.tripsantamonica.com Perched on the southern edge of Santa Monica, Trip is indeed a trip. From the outside, it looks like an everyday neighborhood bar, but the club is actually one of the Westside's leading hot spots, presenting an impressive variety of rock, world, acoustic, indie pop and other live-music and comedy events. Not only that, Trip is ground zero for sexy entertainment, with weekly strip-pole dance revues and in-house burlesque nights. The full bar has an extensive beer, wine and cocktail list, and the kitchen serves Boar's Head deli sandwiches. The atmosphere is inviting, with warm red walls decked out with Christmas lights, ivy, flags and colorfully psychedelic artwork. Patrons can sit at the bar or in the club's more intimate red booths. Since Trip opens daily at 11 a.m., folks can play pool and while away the time in the afternoon before musicians and comedians climb onto the club's low, small stage at night. Ages 21 & over. Street parking. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
http://www.thompsonhotels.com/hotels/la/hollywood-roosevelt/drink/tropicana-bar
http://www.troubadour.com In the first decade after the late Doug Weston opened the Troubadour in 1957, the West Hollywood club presented such influential folk-pop musicians as the Byrds, Joni Mitchell and Buffalo Springfield and legendary comedians like Lenny Bruce and Richard Pryor. In the 1970s, the Troubadour was the site of historic performances by Tim Buckley, Linda Ronstadt, Neil Young, Cheech & Chong, Kris Kristofferson, Bruce Springsteen, the Pointer Sisters, Tom Waits, George Carlin, Miles Davis, Steve Martin, Carole King, James Taylor, Leonard Cohen, Elton John and the poet Charles Bukowski. In the 1980s, the club went in a hard-rock direction, hosting such groups as Metallica, Warrant, Pearl Jam, W.A.S.P. and Guns N' Roses. Since then, the Troubadour continues to book rising bands alongside established names, including Fiona Apple, Manu Chao, Nellie McKay, Radiohead, Gogol Bordello, System of a Down, Johnny Cash, the Go-Betweens, Franz Ferdinand, Cypress Hill, Fleet Foxes and the Cure. The club has a kitchen and three full bars, as well as a balcony that looks down over the stage and dance floor. All ages. Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
Maybe the most laid back gay bar in West Hollywood, Trunks nevertheless, has its wild moments. The drinks are some of the most reasonable (and potent) on the Santa Monica Blvd. strip so when the juke is pumping, so too, is the crowd. Regulars lean towards older gents, but most are friendly no matter the sexual preference of who walks in. People come here mostly to chill and take refuge from the audaciousness of nearby WeHo clubs, but cruising does occur, as does some serious cueing (the pool tables are rarely empty). Read more about this Los Angeles bar or club >>
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