A Quote by Jon Taffer

People don't go to bars they think are uncool. — © Jon Taffer
People don't go to bars they think are uncool.
The only reason people go to bars is to get drunk and have sex. To me, bars are what hell is like.
We go to Europe, and they think we're totally prejudiced 'cause we hang the bars and stripes. But for us, the bars and stripes doesn't mean we want to see anybody in slavery or anything like that. It's just our heritage. To us, the bars and stripes means grits, 'y'all,' and the beauty of the South. There's no prejudice at all in that with us.
The nightlife in Baltimore is very mixed. Any gay people I know go to the hipster bars; they don't go to the gay bars. Start your night at the Club Charles, and then you can meet people to go other places. The Charles has been Baltimore's favourite cool hipster bar forever.
I was never the cool kid in school, and loads of people told me that I was weird, that I dressed uncool and did uncool things, that I was too nice, too happy.
We went from candy bars, to handle bars, to hangin' in bars, to being behind bars
I am enormously uncool. I've made a cottage industry of being uncool. And I'm fine with that.
I can never understand how a solo could ever be 'uncool.' Play something good, and it won't be uncool, you know?
I'm not a big wine guy. And bars, I never go to bars anymore. It's such a drag, man.
I don't go to rock bars. Why would I go to rock bars? I can do that every night; it's boring.
And I think that’s a lot of the reason why when you start to fragment your audience, you start to think about what you’re looking for, you’ll go to different spaces, and it parallels what we do as adults. You go to different bars when you’re in the mood for different things. You see different people when you want to go listen to music or when you just want to have a quiet drink with a couple of friends.
Gay bars in America aren't weird sex clubs. They're sanctuaries. I know so many straight friends that go to gay bars more than I ever do, male and female, because they can go there and be social and there's no expectation there. It's a safe place. It's almost like the real world version of Comic-Con in some places. You can go without judgment.
My own son feels I'm uncool but my grandson loves me. Being cool or uncool is a generational thing. But as a personal thing, I really love everybody in sight.
When we play an outdoor venue, you'll see whole families - boys, girls, men and women - from kids to grandparents who somehow heard the music... Think about how hard it is for artists who can never get a gig at an all-ages gig. Who goes to hear music in bars? People who can get into bars; people who drink.
Spies go to bars for the same reason people go to libraries: full of information if you know where to ask.
All those good people huddling behind bars in gated communities - it's the wrong way round. The others should have the bars.
Of course many bars in Manhasset, like bars everywhere, were nasty places, full of pickled people marinating in regret.
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