riddlemay wrote:Rene G wrote:For delicatessens, I'm having a hard time coming up with anything other than Barnum & Bagel. What names did you have in mind?
That was the one.
Rene G wrote:Perhaps you were thinking of the sandwiches offered at some Chicago delis. D B Kaplan's* was known for their huge menu overstuffed with atrocious puns. Try as I might I'll never forget the Ike & Tina Tuna, the Francis Ford Capicola and many more.
* D B Kaplan's Delicatessen opened in 1976 on the 7th floor of Water Tower Place and became Levy Restaurants' first place a couple years later. It closed in late 1994.
Rene G wrote:* D B Kaplan's Delicatessen opened in 1976 on the 7th floor of Water Tower Place and became Levy Restaurants' first place a couple years later. It closed in late 1994.
nr706 wrote:Rene G wrote:* D B Kaplan's Delicatessen opened in 1976 on the 7th floor of Water Tower Place and became Levy Restaurants' first place a couple years later. It closed in late 1994.
IIRC, D B Kaplan's was a spin-off of Hemingway's Movable Feast, in Hemingway House at the corner of Clark, Wells and Lincoln.
nr706 wrote:Rene G wrote:* D B Kaplan's Delicatessen opened in 1976 on the 7th floor of Water Tower Place and became Levy Restaurants' first place a couple years later. It closed in late 1994.
IIRC, D B Kaplan's was a spin-off of Hemingway's Movable Feast, in Hemingway House at the corner of Clark, Wells and Lincoln. Were the Levy Brothers involved then?
riddlemay wrote:We used to go there all the time, after a movie at the Water Tower movie theater, back when the movie was on the top floor of Water Tower Place. Kaplan's was one floor down.
Rene G wrote:I'm pretty sure the movie theaters were on the 2nd floor and D B Kaplan's was on the 7th.
Rene G wrote:nr706 wrote:Rene G wrote:* D B Kaplan's Delicatessen opened in 1976 on the 7th floor of Water Tower Place and became Levy Restaurants' first place a couple years later. It closed in late 1994.
IIRC, D B Kaplan's was a spin-off of Hemingway's Movable Feast, in Hemingway House at the corner of Clark, Wells and Lincoln. Were the Levy Brothers involved then?
No, the Levy brothers were never involved in Hemingway's as far as I know.
nr706 wrote:I continue to be astounded by Peter's research abilities.
TychaBrahe wrote:I know I'm coming late to the topic, but Hemingway's and Kaplan's menus were full of puns. I don't remember much, but I remember a decadent brownie dessert that was described as sort of a treasure hunt called The Last Time Ever I Saw My Waist. Both restaurants sold Haagen Dazs ice cream when that was a new thing, and the menus (at least at Hemingway's) were accordion fold and opened up to show an enormous sandwich up the middle with King Kong climbing it, a biplane circling, and other humorous touches.
AlekH wrote:It has gotten to the point where the ampersand makes me irrationally angry
disagree wrote:In the spirit of the origin of this thread, I find Evanston-based Temperance Beer Company naming a beer "Birdsong" incredibly insensitive.
Teresa wrote:Call me clueless, but what is the reference here?
Or maybe they are referencing how much they like to hear birds sing? It doesn't matter. The problem is they named a beer Birdsong in a community in which it is a homophone of a word with power and legacy, Byrdsong.ronnie_suburban wrote:Birdsong, with an i, not a y, is a Grateful Dead tune. I thought that was the reference.
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disagree wrote:Or maybe they are referencing how much they like to hear birds sing? It doesn't matter. The problem is they named a beer Birdsong in a community in which it is a homophone of a word with power and legacy, Byrdsong.ronnie_suburban wrote:Birdsong, with an i, not a y, is a Grateful Dead tune. I thought that was the reference.
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At least I'm not alone, I guess. At any rate, I don't see how it's a reach to say that someone gave a beer a name that evokes something that they might not have intended.ronnie_suburban wrote:disagree wrote:Or maybe they are referencing how much they like to hear birds sing? It doesn't matter. The problem is they named a beer Birdsong in a community in which it is a homophone of a word with power and legacy, Byrdsong.ronnie_suburban wrote:Birdsong, with an i, not a y, is a Grateful Dead tune. I thought that was the reference.
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Or maybe it's an homage to the late Mr. Byrdsong. In any case, I think you're really reaching on this one but at least you're in line with the title of the thread: perception.
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disagree wrote:At least I'm not alone, I guess. At any rate, I don't see how it's a reach to say that someone gave a beer a name that evokes something that they might not have intended.
By the way, do you know the brewers or investors?
Have they given you any freebies? It's big of you to understand how this could be offensive. And I similarly want to understand how you cannot be offended. I'm running out of reasons, unless it really just is old hippies really know their Dead songs. (I'd never heard of the Dead song, but I don't feel strongly about taking a guess. I don't know how many other old hippies frequent LTH. A lot?)ronnie_suburban wrote:disagree wrote:At least I'm not alone, I guess. At any rate, I don't see how it's a reach to say that someone gave a beer a name that evokes something that they might not have intended.
By the way, do you know the brewers or investors?
No. I don't know anyone involved in the project.
I think it's a reach to be offended by it. I can understand how the name might touch a nerve with some people but my guess is that more people who frequent this place and drink these beers would associate it with the tune than the coach, especially given the spelling.
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disagree wrote:Have they given you any freebies? It's big of you to understand how this could be offensive. And I similarly want to understand how you cannot be offended. I'm running out of reasons, unless it really just is old hippies really know their Dead songs. (I'd never heard of the Dead song, but I don't feel strongly about taking a guess. I don't know how many other old hippies frequent LTH. A lot?)ronnie_suburban wrote:disagree wrote:At least I'm not alone, I guess. At any rate, I don't see how it's a reach to say that someone gave a beer a name that evokes something that they might not have intended.
By the way, do you know the brewers or investors?
No. I don't know anyone involved in the project.
I think it's a reach to be offended by it. I can understand how the name might touch a nerve with some people but my guess is that more people who frequent this place and drink these beers would associate it with the tune than the coach, especially given the spelling.
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Three people here immediately saw what I saw. I don't know if they drink beer, though. I do. And I live in Evanston. And I remember when it happened, and I think it is offensive and I am now less likely to choose a TBC beer when given a choice.
The Doors of perception, maaaaaaaannnn.
disagree wrote:Have they given you any freebies? It's big of you to understand how this could be offensive. And I similarly want to understand how you cannot be offended. I'm running out of reasons, unless it really just is old hippies really know their Dead songs. (I'd never heard of the Dead song, but I don't feel strongly about taking a guess. I don't know how many other old hippies frequent LTH. A lot?)ronnie_suburban wrote:disagree wrote:At least I'm not alone, I guess. At any rate, I don't see how it's a reach to say that someone gave a beer a name that evokes something that they might not have intended.
By the way, do you know the brewers or investors?
No. I don't know anyone involved in the project.
I think it's a reach to be offended by it. I can understand how the name might touch a nerve with some people but my guess is that more people who frequent this place and drink these beers would associate it with the tune than the coach, especially given the spelling.
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Three people here immediately saw what I saw. I don't know if they drink beer, though. I do. And I live in Evanston. And I remember when it happened, and I think it is offensive and I am now less likely to choose a TBC beer when given a choice.
The Doors of perception, maaaaaaaannnn.