Oh how I miss Hideaway Pizza...
Oh how I miss Hideaway Pizza...
Anyone else here participate in today's first annual McNellie's Pub Run (benefitting officer Chad Perry) in Midtown?
Myself and several friends were there. Great event, great weather and all in a great part of town.
I've seen some pics from some friends that went to Dust Bowl before it opened, looks great. It also appears it makes up for in the areas that redpin lacks, coolness. But that's what Tulsa does, totally outdo okc in the nightlife arena.
Bbates, do you ever take pictures of women indoors? Just kidding.
I'm no runner, but it sure looks like y'all had a fun time, and for a good cause.
I live in OKC and love it's development, but downtown Tulsa is so much cooler than OKC. It's not even close. THere is a way better entertainment/bar scene. I hope OKC can catch up...
Completely lacking. I hate OKC, Tulsa is so much better. It has trees.
I'm one of those weirdos who doesn't like many trees. OKC is just fine, if not too woodsy, for me lol
Back to Midtown, I hope we know who OCURA will choose for the Mercy site after their special meeting tomorrow.
Lived and worked in both places. Tulsa is now playing catch up.
List every nightlife establishment in both OKC and Tulsa and what makes each establishment worth the visit. Then I will subscribe to your assessment that Tulsa has hands-down the better nightlife.
You guys say Tulsa has better nightlife than OKC but you never go into specifics.
Continue the Renaissance!!!
Are there any vacant spaces in the Plaza Court? Trying to imagine where Nelson's OKC version of Dust Bowl would go in that area.
If it has retail and the spaces are deep enough, it would be cool to have it in the new apartments on the old Mercy site.
Perhaps an older building would work better though for the intended atmosphere.
A vibrant bar scene really can only exist when districts exist with several bars. Part of the fun of going out is bouncing around a few different places. Maybe it's generational, but most people in their late 20s/early 30s feel that way. Tulsa has several districts with great bar scenes. They are great because they have variety and walkability. Tulsa has the Blue Dome District with great places like Fassler Hall (German beer garden), the Dust Bowl (retro bowling alley), The Max (1980s theme with awesome games), the original McNellie's, Arnie's, and about 6 other bars. Those are all within a few blocks. The quality of places to go have a drink in the Blue Dome District far surpasses anything OKC has to offer. I could give similar descriptions for Brookside, Cherry Street, and the Brady Disitrict. OKC's best offerings are the 4 bars (only 4 and 2 are separated by Northwest Expressway!!!) off Classen (Edna's, HiLo, Drunken Fry, and Speak Easy). OKC's only other "vibrant" bar area is on Western and it mainly consists of just 4 bars. Tulsa's 4 districts blow away OKC's 2 districts. I could also count Bricktown, but Bricktown is for tourists. Most young people (after they are 21) don't go out there. Bricktown has a generic feel and there aren't bars with much character. Just some clubs and typical bars. Many of OKCs bars are very spread out, which is a huge minus for a lot of people. When you are out drinking you shouldn't have to drive (or get a cab) to go somewhere else. In Tulsa you don't have to do that. There are your details. I love OKC, but Tulsa has a way better bar scene. And it's not even close.
That is what I was asking for. Now I can subscribe.
But as a civic enthusiast for OKC, I have seen Oklahoma City's nightlife come full circle just in the last 15 years. Tulsa has the edge on nightlife, but even you can't discount the direction in which Oklahoma City is heading. I am not asking for OKC to better than Tulsa or vice versa, I am asking for both cities to compete so that, collectively, Oklahoma as a whole can stand out in terms of nightlife. That way, visitors from the coasts can be blown away.
You think OKC has improved over 1993 or even 2003. The next ten years will put the last 20 years to shame. Midtown and Auto Alley are catalysts. Bricktown is well established but is being plagued by squatters.
Continue the Renaissance!!!
I think Midtown OKC has the potential to be the biggest nightlife area in OKC. It could be Tulsa's Brookside, Cherry Street and Blue Dome all rolled into one. I talked to Elliot Nelson once at McNellies in Tulsa. He was sitting at the bar and I introduced myself. I asked him what his next plans were, and at the time it was a German beer garden (which became Fassler Hall) and a retro bowling alley (Dust Bowl). He was also in the process of opening a McNellies location in Norman, and said the OKC McNellies has been a huge success. He said he was interested in opening up new venues in both cities but doesn't want to get stretched too thin...
Going out on a limb here, but the REAL way to rejuvenate the nightlife of a neighborhood is to put a 'good' gay bar in. By 'good' I mean one that is big, open to all LGBT and non-LGBT people, has a great place to dance with a great view of downtown. This is an absolute magnet for new developments as once the LGBT crowd moves in real estate prices will skyrocket. Of-course it will take real guts in OKC to do this, but a lively gay district nearer downtown, even in addition to the one on 39th, would be a HUGE boon to the city. We've got (or are getting) big buildings and (perhaps) a nice new convention center, but THIS step would be the true sign of a maturing urban atmosphere. Can we .... DARE WE do this?
Have a look at this example in Montreal: The Sky Complex
And what would those wonders be? Is this a bit too uncomfortable to consider? OKC's gay neighborhood has been ring-fenced by conservative attitudes that have bullied it into being the ghetto it is. I am suggesting that we free our minds here and look at the potential it has created in other cities, and at least contemplate that it COULD work here too. That's not too hard is it? Yes, it could do wonders for Midtown; no we are not Chelsea in NYC, but we're also not (correct me if I am wrong) Kabul.
By 'wonders' I mean the area is a virtual ghetto immediately surrounding the "Southwest's Largest Gay Resort." And, I'd love to read your list of awesome 'new developments' that area has attracted.
And before you go putting some homophobe label on me..... I used to volunteer as the state's youngest certified HIV/AIDS counselor, tester and educator at ASP (AIDS Support Program) across the street from the Habana in the 80's and 90's. We did many charity events at Angles. I even took my now wife to Angle's when we were dating (1998ish) because we really liked the music and bizarre atmosphere. Not to mention when I was teaching bartending at night (2004ish) I'd take my class to the Copa to watch the lip-sync contest featuring 'Patti-Melt' and 'Ginger Lamar' and celebrate their completion of the class.
So, I'm not speaking from a perspective of being 'uncomfortable.' I'm simply laughing at the idea that.... "All Midtown really needs to be successful is a really big gay bar." (helps if you say it in your best Liza Minnelli voice while doing 'jazz hands')
Pushing one group out front does not make diversity. True diversity comes when no one gives a thought as to whether there are men, women, Asians, gays, republicans, anglos, hispanics, democrats, elderly, etc. etc. at the next table. We don't need a gay OR a straight bar to prove how "cool" we are. And there is no evidence promoting one interest is an economic engine.
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