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BAR PILOT - May 2009

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Happy Hour

Happy Hour of the Week: Trees

Happy hour bounty in the heart of downtown.

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As long as we’re on the subject of happy hour, here’s a bat that gets stuck in my afro: when a restaurant or bar trumpets happy hour specials, and they turn out to be lamer than Gregory House. Like 50 cents off some cocktail you’d never order in the first place (yes, I’m looking at you, appletini!), or a reduced rate on a plate of vulcanized hot wings. Woop-dee-doo. We can do better.

Located right across the street from City Hall, in the lobby of the Key Bank Building on SW Fifth Ave (ideal for you Randy Leonard groupies), is Trees Restaurant and Catering, a dapper little eatery in an airy atrium setting. Trees has decent comfort food, but more importantly, a bountiful happy hour menu. Three tender barbecued pork sliders and coleslaw for $3.50 is a terrific way to unwind after a performance review in which your boss indicated that your value to the company is only slightly greater than that of the stick that props open the window on hot days. The house salad ($3) is at least plate-size and comes with blue cheese, mandarin oranges, and honey-roasted sunflower seeds.

How about a very respectable meatball sandwich and side of seasoned fries for $4? Or a quartet of loaded flatbread pizzas for $5? Not bad, dude.

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There’s typically a $4 cocktail—on my first visit it was a properly potent gimlet in a fathomless bucket glass. “But Bar Pilot,” you exclaim, “I had to clean out the office fridge today! My nerves are frayed to the snapping point! I need beer, stat!”

Fear not, little cubicle drone. Trees offers a micro pint of something worthwhile for $3 (Ninkasi IPA on this day), and if you have a hankering for a more formidable tankard of ale, you can test your mettle with a 24-ounce mug of craft beer for $5. Service is fast and borderline obsequious. Working late? Happy hour stretches to a very civilized 7 p.m. Go climb the Trees and enjoy the amenities. You may not want to come back down to earth.

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Tags: Happy Hour

High Art

A Little More MST3K

Cinematic Titanic makes waves this weekend.

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Joel Hodgson, creator of Mystery Science Theater 3000 and Cinematic Titanic, materializes in Portland this weekend.

Photo courtesy of The Glen Schwartz Company

OK, here’s my follow-up post about this weekend’s appearance at the Newmark Theatre by Joel Hodgson and his partners in crime from the late, great Mystery Science Theater 3000 TV show. Under their new moniker of Cinematic Titanic, Hodgson, Trace Beaulieu, Frank Conniff, Mary Jo Pehl, and J. Elvis Weinstein will once again add some much-needed comic commentary to a pair of craptastic movies; a kung fu blaxploitation flick called East Meets Watts, and Danger on Tiki Island, a low-budget mad-scientist stinker from the Philippines.

In a geeky phone conversation with Hodgson, he told me that tickets for the two Portland shows were selling briskly. “We always seem to do well in cities known for bad weather,” he noted. Makes sense. The nine months out of the year we’re hunkered down with our TVs and Cheez-Its listening to the staccato of rain on the roof are the ideal time to review MST3K classics like Red Zone Cuba, The Day the Earth Froze, or Eegah!

Recalling the show’s humble origins at KTMA, a small TV station in Hopkins, Minnesota, Hodgson’s talent for set construction on a teensy budget came in handy (for those who don’t know, MST3K takes place on a spaceship with a wisecracking robot crew). “I was a big Dr. Who fan, and I figured I could make something at least that convincing out of stuff from the Goodwill. We bought everything that wasn’t clothes or sporting goods. Dish racks, Tupperware, all kinds of toys.”

His appreciation for the “cheesy movies” that became MST’s bread and butter (yikes, a double food metaphor!) came from his childhood in Wisconsin, the highlight of which was staying up late on Friday nights for the local monster movie program. “My world pretty much revolved around Friday night,” he admits. The young Hodgson was especially enthralled by the baffling fluctuation in quality of those Friday flicks. One week it could be a black-and-white Frankenstein film from Universal Studios, and the next week it might be some hippie-vampires-meet-the-Martians corn-fest from the late ’60s drive-in circuit.

Joel readily agrees with my assessment that the randomness of the films was a huge part of the experience. It’s why everyone digs the “shuffle play” function on their iPods—because the next song is always beyond your control. Sadly, this is an element of corporate culture that simply doesn’t exist anymore. Yes, we’ve got hundreds of cable channels, but do we really have more choices if Law & Order is on half of them? Like me, Joel misses the days when local programming made up a significant part of the TV schedule.

After Joel left Mystery Science Theater in 1993, he appeared as a recurring character on Judd Apatow’s much-loved Freaks and Geeks, served as a “magic consultant” on Sabrina, The Teenage Witch, and built gag gadgets for The Jimmy Kimmel Show. But he couldn’t resist the lure of Z-grade cinema, so he reassembled his troops last year for Cinematic Titanic. Eagle-eyed observers will notice that the robots, spaceship, and Tinker Toy sets are long gone, but the incisive patter remains intact. “Yeah, we kind of miss the ’bots and the jumpsuits sometimes,” he says. “But Cinematic Titanic gives us a chance to say what’s on our minds now and to show what we’re like now.”

And that is, a bunch of smart-aleck adults with the same élan for shredding bad movies that they’ve always had. “Trace Beaulieu had the best description for what we do," Hodgson says. "He said, The movies are Margaret Dumont—and we’re the Marx Brothers.”

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Tags: Weekend Plans

Rock the Clubs

Slabtown Salute

Rockin’ fundraiser brings in the bucks for a local nonprofit.

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Coco Cobra & the Killers blast the house with a roaring version of the Sonics’ tune “Cinderella.”

Photo by Della Slowik

Just a quick round of applause for all the bands that played Nuggets Tribute Night at Slabtown last Saturday night. Fans of three-chord garage rock shimmied to the likes of Coco Cobra & the Killers (pictured), featuring the incomparable Viva Las Vegas, the Foxgloves, Beyond Veronica, Purple Owsley, the Strange Effects, and the Welfare State—whose version of the Paul Revere & the Raiders hit “Just Like Me” brought the house down. The event raised $1,000 for Ethos Music Center in North Portland, a nonprofit that seeks to promote music and music-based education for youth in underserved communities. Organizer Sam Soule and the staff at Slabtown also deserve bear hugs for a smoothly run evening and for keeping the musicians hydrated with a veritable ocean of Pabst.

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Tags: band, music, viva las vegas

Drink Locally

The Hawthorne Stumble Zone

Four bars in three blocks. What a trip!

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Photo: Garrett Milojevich

Stumble-zoner Graham Barey finds himself at the Mt Tabor Legacy. How did he get there?

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

Stumble-zoner Graham Barey finds himself at the Mt Tabor Legacy. How did he get there?

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

The Sapphire Hotel is a bastion of cocktail sophistication, but it was only our first destination. Saving money with a reliable PBR is a smart move.

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

The robust well drinks at the Space Room lead to prolonged contemplation of the cosmic décor.

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

Well drinks are cheap and strong at the Space Room. So have two!

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

The atomic-age lighting fixtures at the Space Room are out of this world!

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

The Mt Tabor Legacy boasts two bars. The smaller one, the Sideshow Lounge, has horrifically captivating Day-Glo accents.

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

The youthful reggae band at Mt Tabor Legacy wasn’t exactly Toots & the Maytals, but their beats were serviceable.

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

Crossing SE Hawthorne Blvd can be tricky after visiting three bars. Look both ways, stumble-zoners!

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

At Angelo’s, a spacious table and several cans of domestic lager help our team debrief after a night of boozy adventure.

View Slideshow » Photo: Garrett Milojevich

Taxi! We knew it was time to leave when sassy intern Megan Udow began interpretive dancing to “Sweet Home Alabama.”

Finally, after weeks of planning, theorizing, and sending out scouting parties (some of whom never returned—a moment of silence, please), the time had come for our very first stumble-zone run, and on a recent sunny Thursday evening, we hit the street. Or in this case, the boulevard, as in SE Hawthorne.

As you may recall from an earlier post, the point of a stumble-zone excursion lies in its progress. From sober to tipsy, from swank to seedy, from familiar to alien—as the spirits take effect, inhibitions should be left behind in a carelessly strewn trail, like clothes in a dorm room. A stumble zone is an excuse for carousing, certainly, but there needs to be a definite cultural component attached, making the whole business like an educational carnival ride—with booze and fried food.

My fellow researchers and I assembled at the Sapphire Hotel at the upper end of Hawthorne and were immediately beset by calamity. There were too damn many of us to be seated sensibly in this cozy little den. I blame my surfeit of charisma. (Note to self: Like a backyard bug-zapper, my allure needs to be toned down occasionally.) Hats off to the waitress who courageously managed to stuff us into a corner away from decent, god-fearing folk.

If you haven’t been, the Sapphire Hotel is a tight fit for an entire herd, but its candlelit close quarters make it ideal for a tête-à-tête between prospective romantic partners. The out-of-the-way-hotel-lobby look of the place is attuned to a hook-up vibe, and the drinks are exotically infused and sparkle with champagne and fresh-squeezed juices—even if your conversation does not. Lost your life savings to a Ponzi schemer? (Welcome to the club.) Never fear, you may request a PBR here and feel very little shame in the asking. The food is small plates all the way, but well executed. We made short work of our rustic veggie pizza and artichoke dip, and after laboring over the division of the check for a millennium or so, we sallied forth to the next stop. To the kind people at the Sapphire: I’ll be back to settle the remainder of our bill very soon. In the meantime, enjoy my pants and digital watch.

At the Space Room, we had an easier time finding a table, as it appeared that a few members of our company had joined a religious cult en route. Anyway, they weren’t with us anymore, so elbow room was plentiful. The Space Room gets its fair share of hipsters, but the core clientele, usually clustered around the bar, is made up of graying boomers, hilarious old ladies, and other career drinkers. And while you can order food (the Tater Tots are awash in greasy goodness), the main attraction here is change back from your fiver for a really potent well drink, which can be swilled in a dark lounge that hasn’t had any significant upgrades since the (first) Kennedy assassination, right down to the atomic-age décor. And thanks to the puissance of the cocktails, our conversation became more surreal (and ribald) and, thankfully, steered away from work-related topics. Yes, I know the refrigerator stinks. Can we move on?

We were still ten in number by the time we were ready for our third destination, so I volunteered to seek out appropriate accommodations. Both Bar of the Gods and the Tanker were crammed, so I took a chance on the Mt Tabor Legacy. The doorman charitably waved the cover charge for our posse, and we piled into the Sideshow Lounge, the Day-Glo, circus-themed smaller bar on the premises. But here our morale was dealt a cruel blow. It was comedy night, and the fellow at the mic was attempting to amuse the crowd with a Gilbert Gottfried impersonation. Since the entertainment value generated by Gottfried himself is microscopic, the young mimic wasn’t having much luck. Fortunately, the Mt Tabor Legacy (aka the Tabor; aka Mt Tabor Theater & Pub; aka Sabala’s), a venue that has seen more regime changes than an unstable African nation, has a second, larger room, and on this night a young, Caucasian reggae band was onstage giving it the old college try. A few of us (well, me) tried skanking around the dance floor, which inspired us to down a round of Sessions, that tasty little beer in the stubby bottle that you can always make room for.

Finally, we agreed on a nightcap at Angelo’s, a dive bar that I hadn’t visited in more than a dozen years. I recalled grumpy old men nursing cans of Hamm’s and Budweiser around an unlovely bar in a room that could have been decorated by a chain-saw sculptor, but things had changed dramatically. Now there were surly punk rockers nursing cans of Hamm’s and Budweiser in a room that still had all the rough-hewn charm of a logging-camp canteen. By this stage of the evening, concrete memories are few, but I seem to remember a friendly bartender giving me a complimentary warm energy drink (“They’re promotional. We’ve got a bunch of ’em,” she told me), which I promptly chugged in order to ward off the whirlies. The ill-advised potion promptly made my stomach clutch and roll over like a sheepdog, and I knew it was time to get some air and take the shoe-heel express back to my crib. The next morning, the inside of my mouth tasted like sweat socks, vinegar, and misery.

Ah, but such a night. From pink-cheeked lovers straight from the Abercrombie & Fitch catalog to smart-alecky old ladies in bowling shirts, from pale, tentative reggae musicians to simmering souls in leather jackets, we had passed the evening in the company of strangers and hostile natives, and I for one had learned a valuable lesson. Avoid free energy drinks as you would a rabid bat.

Any ideas on where we should go next (besides detox)? Anyone feel like joining us?

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Tags: Stumble Zone

Around Town

PB Art

The symbolism speaks for itself.

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A jaundiced re-imagining of Michelangelo’s David?

Photo by Me

Any day that I’m greeted by something like this when I get off the bus promises good fortune.

It’s likely one of the top finishers in Pabst Blue Ribbon’s annual public art contest, but the artist’s name hasn’t appeared on the website yet.

Obviously influenced by the bourgeois low-art movement of the 1930s, blended with a soupçon of rural primitive, the artist’s puckish take on the unholy union of art and commerce is a sublime juxtaposition of naive enthusiasm with the eye of a cynic. Or something.

I must confess, I don’t know art—but I know what I like. Think I can get this on a T-shirt?

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Tags: Art, Beer

Pop Culture

Mystery Men

MST3K cast is coming to town for two nights of movie mayhem

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Mystery Science Theater fans rejoice! Cinematic Titanic is coming to Portland.

Photo courtesy the Glen Schwartz Company

Wow. Just wow.

This post is a little off my usual bar beat, but I just couldn’t sit on it any longer. Joel Hodgson and most of the cast of Mystery Science Theater 3000 (pictured) are coming to town at the end of this month for two live shows at the Newmark Theatre.

This may rate a “ho hum” on your “wow” scale, but for me it’s like Zeus, Bob Dylan, and the Harlem Globetrotters dropping by my condo for Little Debbie cakes.

Hodgson’s Mystery Science Theater 3000 ran on Comedy Central and the Sci-Fi Channel from 1988–1999, though Hodgson left the show in 1993. It was MST3K that introduced the concept of “riffing” on bad movies—essentially making snarky, off-the-wall comments throughout—thus making them infinitely more fun. And thanks to MST3K, the world came to know the wonder and majesty of really, really awful films that Hodgson and his co-horts rescued from some obscure Hollywood Dumpster. Now when you mention flicks like Mitchell, starring rotund tough guy Joe Don Baker, or Manos: Hands of Fate, starring … nobody you’ve ever heard of, a glimmer of joyful recognition will register on the face of 1 in 10 or so. Italian muscle-man movies, guy-in-rubber-suit epics from Japan, and excruciatingly bad drive-in fare from gloriously inept filmmakers like Ed Wood, Coleman Francis, and Al Adamson were all fair game for Hodgson and company’s rapid-fire razzberries.

I worshipped this show like a devout pilgrim, as did thousands of other die-hard fans (known as MSTies), and dutifully programmed my piece-of-crap Emerson VHS player every Saturday morning to record as many of its 199 episodes as I could. As a result, and as anyone who knows me will attest, my absolute dream job would be to sit in a dark theater hurling insults and epiphanies at Z-Grade horror and fantasy films. Hell, I’ve got over 40 years of experience!

Hodgson, and original cast members Trace Beaulieu, Frank Conniff, Mary Jo Pehl, and Josh Weinstein -(also a writer for The Simpsons)- will be here under their new moniker, Cinematic Titanic, firing puns, pop culture references, and zesty zingers at two different movies May 29–30; the kung fu blaxploitation flick East Meets Watts, and a mad-scientist stinker from the Phillipines called Danger on Tiki Island. I doubt you’ll find much info on either film from Google, as they’ve probably been renamed a bunch of times.

Stay tuned for more details as I’m hoping to snag an interview with Hodgson some time this week. Tickets are available through the PCPA box office or Ticketmaster. Meanwhile, here’s a shout out to fellow MSTies everywhere.

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Tags: Weekend Plans, music

Kudos, kudos

High Five For Jeffrey!

Playboy recognizes talent

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Jeffrey Morgenthaler in action!

Can I pick ’em or what? Less than a week after my chat with Clyde Common bar manager Jeffrey Morgenthaler about the wonders of St Germain elderflower liqueur, the man himself is named one of the 10 top mixologists in the country by Playboy magazine. I had no idea my humble blog had that kind of influence, even though Hef and I go back a long way. Early on, he tried to bring me on board this whole Playboy thing, but I told him in no uncertain terms, “Hugh, I love you man, but lounging around in my robe with a passel of pulchritudinous gals in their unmentionables—what kind of life is that? I mean, really?”

Congratulations to the esteemed Mr. Morgenthaler and may your martinis always be dry as Death Valley.

I was not going to run this lousy photo of Jeffrey (he just wouldn’t hold still while he was making my drink) but under the circumstances we’ll give quality control the day off.

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Tags: Cocktails, Bar Culture

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