"Other cultures" may not be the right term but it was something that I was reminded of by the Tiki Culture thread. For all I know, there may be other threads about this subject and if there is, well, now there's one more.
"Tiki Culture" doesn't seem that old to me, meaning it isn't like something that disappeared, then was brought back to life by someone. These may be the same. They're all things that I'm reminded of by old movies. They may appear in new movies set in ancient times, meaning before 1960, but I'm thinking only of the old movies.
The first thing that comes to mind is a downtown, big city bar. Relatively small and narrow but sort of upscale, a place that sells more liquor than beer and probably no wine. Not a place you would bring your children but still a place where you'd be a regular. It has a bar, of course, and nice, padded booths. Were there ever such establishments? I've never been in one. But they're in the movies.
The next one is similiar and it's even downtown. It's a workingman's diner. It's essentially a main street version of the free-standing diner. No alcohol is served but still not really a nice place for kids, except maybe in Pennsylvania, where all taverns were always family-friendly. It can be somewhat ethnic but only to the extent that such a thing existed before 1960. In this case, I've even been in one. I'll bet a nickel it's not there anymore. In the movies, they're always smaller than in real life.
Diners have been frequently discussed here and with good reason. But I don't think much has been said about drive-ins, the kind with curb service. Sometimes they show up in movies, always in Southern California. I've been to California and don't remember seeing any, which is odd. But I had been to a few around where I grew up and they're not there anymore, either. So apparently such things went the way of the drive-in movie theater. The best we can do now is the drive-thru but that just isn't the same.
Not a place to eat but I'm also reminded by the same sorts of movies of a scene where the main characterr stops his car in front of a high-rise apartment building to see someone who lives on the top floor. It's a very modern apartment, too, because this is a nice part of town. The principal piece of furniture in the apartment, or at least the one I remember best, is a bar; a padded bar. They drink a lot and always have ice handy. I've never been in an apartment like that. I've seen a lot of apartment buildings like that (in a nice part of town), but there's never any place to park in front of the building, so I guess that's the problem.
Was life better then or what?
"Tiki Culture" doesn't seem that old to me, meaning it isn't like something that disappeared, then was brought back to life by someone. These may be the same. They're all things that I'm reminded of by old movies. They may appear in new movies set in ancient times, meaning before 1960, but I'm thinking only of the old movies.
The first thing that comes to mind is a downtown, big city bar. Relatively small and narrow but sort of upscale, a place that sells more liquor than beer and probably no wine. Not a place you would bring your children but still a place where you'd be a regular. It has a bar, of course, and nice, padded booths. Were there ever such establishments? I've never been in one. But they're in the movies.
The next one is similiar and it's even downtown. It's a workingman's diner. It's essentially a main street version of the free-standing diner. No alcohol is served but still not really a nice place for kids, except maybe in Pennsylvania, where all taverns were always family-friendly. It can be somewhat ethnic but only to the extent that such a thing existed before 1960. In this case, I've even been in one. I'll bet a nickel it's not there anymore. In the movies, they're always smaller than in real life.
Diners have been frequently discussed here and with good reason. But I don't think much has been said about drive-ins, the kind with curb service. Sometimes they show up in movies, always in Southern California. I've been to California and don't remember seeing any, which is odd. But I had been to a few around where I grew up and they're not there anymore, either. So apparently such things went the way of the drive-in movie theater. The best we can do now is the drive-thru but that just isn't the same.
Not a place to eat but I'm also reminded by the same sorts of movies of a scene where the main characterr stops his car in front of a high-rise apartment building to see someone who lives on the top floor. It's a very modern apartment, too, because this is a nice part of town. The principal piece of furniture in the apartment, or at least the one I remember best, is a bar; a padded bar. They drink a lot and always have ice handy. I've never been in an apartment like that. I've seen a lot of apartment buildings like that (in a nice part of town), but there's never any place to park in front of the building, so I guess that's the problem.
Was life better then or what?