Hello!

Welcome to The Epic! I am launching this blog as a manifesto for and a guide to living well. The title and motto of the blog are taken from the Epicureans, at least some of whom believed in the notion that not one minute of the future was guaranteed to them and that as a result they had the duty to live life to its fullest every moment.

I believe in discovering fun and pleasurable things wherever I find myself each day and I am told I have a knack for unearthing them. My hope is that by sharing in my pleasures and some of my ways of finding them you will begin to collect all the riches that lie in the moments of your life. They are there. Take them! All our lives should be.....Epic.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Happy Hour at TGIF

I was there alright. TGI Friday's. A Wednesday evening, just before six. Mid-week happy hour. Actually I was ordering take out. With a pop on the side for the wait. If you want to see a genuine selection of characters, check out this scene sometime. Remote control trivia gaming using some sort of satellite keyboard is a blood sport. With hard questions, too. Such as "mint is in the same family as which of the following...?". As I ordered my drink, I braced for Happy Hour Hell. I made a mental note to revisit my Dante to see if this is one of the circles. If not, I thought it certainly should be.

The young lady behind the bar was cute but not too cute. I wouldn't try to ask for an old school cocktail here. This is definitely a highball joint. The old-ish fellow to my immediate left was wearing khakis, a gingham check shirt and a Crocodile Dundee hat. Suspiciously, he seemed to be drinking water which deflated his outback image. He stared grimly at the screen as each question and set of answers appeared, occasionally calling out "Who could know this?". The rather old fellow to the left of Dundee was drinking coffee from a mug he must have brought in himself because it had "I [heart] Nuns" printed on it. In red. He got more answers correct than Dundee but also loudly agreed with Dundee that most of the questions were too hard for anybody to answer. Sipping my Jack and water, I had to agree. Although I didn't verbalize my opinion like my neighbors.

Ultimately, it didn't matter if Dundee or Nun Man got one right every so often. Because across the bar was another older fellow wearing a Greek fisherman cap and drinking very large Margaritas. I noticed that his drinks come out of a shaker, not a freezer/blender, so I began to revise my opinion of the bartender.

One rule I have consistently found to be sound is to beware of men in Greek fisherman caps. Particularly older men. They know things. Not pleasant things. Have been places. Not pleasant places. Sometimes they carry small wicked knives. Trust me. I know. Once I saw this gent, drinking large, real drinks, I knew where to put my money. Dundee and Nun Man never had a shot.

The Greek Fisherman was a large man, with weather hardened skin and a fringe of white hair curling out from under the edges of his cap. He would watch as each question came up on the televisions over the bar, take a long pull at his Margarita, and stretch a finger out toward his response keyboard. Almost bored. Then he would almost unfailingly tap in the correct answer. Sort of like Auric Goldfinger playing Chemin De Fer. At TGI Friday's. On Wednesday evening.

Finally, defeated, Nun Man threw up his hands and walked out of the bar to have a smoke muttering how nobody could get the answers right and how SOME people are just damned lucky. The bartender grinned, refilled his Nun mug with coffee, and waited for his return.

While Nun Man was out calming himself with a Marlboro Red, I noticed an odd thing. The bartender referred to all of the older folk at her bar by name. Asked about their families. Knew their drinks. Many of the customers raised a hand to each other as the came or left. Some hugged. When Nun Man returned to the trivial arena, the Greek Fisherman was paying his tab and preparing to leave. Leaving the field of play to lesser men. The bartender glanced sideways at Nun Man and asked if he had remembered to take his medicine that day. He muttered that he had, grinned sheepishly, and returned to his keyboard. I sipped my drink and tried to remember if I had taken my medicine that day as well.

Kingsley Amis held that, prior to degradation by corporate ownership, music systems and television, the English pub was an important social institution because it provided patrons with an extended family network. I believe that Waverly Root said much the same about good little Parisian bistros. The point being that pleasant communal activity is essential to human social existence despite what certain well-read hermitic sorts may espouse. What I learned that Wednesday evening at TGI Friday was that a good bar doesn't have to be located in a discrete location or even have very good drinks. A good bar can be found in a mall parking lot behind rather loud red and white striping. Because a good bar comes from the people inside it. At happy hour. Or any other time. Dundee, Nun Man, the Greek Fisherman and their bartender deserve my honest thanks for reminding me of that simple truth.

9 comments:

James said...

You have stated a profound truth. I also agree with the Greek fisherman hat.

Anonymous said...

In the old days (early 70's through early 80's)when single and moving on the corporate dime almost yearly, I would have the opportunity to fly in to the new post, look the place over and find an apartment. Or turn down the promotion.

Nashville, Dallas, Chicago suburbs, San Jose, and up the Jersey Turnpike I would always ask either the rental car person or the cabbie to lead me to the TGI Fridays. As long as I lived within a 5 mile radius of that place I would be "ok". I hate to admit it now, but the TGIF vibe was usually the deciding factor of taking the deal or not.

Forty years later you have hit the mark. All those old fellows might have been on the road back then...

As usual, great post.
LD

Sandra said...

This is a great post. And so true. Cliche as it is, the theme song from Cheers "Where Everybody Knows Your Name" says a lot. Interesting, too, how it doesn't take long to feel the family dynamic in a bar/restaurant. Hope you're having a great weekend! xoxo

~Tessa~Scoffs said...

Delightful piece, Mr. Lane. Love the description of Greek Fisherman hat.

Ben said...

A great way to remind us not to be snobs. Cheers!

scribbler50 said...

Very nice story, M., it sure didn't go where I expected it to. You being you and TGIF's being TGIF's... well, you get the idea. I especially liked how the bar maid knew everyone's story. Extended family indeed!

Best,
Scribbler 50

Suburban Princess said...

Such lovely observations.
I remember a friend growing up...her grandfather was Greek and came complete with the hat...we were scared to death of him.

The pub in my town has all the regulars and their mugs...they leave them there awaiting their owner's return.

Julie said...

I just found your blog... great writing. I thoroughly enjoyed this post and look forward to reading others.
Julie

M.Lane said...

Thanks everyone! And Julie, welcome as a new Epicurian!! I hope you enjoy what you find here.

ML