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Featured Bars/Clubs


http://www.bossanovamartinilounge.com Bossanova Restaurant & Martini Lounge is a bar and restaurant located in Alton, Illinois. It serves contemporary cuisine with a focus on small plates and pizza. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.boxersnbriefs.com Boxers 'n Briefs' website boasts: "All races, colors, sexes and sexual orientations are welcome," and that is the damn truth. It doesn't matter if you're gay, straight or a penis-veil-wearing bachelorette, if you want to ogle dancing dudes, this is the only place to be. The cover charge is a little steep -- $10 on the weekends -- but you get hours of fun. The entertainment rotates all night, and it doesn't take the dancers long to get fully nude and do acrobatic flips right on the bar; here the entertainers are very accessible. The club also boasts a shower (on the bar -- for the dancers to perform in), private rooms and a drag show every Sunday night. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.cometobrennans.net Brennan's has achieved must-go status among St. Louisans. The quaint Central West End cigar bar and wine market recently got a big city renovation, adding to its already considerable allure. The bar on the main floor of Brennan's is presided over by a billboard-sized sign, with text that changes regularly. Recent offerings: "When a smoking Indonesian toddler looks cooler than you, it's time to reevaluate your Ed Hardy gear," and "Chuck Norris will be upstairs this evening playing ping pong with an ironing board and a watermelon." An unmarked door in the middle of the room leads to the modern-day speakeasy in the basement cellar. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
One of Maryland Heights' friendliest and busiest bars, The Brew House is made up of equal parts "bros" and brouhaha. Take into account its close proximity to several apartment complexes, and it's easy enough to see why you'll find a diverse (and fairly random) selection of co-eds, grads, businessmen, and townies all under the same roof. The much-coveted pool table in the back always brings out a slew of seasoned players, but newcomers are always welcome to shoot with the best. Loosen your tie, turn your baseball hat backwards and come on in for inexpensive drinks and some pretty hilarious '80s karaoke. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.brewskeez.net The O'Fallon location of this "sports cafe" serves up similar favorites to its Florissant sister. Appetizers include T-ravs, mozzarella sticks, stuffed bread sticks and wings, while the main event offers burgers and sandwiches. For those with a bigger appetite, go for the "Heavy Weight Champ" - 3.5 pounds of beef topped with six strips of bacon, cheddar-onion straws, cheddar and Monterey jack cheeses, lettuce, onions, pickles and tomato. Guests who can knock out this bad boy, along with an order of fries and a 22-ounce soda or beer, in 45 minutes, get the meal for free. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.brewskeez.net Brewskeez touts itself as a "sports cafe," which translates to tons of appetizers, including potato skins, T-ravs and wings. Brewskeez rounds out their menu with salads, wraps, pizza and burgers, but there are a few unexpected choices, such as veal-and-portabella-mushroom ravioli. There's also pool and darts to entertain guests in between innings. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.thebridgestl.com Restaurateur Dave Bailey (Baileys' Chocolate Bar, Rooster) does it again: The Bridge offers a terrific casual-dining experience in a stylish downtown space. The menu devotes a section to "Snacks" (tasty seasoned popcorn and spiced nuts), as well as charcuterie and cheese, sandwiches, salads and small entrées called "Pots." Of this last group, the coffee-braised beef over sweet-potato orzo is a standout. The beer list features well-known craft brewers on three dozen taps and in 200 bottles; the wine list, though not as lengthy, offers value. The décor, especially the giant bird's-nest light fixtures, is, frankly, awesome. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.broadwayoysterbar.com A true taste of N'awlins awaits you at this party-time Cajun/Creole dive, housed in a 150-year-old historic building in the shadows of Busch Stadium and the Highway 40 overpass. Order up a mess of crawfish, fried alligator, jambalaya or gumbo (the house recipe, known as Gumbo Ya Ya, is mixed with shrimp, chicken and andouille sausage), or go for one of the five grinders or five varieties of oysters on the half-shell. The Big Easy ain't just found in the flavors, though: Broadway Oyster Bar is also a great place to see national jazz, blues and zydeco acts seven days a week. Nowhere else in town can you eat gator meat and oysters and hear live music. The regulars know it, and they pack the bar so full it makes you wonder if N'awlins natives aren't coming up here for a slice o' blues, St. Louis-style. Laissez le bon temps rouler, indeed. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.brunosamericangrill.com Just south of Interstate 44, Bruno's American Grill serves up classic home cooking and pub grub. Diners can choose to sit in the large, separate dining room or in the spacious bar area. The bar also hosts live music and has two large TVs for sports fans to get their fix. Besides burgers, St. Louis-style pizza, soups, and standard appetizers such as toasted ravioli and potato skins, the restaurant also offers sandwiches, including a hot ham and cheese, and "pub platters," which are available after 4 p.m. and include items such as grilled pork chops, or opt for the house special (also available after 4 p.m.) -- fried chicken served with mashed potatoes and gravy. Bruno's has plenty of parking behind the restaurant. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.bsbarandgrill.com BS Bar & Grill knocks it out of the park — with great happy hours, live entertainment and tremendous bar fare. BS, by the way, stands for the first initials of the bar's two owners. Of course, the double-entendre is lost on no one. As the folks at BS like to say: "Sometimes it's good to be full of it." The restaurant and sports bar located in St. Ann, Missouri, serves American bar food such as wings, sandwiches, burgers and pizza. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.bubbyandsissys.com Just a few blocks from the upscale bars of the State Street neighborhood, Bubby & Sissy's is on a mission to make Alton a wee bit freakier. The tacky-chic watering hole is LGBT friendly and hosts extremely popular drag shows every weekend at JP's Showlounge upstairs. Bubby & Sissy's may be a conservative's nightmare, but the place is overwhelmingly welcoming. Its back patio features a stunning waterfall display and always-burning campfire. The owners serve free dinners to patrons twice a week, and the Christmas lights decking out the bar provide the familiar feeling of throwing back tallboys in your college dorm room. The Glenn Becks of the world are petrified of stepping foot in a place like Bubby & Sissy's - probably because they'd never want to leave. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
http://www.buffalowildwings.com Buffalo Wild Wings was founded in 1982 when a guy from Buffalo, New York traveled to Ohio to judge an amateur figure skating competition and failed to find any wings that measured up to the ones at home. Now B-Dubs, as it likes to call itself, has spread to nearly every state in the U.S. with more than 600 locations, including St. Louis, where it's easy to find on Voice Places. The yellow-and-black logo features a buffalo that has sprouted majestic wings, but make no mistake--it's strictly chicken here, available in regular or boneless varieties in 21 flavors from Garlic Parmesan and Caribbean Jerk to Asian Zing and the simply named but much feared Blazin'. Every location features a plethora of televisions for your sports-watching needs and a plentiful selection of beer on tap. Read more about this St. Louis bar or club >>
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