Thursday, March 17, 2016

A St. Patrick's Day morning look at the line at McSorley's



On this St. Patrick's Day, the line for McSorley's on East Seventh Street "isn't too crazy" EVG line correspondent Steven noted... this was the back of the line right at 8 a.m., when the bar was opening for the (St. Patrick's) day...



Not even to Cooper Square. Yet!

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

I want to know how many of these people are even Irish. And I mean ACTUALLY Irish, not "my grandmother is a quarter Irish."

The older I get, the angrier I become that my people's holiday here in the states has devolved into nothing more than a drunkfest. The Irish people have made huge cultural contributions to society, to literature, to music, yet all these assholes want to do is use the holiday as an excuse to get morning wasted.

Cinco de Mayo -- Mexico's most important national holiday -- is on a similar path here in the US, and I'm sure the marginally more sophisticated drunks will find a way to ruin Bastille Day eventually.

Anonymous said...

Being of partial Irish descent I have always been ashamed that alcohol is used by many to define their heritage instead of acknowledging the struggles our ancestors met and overcame when first coming to this country and the many contributions and accomplishments Irish - Americans have made.

Anonymous said...

Wo-hoo! There I am, in the crowd! I enjoyed a pre-work brew and now I now I am ward at hurk!

Anonymous said...

Because nothing says "I'm proud of my heritage" like living up to negative stereotypes.

SantaCon said...

Santacon NYC (@santacon)
3/17/16, 11:13 AM
Happy St. Patrick's Day or as we like to call it Springtime SantaCon! 🍀

cmarrtyy said...

Well it's the annual East Village Marathon - 26 bars long. On your mark. Get set. Drink!

Edmund Dunn said...

And now for some real Irish culture.

"The Artist Who Dared to Paint Ireland’s Great Famine"

"It is called An Gorta Mor, or the Great Hunger, an evocative term that still fails to convey the full horror of the Irish potato famine, perhaps the single worst catastrophe in 19th-century Europe. Between 1845 and 1852, Ireland lost more than a quarter of its population to starvation, disease and emigration, while its English overlords hemmed, hawed and, in at least one prominent case, cited God’s will as justification."


http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/19/arts/design/the-artist-who-dared-to-paint-irelands-great-famine.html?_r=0

Anonymous said...

Anon @ 9:41am - clearly you are not Mexican nor have the slightest clue about our neighbors to the south. Cinco de mayo is really no big deal in Mexico and doesn't even come close to what 4th of July is for the US.

Hope you enjoy the rest of the holiday. I'll have a drink for you, since I'm sure you'll be diving into your favorite james Joyce novel.

Anonymous said...

The annual shit show begins....

Anonymous said...

I'm glad to be able to pile on with those hating everything.

Anonymous said...

9:41am,

You may want to check your Mexican history, Cinco de Mayo is an American holiday created by Mexican-Americans to celebrate their heritage and isn't even a national holiday in Mexico.

Mexico's Independence Day is on September 16th.

Anonymous said...

What better way to celebrate the defeat of the godless pagans by the One True Church than with a nip of the brown, I always say!

Anonymous said...

I stand corrected 1:27! But my point still stands: I doubt Mexican Americans want to see Cinco de Mayo co-opted by a bunch of non-Mexican American drunks.

St. Paddy not St. Patty said...

Best time to go to McSorley's is in the middle of the afternoon on a midweek, except St. Patrick's Day.

8am opening? Sheez, On an early football matches, I show up at 7am at pubs showing said matches.

There's really something more alluring with a lass, esp. Irish, wearing green.

Don't know if anyone notice it, but there seems to be more head on the beer at McSorley's during St. Paddy's day; maybe a prelude on what patrons get afterwards.

Anonymous said...

@1:34

Before the rise of monotheistic religions, most people practiced some type of polytheism, meaning pagans believe in more than one god. Catholicism restructured these multi gods faiths into one big god and minor gods called saints. The only real improvement from paganism was getting rid of human sacrifices and various icons of animals except for the lamb = Jesus and the dove = something called the holy spirit which I still can't figure out.
I always thought that a religion created by people from the Mediterranean was a bad fit for northern European peoples, the Irish especially, you know having a wife and a mistress without guilt is hard.

Shazziz said...

I just don't want a sexy leprechaun barfing in my vestibule. I already saw an argument with a drunken grown ass man wearing sa hamrock headband.