slightly different than MLK, dream speach but revelatorybearister said:
I had a dream last week about a Top Dog chasing a glazed donut through the Caldecott Tunnel.
Anyone into dream interpretation?
slightly different than MLK, dream speach but revelatorybearister said:
I had a dream last week about a Top Dog chasing a glazed donut through the Caldecott Tunnel.
Anyone into dream interpretation?
Very well played, MSaviolives. And probably the safest response possible given the dream in question.MSaviolives said:Sometimes a cigar is just a cigarbearister said:
I had a dream last week about a Top Dog chasing a glazed donut through the Caldecott Tunnel.
Anyone into dream interpretation?
wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
calumnus said:wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Yes. The OP thread title is not correct. Top Dog will return to Center Street when the new building is completed.
Well that's gonna take a while. What a monstrosity!bear2034 said:calumnus said:wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Yes. The OP thread title is not correct. Top Dog will return to Center Street when the new building is completed.
Was it a King Pin glazed?bearister said:
I am no Dane Cook, so I have to admit to stealing a joke. My alleged dream was lifted from a Robert Klein bit 50 years ago:
"In the fifties I had dreams about touching a naked woman and she would turn to bronze or the dream about hot dogs chasing donuts through the Lincoln Tunnel."
-Robert Klein
JimSox said:Well that's gonna take a while. What a monstrosity!bear2034 said:calumnus said:wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Yes. The OP thread title is not correct. Top Dog will return to Center Street when the new building is completed.
Comment from one of the owners in the SFGate article: "Downtown Berkeley is really almost nothing but a ghost town right now."wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Nabbed lunch at Top Dog today. Realized I'd bought my son a Top Dog t-shirt as a present years ago, but I still didn't own one. Fixed that.
— Rich Lyons (@richlyons) May 9, 2024
ducky23 said:
This man is a god
Rich are you a bratwurst or chicken apple guy?
— Not Ryan Cobb #FireKnowlton (@hairtest420) May 9, 2024
Monkey Inn, back in the 60s. Everything bad you ever thought of, and then some. The classic: a party of 6, 3 Coeds and many pitchers. One of the Coeds asks if. it is raining - down her leg.MSaviolives said:To be fair, this isn't the only place I have seen dudes pissing in sinks. Maybe we should start a thread on "things I have witnessed in public bathrooms."cal83dls79 said:my badMSaviolives said:I literally saw dudes pissing in that sink when there was a line up at the urinalsBig C said:BearBoarBlarney said:Big C said:
La Val's closed?!? I was just there in November...
I think @cal83dls79 was referring to the old La Val's on Durant, in that same complex that used to have a Tower Records. I think the southside La Val's close in the late-90's/early-00's. Pretty sure northside La Val's is going strong, as their website is active and accepting orders.
I don't recall a "Cheshire Cat" in Berkeley, however. And I'm old having graduated in the early nineties.
What I'd give to be as "old" as you (I got maybe a dozen years on you)...
Cheshire Cat was disgusting, maybe in a good way, depending on your POV... it was right near N, side LaVal's, maybe in the same alcove. On Thursday's, they had 99 cent pitchers of PBR and the pitchers were pretty big, at that. I don't know anyone that ever went there except Thursdays. The men's room was dark... and you were glad it was, the floor was all sticky. You had to decide if washing your hands after you peed would improve your hygiene situation, or make it worse. Probably the latter, as the sink was only semi-functional and there were no paper towels.
No surprise that Cheshire Cat didn't last until the '90s.
it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives howeverHearstMining said:Comment from one of the owners in the SFGate article: "Downtown Berkeley is really almost nothing but a ghost town right now."wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Does this mean it's gotten even worse? I know I've ranted about this before, but I grew up in Berkeley during the 1960s-1970s when Berkeley's downtown had everything you could want: hardware stores, sporting goods, toys, men's and women's clothing, Edy's, Palmer's, the movie theaters, furniture, etc. As a kid, it was rare that I didn't bump into somebody or their parent or sibling when I went downtown. I've only been in town occasionally since the early 1980s, but it's honestly seemed like a ghost town since then, but apparently it's even worse. Any opinions on why this is the case? Upper Shattuck (gourmet ghetto) seems healthy and vibrant.
As an aside, does anybody remember the Top Dog on Shattuck just south of University serving apple pie? I seem to recall it was very good and very cheap. If I missed the #7 bus and had to wait another twenty minutes, it was a pleasant diversion, along with the magazine rack in Palmers.
EDIT - I just thought of one of the reasons: Amazon. But still, downtown Berkeley was headed downhill long before that.
cal83dls79 said:it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives howeverHearstMining said:Comment from one of the owners in the SFGate article: "Downtown Berkeley is really almost nothing but a ghost town right now."wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Does this mean it's gotten even worse? I know I've ranted about this before, but I grew up in Berkeley during the 1960s-1970s when Berkeley's downtown had everything you could want: hardware stores, sporting goods, toys, men's and women's clothing, Edy's, Palmer's, the movie theaters, furniture, etc. As a kid, it was rare that I didn't bump into somebody or their parent or sibling when I went downtown. I've only been in town occasionally since the early 1980s, but it's honestly seemed like a ghost town since then, but apparently it's even worse. Any opinions on why this is the case? Upper Shattuck (gourmet ghetto) seems healthy and vibrant.
As an aside, does anybody remember the Top Dog on Shattuck just south of University serving apple pie? I seem to recall it was very good and very cheap. If I missed the #7 bus and had to wait another twenty minutes, it was a pleasant diversion, along with the magazine rack in Palmers.
EDIT - I just thought of one of the reasons: Amazon. But still, downtown Berkeley was headed downhill long before that.
cal83dls79 said:it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives howeverHearstMining said:Comment from one of the owners in the SFGate article: "Downtown Berkeley is really almost nothing but a ghost town right now."wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Does this mean it's gotten even worse? I know I've ranted about this before, but I grew up in Berkeley during the 1960s-1970s when Berkeley's downtown had everything you could want: hardware stores, sporting goods, toys, men's and women's clothing, Edy's, Palmer's, the movie theaters, furniture, etc. As a kid, it was rare that I didn't bump into somebody or their parent or sibling when I went downtown. I've only been in town occasionally since the early 1980s, but it's honestly seemed like a ghost town since then, but apparently it's even worse. Any opinions on why this is the case? Upper Shattuck (gourmet ghetto) seems healthy and vibrant.
As an aside, does anybody remember the Top Dog on Shattuck just south of University serving apple pie? I seem to recall it was very good and very cheap. If I missed the #7 bus and had to wait another twenty minutes, it was a pleasant diversion, along with the magazine rack in Palmers.
EDIT - I just thought of one of the reasons: Amazon. But still, downtown Berkeley was headed downhill long before that.
I never ate there, but King Dong went kaput earlier this year.cal83dls79 said:
it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives however
philbert said:I never ate there, but King Dong went kaput earlier this year.cal83dls79 said:
it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives however
cal83dls79 said:it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives howeverHearstMining said:Comment from one of the owners in the SFGate article: "Downtown Berkeley is really almost nothing but a ghost town right now."wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Does this mean it's gotten even worse? I know I've ranted about this before, but I grew up in Berkeley during the 1960s-1970s when Berkeley's downtown had everything you could want: hardware stores, sporting goods, toys, men's and women's clothing, Edy's, Palmer's, the movie theaters, furniture, etc. As a kid, it was rare that I didn't bump into somebody or their parent or sibling when I went downtown. I've only been in town occasionally since the early 1980s, but it's honestly seemed like a ghost town since then, but apparently it's even worse. Any opinions on why this is the case? Upper Shattuck (gourmet ghetto) seems healthy and vibrant.
As an aside, does anybody remember the Top Dog on Shattuck just south of University serving apple pie? I seem to recall it was very good and very cheap. If I missed the #7 bus and had to wait another twenty minutes, it was a pleasant diversion, along with the magazine rack in Palmers.
EDIT - I just thought of one of the reasons: Amazon. But still, downtown Berkeley was headed downhill long before that.
For Korean insiders -- Korean-Chinese food a la jjajangmyeon (like Paik's Noodles in Sunnyvale). Only game in town for that, and it was worth walking down to Shattuck for my fix.01Bear said:cal83dls79 said:it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives howeverHearstMining said:Comment from one of the owners in the SFGate article: "Downtown Berkeley is really almost nothing but a ghost town right now."wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Does this mean it's gotten even worse? I know I've ranted about this before, but I grew up in Berkeley during the 1960s-1970s when Berkeley's downtown had everything you could want: hardware stores, sporting goods, toys, men's and women's clothing, Edy's, Palmer's, the movie theaters, furniture, etc. As a kid, it was rare that I didn't bump into somebody or their parent or sibling when I went downtown. I've only been in town occasionally since the early 1980s, but it's honestly seemed like a ghost town since then, but apparently it's even worse. Any opinions on why this is the case? Upper Shattuck (gourmet ghetto) seems healthy and vibrant.
As an aside, does anybody remember the Top Dog on Shattuck just south of University serving apple pie? I seem to recall it was very good and very cheap. If I missed the #7 bus and had to wait another twenty minutes, it was a pleasant diversion, along with the magazine rack in Palmers.
EDIT - I just thought of one of the reasons: Amazon. But still, downtown Berkeley was headed downhill long before that.
I actually have fond memories of King Dong.
calumnus said:JimSox said:Well that's gonna take a while. What a monstrosity!bear2034 said:calumnus said:wifeisafurd said:
Article says Top Dog is just closing temporary and will be part of a new building being constructed.
https://sfgate.com/food/article/top-dog-berkeley-closed-19442353.php?utm_campaign=CMS%20Sharing%20Tools%20(Premium)&utm_source=share-by-email&utm_medium=email
The iconic hot dog eatery's building is slated to be razed for a new high-rise.
Yes. The OP thread title is not correct. Top Dog will return to Center Street when the new building is completed.
The housing is needed, but it is going to obstruct some Bay views from campus.
philbert said:I never ate there, but King Dong went kaput earlier this year.cal83dls79 said:
it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives however
For me, just a sample of things I have seen in public bathrooms:operbear said:Monkey Inn, back in the 60s. Everything bad you ever thought of, and then some. The classic: a party of 6, 3 Coeds and many pitchers. One of the Coeds asks if. it is raining - down her leg.MSaviolives said:To be fair, this isn't the only place I have seen dudes pissing in sinks. Maybe we should start a thread on "things I have witnessed in public bathrooms."cal83dls79 said:my badMSaviolives said:I literally saw dudes pissing in that sink when there was a line up at the urinalsBig C said:BearBoarBlarney said:Big C said:
La Val's closed?!? I was just there in November...
I think @cal83dls79 was referring to the old La Val's on Durant, in that same complex that used to have a Tower Records. I think the southside La Val's close in the late-90's/early-00's. Pretty sure northside La Val's is going strong, as their website is active and accepting orders.
I don't recall a "Cheshire Cat" in Berkeley, however. And I'm old having graduated in the early nineties.
What I'd give to be as "old" as you (I got maybe a dozen years on you)...
Cheshire Cat was disgusting, maybe in a good way, depending on your POV... it was right near N, side LaVal's, maybe in the same alcove. On Thursday's, they had 99 cent pitchers of PBR and the pitchers were pretty big, at that. I don't know anyone that ever went there except Thursdays. The men's room was dark... and you were glad it was, the floor was all sticky. You had to decide if washing your hands after you peed would improve your hygiene situation, or make it worse. Probably the latter, as the sink was only semi-functional and there were no paper towels.
No surprise that Cheshire Cat didn't last until the '90s.
JimSox said:philbert said:I never ate there, but King Dong went kaput earlier this year.cal83dls79 said:
it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives however
Yeah. Very recently. I was surprised to see that. But Shattuck is not a ghost town by any means. The movie theaters are gone, which is a bummer. But there is plenty of economic activity. Try Sliver in the BART Plaza. Pizza that rivals the Cheeseboard. And they sell by the slice.
Top Dog on Center Street was often a ghost town and he was probably extrapolating it to the whole Shattuck downtown area, which is very incorrect as anyone can see on any evening, especially on the weekends.calumnus said:JimSox said:philbert said:I never ate there, but King Dong went kaput earlier this year.cal83dls79 said:
it's not a ghost town. If you were there in the 80s it was a mess. They have replaced lots of vacant lots and car showrooms with high end apartments and health clubs. King Dong survives however
Yeah. Very recently. I was surprised to see that. But Shattuck is not a ghost town by any means. The movie theaters are gone, which is a bummer. But there is plenty of economic activity. Try Sliver in the BART Plaza. Pizza that rivals the Cheeseboard. And they sell by the slice.
The person who made the "ghost town" statement probably has a very short frame of reference and is clearly prone to exaggeration,