Bars
Divebar |
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Divebar Details
- Hours: Open daily, 24 hours.
- Average drink price: $5. Happy hours are from 4 - 7 p.m. Monday - Saturday and from 10 p.m. Monday - 10 p.m. Tuesday, featuring $1.50 Bud drafts, $2 wells and bottled Bud or Bud Light, and $3 Jagermeister shots.
- Payment info: Cash only; ATM on premises.
- Parking: Free in adjacent lot.
- Occupancy: TBA.
- Special events:
- Monday: The Underground Rebels (featuring members of Faster Pussycat and Blue Man Group).
- Tuesday: Acoustic open mic night with hosts Anne Donohue and Bruce Christian.
- Wednesday: Late night dance music with DJ A.P. Dolci
- Thursday: The Lived.
- Friday - Saturday: Live music every night from various local and regional artists. All events are free and start at 10 p.m. unless otherwise noted. Click here for weekly schedule of bands.
Divebar Review
Naming a tavern Divebar is kind of like titling your novel American Epic or calling your band The Next Clash. In other words, announcing exactly what you intend to be sets up a lot of expectations and judgments that might otherwise be avoided. Because, while Divebar is a pleasant enough place, it's not really what I would call, you know, a dive bar.
Not that it doesn't try. The awkward layout, the cheap wood paneling, the mirror-backed bar, the Christmas lights--all are staples of the dive. But the clientele is more Swingers than Barfly, the barmaids more perky 'n' pierced than sullen 'n' slatternly. Step outside and you'll not find empty storefronts and liquor stores, but a strip mall beneath the looming façade of a Wal-Mart. The sign isn't sputtering neon, but bright orange plastic, with a marquee that is changed almost daily. Finally, the drinks aren't cheap--they're not expensive either, but in a true dive bar you can get a Budweiser for pocket change.
That said, if I hadn't been anticipating the sort of Lost Weekend hole I personally fancy, Divebar does offer a number of desirable features not normally found in such places. There's a kitchen with burgers, fries, steaks and other alcohol-soaking foods, as well as a well-stocked, Internet-connected jukebox. The main attraction is a full schedule of free entertainment. During the week, there are regular open-mike nights (stand-up and acoustic!), jam sessions, and most of the local punk rock bands have passed through already.
Maybe it's the bar's newness, but there's a sense that Divebar almost seems to be taking on more than the space can hold. It seems a bit small for a bar, kitchen, stage and Saturday-night crowd: I once waited a solid 15 minutes to get a drink, and my companions and I had to wedge ourselves into a corner between the jukebox and the hallway amid a crowd that seemed like an askew version of the audience in a Strokes video.
Ultimately, Divebar is a welcome addition to the string of drinking establishments along Tropicana. And perhaps once they settle in and slack off a bit, when they get lazy about changing the sign and let a little gunk accumulate in the corners, after the jukebox slips a little out-of-date and some of the crowd moves on to the inevitable next and newest stop on the route, things will loosen up and mellow out a bit. And who knows? If Divebar is still there in a dozen years, it may live up--or down--to its name.
--Review by Lissa Townsend Rodgers
Additional information: On display at Divebar until April 14: "Paper Bag Frustrations," original paintings by Suite 666's Brookelyn Latham.
