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. screenwritersblues posted:
I know this is late, but three lives is pretty cool. I'm biased because a relative worked there, but its a genuinely cool little bookstore with a small but well curated selection. As for other content, I'm looking for a good Indian or middle eastern resturant, preferably cheap. Last time I visited I picked a couple of places off yelp and was somewhat disappointed. We will be staying near Chinatown but anywhere in manhattan is fair game.
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# ? Jul 31, 2013 02:16 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 05:42 |
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What's the transport situation from JFK to Jersey City? I'll be flying in sometime during September, hopefully, and need to decide between JFK and EWR. I can find flights to the former that are a bit cheaper and without layovers, but apparently getting to JC from the airport is a huge PITA in terms of time and money that will offset the cost and time advantages.
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# ? Jul 31, 2013 16:04 |
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Is there a website I can use to figure out what trains and stations I need to use to get around with the subway?
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# ? Aug 1, 2013 18:16 |
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Mta.info. You'll be able to figure it out on the fly once you're here from the subway maps. Station agents in the booths usually have free copies of the map you can get, and many use an app like Hopstop or Embark so they don't have to get out of their seat to go look at the map that's posted all over the place in stations and in almost every train car. Almost no one uses a schedule. You just go to your station and wait and unless it's at night on a weekend you usually don't have to wait too long. As a tourist if you are waiting for a while or have a long trip just go take a cab instead. raton fucked around with this message at 18:33 on Aug 1, 2013 |
# ? Aug 1, 2013 18:29 |
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Yeah I found hopstop to be my favourite way when I visited. Found the cabs a nightmare personally, but we were heading outside of manhattan and into williamsburg. This seemed to confuse the crap out of lots of cab drivers.
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# ? Aug 1, 2013 19:19 |
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Cool thanks, any place in the financial district I should hit on a Friday night?
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# ? Aug 2, 2013 03:03 |
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Financial District is a dead zone at night relatively speaking. Go uptown a little bit to Canal and drink/dance at at bar named Macao. It's not much out of your way. A little further to the north/east of there and you're in the Lower East Side, which is a very busy nightlife area with countless options. Or if you want more bougie / clubby go to the west instead of the east at the relative same latitude.
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# ? Aug 2, 2013 04:07 |
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Macdeo Lurjtux posted:Is there a website I can use to figure out what trains and stations I need to use to get around with the subway? Google Maps actually has live MTA times if you set to use public transport but their clock is ~6 minutes out so a bit confusing.
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# ? Aug 6, 2013 03:18 |
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My younger cousin and I are going need a break from visiting relatives in Long Island and jaunt to the city. My cousin is not quite 21 so bars and such are out of the question. We're familiar with all the main museum and tourist trappings, having spent childhood in Queens. But as non-NY adults we realize we don't really know the City. I'm also completely unfamiliar with these supposed cool places to go in Brooklyn. Any suggestions of things or neighborhoods to tramp around in, being age-sensitive? Sleep No More looks awesome. Sort of interactive stuff like that would be great. CatchrNdRy fucked around with this message at 08:10 on Aug 7, 2013 |
# ? Aug 7, 2013 08:05 |
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Sleep No More is 21+.
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# ? Aug 7, 2013 14:58 |
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Sheep-Goats posted:Sleep No More is 21+. well we just verified its not, its now 16+. you get a giant X on your hand if you are under 21. on a hilarious note the elevator broke and some people got stuck. i wonder if they played it off as part of the show.
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# ? Aug 21, 2013 07:50 |
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I have to drive to NYC for a couple of days. Thinking of using airbnb so save some monies. Looks like Brooklyn area is most affordable/close to subway. How safe/easy it is to use street parking around there? Can I leave the car for a couple of days around Bushwik/Williamsburg?
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# ? Aug 27, 2013 17:41 |
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I've done most of the touristy stuff and still have until the end of the week still in NYC. In Brooklyn I was in the park between the bridges, at the Brighton Beach, 86th street (I think) and Williamsburg. But for the most part I was in Manhattan. Is there anything else in Brooklyn, or perhaps Queens or the Bronx that isn't very touristy but worth seeing and won't get me stabbed? Edit: Where can I look for some cheap local art? Nothing fancy, just something with local character to decorate my sterile apartment. mobby_6kl fucked around with this message at 15:12 on Sep 25, 2013 |
# ? Sep 25, 2013 14:30 |
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I'm headed to New York as a tourist next week and staying for 4 days. It'll be my first time there and kind of pumped about it. Kind of already have the big stuff already set in stone. Seeing Sleep No More, Fuerza Bruta and Matilda. Already booked my visit to the Statue of Liberty. Going to try to check out as many museums and parks as I can. I have a couple primary questions, though: 1) If there is one district with cool shops I would want to visit, which would it be? 2) What's a good breakfast option in that city? Naturally, I get a lot of recommendations for eating food in the city, but they are all the food carts, delis, pizza places, delis, etc. that everyone tells you to visit. Way too many to even visit my first time there. But nobody tells me where to get a great benny or something. Does it even matter? With all the suggestions I've gotten, I'm wondering if I should even bother. I'm getting the impression that walking into any place in Midtown or Hell's Kitchen is like a 90% chance of a good meal, without me having expectations for it to live up to.
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# ? Sep 26, 2013 19:17 |
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kuddles posted:1) If there is one district with cool shops I would want to visit, which would it be? Like, clothes? Probably SoHo, which is a mix of chain and smaller boutique designer stores. Every chain store in the world has a "Flagship" outlet on 5th Avenue too though along with the shitheel luxury bigboxes (French or Italianate names here). You may want to visit the respective fashion/clothing threads in YLLS to ask for suggestions for small shops to check out visavis your style -- most clothing designers start here. Standard NY breakfast is a Baconeggandcheese from any of the mulitple street carts or delis selling them for 2 to 3 bucks, which comes on a largeish round piece of bread called a roll here -- I prefer mine without the cheese and with ketchup on one of those ghetto raisin bagels they usually have, but whatever. A nicer choice would be a nice bagel but those are rarer (I like David's Bagels on 1st Ave, Ess-A-Bagel is fine, anywhere where the bagels are made in-house really). People get different things on their bagels. If you have two days you could get a whole wheat everything bagel with chive cream cheese and lox and something less fancy. Truth be told New Yorkers don't care about breakfast very much. The 9-5ers fetishize Sunday Brunch (Cafe Orlin, hundreds of others) I think mostly because they're insufferable late 20s goobers who are enchanted with champagne with food upon waking. Maybe you can try mangu for breakfast if you're in a Spanish part of town. Eat a pastrami reuben at either Carneigie Deli or Katz's (I slightly prefer Katz's) while you're here. Midtown is famous for having bad food options. Hell's Kitchen will have lots of Baconeggandcheese around. raton fucked around with this message at 20:11 on Sep 26, 2013 |
# ? Sep 26, 2013 20:02 |
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I'm going to Manhattan for a short vacation from Oct 5 to Oct 11. I'm staying with a relative who works there, so I have weekdays to myself. What are some good things to do during the day in NYC? I know about the big museums and plan to hit some of them but I'm also looking for offbeat, unusual, and unique places to check out. Also, I did manage to score a ticket to see the daily show. How early should I show up?
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# ? Oct 1, 2013 05:21 |
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clockworkjoe posted:Also, I did manage to score a ticket to see the daily show. How early should I show up? Early enough not to have your space taken by a stand-by.
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# ? Oct 1, 2013 14:56 |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LmPBPWHJu4 From the LAN thread. It's actually a good guide to some basics.
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# ? Oct 2, 2013 20:05 |
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I'm heading to Columbus, OH for Thanksgiving but because of my school schedule, I'm taking a 4:15 PM flight from Orange County, CA to Newark, staying there for 6 hours then taking a 6:10 AM flight to Columbus. I spent a night in Newark Penn Station earlier this year and it loving sucked and while EWR obviously isn't as bad, the wifi isn't free and everything will be closed. So I want to go to the city. At 12:30 AM. On Thanksgiving day. Is this feasible? I have no issue paying for an airport shuttle on the way back to ensure I catch my flight. I just want to walk around Central Park at night or something.
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# ? Oct 14, 2013 23:39 |
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I've literally never gone anywhere on vacation, and next year would like to change that with a trip to NYC. Getting there is easy for me (I live in NY and buses there are cheap). My issue is that I'm a timid guy who sucks at planning poo poo for myself. So can anyone recommend a good tour group for once I get there? Preferably one that's not too stupidly overpriced, as my budget for the whole trip will be low.
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# ? Oct 17, 2013 22:34 |
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Liar posted:I've literally never gone anywhere on vacation, and next year would like to change that with a trip to NYC. Getting there is easy for me (I live in NY and buses there are cheap). My issue is that I'm a timid guy who sucks at planning poo poo for myself. So can anyone recommend a good tour group for once I get there? Preferably one that's not too stupidly overpriced, as my budget for the whole trip will be low.
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# ? Oct 18, 2013 15:16 |
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geera posted:Opinions are hit or miss, but Contiki has a pretty reasonable 4-day tour of NYC, which includes hotel and some meals. My wife and I took a Contiki tour of London and Paris a couple years ago and loved it, but we had a great guide and a solid group of people who were there for the experience, not just to get drunk. It seems the quality of the tour depends on the makeup of the tour group, which you don't really have any control over (but this is probably true for any tour group you sign up for). This looks like basically exactly what I'd hoped for, and the hotel being included is fantastic. Plus I'm shocked at their low rates for big foreign tours. Maybe next year I can set my sights on a big foreign trip like exotic Canada.
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# ? Oct 19, 2013 04:22 |
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Liar posted:This looks like basically exactly what I'd hoped for, and the hotel being included is fantastic. Plus I'm shocked at their low rates for big foreign tours. Maybe next year I can set my sights on a big foreign trip like exotic Canada. Looking at the itinerary, it seems like a majority of it is optional and thus costs extra. Make sure you factor that in.
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# ? Oct 19, 2013 04:52 |
My girlfriend and I will be spending 3 or 4 days in the city starting Oct 25th. We'll be staying in the Upper East Side and exploring to the south. Are there any interesting Halloween events happening that weekend? I'm looking for an excuse to bring this on our trip.
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# ? Oct 20, 2013 04:21 |
I will be staying in NY for around 6 nights the first week in January and would rather stay in a hostel given that I'll be travelling alone - can anyone recommend a nice, social one in a central-ish location? Also, is there anything particularly worth seeing at that time of year?
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# ? Oct 20, 2013 10:23 |
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Bowery Whitehouse hostel.
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# ? Oct 20, 2013 14:17 |
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Shane-O-Mac posted:My girlfriend and I will be spending 3 or 4 days in the city starting Oct 25th. We'll be staying in the Upper East Side and exploring to the south. Are there any interesting Halloween events happening that weekend? I'm looking for an excuse to bring this on our trip. There's the Village Halloween Parade. http://www.halloween-nyc.com/
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# ? Oct 20, 2013 16:19 |
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munchy box posted:I will be staying in NY for around 6 nights the first week in January and would rather stay in a hostel given that I'll be travelling alone - can anyone recommend a nice, social one in a central-ish location? Also, is there anything particularly worth seeing at that time of year? New York Loft in Brooklyn is great. Decent neighborhood, great outdoor area. The Morgan Ave station (L) is two blocks away and is a safe walk 24 hours a day. Between that and the hostel are a few small grocers, at least one cafe, a bangin' pizza joint (Robertas), a live music venue, and a hell of a dive bar (King's County). You've got a dash of hipsterism here without being obnoxious. Walk towards Flushing Ave and there are a few more no-frills diners, bars, and ethnic restaurants worth checking out. Just remember to go EAST on Flushing; go west and you head towards a rougher area. If you want to stay in Manhattan check out the Bowery House. I don't remember the rates but the accommodations and neighborhood are decent. If all else fails, Hosteling International up around 103 & Amsterdam (UWS) is always my emergency standby choice. The crowd is always extremely friendly and extremely social, people are always grouping up to go out and do stuff, and the place was clean. My only complaint here is that the bathrooms were majorly outdated. They were badly ventilated so in the morning it would be a humid, poo poo-smelling jungle in there. It has a small grocer across the street, and your usual assortment of ethnic restaurants nearby. Walk one block over and you've got Broadway with its Starbucks and KFCs. New York Lofts is one of the best hostels I've ever stayed in except for the long-closed L Hostel. You can't go wrong there.
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# ? Oct 21, 2013 15:00 |
SwivelTits2000 posted:New York Loft in Brooklyn is great. Decent neighborhood, great outdoor area. The Morgan Ave station (L) is two blocks away and is a safe walk 24 hours a day. Between that and the hostel are a few small grocers, at least one cafe, a bangin' pizza joint (Robertas), a live music venue, and a hell of a dive bar (King's County). You've got a dash of hipsterism here without being obnoxious. Walk towards Flushing Ave and there are a few more no-frills diners, bars, and ethnic restaurants worth checking out. Just remember to go EAST on Flushing; go west and you head towards a rougher area. Excellent, thanks for this and the other shout for Bowery House - was aiming for Manhattan but New York Loft seems nice, I'll probably flip a coin or something.
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# ? Oct 21, 2013 20:28 |
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munchy box posted:Excellent, thanks for this and the other shout for Bowery House - was aiming for Manhattan but New York Loft seems nice, I'll probably flip a coin or something. Just so you know, this is the Bowery House I was talking about : http://www.theboweryhouse.com/ This is the Bowery House the other guy was talking about : http://www.whitehousehotelofny.com/ (that seems to be down now - try http://www.tripadvisor.com/Hotel_Review-g60763-d261410-Reviews-Bowery_s_Whitehouse_Hotel-New_York_City_New_York.html Never stayed in Bowery White House, so I can't comment on that. Just wanted to make sure you knew they were two different places, as they both look VERY different. Enjoy your trip!
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# ? Oct 22, 2013 19:03 |
I have two people staying in the Upper East side for 3 days and 3 nights. Would it be cheaper for the both of us to share a pay-per-ride Metro Card, or for us each to get a 7-day unlimited? It's tough for me to judge how many separate trips we'll actually need to take. Also, how do transfers work when going from subway to bus and vice-versa? MTA.info makes it out like transferring from subway to bus is free, but I don't see how that's possible because you need to leave the station to get on the bus.
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# ? Oct 22, 2013 20:31 |
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Shane-O-Mac posted:Also, how do transfers work when going from subway to bus and vice-versa? MTA.info makes it out like transferring from subway to bus is free, but I don't see how that's possible because you need to leave the station to get on the bus. It's done by time. You can transfer from subway to bus or vice-versa within two hours of swiping the card to get into/onto the first leg.
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# ? Oct 22, 2013 20:41 |
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Shane-O-Mac posted:I have two people staying in the Upper East side for 3 days and 3 nights. Would it be cheaper for the both of us to share a pay-per-ride Metro Card, or for us each to get a 7-day unlimited? It's tough for me to judge how many separate trips we'll actually need to take. It would be more sensible for you to get individual pay-per-ride cards with about twenty bucks on there to start with and use taxis when traveling together sometimes. Three days is probably not enough to get your money out of an unlimited card given that you'll likely be traveling together at night a fair bit and in that case it'll be faster/easier/cheaper to share a cab.
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# ? Oct 22, 2013 23:24 |
Thanks everyone! We should be able to use the same MetroCard, right? According to MTA.info you can share a card between 4 people, but I don't see how they'd even know.
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# ? Oct 23, 2013 02:13 |
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I mean yeah the leader guy can stand at the gate swiping away like a maniac to let people through but then you'll look like a herd of brand new Chinese immigrants. Also part of what makes the subway nice is that you don't have to haggle out rides home at the end of the night and the cards make a decent souvenir. And you get to make fun of someone for their poor swiping technique (it goes print facing you at the same speed at which you walk). The cards register the last time they were used each time they're used. Unlimited cards have like a 15 minute time period before you can use them again. Maybe if you try to use a regular card more than four times in X time it won't let you through. I've seen people swiping groups through before but never a really large group that I've paid attention to so I can't say for sure if that happens or not. raton fucked around with this message at 02:21 on Oct 23, 2013 |
# ? Oct 23, 2013 02:18 |
Thanks. Since it's just my girlfriend and me, I think we'll share one card. If it doesn't work, we'll just get a second card at the machine.
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# ? Oct 23, 2013 16:28 |
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So we're going to New York next month for my dad's 65th birthday (his reasoning: "I'm turning 65 and want to eat bagels!"). If anyone has some cool recommendations for any of the following, I'd be wildly appreciative: - best place to get bagels edit: just found the crassly-annotated map up this page - a good comic shop - should I go to Barcade? - what is some good family stuff to do? We're probably going to hit up a bunch of museums, but I'm sure there's plenty of stuff I will not have thought about. Majuju fucked around with this message at 17:24 on Oct 25, 2013 |
# ? Oct 25, 2013 16:42 |
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Majuju posted:So we're going to New York next month for my dad's 65th birthday (his reasoning: "I'm turning 65 and want to eat bagels!"). If anyone has some cool recommendations for any of the following, I'd be wildly appreciative: Forbidden Planet and Midtown Comics are both good for buying comics. I have a slight preference for Midtown but FP's been better since they moved, and I like the area around it more.
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 17:23 |
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Family stuff: see a play. If your family is plain Jane see The Lion King. If you're high minded go to stagegrade.com and pick out something highly regarded. If you're all adventurous and able to ambulate easily try Sleep No More. Book of Mormon is also very good but expensive and often hard to get tickets for (still). The Metropolitan museum is the best one for families. The range and the price (the 20 is suggested, part of their deal with NYC that lets them sit on park land is to provide at will pricing, so you can get in for a dollar if you want). Dim Sum on a Sunday is a good family thing if you don't have a good Chinatown back home. There are numerous options, the best overall one being Hop Shing IMHO (or Flushing, but that's probably too far for ya). Bagels: Ess-A-Bagel is solid and makes a bagel that no one could complain about. I also like David's Bagels. You can get a sort of bagel sandwich called a Super Heeb at Russ and Daughters that is very tasty (two kinds of smokey fish and a wasabi roe), and both Johnah Shimmel knishery (a knish is a heavy kind of potato muffin thing that you eat for lunch or dinner, often with mustard) and Katz's Deli are near there. See a comedy show. Stand up had never been stronger than it is now. Comedy Cellar is the premier venu but there are lots of others right on its heels. raton fucked around with this message at 21:35 on Oct 25, 2013 |
# ? Oct 25, 2013 21:28 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 05:42 |
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I like Barcade a lot, they have great beer and the machines are only a quarter or two. It does get super crowded on weekend nights, so try getting there on the off hours.
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# ? Oct 25, 2013 22:24 |