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A newsletter for the industry pro or aspiring pro. A newsletter for the industry pro or aspiring pro looking for behind-the-scenes insights into bar and restaurant culture. By , 20 percent of Americans had flown commercially and tens of thousands of stewardesses were stationed in urban hubs like San Francisco, Chicago and New York. Due to strict airline criteria, most all these women were unmarried, trim and under the age of In G. It was an instant hit and, by , 6.
Also in , Alan Stillman, a year-old essential oils salesman in New York City, was trying to figure out a better way to meet single women in his neighborhood. Before , your average couple met each other via setups from friends or family, they had been high school or college sweethearts, maybe even co-workers or fellow churchgoers. Stillman wanted to change that and, in doing so, would inadvertently change dating in the latter part of the 20th century.
Stillman was a regular at a bullet-riddled, 1st Avenue saloon called Good Tavern. Stillman painted the building bright blue with red-striped awnings and stocked the interior with Tiffany lamps, stained glass, brass rails and a floor lightly brushed with sawdust. He had his waiters wear loudly colored soccer jerseys and offered a menu both affordable and enticing to a younger person—burgers and fries, cheap beer, Long Island Iced Teas and Harvey Wallbangers.
It was like nothing anyone had ever seen, a bar so obviously meant for young people. Stillman may have invented the singles bar, but he never used the phrase to refer to T. Nevertheless, a new kind of bar had officially been created. By the summer of , that small stretch of 1st Avenue was flooded on Friday nights with the police having to close down the street from 8 p. By , there were a whopping 85 bars on the Upper East Side, most of them singles bars.