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May’s Bartender of the Month: Steven!

15 May

So  this month seemed to be a no-brainer when it came to nominations. Steven Owens from The 99 in Quincy was nominated quite a few times. He’s actually been my bartender before and he is a really nice guy who chatted with the patrons and knew exactly what he was doing. Introducing Steven Owens!

steve

Where and when can we catch you bartending?

I tend bar at the 99 in North Quincy on Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights; and during the day on Sundays.

Do you have a signature drink?

People tend to keep things pretty simple as far as drinks are concerned, but I do have some drinks I recommend regularly. My favorite is probably the Mudslide Martini: Stoli Vanil, Bailey’s and Kahlua. I like the idea of combining dessert and booze!

What’s your favorite drink when you’re not busy serving the thirsty citizens of Quincy?

When I’m enjoying some time off, I mostly drink IPA, with the occasional tequila or bourbon on the rocks. An extra dirty martini every now and then to take the edge off, too!

What is the craziest thing you’ve ever seen as a bartender?

I’ve seen a few wild things in my day, that’s for sure. For instance, one of my Sunday regulars comes in with a menagerie of stuffed animals, complete with costumes (Red Sox/Pats uniforms, Dracula for Halloween)! Also, one time, this guy pooped his pants at the bar, left, then came back an hour or two later in different clothes. That dude had no shame!

 

Thanks for the hospitality, Steve! See you soon for one of those 99 tall boys!

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Meet Stephanie of Gorgeous Styles ect.

9 May

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Once in awhile I like to shout out businesses that I know (from experience) are amazing. I am so excited for my friend Stephanie who recently followed her dream and opened her own salon. Stephanie is a friendly and positive girl (from Quincy) who is also an extremely talented hairdresser. I highly recommend Stephanie to anyone! Nicest girl in the world (I spilled taco dip on her white shirt during game night this past weekend and she was so cool about it), and she always looks as gorgeous as the styles she guarantees her clients, so you will know you are in good hands! I asked Stephanie to write about herself to give you more of an idea of  her experience in her industry, so here she is…

SK: I’ve been in the business for 8 years after attending Blaine in Boston. I am Keratin Complex Soothing Therapy certified and have taken multiple color and cutting classes at The Studio in New York City. I work with Wella Color. At my old salon I would teach junior stylists new techniques and how to master the art of hair.

I felt like after 8 years of working for someone else, it was finally time to take ahold of my dreams and open up my own business. My new salon is called Gorgeous Styles etc., located at 247 Washington Street in Weymouth, MA (parking located in the back).

Please book an appointment with Stephanie, mention my blog and receive $10.00 off through the month of May! To receive updates on openings and promotions, and to check out her work, you can “like” Gorgeous Styles etc. on Facebook.

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I Will Never Leave This City.

26 Apr

So my new “thing” is looking up houses for sale online when I’m supposed to be blogging/doing literally everything else I’m supposed to be doing. I 100% know that I cannot afford to buy a house right now, maybe if I would stop ripping the tags off my Marshall’s clothes before trying them on I will be able to afford something in the two hundred thousand range by 2019 (probably not because I don’t save receipts either), but a girl can dream, right? Anyways, I’ve had a few towns on my list of “Places That I would Settle For That Aren’t Quincy”, and those places are basically everywhere except Randolph, Holbrook, and Brockton.  I won’t list my reasoning, because it’s Friday and I’m not in the mood for an inbox full of white trash defending their turf because it’s home to a Piccadilly Pub and one of the Massasoits. Does that make me a snob? No. It makes me a realist who embraces stereotypes of the South Shore and is also in denial of her own city’s flaws. Otherwise known as a “douchebag”.

Anyways, I feel like at some point I will have to prepare myself for the inevitable: leaving Quincy. But it’s going to be hard to figure out where  to go, and my standards are very vague other than knowing I won’t commute much further than 5 seconds outside of  Boston. Based on my list of every city/town other than Randolph, Holbrook, and Brockton, I’ve realized I need to narrow down my options. I give Weymouth way too much shit to ever attempt driving a Uhaul over the Fore River Bridge. That and I don’t want to live in a town that leaves you to fend for yourself for up to twenty minutes on route 3A because a sail boat is trying to get by. Oh, and imagine checking into a place called “N Dub” on social media? As if I  were on 8 Mile Road instead of the predominantly Caucasian suburb that is Weymouth? No thanks. Braintree is cool,  it’s home to the mall and in general, I am a mall fan. But it’s about as pricey as Quincy, so why even bother switching to a town that has a school mascot called a Wamp? Milton is also nice, but I’m not really over that time it’s citizens picketed outside that restaurant in East Milton Square to “keep Quincy out of Milton”, in regards to a liquor license. East Milton needs to be put in it’s place and just accept the fact that a place that is in 5 minutes walking distance of Atlas Liquors, a 7-11, and Dairy Freeze might as well just secede from it’s town and become another section of Quincy, gang sign and all.

To conclude, unless I decide that I’d rather throw down the money to live in Hingham and own a boat than have children, it looks like I am just never leaving Quincy. A sobering thought, but I think I’m okay with it. Making adult decisions based off of superficial bullshit that I create in my own mind sure is hard. Mom’s spaghetti!

Wait…Why Isn’t It Summer?

18 Apr

Spring can go away now. I just want to be sitting on a deck in America with a bucket of Coronas. Why is that so hard? Marina season commence! April is for the birds. And by birds I mean freaks who enjoy sitting on a deck in America on a day that feels like it’s 80 degrees until realizing that sitting on a deck by a body of water actually feels like 40 degrees with wind. I was guilty of this yesterday, sitting on a cold deck like some kind of a douchebag, so I guess I’m a bird. If you’re a bird, I’m a bird.

…What was I talking about again?

marina

A Very Quincy Birthday

12 Apr

For some reason, this blog is dedicated to Peter Clarke.

I asked some of my Facebook blog followers what I should do tonight to celebrate my 5th anniversary of turning 21. I was not surprised when the first comment, as well as the most liked comment, suggested that I do Oxycontin. Defeated, I decided to make my own list of shit I can do (that is not Oxycontin) in Quincy to make my 26th birthday as unmemorable as my 1st birthday, and just like every other weekend spent in this fine city. Here it is:

1. Pills. You know, I’m not in the mood for a full blown addiction after my 18th birthday. Let’s scratch number 1.

2. Pregame. Perhaps one of Quincy’s (and every other city in America) most beloved ritual, the pregame gets us feeling *nice before venturing out into the depths of the local dive bar scene. Just get a twelve of probably some form of Bud product at Atlas, because for some bizarre reason just one or two beers before going out is never enough, and sit in someone’s mom’s living room until 10:30 at night before calling the cab company that will not be named but described as “the one with the really bitchy operator” to pick you up.

*nice: unnecessarily drunk

3. Bar hop: Ew, way too many Randolph people are inhabiting some of the Quincy Center bars lately. I mean, I don’t know if they are really Randolph people, maybe Stoughton, but same difference, I think.  So get one beer at your first bar, then complain about how trashy everyone is and how people are dancing in a non-danceable bar, and then head to the next bar (usually located right next door or directly across the street). Repeat this step until you and your friends are in no state of mind to make general observations anymore and are squinting in S6 wondering why it’s not tinted blue anymore and grown men who don’t even work there are screaming at you to get out (side note: no disrespect to S6, place is my favorite in QC, but I had to express how confused I am when it goes from being tinted blue to normally lit so suddenly).

4. Decline Peggy’s &/or JJ’s: Nothing against these establishments (the last time I gave my opinion about a bar, I was nearly sued. And by nearly sued, I mean psychos with zero sense of professionalism were inboxing me on Facebook about “contactin someone” – I think “someone” meant lawyer, but the spelling was too hard to conquer), but nothing good ever happens after last call in Quincy. Then again, one could even argue that nothing good ever happens before last call in Quincy either…so there’s that. But another factor you might want to consider is if you feel like getting coked out of your brain or not. I pass on putting things up my nose, so I tend to decline a trip to a place where I know nine out of ten people will only be happy to see me for unnatural reasons. In my defense, ten out of ten of those people are people I don’t want to see sober or not. Avoid the hangover and skip the after bar. Besides, if I rush out of the parking lot too fast to go somewhere else I might miss a *Quincy fight.

*Quincy fight: A gang of 2 or more manchildren jumping another manchild for looking at one of them the wrong way 4 months prior while trashed in a crowded bar.

5. Fall asleep with a JBC: Nothing says regret like waking up to Wendy’s in or around your bed. Wait, I guess waking up with a JBC next to you on the floor also says regret.

Sounds like I’m going to have a pretty solid birthday, no? And many more to look forward to. Is it lame to stay in?

jbc

Disclaimer: Don’t inbox me accusing me of making Quincy look bad with this blog. I love my hometown and if you can’t laugh about some of it’s weirdness or flaws, then you are probably someone who listens to Dane Cook during long roadtrips to lame places.

Get Drunk On A Roof Deck Weather

8 Apr

fedora

It’s that time of year again. You know, that time of year that we get one or two warm days a week so we transform into full blown alcoholics who want to day drink on roof decks, patios, and all other outdoor surfaces. It’s a hard time of year for us full time 9-5 schmucks. All day long we sit here at our jobs, fucking around on the internet pretending we are important while behind our screen shields our Facebooks are up so we can enviously creep on those who work nights and get to enjoy the weather. We vow that we will call out sick the next time weather permits for the Marina, but deep down inside, we know we are pussies who won’t call out sick based on the fear that one of our ass-hat friends will check us in to Port 305 for all of our coworkers to see. So instead we will put up passive aggressive statuses that insinuate that everyone who is basking in the sun is somehow mooching off the government and should focus on getting a job like the rest of us professionals. Then we will go on our lunch breaks and search for maxi dresses online for us to not wear this summer because maxi dresses aren’t appropriate for the office, because we know that’s where will will spend 90% of our Summer, and we don’t have casual Fridays at our office. Maybe we will walk downtown for an hour on lunch, stop in at H&M and purchase a floppy hat or straw fedora to make ourselves feel better. But probably not, because an object sitting on our heads will only serve to remind us that even when we are off on the weekend, it will probably be overcast. That fedora will just sit on the back speaker in our cars, overheating in the sun while we slave away in an air conditioned building, sipping melted iced coffees. Life is hard. My soul hurts.

Woah, that was depressing. Here’s hoping we get some beach weather Saturdays in this year so I never write something so bitter again. Until then, feel free to choke on your week day Bloody Mary. Jerk.

Ode To Quincy

28 Mar

A guest blog from someone who might be familiar to you if you are an avid Patriot Ledger online reader. Enjoy!

q

First off let me preface that I’m not a Quincy native. I grew up on the mean streets of Hingham. Luckily, I was able to spend a large amount of time of my high school years with friends in North Quincy.  I was constantly thinking why drink in the woods of Hingham only to get chased through pricker bushes?  In Quincy, the police, both local and state, police are more concerned with making sure everyone gets home safe than ruining a teenager’s life. Thus my love affair with Quincy was born.

After college, I returned to Quincy with my new bride. We lived in an apartment on Vassal St for two years, did a forgettable stint in Weymouth and have spent the past 7 years in Norfolk Downs.

Quincy offers a fantastic alternative for city living. As a Hingham native, Southie presented itself as a desirable area, but was too much of a high school reunion, complete with Hingham transplant rental prices.  Quincy has been a great option for a young couple. The commute to Boston is less than 10 miles.  The convenience factor for just about everything is off the charts. Where else can you get three massages, your nails done twice, General Tsao’s chicken, a Brigham’s ice cream cone and a Chinese wedding dress all within 100 yards? Quincy has some of the best and most diverse dining options on the South Shore. Two words: Fat Cat.  Only in Quincy do the drive-through windows at McDonald’s speak drunken gibberish. “You want piztha? Sir, this is McDonalds”. Quincy also is home to some hidden gems. Everyone remembers  the first time they stumbled into Paddy Barry’s after a couple of cocktails and discovered the “best Irish music ever” or the first time they went to the Cathay Pacific lounge, an 80s time warp full with bandleaders sporting Michael Jackson glove and people at the bar are wearing jean jackets to match their  IROC out front.  Coffee Break café, you will be missed.

After 10 total years in Quincy including the better part of our twenties and early thirties, it’s time to move on. I’ve been reflecting on the good, bad and the in-between and the crossroads Quincy is at as city. Some of the stories are from different phases in our life. Gone are the days of Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights drinking “knoxie specials” (3.9 parts rum .1 part coke) at Murphy’s.  Gone are the days of 8am World Cup shenanigans at Bad Abbotts, Ups and Downs for last call and the BeachComba. Now are the days of Bright Horizons, Campus Kinder Haus, Gymboree and take-out at Grumpy’s.

After some immersion, one of the greatest things you learn about Quincy is what you’d call “Old School Quincy”.  Old School Quincy seems to be something is passed down through generations, a feeling of pride in your neighborhood and community.  In my short time in Quincy, I feel like I was taught much of these courtesies and experiences from my friends and their families.  What’s sad is that in our short time in Quincy we’re seeing this old school attitude fading off into the sunset   I’m seeing it from not just new Quincy transplants but also from the younger generation of Old School families.  Old School doesn’t just mean Irish or Italian descent. Many of my Asian neighbors are as “Old School” as it gets.  They take tremendous pride in their houses and their neighborhood. They give you the same old school wave and watch out for the neighborhood they’ve worked so hard to move into.

Old School ideas are common courtesies like waiting 30 seconds for a car to pass on a very tight street instead of trying to bull your way through with 1 inch to spare between your respective mirrors.  Old school is giving a nice wave from the person for actually waiting a minute.

Old school is my mailman, who is a better security system than ADT. He’ll tell you who’s away on vacation, who’s having a baby and who has the nicest lawn in the neighborhood (thank you very much).  He’ll tell you that you’re buying too much stuff online because he has to keep delivering you 30 catalogs.  He’s a walking talking Farmer’s Almanac.  “Crocuses are up today, 2 more weeks until Spring.” He probably knows who is sleeping with whom, but won’t tell if you asked, because, well, he is Old School.

Old School is having a 50 year old neighbor named Sully.  Sully works for the State.  He has 8 months of vacation time and 4 months of sick time.  He’s great for little known career advice, such as if you are ever in the vicinity (3 miles) of a shooting while working  in Roxbury , you can put in for emotional distress and get short term disability, which is a great excuse to drink for two weeks straight.  While away on vacation, Sully will make sure to watch your house. He’ll even take the liberty of removing your American flag and replacing it with a rainbow flag for the weekend.

Old school was learning that it’s encouraged to shovel snow into the street because the plows take care of it.  Old School is not needing to put out cones in front of your house after you spent 8 hours digging out your car from the snow. It’s common courtesy not to park in your neighbor’s spot.  The last two years I’ve noticed cones and chairs, a Southie phenomenon, now making an appearance in Quincy.  It’s about respect.

Old School is getting into a fender bender with your neighbor’s parked car at 3am,  and leaving a note to  laugh about the next day. No police are called.

Sadly, in my short time in Quincy, I’m seeing a lot of “New School”.

New School is the first time you started listening to the Quincy police scanner because there were State Police helicopters over your house.

New School is having multiple shootings in a short period of time at North Quincy high school.

New School is having my cars broken into twice.

New School is having a meth lab down the street.

New School is having to pick up my wife at the T because I’m afraid of her walking home in the dark due to all of the muggings.

This brings me to my point; Quincy is at a turning point. Many of the remaining old school families need to educate the New School on what it’s like to be Old School.

I worry that efforts like the downtown development project, and its creative financing could come back to bite the city in the butt and leave taxpayers on the hook. The downtown Quincy development project is a knife edge between working for Quincy and being a total disaster. Think of it as buying a gigantic rental property with 5% down, financing some of it on a maxed out credit card and you have no real job. My advice for new Quincy residents is to get involved.   Learn about decisions that are being made that are shaping Quincy’s future.  Crime in Quincy needs to be brought under control.   Daily, you’re reading in the paper about an out of control crime wave. This is driving many young families out of Quincy, and is one of the major deciding factors for my family’s move.

Finally, your Asian neighbors are the hope for the city.  Embrace them and their Old School mentality.  .  They can’t drive worth a damn and I won’t miss my recycling bin wars with little old women. They believe in the public school system, support a cohesive neighborhood unit and are key to raising Quincy’s property values.

Quincy, it’s been fun.  Yes, I’ve complained, yes, I’ve bitched and moaned and possibly exaggerated some circumstances regarding some neighborhood incidents. When it comes down to it, Quincy has been good to me and my family during our time here, and hope that those that remain embrace the Old School spirit that  is needed to support healthy neighborhoods and make the City of Presidents a great place to live.

-Richard Struh

A Night For Mike Benefit on April 13th – Donations Welcome!

18 Mar
ATTENTION LOCAL BUSINESSES: One of my readers recently reached out to me about a benefit coming up on April 13th called A Night for Mike – Mike is a Quincy (Squantum) native who was diagnosed with lung cancer this past February. The money raised at the benefit will go towards Mike’s treatment- without health insurance you can only imagine how expensive treatment is. Mike’s friends are hoping that some local businesses could help them out by donating some raffle prizes. The following businesses have already generously donated:

Sonoma Spa & Salon

Ashmont Grill

Fratelli’s Pastry Shop

ZAMFORIA

DoodyCalls

Barry’s Flower Shop

Italian Express Pizzeria

Higs Tickets

Please contact me directly via bcmollysaidso@gmail.com if you’d like to donate so I can give you the contact information for Erin, a friend of Mike’s who is helping out by tracking the donations. Although I don’t know Mike personally, this is a cause that hits close to home – as I am sure it does for everyone affected by cancer. Please help out! I will be following up weekly to see if anyone would like to donate. Because Molly Said So will shout out your business/services when you want upon donating to A Night For Mike. Thank you!

A Night For Mike Benefit Facebook event page. 

Bartender of the Month of March: Jarlath from Paddy Barry’s!

18 Mar

In honor of St Patrick’s Day, I introduce you to Jarlath (straight from Ireland!) who works the bar at Paddy Barry’s in Quincy Center. He also happens to be my dad’s neighbor, and my dad is a pretty good judge of character so Jarlath is okay in my book! Here he is:

j

Where/when we catch you behind the bar?

I’m a bartender at Paddy Barry’s Irish Pub, 1574 Hancock Street in Quincy Center Monday nights, Friday nights and every other Saturday night.

Do you have a signature drink?
My specialty is a fruit salad shot (stoli razz, stoli-orange, banana liquor, cranberry & oj). I came up with the recipe one winter night out of boredom, now it’s our best selling shot.

What is the craziest thing you’ve ever seen as a bartender?
Well, the funniest would be the night some random elderly lady walked in…she just started dancing. Didn’t even order a drink. The guys at the bar started cheering her on…until she decided it would be a good time to take her top off…at which point the same guys started yelling at her to put her clothes on. I put her in a cab-no one should see a woman their grandmothers age naked. The second funniest is more ironic-I was bar tending one Saturday and a man came up to the bar & ordered Blue Moon. He looked familiar and I realized he looked like the guy from the “hoppa” commercial for the Dish cable-so I asked him if anyone ever told him he looked like him…he said “Yeah, cause it’s me!” Great guy-very friendly.

hoppa

Any other creepy or funny behind the bar stories?

Any creepy stories die with me! For the most part what happens here stays here & a good bartender never tells!
Jarlath Waters: Quincy resident native of Ireland & your dad’s favorite neighbor! Was behind the bar this weekend Friday night and Sunday night for the post parade crowd!

Youtube: Fueling Quincy Girls Stereotypes.

15 Mar

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After watching that Quincy girls fight video that made it to Barstool Sports yesterday, when the vomiting feeling had passed, I started thinking about how lucky I am that this whole Youtube craze wasn’t big when I was in high school. I think it existed, but it wasn’t nearly as big as it is now. Sounds bad that I really don’t know if it existed or not but I could have given a fuck less about social media/the internet when I was out with friends back then. I cringe when I think that there could have been video evidence of me rocking awkward bangs, shelltoes with jeans and dress shirts, 40 ounce in hand because I thought it was gangster (by gangster I mean I quit my job at Stop and Shop and couldn’t afford much else). I cannot imagine what it would be like to have a video of myself up Forbes Hill in a full on brawl with like 10 randoms, Boston accent screaming every obscenity in the book. My graduating class called that “Powderpuff” and we legitimized it with jerseys.

But now, people take videos of EVERYTHING. I’m guilty of it myself, I have 2 Quincy parking lot fight videos on my phone as I type. But would I post them? No. Because when you post it, the trashy comes out in all parties involved a la the comments section of my Facebook page. And once things take a turn for the trashy, I delete delete delete! Which is exactly what happened yesterday when I posted the Quincy girl fight video. The comments section blows up with personal attacks on people who know the girls in the video and people who commented on the video, easily setting things up for a Quincy girls fight part two video. Silly, really.

But like I said, from 2001-2005 no one was posting everything they see to Youtube and the world was a better place. I watched that Lifetime movie (Girl Fight I think it’s called) last Saturday that is based on real life. Corny as shit of course, it’s a Lifetime movie, but it’s about a gang of girls that get pissed at this chick for “talking crap on Facebook”, so they invite her over, beat her til she passes out, and record the entire thing. First off, that’s gross in general. Second off, good idea recording it and incriminating yourselves. See? We really CAN learn something from Lifetime movies and not just laugh at them like I did through the duration of that one when Fred Savage kills DJ Tanner. An instant classic.

But enough tangents! Youtube is obviously here to stay for awhile, so maybe we should enact a Quincy girl ban on it because after yesterday’s fiasco, I’m unsure SOME of us can handle it. OR we could just make those who partake in such behavior vow to stop it. At the very least stop doing it in Wollaston. Take that shit to the Point.

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