Hop on the Bar Car

Maybe, I have watched too much Mad Men but the thought of a “bar car” on a train line doesn’t seem so far fetched (or even wrong) to me.

And yet this piece in the NY Times made it seem like it was something best left in the “Good Old Days”.  I thought that people taking public transit or taxis was preferred.  But if the article is to be believed then people were getting blitzed on the train and then driving home once they reached their destination.  The mixed message that I get is that it is OK to have bars in train stations and everywhere else but a train car is too much.

photo from the New York Times article linked to above.
photo from the New York Times article linked to above.

I am a big advocate for enjoying your drinks in moderation, be it wine, cocktails or craft beer.  Primarily because I have a Slow Food type of motto.  That you shouldn’t wolf down food or drink.  You just don’t enjoy it as much that way.  And if people did that, then we could have beer and wine and spirits on planes, trains (but not automobiles).

I would think that a great tourism idea would be to have the public transport take visitors to various culinary spots around town with local beer and wine on the train as a way to show off Los Angeles without having to fight our so much fun traffic.

Don’t ban something when it can be turned into something creative and fun.

Great Quote from the NY Times

“But the enemy of good beer and good wine, and good food in general, is bad beer, bad wine and, yes, bad food.

What unites this team is the striving for real wine, real beer, and real food, as opposed to cynical product. That is the problem, and I think most people realize this no matter what they say or do. Craft beer’s battle is not against wine but against decades of cynical marketing from the giant breweries, which have done everything possible to portray beer drinkers as asinine fools. The enemy of good wine is the atrocious marketing that makes wine an aspirational commodity, just another luxury good to purchase for its status value. That has to offend the reverse snob in all of us.”
Eric Asimov