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The Water Cooler
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Anyone remember old Tulsa restaurant
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<blockquote data-quote="p238shooter" data-source="post: 2198020" data-attributes="member: 24583"><p>Thanks for bringing the Stables Lounge up again. SHAZAM Was I really there? I am older than you for sure, but if you were there you might relate to this part. I remember a few nights with Pattie Ann after she had started her first job dancing at the Brass Rail. she was fun, but not a lifestyle for me. I am glad she was able to put the successful business deal together and re-open the Stables Lounge as a Gentleman's Club version. It was a world wide known place in Tulsa Oklahoma, Again </p><p></p><p>Before that, the Stables Lounge originally was a hole in the wall "real" rock and roll joint in the early 70's. Sunday evening at 5pm pay $2 to get in the door and drink all the free beer you could for an hour. 6PM start paying for your beer for an hour, think it was 25 cents/ draw. 7PM free beer another hour when the band started. They usually had a good bands. I say "hole in the wall bar" tongue in cheek, because I have been there on a Friday or Sat night when a few special people have came in the door to "sit in" with what ever band happened to be playing. People like Clapton, Russell, A. Franklin, Joe Joe Gunn, Joe Cocker, and some others. A real Joint to have fun in. It was known world wide two times for two different types of entertainment as I found out talking with the wife of a business associate at a meeting in Boston one time. I had to define the rock and roll version vs the other version.</p><p></p><p>Now that the place is gone, I guess I can admit that I am the person that put the 120 ft black mark up the sidewalk toward the East ( Away from where the Vapors Lounge was before it had a mysterious fire) with my H2 72 Kawasaki one evening as I was leaving. I was by there a few years back at the paint store before they tore the whole building down, went around the corner and the concrete still had a polished stripe from that, what 30 Years later. Those were the good old days. I still have a Budwiser Pool table light that Ron's Playgirl lounge on Sheridan tossed out the door one night when the lamp burnt out and I loaded it up in my car and took it home. I have it over my shop bench in the garage. Yes those were the good old days.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="p238shooter, post: 2198020, member: 24583"] Thanks for bringing the Stables Lounge up again. SHAZAM Was I really there? I am older than you for sure, but if you were there you might relate to this part. I remember a few nights with Pattie Ann after she had started her first job dancing at the Brass Rail. she was fun, but not a lifestyle for me. I am glad she was able to put the successful business deal together and re-open the Stables Lounge as a Gentleman's Club version. It was a world wide known place in Tulsa Oklahoma, Again Before that, the Stables Lounge originally was a hole in the wall "real" rock and roll joint in the early 70's. Sunday evening at 5pm pay $2 to get in the door and drink all the free beer you could for an hour. 6PM start paying for your beer for an hour, think it was 25 cents/ draw. 7PM free beer another hour when the band started. They usually had a good bands. I say "hole in the wall bar" tongue in cheek, because I have been there on a Friday or Sat night when a few special people have came in the door to "sit in" with what ever band happened to be playing. People like Clapton, Russell, A. Franklin, Joe Joe Gunn, Joe Cocker, and some others. A real Joint to have fun in. It was known world wide two times for two different types of entertainment as I found out talking with the wife of a business associate at a meeting in Boston one time. I had to define the rock and roll version vs the other version. Now that the place is gone, I guess I can admit that I am the person that put the 120 ft black mark up the sidewalk toward the East ( Away from where the Vapors Lounge was before it had a mysterious fire) with my H2 72 Kawasaki one evening as I was leaving. I was by there a few years back at the paint store before they tore the whole building down, went around the corner and the concrete still had a polished stripe from that, what 30 Years later. Those were the good old days. I still have a Budwiser Pool table light that Ron's Playgirl lounge on Sheridan tossed out the door one night when the lamp burnt out and I loaded it up in my car and took it home. I have it over my shop bench in the garage. Yes those were the good old days. [/QUOTE]
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