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Welcome to Friday Night Bug Juice, a Metro Detroit bar review site. We're here to give you a look into the dive bars of the Detroit area, so you can hopefully spend your cash wisely, and get a little insight into the lives of a couple of hapless irish louts.

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Welcome to the section of our site where you can learn everything you ever wanted to know and way too much more about the gang that works hard ruining their livers to bring you all you need to know about the dive bars of the Metro Detroit area!

COYOTE STATION / PEPPERBOTTOM's

This is some random shit that happened when I was a kid:

I was playing tag in front of my friend Jeff’s house and dying for a drink. I went over to the spicket at the side of the house and placed my mouth about one half inch from the spout. Just as I turned the knob to release the water, I felt a spider crawl into my yap. Too late, the water gushed out and shot the spider down my throat. Even as a kid I was repulsed by that one.

My friend Andy was well known for teasing dogs, especially his own. One day he was doing a particularly offensive dance in front of the mutt when the dog bit him. In the balls. Sadly (for Andy), the story gets better. At the hospital, as a means of isolating the damaged area, the nurse asked Andy to stand up, covered him from head to toe in a sheet and stuck his ten year old balls through a tiny (very?) slit for treatment. He would have been less traumatized bleeding to death.

I took tap dance lessons after school. Not bad enough? I pissed my pants because I didn’t want to interrupt the critical instruction from my muse, Mr. Jimmy. This may go a long way explaining why you never see me on a dance floor at a club. Memories of urine past.

I went to an outing for altar boys at Camp Dearborn. After a day courting melanoma, all I wanted was to win a transistor radio in the raffle (Christ, I really am old). Instead I won a Ball-Net-O! This stupid fucking toy was no more than a rubber ball and a cheap net used to catch and sling the rubber ball. On the way home, I threw the damn thing out on I-96.

In a moment that all kids dream of, I came to bat in the last inning of the championship game at Ten Eyck Park in Dearborn with the bases loaded and two outs, my team trailing by a run. I never took the bat off my shoulder, and my prayer to be walked never came true. I struck out and walked home crying. I don’t recall that being part of the dream.

My best friend Rob had a weight problem growing up (I think this is all right to bring up as I did also, and Rob has since slimmed down and is now just a big sonofabitch). One day while driving in a car with his mom, young Rob looked over at the car next to them while stopped at a red light. The asshole called Rob a “fatso”. Bad enough, right. It then dawned on Rob that the guy based his name calling on his round face only, that being the part of his body visible above the window. I believe he yelled at his mom for letting him get fat.

One day, a bunch of us were playing football in the backyard at the home of this oddball kid named Craig. Older brother of Jeff, Bobby, was drawing up a play in the dirt. He used a small stick to represent me, a bit of leaf was Jeff and a bottle cap was Craig. Bobby’s diagram of the play was interrupted by a stream of piss from Jeff raining down on the bottle cap that represented Craig. Bobby flip hopped the fence into his own backyard and squealed on Jeff. Game over.

Next week, I will go over some of the stuff that happened to me during puberty. It’ll break your heart. Meanwhile, this is the crap that happened to me this past Friday:

First, I must admit that Tony and I are having a devil of a time deciding what bars to haunt. We have exhausted our immediate area and are expanding our coverage, though the drive home is limiting that distance. This week, the debate raged, east side versus west side. The east side has been tough on us in the past, The Village Idiot and Hard Luck Lounge are two joints that broke our hearts.

But, courage is an important component in the Tour, so we made our way east through heavy rains to The Coyote Station on the west side of Harper, north of Ten Mile in St. Clair Shores. We were encouraged to see a lot of cars in the parking lot just north of the building and crestfallen when we walked inside the club (no cover) and saw only a handful of revelers.

Where were the people that belonged to the cars? I know the Allies would sometimes try to fake the Krauts into believing their numbers were larger by using wooden cutouts of airplanes. Was Coyote Station capable of such subterfuge?

Tony seemed particularly disgusted by the numbers, thoughts of previous east side disasters danced through his head. We took in the lighted dance floor in the middle of the place surrounded by a rail for standing, a bar at each end of the room for better service, countless televisions for sports, pool tables/video games/pinball/foosball/dome hockey for diversion. That these areas were largely empty led little brother to declare Coyote “One and out”.

Getting the “one” from the bar proved to be a bit tough, as I had to bear witness to a dispute between barmaid and waitress. My wish to see this feud morph into a wrestling match never developed, and after a while I was given a pair of beers for six bucks.

There was not much to look at, no crowd to speak of and a Tiger broadcast in rain delay, so we decided to have it out at the dome hockey game. If Tony and I are seeing who can throw little bits of stick into a sewer grate, I want to win (by the way, that is a real contest that we play when going for our lunch time walks). So, I was not thrilled to get my ass handed to me in every game played. I was thrilled, however, to see that the bar filled up nicely while we were busy cursing and playing.

We decided to grab a second drink and stand at the rail in the center of the room and soak up Coyote Station. The room, now bustling and filling rapidly, had a friendly feel to it. Mostly twenty and thirty somethings, with a few of us older geezers mixed in. If there are ethnic groups in the St. Clair Shores area, word of this place has not reached them.

The dance floor never filled up, but was used on occasion, groups of girls dancing to Prince and Afrika Bambaataa, tunes endorsed by Tony (I sometimes forget that, like Prince, Tony is almost black).

If not for dome hockey and the immaturity of my need to keep playing until I best Tony (I gave up on that after twenty minutes and four ass kickings), we might have left after one beer and declared Coyote Station shit. Hmm...this whole bar review thing might not be an exact science.

Still, we had traveled to the east side to look over two bars, and so we ventured back out into the rain and headed to Pepperbottoms. This barn was also on Harper, south of Ten Mile in St. Clair Shores. Parking was a snap in front of and behind the huge building, though I looked suspiciously at the glut of cars surrounding the bar. No subterfuge here, Pepperbottoms was jammed.

After parting with two bucks per for cover, we grabbed a pair of beers ($6 again) from the ice chest near the front door. Strangely, we rarely get our beers from the ubiquitous ice chest near the front door. The beer was easy to fetch, ice cold and going down my gullet in seconds. We may have to rethink the ubiquitous ice chest near the front door (ubiquitous is my word of the day).

Soon after soaking in the ambience of Pepperbottoms, Tony stole one of my favorite lines and stated that, “We are the oldest people in here by miles.” Tony further believed that we were being sized up by the kids in this joint as cops, an accusation made to our faces in at least two other bars (J Dubs and Stilettos...weirdly, the accusation at Stilettos came from a lesbian while we were trying to piss in their unisex bathroom).

These young ‘uns were ready to live it up and had no trouble lubricating at the multiple bars or from the highly attentive waitstaff. The music had less to do with the 80’s and more to do with unending beats. Whatever... it worked and the dance floor was filled all night, including one number that featured a contest between broads passing a dildo around in a smutty version of musical chairs (musical dicks?). Pool tables and other games provided further diversion for the hordes.

Pepperbottoms had more broads, was louder and more crazy than Coyote Station. So why did I give a slight edge to Coyote Station? Not sure, though Tony may have felt the same way as we split to make a return voyage to Coyote for last call. Wet minds think alike.

Cheers!
-Jim


Coyote Station:  25117 Harper Ave. St. Clair Shores, MI 48081
3 OUT OF 5

Pepperbottom's:  24301 Harper Ave. St. Clair Shores, MI 48080
2 OUT OF 5
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CHELI's CHILI BAR

Nobody should develop a honking pimple on their chin on the day of their wedding, but that’s what I woke up to on October 17, 1981. I looked it over carefully in the bathroom mirror, gave it a few test prods and wisely decided to leave it alone. As a veteran of the life span of a pimple, I knew that I had twenty hours before it would blossom. If I left the damn thing alone, I could get through the wedding, after party and reception.

The day broke clear and crisp, the kind you get in Michigan during the fall. I made my way outside to check on my best man Rob and usher Jeff, two of my closest friends since forever. Both were ready to get the party started, and we talked things over while tossing a football around in the street. Going to Denny’s for breakfast seemed like a good idea. And, for maybe the first time in five years, the three of us went somewhere without first getting stoned (most of my stories from this period of life start like this...”We were headed to the store, smoking a joint”...”We were going camping and just bought a quarter pound of weed”...”We had to go to the funeral, so we arrived pre-rolled”).

It wasn’t until the grand slam had been wolfed down, and I was back at my parent’s house that the nerves set in. I showered and shaved, carefully avoiding the soon to be honking pimple. I thoughtlessly combed my hair (if I knew baldness was right around the corner I would have cherished those moments) and noticed that my balls were pulling up tight to my body. Now I was petrified. Not because I wasn’t sure about Andrea, but because I was going to co-star in a three hundred person play.

I put on my tux, an off white number with chocolate brown trim (Andrea gave me one job for the wedding, pick the tux, and I blew it). I could not wait to get to Holy Cross Hungarian Church and get this thing in gear. The hour prior to the ceremony was dominated by the photographer. I normally detest getting my picture taken, but on this day I was grateful for the intrusion. Before I knew it, I got word that it was time to line up with my best man and ushers. The aforementioned Rob and Jeff, my brothers Mike and Tony and future brother-in-law Danny stood at attention on the altar. All I recall from that portion of the ceremony was telling Tony to walk slowly down the aisle. Why I thought he needed reminding, I have no idea (young?).

The ceremony took forever, my wife looked radiant in her gown ( a restored beauty that her mother had previously worn) and I was filled with joy as we made our way down the aisle and gathered in the small vestibule at the front of church. It got crazy back there. Loud and hectic was the order of the day. Lots of kissing, hugging and crying. Some of the girls got emotional too.

After the ceremony, my sister Chris threw a beautiful and lavish party at her home to fill the two or three hours between wedding and reception. This is where things kicked up a notch. I seem to recall champagne popping everywhere, walking in on people “covertly” getting high and wondering how this rowdy bunch was going to keep it up for another six hours.

I should not have worried. The party and reception flew by in a haze of drinking, dancing and kissing. The photos from the beginning of the reception look a hell of lot different than those at the end. When the hall manager announced that the evening was over, my dad tried to bribe him into keeping the place, and more specifically the bar, open for another half hour (I guess I got the “I don’t know when to quit” gene from him). My final memory from the reception was Rob tipping back a serving tray with the evenings booze sloshed on it, drinking it down like a Roman warrior.

We stopped in at a local watering hole for last call, before my beautiful bride pried me away from my friends to begin our first married night together. I can still recall the look of exasperation on her face. Our first married moment of disappointment!

And speaking of disappointments...You would think that a great place to watch the end of Game 3 of the Stanley Cup semifinals would be at Cheli’s Bar in downtown Dearborn. Having to pay for parking in the municipal lots surrounding the bar on the north side of Michigan Avenue west of the Southfield Freeway was the first ass pain of the evening.

There is no cover to enter the bar. And, as expected, there were hordes of Wing fans vying for space to watch the pivotal game. What was not expected was the degree of difficulty getting a beer. There was one huge bar and one small bar on the main floor. The crowd around the huge bar was daunting, so Tony and I made our way to the smaller venue in hopes of snagging our drinks. We waited there for five minutes and never saw anyone manning this station.

On to the bigger bar. The ring of Wing fans around this bar was four deep in most spots. I felt I was on to something when I saw an opening at the far end near the windows looking out on Michigan Avenue. Here I could clearly see that there was one barmaid trying (?) to keep up with the thirsty patrons and the demanding waitstaff. Getting her to notice me was impossible. Perhaps it was the scowl on her face, furrowing her brow and narrowing her eyes which prevented my being seen (think Clint Eastwood in any Clint Eastwood flick).

I tried in vain to flag down any of the three or four waitresses who walked briskly by. About fifteen minutes had passed by and we were no closer to getting a drink. Did I mention that the sound on the televisions surrounding the bar was a horrible combination of loud and treble. I looked back at Tony, and we both agreed that it was time to move on.

Back out the door, heading toward Michigan Avenue and any of the other bars within walking distance. But wait, what about the steep set of outside steps heading up to Cheli’s outdoor patio? If we could make our way up there and grab a brew, Tony and I would miss less of the riveting third period. There, overlooking downtown Dearborn, we found large round tables, televisions and most importantly, a small bar much less crowded than the others, manned by an actual person. I made my way to the bar and was fucking ignored again. It took this barmaid a good five minutes to deal with three people and take my order. Oh yeah, no Miller products up here (maybe they don’t do well in the rarified air), so I settled for two Labatts at $7 (in a can, no less). Still, I was finally drinking and watching what was left of the third period.

The patio is a pretty cool space, and features large round picnic tables, many televisions and a less tinny sound system. Still, it remained tough to get a refill and the Wings lost early in overtime (can’t blame the bar or its owner for that...Chelios watched this game from the press box where presumably it was easier for him to be served).

Before I forget, this was not my first time at Cheli’s. Once, I went there with my wife, sat on the upper patio in the middle of summer and sipped a beer. While the two of us occupied one of the large picnic tables, Cheli himself stopped by and asked if we would mind having a few people join us at our table due to limited space. While my wife stared at his Greek good looks, I told him that would be fine. A couple of minutes later, a waitress stopped by with complimentary drinks from Chris. Very nice. I have also eaten there. My wife makes better chili.

Tony and I spent the rest of the night chasing a good time, but never really catching it. The Post Bar, Glass Mug and All Around were hit, the Post being the only place to stand out.

Disappointed in the Wings, but confident they will comeback. Disappointed in Cheli’s, we will not be coming back.

Cheers!
-Jim


Cheli's Chili Bar:  21918 Michigan Ave. Dearborn, MI 48124
2 OUT OF 5
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