Tiki Central / General Tiki
Why Destroy Tiki Palaces?
KBT3
King Bushwich the 33rd
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Wed, Mar 9, 2011 11:42 PM
The trend started a long time ago. Legends is a very famous sports bar and it opened in 1979 at 5236 E. 2nd Street in the Belmont Shore neighborhood of Long Beach, CA. Previously at this location was... |
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Limbo Lizard
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Thu, Mar 10, 2011 6:02 AM
Behold... the GOLDEN STONED Glazed Oki Doki Mug! "The rum's the thing..." [ Edited by: Limbo Lizard 2011-03-10 12:27 ] |
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Cammo
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Thu, Mar 10, 2011 12:33 PM
Looks GOOD! The Thirsty Two Ouncer!!!! |
KBT3
King Bushwich the 33rd
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Fri, Mar 11, 2011 2:23 PM
Are there tiki palaces in the future? According to Disney Imagineers, yes. In Progress City, a model of what a city of the future will look like that use to be displayed in the Caraousel of Progress, there was a tiki palace. Disney Imagineering: Progress City "There's a great big beautiful tomorrow shining at the end of every day...." |
TM
tiki mick
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Fri, Mar 11, 2011 2:46 PM
Great find Bushwich! Here is a link to me original thread where I can see you have already posted this info! I am a total devotee of Progress City (And also a douchebag with nothing to contribute, according to leleliz) but I am surprised I never saw this stuff before. I actually don't remember seeing the tiki restaurant, but as I recall, you passed this diorama while on a moving escalator, so you did not have a chance to stop and really look at it in detail. Also, I was 7 years old at the time. http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?topic=32940&forum=13&hilite=progress%20city |
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Tiki Trav
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Sat, Mar 12, 2011 7:18 PM
Hey Cammo, Thanks for firing up an intersting, educational and entertaining thread..sorely missed on TC these days.. a pat on the back from over here.. |
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christiki295
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Sat, Mar 12, 2011 8:47 PM
Great summary, Cammo. I will add another reason: FADS. Hotel chains now are all trying to be the "W" and feature high-design contemporary lobbies. One glaring example is the "grand-dame" St. Francis in San Francisco, possibly the most the respected hotel in the City, which demolished its historic, trademark "Compass Room" in favor of a sleek, all-white restaurant which appears to be a replica of the restaurant in the ultra-hip Delano in Miami Beach. The Hanalei, the SF Fairmont, New York's Palace, etc., all exemplify this unfortunate trend. |
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Cammo
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Tue, Mar 15, 2011 6:15 PM
Yeah, and we have a place just off Little Italy in downtown San Diego called the Glass Door. It has maybe the coolest view and location in the whole city, but is going for a sort of Lounge Moderne look that really doesn't work; it just isn't very well done. (It doesn't help that the food isn't all that great either.) Basically, they shot themselves in the foot because almost nobody goes there now. Give it a few years and they'll redo the look anyway. |
KBT3
King Bushwich the 33rd
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Thu, Jun 27, 2013 1:05 PM
Buster's Beach House in Long Beach, CA has not looked anything like a beach house for years now and as of July 3rd, it will cease to exist and be replaced by an Irish Pub kind of place. |
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RevBambooBen
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Fri, Jun 28, 2013 9:38 AM
Ugh! |
ATP
Atomic Tiki Punk
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Fri, Jun 28, 2013 10:13 AM
Hey is that the same "Malarkey's" that use to be on Newport Blvd. Man that place was a real dive (Frat boy hell!) [ Edited by: Atomic Tiki Punk 2013-06-28 10:14 ] |
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TIKIBOSKO
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Fri, Jun 28, 2013 10:57 AM
Not to derail this threat too much but that Progress City link was amazing, Thanks |
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christiki295
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Sat, Jun 29, 2013 12:40 PM
Ownership's interest in maximizing profits seemingly all too often requires bulldozing a Tiki Mecca, like The International Yet sometimes, like the Tonga Room at the SF Fairmonte, or Don the Beachcomber in Sunst Beach, developers do not prevail, often because local govenments, whether by zoning rules or unions, say "no." Other times, like LA Live Trader Vic's, Mickey Finz, Bali Hai or, for a brief glorious moment - Taboo Cove at the Venetian, developers latch onto Tiki to keep the profits rolling. |
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AceExplorer
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Sat, Jun 29, 2013 1:00 PM
Tiki does have a future thanks to folks like us. So while we are losing vintage tiki we are fortunately also gaining "new" tiki. No need for me to post a list of new venues here... |
HT
Hale Tiki
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Mon, Jul 1, 2013 5:28 AM
Indeed. I hadn't read that far back on Imagineering Disney yet. Thanks for the bump/link. |
KBT3
King Bushwich the 33rd
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Mon, Nov 6, 2017 2:43 PM
Another makeover at DCA with Pixar Pier It ain't tiki but a planned building seems inspired by tiki palace of Progress City!? |
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AceExplorer
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Mon, Nov 6, 2017 6:56 PM
Nice! I have mentioned in a few other posts that Disney Imagineers and show designers have a huge soft spot in their hearts for tiki and Polynesian pop. Both Trader Sam's are proof of that, Moana, Aulani, and now possibly this too. There's also Kevin Kidney and Jody Daily as well. I'm sure others here can point out more. One more thought -- this design hit me as just a wee bit reminiscent of the old Hawaiian Punch village at SeaWorld San Diego. Could be my mind playing tricks on me, but I'll have to go back and look at old SeaWorld pics and see if there's any real similarity. |
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Prikli Pear
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Tue, Nov 7, 2017 9:21 AM
The Incredibles design work was heavily influenced by MCM, so there are clearly elements of that in this rendering, along with generous borrowing from tiki design. Looks great--I hope it comes to fruition. |
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AceExplorer
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Tue, Nov 7, 2017 11:45 AM
That's a good addition - MCM - yes! "The Incredibles" is on my to-watch list since I've only seen it once in its original theatrical release. I remember there are some great caricatures of real-life people in the film - Edna Mode, for example, and among others, is brilliant. |
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tikiskip
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 6:54 AM
Why Destroy Tiki Palaces? I think it is hard to find the kind of love and dedication for the place you work or even the kind of pride in your job that there was back in the heyday of tiki. The kind of work and extra effort needed for a place like the Kahiki is just nowhere to be found these days. One of the new tiki joints I went to had those cheep plastic outdoor chairs for seating INSIDE! One place had no mint for the Mai Tais. The old places would go far and wide to find the décor or make it themselves. The kind of class that people had back in the day is gone, think of that Mai Kai host seater guy at Mai Kai. Some of the new tiki joints I have been to just don't have this. many say we should support any tiki joint to keep tiki alive but I feel that these type of not so great places just crap on what I loved about the old places and could taint the image and style that the old tiki joints had. So in short the new places if done badly are just another nail in the coffin of cool old classic tiki and for me are not what I'm lookin for and they help defame tiki. Why Destroy Tiki Palaces? because what made them great is getting harder and harder to find But then Pride, quality, and even class and style is hard to find in any product or business these days. |
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AceExplorer
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 8:57 AM
Skip, you made some good points, and made me think... I would add that today the audience is very different as well. In mid-century America we had lots of veterans who easily rolled with out-of-the-way holes-in-the-wall from their travels, with a hodge-podge of furnishings within a fairly cohesive and identifiable theme. Today we see places which are often created from scratch, and it's very different because of how different the guests personal "connections" to that stuff is. Today's bar guests see entertainment and booze when they go. The mid-century bar guest had a greater degree of familiarity with, and connection to, the subject matter, and then they saw the entertainment and booze. Cheers to you, sir!!! |
OGR
Or Got Rum?
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 9:28 AM
Great points Skip, taken w/ validity as you are someone who has operated a food-service business. Today IMHO, some of the "new" places offer plenty of "hip service"...um, I mean "lip service", where talk of original and true to spec classic Tiki and cocktails w/ very high "craft" prices are offered and when they are experienced or reviewed, they miss the mark....often. Again, beating that damn dead horse, talk of "service" is always blabbed about but quickly forgotten. Just as Skip was saying (and a convo w/ my Wife this morning about no one wanting to take over a very successful restaurant) people don't have (or don't want to have) the nut-busting work ethic these places require. It takes more than $ (although PLENTY is needed) it takes a desire to carve out a niche position in your market and keep pushing until you feel you maybe can see the forest through the trees, THEN, keep pushing harder. |
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tikiskip
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 10:35 AM
"I would add that today the audience is very different as well." That is a great point, I often wonder if what we want in a bar restaurant is what most people don't want. I for one see restaurants that people RAVE about that truly suck. Same with a drink, I have had the best boozes there is, and drinks from the Mai Kai and Tiki Ti so I've had the best. More drunkie = better. PS at home I use very good booze and not the cheap stuff, and get Havana club for $36.00 bucks per bottle. |
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AceExplorer
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 10:39 AM
Yup, it's sad. Sometimes you just want to visit a nice tropical place where you can escape and chill with good drinks and have a conversation with who you're with. Now we can't seem to have a bar without sports or news TVs blaring, or distracting us. Thank the tiki gods for the exceptions out there! |
OGR
Or Got Rum?
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 11:40 AM
"Now we can't seem to have a bar without sports or news TVs blaring, or distracting us." ..or, suck ass music too loud. |
MAM
mike and marie
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Wed, Nov 8, 2017 3:15 PM
The devolution and then destruction of Tiki is nothing special. In other words it's not something that happened just to Tiki. Everything has been changing, as it always does, and some things change for the worse. In the west, over the past half century (or, really, longer), a lot of factors or elements that would sustain Tiki or Tiki-like things that we like have been deteriorating and even outright going away. If things continue has they have been we can expect even more major, surprising changes to the world in the coming decade. Tiki was exotic, primal, tribal ... a perfect escape for a civilized, cultured and literate society. But that was then; now the west is more tribal and primal itself and Tiki just doesn't fit in. Look at the people in old photos of any good restaurants or lounges ... you can tell that they come from a different world ... a different civilization. It has ended. No architect or deep-pocketed investor can bring something like that back today. It's not a matter of constructing, collecting, or decorating. The people are the key factor and the one that's missing. The way to bring back Tiki palaces and fantastic places that are even better than anything that has come before is to change the surrounding civilization. So, how do you do that? Who knows. But do it, and you're golden. |
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tikiskip
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Thu, Nov 9, 2017 4:48 AM
"Tiki palaces and fantastic places that are even better than anything that has come before is to change the surrounding civilization." We do have a few successes in the new tiki joint arena as well though, places like Three Dots and a Dash and Forbidden island to name a few. So it can be done right in this time and still thrive. The food at the end was ok, and the drinks were depending on who made it strong, not so great, or good. But it was fun. Dam what would the rent be for a Kahiki or Mai Kai these days! The official reason given for tearing down the Kahiki was it was in need of a lot of work so he sold it rather than repair it. I think the reason was the million bucks he got for the place. |
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Prikli Pear
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Thu, Nov 9, 2017 9:59 AM
There's a new bar/restaurant here in New Braunfels, the Downtowner, that has gone with nightly themes for its drinks. They have Tiki Sundays, so The Wife and I went a couple weeks ago to check them out. The place is in an old rock shop (seriously--they sold minerals, semi-precious stones, geodes, amethyst etc.) with a lot of space. Unfortunately, they remodeled it with the industrial look so popular today--polished concrete floors, flat walls, unfinished ceiling with duct work exposed, etc. Nothing inherently wrong with that, except for the fact that it was LOUD. In these places even the smallest sound echoes around, so that you have to talk louder and louder just to be heard. Their tiki "decor" was a dozen paper accordion-style pineapples scattered around the place, along with some Party City leis. The drink menu was limited, with half a dozen less common tiki drinks (no Mai Tai, for example) and two bar originals that looked like they had potential. I can't recall what we ordered, but I do recall they were good. Not great, but they significantly exceeded my expectations. Good enough that we were inclined to order another round, but left instead. The place was so damn loud it was giving us both headaches. The drinks were good, but there was zero atmosphere. We're not the type of folks who go to bars to drink, we go to relax and enjoy the atmosphere. For us, putting up with the noise and tension was not worth it for the good, reasonably-priced drinks. I made a foray to the restroom--one of the few quiet places there--and realized they were piping in reggae music over the PA. It's reggae, yeah, but I give them points for making the effort to switch it off the top 40 they normally play. But my larger point is that I couldn't even hear it in the main bar area. And there were younger 20-somethings there who were ordering these respectably-crafted tiki drinks and videoing each other with their phones as they raced to see who could drink theirs down the fastest. No. Just no. These aren't shots or slammers. They're defeating the entire purpose of tiki cocktails. And here's the kicker: Just yesterday some of The Wife's friends were raving about how much they loved the place, and how they go there every chance they get. The Wife said she found the drinks good, but the atmosphere terrible. "Really?" they replied in surprise. "We hadn't noticed." There you go. |
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AceExplorer
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Thu, Nov 9, 2017 10:13 AM
====== There you go.Right on the nose - low standards of the general public is one of the problems. I have a similar problem with friends who love EVERY FREAKIN' MOVIE that comes out, and then they think I'm a hard-ass when I say a certain film sucked. (I can usually tell them in detail why it was bad.) How can we turn this around? People are both very easy to please, and on top of that they have very low standards. They literally don't know what they don't know. |
OGR
Or Got Rum?
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Thu, Nov 9, 2017 10:45 AM
They are looking for the next shiny thing, or somewhere their friends deem "hip"....then it's on to something else. |
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tikiskip
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Thu, Nov 9, 2017 11:34 AM
"The place was so damn loud it was giving us both headaches." Ha! at the Windward Passage restaurant that we go to often it is not loud and you can talk in fact often people at the bar talk back and forth to each other like 15 feet away from each other. BUT one night it did get loud I think there were some younger people there that night. I thought that was a bit much as it's not a dam Library. It could have been me as I can get a bit loud when I drink, The wife said it was not me that time though. |
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Prikli Pear
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Thu, Nov 9, 2017 12:56 PM
In this case it was more of the space than the people. Even a modest volume echoes and amplifies in the hard-surfaced environment of the Downtowner. I've been other places like that, and I've been other places with loud crowds that are comfortable because the noise doesn't carry. Hale Pele was packed and noisy each time we went, but we could still carry on a conversation even if we couldn't quite make out what music was playing. There are some simple steps that can be taken to break up those hard surfaces and improve the acoustics, but that's never taken into consideration during remodels. Too many people just figure "That's the way it is." |