Bangcock Willie's

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 +''[[Stimes Addisson]] once sold'' Bangcock to a group of investors for 27 million USD and a lifetime supply of bespoke [[pants]].
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Revision as of 16:26, 7 Apr 2021

Philadelphia bar frequented by underworld types and the more thuggish elements of The League of Gnomes. Somehow, it became the leading gay bar of its era for five or maybe, twelve minutes. It receives an email from a long-lost friend.

"BW's," or "Willie's," opened in 1947 and originally served a rowdy crew of roustabouts, longshoreman, rickshaw mechanics, and circus performers. It soon became a strange mixture of mobsters and homosexuals, given that proprietor Saul Thebo was himself heavily involved with both subcultures. For a while in the late 60's, it's cartoon mascot was a pugilistic leprechaun blatantly copied from the University of Notre Dame, officially named "Bunghole Willy" by the local North American Drag Queens Union, no. 27, barely beating out the competing name of "Dick 'Fudgie' McPacken."

It was the scene of the infamous Showdown Post Facto between Alexandre Dacusse and Ryan O'Donnely in 1968.

After Thebo's death in 1977, the bar fell on hard times and was closed when the neighborhood became gentrified during the 1980's. The building was soon transformed into a dry-cleaners, coincidentially owned by a young couple from Bangkok, Thailand.

Desiderata


Stimes Addisson once sold Bangcock to a group of investors for 27 million USD and a lifetime supply of bespoke pants.