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Wednesday, February 4,2009

Passing the Bar: The Hose

JOSEPH ALEXIOU unravels The Hose

By Joseph Alexiou
. . . . . . .
Thank God for the financial crisis, which is responsible for the opening of new East Village gay bar The Hose. According to owner Robert Morgan, its previous incarnation, Uncle Ming’s, was where uptown and Wall Street kids would go to “do something Downtown.” No wonder I’d never been. “But after the economy shifted those kids stopped coming,” says Morgan.Thank goodness, is what I say, because what has replaced it is far preferable.

I visited Paul Short’s Friday party “Mooseknuckles,” and Saturday’s “Rocket,” run by Ashton Anders and Ryan Smith (the lanky Morgan bartends next to his sexy muscled employees). The idea for running a gay bar—Morgan is straight but, as a longtime East Village denizen, knows his way around the gays—came from the success of Spit, Short’s monthly party, which ran for two years at Uncle Ming’s.

Once inside, the décor is simple: rubberhose curtains divide the room in several places, while fake-flame chandeliers compliment posters of 1950s gay-pulp paperbacks and almost identical black-and-white photos of the same naked, well-endowed man (the model’s cock is twice as long in the second photo as the first). I couldn’t wait to start drinking.

The room was a crowded mishmash of mostly white East Villagers of all sizes, wearing funky glasses and sporting smatterings of facial and chest hair. Dancing on the bar was Israeli go-go boy Shay, who gave me a wink and a nod as I deposited a dollar on his person in an effort to support local artists.

Still, there was something off with the vibe—people were chatty, but not dancing. There were cute guys everywhere but no cruising.

“Girl, this is the most watered-down drink I’ve ever had in my life!” my cohort screamed, and I agreed. Usually polite, he spattered on while inhaling her cranberry juice: “People are never going to make new friends at this rate!” By 10:30 the next evening, however, there was already a line out the door. Inside DJ Ron Like Hell spun disco and deep house for the crowd. In the dark back area, totally deserted the previous night, the smell of cigarettes and hippie lettuce awoke my senses from the cold. The bar area being very crowded, I squeezed up against a lovely, delicate woman only to discover that it was Shortbus star Justin Bond, also of Kiki and Herb fame. A new fan of The Hose, Bond’s introduction to the bar was at an intermittent party called Judy (the next one is Feb. 5). “It’s good to have a new East Village gay space,” he explained, “with high ceilings and it’s not awfully claustrophobic.” I agreed, as two art fags mashed up on either side of me. “One thing though,” I shouted above the din, “it’s not very cruisy and nobody has felt me up all night!” I swear I was just making a point, but he immediately put his hand on my ass. “I can’t believe Justin Bond touched my ass; you just made my night!” I told him. “Me too!” he said.What a dream.

The rest of the night was a whirlwind of local freaks and celebrities, like party organizer Jonny McGovern and his posse. Having a great time, they were supposed to be on an East Village bar crawl but didn’t leave until wee hours.

Much later I was stumbling into a cab, and I looked back at the unmarked door feeling very fulfilled. I believe that this fledging party house, with a few minor kinks to iron out, has a whole lot of crazy (and dirty) potential.

The Hose, 225 Ave. B (betw. E. 13th & E. 14th Sts.), 212-979-8506, www.thehosenyc.com


  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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Posted at 02/10/2009 
 
the best way to shut down a cool spot is to write about it. You might as well be writing the club's obit. Yeah, the world knows you're so cool that you went there before you sealed it's fate. Your article stands to do a few things, none of them good things; 1.) alert a bunch of people that should already know about it (It's been going on for a while now as a gay club!) and while they should be fun to hang with they will make it even more crowded and harder to get into and more difficult to enjoy, 2.) a bunch of assholes that have no business there will go to be cool, thus making it even more crowded and unpleasant, 3.) as a result of 1 & 2 the noise level will go up and complaints from Stuy Town across the street will start to pour in. 4.) Already alerted to the smoking and 'hippie weed'(WTF?) and prodded on by upset neighbors the police will intervene and ruin the place for everyone. Luckily this article is in the NY Press and so almost no one will read it.

 

Posted at 02/10/2009 
 
This place is great.. really fills a niche in the gay nightlife in the East Village. Have been to a few different nights, all were interesting, great people and lots of fun.. am looking forward to making this place my "local"!! Highly reccomend for anyone looking for something new and fresh!

 

Posted at 02/09/2009 
 
"Still, there was something off with the vibe—people were chatty, but not dancing. There were cute guys everywhere but no cruising." That's "off"? A bar with chatting but no dancing or cruising sounds wonderful. If it ever irons out what you call "kinks", it'll just be another sleazy dive in my neighborhood. Until it closes a year later.

 

 
 


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