
I went to law school at the University of San Francisco. I lived in San Francisco and went to the Buena Vista Café, maybe only once. I was shy.
But that Café has meaning under the Tweety Presidency. Tweety is so full of stories he does not know the difference between truth and lies. I like stories, Your like stories. We all like stories, true of fantasy. Iyt is fun to deal in fantasy. I recall stories was what the Buena Vist Café was all about in 1969. Stories. Fish tales, eh!
Here is the Web site:
http://www.thebuenavista.com/home/home.html
"Ding! Ding! Ding! We are located just to the left of the
Powell-Hyde Cable Car's last stop in Fisherman's Wharf."
Fishermen tells tall tales and that is normal. As President, however, the time for tall tales has ended. Karma is that story telling got Tweety elected! lol
"A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BUENA VISTA
The original building where the Buena Vista sits today was a boardinghouse until 1916 when the landlord converted the first floor into a saloon. That saloon was named the Buena Vista. ("Good View" in Spanish) The view was good indeed and it served as a warm meeting place for hundreds of fishermen and handlers who worked for the nearby Sardine Cannery. There they could take in a whiskey while scouting the bay for incoming fishing boats which would mean, "Quick! Finish your drink and back to meet the boats!"
In 1952, with the help of a Pulitzer-Prize winning writer, the Buena Vista introduced to the world it's now famous Irish Coffee. The recipe has never changed and the view is still quite good."
It is about Irish Coffee. "THE IRISH COFFEE STORY
The historic venture started on the night of November the 10th in 1952. Jack Koeppler, then-owner of the Buena Vista, challenged international travel writer Stanton Delaplane to help re-create a highly touted "Irish Coffee" served at Shannon Airport in Ireland. Intrigued, Stan Accepted Jack’s invitation, and the pair began to experiment immediately."
And eventually we all tell stories, right. Tweety, however, was supposed to STOP telling these "stories" when he was elected President.