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In reply to the discussion: Intellectual Honesty Test. Would you have been offended by "86-46" jargon thrown around a year ago? [View all]lapucelle
(20,294 posts)100. I only knew the term in the speakeasy sense and to generally mean "to get rid of".
Chumley's NYC speakeasy fronted Barrow Street, but had a second entrance/exit door at 86 Bedford Street. They would take VIPS out that door when the cops raided the place, and they also used the door to eject unruly patrons.
If the owners were tipped off that there would be a raid, staff was directed to "86" the VIP customers.
Besides being haunted, there are many other reasons why Chumley’s stands out from similar establishments. First of all, it was the favorite watering hole for many literary giants, including Norman Mailer, William Faulkner, E.E. Cummings, Jack Kerouac, Anais Nin, John Steinbeck, and J.D. Salinger. Its walls were thus decorated with book jackets and autographed photographs of many famous writers.
The term “86-ed” is also said to originate from there. In the bar world, the phrase means that an item has become unavailable or to stop serving someone. The number, marked right over the bar’s door, was one of the first things seen by unruly patrons who had been thrown out of Chumley’s. “I’ve been 86-ed,” many would remorsefully conclude. The term caught on, and was soon being used by other restaurants, even the police. Before a raid, “they’d tell the bartender to ‘86’ his customers”, for instance.
The term “86-ed” is also said to originate from there. In the bar world, the phrase means that an item has become unavailable or to stop serving someone. The number, marked right over the bar’s door, was one of the first things seen by unruly patrons who had been thrown out of Chumley’s. “I’ve been 86-ed,” many would remorsefully conclude. The term caught on, and was soon being used by other restaurants, even the police. Before a raid, “they’d tell the bartender to ‘86’ his customers”, for instance.
https://nyghosts.com/chum/

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Intellectual Honesty Test. Would you have been offended by "86-46" jargon thrown around a year ago? [View all]
WarGamer
May 16
OP
So the fact that the majority of us in the modern era think it means to get sacked, canned, ...
Hekate
May 16
#15
Why do you highlight that part and not other, more prominent portions of the same page?
JHB
May 18
#110
I'm fine with it considering the say so many other worse terrible things. And I understood what it meant
Walleye
May 16
#3
The party of butt-hurt boys. They know damn well what it means they're just being drama queens
Walleye
May 16
#5
What segment of the population threw baby fits when Amazon sold this merch?
Hassin Bin Sober
May 17
#71
There was an 8646 bumper sticker in my neighborhood. I was tempted, but I never keyed the car.
Scrivener7
May 16
#9
Everyone who ever went into a music club or bar knows it means to get tossed out or banned
blm
May 16
#11
Yes, it might also mean that, but it hasn't been a common use in my not so sheltered life
Ilikepurple
May 16
#22
You are "troubled by the coarseness in politics" --yet you pass it along to us & demand we be accountable for it
Hekate
May 20
#114
Comey knew it was wrong. He just wanted attention. This fool is not on our side. He sabotaged Hillary.
Pisces
May 16
#31
How I've always understood the term 86 it is to eject someone or cut off contact
Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
May 16
#34
I had never seen the 86 46 stuff... probably because I don't digest RWNJ content...
WarGamer
May 17
#58
I didn't know about it because there were far worse things being said by MAGAts about Biden at the time.
W_HAMILTON
May 17
#72
The rise of political violence in our country has been primarily due to ever-increasing Republican extremism.
W_HAMILTON
May 18
#75
Just because you have a right to say something doesn't mean it's right to say it.
DemocratSinceBirth
May 17
#62
Agree. It was minor drivel until Dotard and his cult got his panties twisted in a wad.
Norrrm
May 18
#84
86-46 would have been one of the least offensive things MAGA said or posted publically.
mackdaddy
May 18
#92
I only knew the term in the speakeasy sense and to generally mean "to get rid of".
lapucelle
May 18
#100
When the kitchen tells a waiter to "86" the roast chicken, it doesn't mean...
LudwigPastorius
May 18
#109