I don't go to pubs.

I love pubs and I love pub culture.

Beer. Now there's a temporary solution!

Let's all go and be feminists in the pub.

You meet a better class of person in pubs.

A lot of country pubs will receive Michelin stars.

I don't like discotheques, pubs, or late-night parties.

Two Irishmen were passing a pub - well, it could happen.

I worked in pubs when I was younger. My nickname was Morticia.

Potter! There are hundreds of people thundering through my pub!

I'd like to think...that people in pubs would talk about my poems

Ignore the trade-pub narratives about how little success indies enjoy.

I'm just getting to know the local pubs. I do enjoy going out in east London.

People come up to me in pubs - gay pubs, mind you - and can't believe that I'm gay.

I once worked in a pub. I couldn't add up to save my life, but I could pull the pints.

Three women walk into a pub and say, `Hooray, we've colonised a male-dominated joke format'

You can get samosas in any pub in England today, pretty much. So, "Gunga Din" has come back.

Dublin was turning into Disneyland with super-pubs, a Purgatory open till five in the morning.

When I die I want to decompose in a barrel of porter and have it served in all the pubs in Dublin.

So we used to look for funny songs, and learn them and play them. And we used to play them in pubs.

In my hometown there is a pub named after me - The Frome Flyer on Jenson Avenue. How cool is that?!

Young writers should keep out of pubs and remember that the cliche way of the artistic life is a lie.

I'd been gigging since I was 14, doing little competitions and pubs and clubs and old people's homes.

Islamic State practise a brand of Islamic law so strict that apparently Raqqa only has two Irish Pubs.

Looking back, I spent a lot of time sitting in pubs when I should have been perfecting my playwriting.

I like being able to go to a local pub and have great food and particularly love pubs that welcome my dogs.

I have a theory that the secret of marital happiness is simple: drink in different pubs to your other half.

The sport has come on - we do not just play in pubs any more and there are massive international competitions.

Pub life was such a huge part of growing up for me, going to pubs and being around them. It made me who I am today.

A lot of bands have the enthusiasm kicked out of them by playing really dreary pub venues that just churn bands through.

I played a lot of pubs, and some were a bit rougher than others, but once you got on, it was the same reception everywhere.

Contrary to what you think, not all preternatural beings hang out at the local Supernatural Pub looking for humans and dates.

In spite of its relatively nascent rise in popularity, tea joints across the country are romanticized, quite like beer pubs in the West.

I started singing when I was 18 and landed my first record deal with RCA when I was 26 after a lot of grafting singing in pubs and clubs.

Night buses serve not only the leisure economy- pubs, bars, clubs, theatres and concerts- but also hundreds of thousands of night workers.

My mum and dad had four pubs when we were growing up, but the main one was the New Inn in Hattersley, on the estate. It was a very good pub.

I miss the banter with friends and family, which more often than not takes place within the confines of a decent public house. So I miss the pubs.

For me, normal means freedom to live life as we choose, from cramming into packed planes to go on holiday to crowding into pubs for birthday parties.

In a proper pub everyone there is potentially, if not a lifelong friend, at least someone to lure into an argument about foreign policy or the Red Sox.

Personally, I've never been attracted to danger. It's not my sort of thing. I am more attracted to pubs and cafes. The known, safe and comfortable world.

I love those people who do story-telling and who ramble on, but I don't do that, I tell jokes - the sort of jokes that anyone really could tell in the pub.

But one of the most fantastic things about Ireland and Dublin is that the pubs are like Paris and the cafe culture. And Dublin, in many ways, is a pub culture.

I have a lot of funny friends, though not everyone's funny all the time. Doon Mackichan's my funniest friend in the pub; Nina Conti's the funniest with a monkey.

I love Tate Modern; there's such great style and shopping here. I love the galleries and the pubs out on the street, just having your pint as the sun is setting.

Irish women are always carrying water on their heads, and always carrying their husbands home from pubs. Such things are the greatest posture-builders in the world.

Trouble is, I don't get to play a lot at the moment because I've just signed a contract where I've got to do 200 shows a year in pubs, so the golf's fallen away a bit.

In the very beginning, we went on tours with Rammstein in really small clubs. We didn't even have a record out. We played in restaurants and pubs in the south of Germany.

I grew up in pubs so my whole thing is 'the game happened,' people would go into the pub afterwards and discuss 'it should have been a penalty, he should have scored that.'

Irish music in the local pubs was my first exposure to musical expression, and I feel like Irish music is very close to musical theater because it is always telling a story.

I like pubs too, but it's hard for me to go and get proper bladdered in the way I used to. I don't want to moan about being recognised but I do get a bit of grief sometimes.

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