Not exact matches
Notable Canada Bars & Club Date Spots: Food & Liquor in Toronto, Ontario; Noble in Halifax, Nova Scotia; The Shameful Tiki Room in Toronto, Ontario; The Roost Social House in Winnipeg, Manitoba; The Tannery in Fredericton, New Brunswick; NWT Brewing
Company in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories; EXP Restaurant + Bar in Vancouver, British Columbia; The Storm Crow Tavern in Vancouver, British Columbia; Cilantro and Chive in Lacombe, Alberta; Wild Rose Brewery in Calgary, Alberta; Track & Field in Toronto, Ontario;
Big In Japan in Montreal, Quebec; El Caballito in Toronto, Ontario; Le Saint Sulpice in Montreal, Quebec; Miss Things in Toronto, Ontario; Serve Ping Pong in Hamilton, Ontario; To The Lost in Red Deer, Alberta; The Split Crow
Pub in Halifax, Nova Scotia; Skin + Bones in Toronto, Ontario;
Big Bad John's in Victoria, British Columbia; Parts & Labour in Toronto, Ontario; Blind Tiger Coffee Co. in Winnipeg, Manitoba; Grey Tiger in Toronto, Ontario; Union Local 613 in Ottawa, Ontario; and Bartari Videogame Restaurant & Bar in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
And yet there's a part of me that keeps nagging on about how now is the time to get in on the ground floor with self -
pub POD, before the
big companies wise up and move in with faux - indie offshoots and sponsored writing collectives and the like.
Many authors reject full - service self -
pub companies for the same reasons they reject the
big traditional houses: they want full control and full financial benefit.
IMHO, there's a pretty
big difference between Random House being a minority owner of a self -
pub company and Harlequin including a referral to their own vanity press imprint in their rejection letters.
Stacia said, IMHO, there's a pretty
big difference between Random House being a minority owner of a self -
pub company and Harlequin including a referral to their own vanity press imprint in their rejection letters.
I don't se why
pubs don't just let devs play to they're strengths, let them do what they're good at and have a reasonable, yet a «guaranteed» amount of financial success with they're games, but instead of that we get corporate meddling, following popular trends and possibly,
companies gambling its brands reputation away along with the people that work for them, all for a chance, not a «guarantee», at making as
big a profit as they're greed allows Tldr They'd rather gamble it all and «try» to get all the profits, then guarantee success and get a reasonable amount of the profits
Here are some examples of the graduate starting pay on offer from
big companies that run
pubs or restaurants: