The name came to him like a "brain fart," said empire builder and restaurant provocateur Phil Roberts. He was originally going to call his latest concept the Uptown Cafeteria and Celebrity Hangout -- a tongue-in-cheek nod to the fact that there are no celebrities in Uptown (but maybe enough people who think they're celebrities?). His underlings talked him out of it.
Instead, he settled on the equally perplexing Uptown Cafeteria and Support Group. "It's just a piece of wit and whimsy," Roberts said. "Just to stick in there for no other reason than that I like it."
Submitting to one's own indulgence seems to be the modus operandi at this new hot spot. What other bar hands out batons of hyper-colored cotton candy to people who say it's their birthday?
Sugary trinkets and silly names aside, the real reason people are so hyped about the Uptown Cafeteria can be found high above Calhoun Square. The restaurant's rooftop, dubbed the Sky Bar, has been packed since its June 15 opening day.
By dusk on most Fridays and Saturdays, a line snakes through the restaurant's street-level lounge with people clamoring to get inside the gaudy glass elevator. Up top, a herd of finely manicured people smush together under the stars, drinking their drinks and peering toward the downtown skyline.
A cafeteria this is not.
The concept
Roberts, whose Parasole company runs about a dozen restaurants, said there is no concept. True enough, his $3 million project is basically two spots in one. The restaurant below is a mash-up of retro stylings poured into a diner on steroids. The colors are kaleidoscopic. There's shag carpet on the walls. The comfort-food menu includes everything from a "mile high" tuna sandwich to meatloaf sliders to chicken-and-waffles.