Shannon's is small, dark, short on seating, oddly set up, and most often frequented by regulars. Â There is no ploy for attention from tourists and there's nothing fancy to bring in different clientele. Â The drinks are ridiculously cheap, although limited in scope by quite a bit. Â Shannon's is what it is: a corner neighborhood bar; nothing more, nothing less.
And then there are the weekends when Shannon's hosts karaoke. Â At that point, the "regulars" change to the "karaoke regulars." Â If you visit a few times, you'll see a lot of the same people singing the same songs... including the bartender, from behind the bar (she doesn't stop dispensing drinks while she jams out, either). Â Still, those who are new or outsiders aren't shunned in the slightest. Â You might not get first attention as you attempt to buy a drink, but nobody is staring at you until you leave.
My last visit to Shannon's was my first in years, and I was amazed at how much the place (and the people!) had not changed. Â Everything was exactly how I remembered it. Â The only real difference was that now I could get bottles of Newcastle. Â If those are the only types of improvements Shannon's bothers to make over the years, I'm cool with that.