The classic pub, with its form, architecture, clientele, expectations, beverages, and legally enforced bedtime. I've gone by the Golden Hind on the bus a few times and wondered what that's all about and now I know that it's an early suburban superpub of a particular type, because all pubs are of a particular type while also being somewhat unique in a way that is strangled by the ownership of brewery owners that was exacerbated under Thatcher. Some pubs don't have a parking lot and some pubs really, really do, so we start there and move inwards, to the bar which isn't mandatory and has a lot to do with 19th century gin palaces, and the loo, which might not have existed for the ladies until the mid-'80s. If the pub serves food, how pretentious is it, and if it's that pretentious, is it really a pub? Pubs were disreputable but now they are considered mandatory and the British government talks about pub deserts, because people need a place to have a pint, because the alternative is going to the supermarket and drinking at home, and is that what society should be? In America, yes; in Britain, no. This was a great edition to the Object Lessons series. Cheers.