Against the Grain Brewery & Smokehouse Reviews
Louisville
401 E Main St
Average Rating: 4 out of 5 (19 Reviews)
Review by Eric K.
Food and service were great! I had The Texan (sausage) and my wife had the Borscht (soup of the day). We had the pork nachos which were stellar! Great…
Rating: 5
Review by Robyn S.
I’ve had both lunch and evening beers at ATG and I love it. The servers were helpful and friendly, the food unusual and tasty, and the beer selections…
Rating: 5
Review by Marianne C.
Four stars for the thoughtful waitress, but two stars for the poor food selection and general disappointment experienced. We walked here from the Brown,…
Rating: 2
Cafe 360 Reviews
Louisville
1582 Bardstown Rd
Average Rating: 2 out of 5 (26 Reviews)
Review by Drew P.
This place is completely unacceptable in every way.
To start, the decor is a poorly executed, do it yourself, bourgeois mess. Yeah they have hookah, I…
Rating: 1
Review by Venkatesh B.
I go to this Cafe for a few drinks, an occasional hookah and some good ‘ol Indian dishes, mind you they are pretty tasty. So when I’m there although I seem…
Rating: 3
Review by Sean G.
Although there are a few nice paintings on the walls, the service here is the worst I have ever experienced in over 40 years as a Louisville resident. They…
Rating: 1
Civil Warriors: The Legal Siege on the Tobacco Industry

Ron Motley hardly slept the night before the verdict.He went to bed in his suite on the seventh floor of the Radisson at ten o’clock complaining of a headache and never really dozed off. His bodyguard, a refrigerator-sized black man named Larry who once provided security for the Saudi royal family, watched television with him and retired to his room.Larry was there because Motley had received a steady stream of death threats since he started suing tobacco companies four years earlier. Another came a week before.“We know where you are and you’ll be dead by midnight,” said a voice on his answering machine back home in South Carolina.By the spring of 1998, the anti-tobacco side had lost a lot of sleep worrying about stolen information, tapped phones, hidden documents and death threats. It gave rise to jokes about living in a John Grisham novel, but it wasn’t very funny for those on the inside of the experience. Jeffrey Wigand, a tobacco whistleblower and close friend of Motley’s, moved out of Louisville, Kentucky after being threatened by telephone and having a bullet left in his mailbox. The bullet was an armor-piercing Israeli specialty round, a very nasty addition to the day’s bills and letters. A lawyer for another ex-tobacco insider became convinced he was being followed one day in traffic, jumped out of his car at a red light, ran back to the other car and screamed that if he ever saw the driver again, he’d beat him to a pulp.Motley wondered whether it was all a continuum. Would an industry that lied and shredded also wiretap and have you followed? Would they put a bullet in your mailbox?Would they beat you up? Ness, Motley, Loadholt, Richardson & Poole, Motley’s law firm in Charleston, South Carolina, which had spent million on tobacco cases and so far received not a red cent in return, took no chances. They hired the best bodyguard they could find, and
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