Kennyz wrote: Tavern on Rush and Gibsons are the archetypes. Both are expensive, with crappy food. Hey, you can't have everything.
I'm no apologist for these places, but your comment about Gibson's seems like hyperbole at best. Much better steak around town, for sure. However, Gibson's and the adjoining Hugo's do some things quite well, particularly with seafood in my experience. I had a kitchen tour once and was surprised/impressed to see the spotless room where the house fish guys break down whole, never frozen halibut, salmon, grouper, whatever daily. Same deal with the meat and veg prep stations. Veggies start with washing the mud off, not with a bag of frozen stuff. I half expected a high-end version of a Grizzlebee's set up. Not so. They take the product very seriously from what I can tell. Not a lot of Sysco around the kitchen.
Say what you want about the cattle call, Viagra, the dumb spiel with the raw meat, the silly giant desserts, I always manage to eat well by looking for some quirks on the menus (one can order from either or both in both restaurants): chopped liver (Gibsons menu) among the best in Chicago and anywhere, lake/yellow perch fry (Hugo's), avocado with king crab appetizer (Gibson's), soups, and a couple of other things are really quite good. Maybe this is damnation by faint praise, since I've essentailly abandoned red meat at Gibson's. However, once you are dragged in there for business dinners often enough, it turns out that certain not-steak items satisfy due to top notch ingredients and simple, competent cooking.