Bar in Milwaukee, United States
Who's on Third
100ptsNorth Side Neighborhood Pour

About Who's on Third
On Milwaukee's Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Who's on Third occupies a stretch of the city where neighborhood bars carry the weight of local identity. The address puts it in a corridor of North Side spots with genuine character, the kind that reward visitors willing to move past the obvious downtown circuit and follow the city on its own terms.
A Corner of Milwaukee Worth Finding
Milwaukee's drinking culture has always been layered. The city built its identity on large-format brewing, then watched that infrastructure give way to something more granular: neighborhood bars that operate as community anchors rather than destination concepts. The North Side stretch of Martin Luther King Jr. Drive carries that tradition forward. Who's on Third sits at 1007 N Doctor M.L.K. Jr Dr, a direct address that tells you nothing about what draws people there and everything about where it stands relative to the city's center of gravity.
The corridor has a different rhythm from the tightly programmed bar scenes on Water Street or in the Third Ward. Venues along this stretch tend to be longer-lived, less concerned with press cycles, and more focused on the regulars who make a place functional on a Tuesday than the visitors who appear on a Saturday. That context shapes what Who's on Third is and what a first-time visitor should expect when they walk through the door.
What the Room Tells You
Milwaukee's neighborhood bar interior is a recognizable type: low light, a long bar rail, the particular acoustics of a room that has absorbed years of conversation. Bars in this tradition are not designed to photograph well; they are designed to feel right once you are inside, with the kind of atmospheric density that comes from consistent use rather than deliberate curation. The sensory register at a place like this runs on wood, glass, and the low murmur of a room that knows itself. It is a different proposition from the polished technical programs at venues like Kumiko in Chicago or the structured craft formats at Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu, where the design intent and the drink program are inseparable. Here, the bar is the experience, and the drink is secondary to the room.
That distinction matters for calibration. Visitors who arrive expecting a cocktail menu built around clarified spirits or a tasting flight of local craft beer will have misread the room. What the neighborhood bar format offers instead is a social environment that has its own internal logic, one that rewards engagement over observation. The sound of the room, the light level, the pace of service: these are not incidental details but the actual content of the experience.
Milwaukee's North Side Bar Tradition in Wider Context
Within Milwaukee, Who's on Third occupies a position that is distinct from the more widely covered venues on the city's drink circuit. The cocktail-forward bars that draw the most editorial attention, including At Random with its vintage tiki format and Birch, represent a different segment of the market. Boone & Crockett sits in the craft cocktail tier where program depth and ingredient sourcing drive the editorial narrative. Who's on Third is not competing in that tier, and understanding that positioning is useful before a visit.
The comparison that matters more is with other long-running North Side spots that function as neighborhood institutions rather than destination bars. In that peer set, the criteria for assessment shift: longevity, consistency, community function, and the degree to which a place has become part of its block's identity. Those are harder to quantify than Michelin recognition or a placement on a ranked spirits list, but they are no less real as indicators of a bar's standing. For context on how seriously Milwaukee takes its bar culture at both ends of the format spectrum, see our full Milwaukee restaurants guide.
The broader national picture places venues like Who's on Third in a category that receives less attention than their craft-forward counterparts but serves a larger share of actual drinking occasions. Bars such as Jewel of the South in New Orleans and Julep in Houston have built recognition through documented program rigor and award signals. Superbueno in New York City, ABV in San Francisco, and The Parlour in Frankfurt on the Main each represent the technical and editorial tier of the global bar world. Who's on Third operates outside that framework, which is not a criticism but a category clarification.
What to Eat and Drink
Specific menu details for Who's on Third are not on record, and inventing them would be a disservice to a bar that operates on its own terms. What the neighborhood bar format reliably delivers in Milwaukee is a draft beer selection anchored in regional production, a direct spirits rail, and bar food calibrated for the room rather than for a review. The operative question is not whether the cocktail program has a philosophy but whether the beer is cold and the food arrives quickly. On that axis, the long-running North Side bar generally performs well by design.
For visitors who want a more structured food and drink experience in the same city, Braise Restaurant & Culinary School operates a farm-sourcing model with documented culinary programming that places it in a different register entirely. Both are worth knowing about; they serve different purposes on the same city map.
Planning a Visit
Who's on Third is located at 1007 N Doctor M.L.K. Jr Dr, on Milwaukee's North Side. Phone, website, and hours are not confirmed in current records, so the practical approach is to treat it as a venue you arrive at rather than one you book in advance. Walk-in access is the standard format for this category of bar, and mid-evening visits on weeknights will typically find the room at its most legible: occupied enough to have atmosphere, spacious enough to find a seat at the rail. Weekends draw a denser crowd, which changes the acoustic and social texture of the room considerably. Pricing at neighborhood bars in this part of Milwaukee runs well below the craft cocktail tier, making it an accessible stop on a longer evening that might start or end somewhere more formally programmed.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I try at Who's on Third?
- Specific menu details are not confirmed, but the neighborhood bar format in Milwaukee reliably delivers draft beer from regional producers and direct bar food. Order what the room suggests: the draft selection is the reliable anchor in this category, and the food is built to complement a long stay rather than to headline a meal.
- What makes Who's on Third worth visiting?
- Its value is positional rather than award-driven. It sits on a North Side corridor that carries Milwaukee's neighborhood bar tradition without the self-consciousness of a destination concept. The city's craft and cocktail bar scene has its own documented tier, including At Random and Boone & Crockett, but this stretch of MLK Drive offers a different register of the same city's drinking culture.
- Can I walk in to Who's on Third?
- Walk-in access is standard for this format. No booking platform or confirmed reservation system is on record. Phone and website details are currently unavailable, so arriving in person is the most reliable approach. Weeknight evenings tend to offer the most comfortable entry.
- What kind of traveler is Who's on Third a good fit for?
- It suits visitors who want to move beyond the curated bar circuit and spend time in a room shaped by neighborhood use rather than editorial positioning. It is not a match for travelers prioritizing documented cocktail programs or Michelin-adjacent dining. It is a good match for those who read a city through its working bars rather than its showcase venues.
- Is Who's on Third worth the prices?
- No confirmed price data is on record, but the neighborhood bar category in Milwaukee's North Side runs at the accessible end of the city's pricing spectrum, well below the craft cocktail tier. The proposition is a low-threshold entry point into a part of Milwaukee that receives less itinerary attention than the Third Ward or downtown core.
- How does Who's on Third fit into Milwaukee's broader North Side neighborhood bar scene?
- MLK Drive has historically supported a cluster of bars that function as community institutions rather than programmatic concepts. Who's on Third sits within that tradition, which distinguishes it from both the tourist-facing venues downtown and the award-tracked craft bars covered in most Milwaukee drinking guides. For visitors building a full picture of the city's bar culture, it represents a category that the standard editorial circuit tends to underweight.
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