By: Nic Abelian
The honking starts mid-afternoon and doesn’t stop until well past midnight. Not angry honking — the greeting kind. Quick beeps for the regulars sitting outside. Longer ones for the owners if they’re visible. Sometimes a wave.
For a bar that opened just before last summer with no runway into peak season, this spontaneous soundtrack of acceptance means something. On a Greek island where some villages have traded their soul for boutique hotels and €30 salads, that honking is a referendum — the community saying: this place belongs here.
Inside, George — a Greek American who traded nearly a decade with global maritime companies in Manhattan’s financial district to launch a successful entertainment marketing firm — stocks shelves alongside Theo, who’s been running beloved restaurants on Paros long enough that most locals consider him family. They’re an unlikely partnership: Wall Street precision meets island-time wisdom.
But the bar works. It’s the kind of place where those who keep the island running drift in after their shifts to talk, drink, and not think about work for a while.
The honking knows what it’s celebrating.
The Wall Street Escape Artist
By 27, George was overseeing global trade routes in the corporate maritime industry. Working for international shipping firms operating across continents, he progressed from import-export to managing critical supply chains.
“I realized I was spending my best years not doing anything that would lead to change,” George recalls. “Staying there meant more years in offices, different departments — but no real chances at anything beyond the corporate game.”
The maritime industry’s loss became entertainment’s gain. George founded an independent marketing company focused on alternative industries, horror films, underground artists, and emerging talent in need of creative solutions on impossible budgets. He became the go-to problem solver for brands and productions, producing and consulting on film and music releases. The work carried him to red carpets, late nights, and creative circles where ideas moved faster than money. He earned awards for it.
A childhood dream eventually called him back to Paros, where he’d spent summers imagining a simpler, more meaningful life beyond the city. He saw an opportunity for another Hail Mary — this time toward something that would feed his soul.
The Local Visionary

Photo Courtesy: Look Cafe & Billiards Bar
If George’s story is about escape, Theo’s is about strategic expansion.
Born in Trikala, a city on the Greek mainland, Theo arrived in Paros and built methodically. He worked in local restaurants until he and his brother — also named George — were ready to open their own. What followed was textbook entrepreneurship: two beloved year-round souvlaki spots that stayed open when others closed seasonally.
Over the years, Theo became known not just for consistent quality, but for the kind of business instinct that turns good restaurants into community institutions — knowing when to expand, when to hold steady, and how to keep both tourists and locals equally satisfied.
“Everyone loves them,” says a longtime resident. “They’ve done so much for this part of the island. They’re really an important part of our community.”
His reputation opened doors that money couldn’t buy: supplier relationships built on trust, the respect of fellow business owners who saw him as a collaborator rather than competition, and deep community ties that transformed customers into family.
With two successful restaurants running smoothly, Theo saw something others missed — a billiards bar in Drios with real potential.
He just needed the right partner to execute the vision.
When Opportunity Meets Instinct
George was building a house in Paros, trading New York’s intensity for island life. He became a regular at Theo’s restaurants, and the two men quickly discovered they operated on the same frequency.
“Within a few visits, we weren’t just owner and customer,” George says. “We were part of the same circle.”
Two years passed. The friendship deepened. Then Theo approached George with a proposition — not another restaurant, but a genuine gathering place, one that served locals as authentically as it welcomed visitors.
The location was perfect: Drios, a village that has largely shielded itself from the mass tourism transforming the main towns of Naoussa and Parikia. Here, locals still outnumber visitors. Farmers still work the land. Greek heritage hasn’t been traded for boutique hotels.
The Accidental Alchemy
Look Café & Billiards Bar sits on the main road between Golden Beach and the entrance to Drios, with ocean views just across the street. As cars pass, drivers honk in greeting to a place already woven into daily life.
The pool tables are a throwback to 1990s Greece, when billiards cafés dotted every neighborhood — places where people smoked cigarettes, sipped whiskey or coffee, and spent entire nights over a game. It’s a culture that largely disappeared, and locals were genuinely excited to see it return.
The walls feature murals and paintings by local artists. The handmade pizza became an unexpected island favorite, and the venue has evolved into a destination for live sports — from Greek soccer to EuroLeague basketball — drawing passionate crowds.
It reflects both partners’ sensibilities: exhibitions drawing collectors and local creators, dance nights with local DJs that mix Greek tradition with modern energy, and themed events like Halloween parties.
When Australian travelers celebrating a milestone anniversary asked if Look would be showing the NRL Grand Final, there was a problem: the match aired before opening hours on a weekend morning. Someone laughed at the idea of opening early for them, calling it a waste of time.
George and Theo opened anyway.
“Ten people walked in that Saturday with the energy of a hundred,” George recalls. “They ordered about fifty beers in an hour. When they left, there were hugs, kisses, and a ton of love. They told us they could feel both the New York influence and the Greek soul in the space. It was one of those things you don’t forget.”
The Professional Vote
Perhaps the most meaningful validation comes from the island’s hospitality professionals themselves. When servers, bartenders, cooks, and managers from other establishments finish their shifts, many make their way to Look to unwind.
“These are the people who make the island work,” Theo says. “When they choose to spend their time here after long shifts, that trust means everything to us.”

Photo Courtesy: Look Cafe & Billiards Bar
What Success Actually Looks Like
The partnership works because both men bring something essential. Theo contributes entrepreneurial vision, community trust, and the kind of island business instinct that can’t be taught. George brings an international perspective, creative range, and the ability to bridge different worlds.
In an age of optimization and exit strategies, Look Café & Billiards Bar offers a different model—one that prioritizes community over expansion, authenticity over image, and long-term relationships over short-term profits.
For visitors seeking what Greek island life can still be, an evening at Look offers more than good food and games. It provides a glimpse of Greece that hasn’t been optimized or packaged for consumption — where community still means something, where business relationships remain personal, and where locals and visitors share space without either playing a role.
In Drios, where locals greet you with honks and the modern world feels blessedly distant, two entrepreneurs from different worlds are proving that old ways and new ideas aren’t enemies — they’re partners.
And every time someone walks through the door — whether for a quick game of pool, a bite and a drink, or simply a place where they’re known — that partnership comes alive in laughter, conversation, and the particular kind of magic that only happens when people build something real.
Join the locals and see for yourself how Wall Street meets the Aegean. Read more about Look Cafe & Billiards Bar on Google or follow them on Instagram.











