I personally never understood the whole stigma surrounding the use of the Bridge with some folks.
To me, using the Bridge looks elegant when cued and then lifted-away from the table correctly - I am amazed how often I see people who are otherwise excellent pool-players, handle the removal and lifting-away of the Bridge like a scene from The 3 Stooges - and, I mean elegant in terms of a surgeon concentration on making a careful incision.
Way back in my youth, in either Ray Martin's 99 Critical Shots in Pool, or, Minnesota Fats' On Pool - both being the 1st 2 books I read on playing pool as a youngster - the suggestion was put forward by the author to practice all shots with the Bridge, and not to neglect integrating practicing with the Bridge regularly within the other training.
I followed that advice, and it served me well.
I also recall as a young teen, how we at first deemed the Bridge as 'very uncool' to use - especially after learning from older teenagers how to do the 'behind the back' shot as an alternative solution. However, today, and for many, many years, whenever I see some grown adult pull that 'behind the back' move, rather then employing the Bridge, it just screams "Amateur Pre-Teen shooting pool in the basement rec-room" to me.
I know for a fact that I subconsciously judge a fellow-player's overall "Cuemanship" level on how well - or not! - he handles the Bridge. I have always found it jarring and discordant to watch an excellent shot & position player, suddenly look awkward and uncomfortable when the Bridge is called for. Of course this immediately flags in my mind, someone who didn't follow that advice about practicing with and learning to properly handle the Bridge - regardless if they make the shot or not.
I don't know, maybe I am a 'Bridge Snob'; but to me, it just looks so bad when I watch the obvious discomfort, and then, when the two stick awkwardly and clumsily separate and flail about with an improper take-away removal ; and, concerning those people who poo-poo the Bridge as a 'Crutch, B-Stick, etc', just seem to me to be announcing their ignorance and lack of complete appreciation for the craft of this aspect of the cuing arts.
Yeah, so rightly or wrongly, I guess I have to own it, I am a Bridge-snob. - GJ