Posts Tagged ‘grove heights club’

Burlesque Hall Of Fame

Monday, May 9th, 2011

 

Stripper Halls of Fame Take Gloves Off
By NICK DIVITO
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
LAS VEGAS (CN) – The Burlesque Hall of Fame aka the “Stripper Museum in the middle of the Mojave Desert,” has come to blows with one of its former board members, whom it claims stole its identity and props to mount a competing venue.

The Burlesque Hall of Fame was founded in 1955 by Jennie Lee, a burlesque performer who also established the Exotique Dancers League of North America as a burlesque entertainers’ trade union.
Lee hosted gatherings for “members of the burlesque league” at her California home and night club “since at least as early as 1957,” according to the federal complaint. “These gatherings have included an awards element, recognizing excellence in the field of burlesque.”
Lee announced plans for the Burlesque Hall of Fame in 1965, and invitations were sent out.
Lee owned both The Blue Viking and The Sassy Lassy nightclubs in San Pedro, Calif., the latter of which is “widely recognized as the first public home of the ‘Burlesque Hall of Fame,” the complaint states.
The Sassy Lassy name and trademark has been used ever since on T-shirts, matchbooks and programs to promote reunions and burlesque events.
Lee and her husband, Charlie Arroyo, bought a 40-acre plot of land in Helendale, Calif., in the 1980s with the “intent of building ‘Jennie Lee’s Exotic World,’ incorporating a permanent burlesque museum, a ‘striptease school’ and a retirement community for elderly exotic dancers,” according to the complaint.
Jennie Lee died in 1990 “before her plans were fully realized.”
In 1990, former exotic dancer Mary Lee “Dixie” Evans moved to Helendale to care for Jennie Lee, and after her death, worked with Arroyo to help Lee’s dream become a reality.
They created the “Miss Exotic World Pageant,” “intending to draw attention to the art of burlesque and the fledgling Burlesque Hall of Fame Museum,” the lawsuit states.
The museum was incorporated as a California Public Benefit Corporation in 1998.
In 2000, Laura Herbert, a current board member for the Hall of Fame, first heard of this “stripper museum in the middle of the Mojave Desert,” and visited with her then-boyfriend, defendant Luke Littell, also a board member and pageant producer.
In 2002, Herbert launched a Miss Exotic World website to promote the pageant, and it became a “hub of the burgeoning neo-burlesque movement” with 1,800 members strong, the lawsuit states.
The event and museum outgrew the ranch, however, and Herbert and Littell sought out new locations for the pageant and museum, finally settling on East Fremont Street.
The show ran from 2006 to 2009 with increasing popularity. It was through staging the show at the Celebrity Theater that Herbert and Littell met defendant Frederic Apcar Jr., then part-owner of the theater, who said he was a member of a “well-known and affluent Las Vegas entertainment/show producer family,” according to the complaint.
Although the Hall of Fame and Apcar and Littell did not enter into a formal agreement, it was understood that in 2010, Apcar and Littell would produce the Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekend at the Plaza Hotel on Fremont Street.
After producing the event, the two “took possession of certain property belonging to the [Burlesque Hall of Fame], including items of the stage set and props from the event, memorabilia, T-shirts and other merchandise,” the complaint states.
Apcar and Littel also failed to pay the $30,000 minimum to the Burlesque Hall of Fame as promised, the plaintiff claims.
“When Apcar and Littel realized that the [Hall of Fame] would not sanction their handling of the 2001 Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekend and pageant, they surreptitiously entered into their own contract with the Plaza Hotel for their own burlesque event,” thereby precluding the Burlesque Hall of Fame from “holding its event there a second time,” the lawsuit states.
“More egregiously,” the lawsuit states, “Apcar and Littell used their prior connection with the 2010 Burlesque Hall of Fame Weekend and pageant to induce the Plaza Hotel to host the event in 2011.”
The Burlesque Hall of Fame says that Apcar and Littell have advertised their own 2011 burlesque event for the same weekend that the Hall of Fame intends to hold its event, and are using its Sassy Lassy Burlesque marks without permission.
The defendants are “taking in application fees, vending, retail and advertising fees and other income amounting to tens of thousands of dollars under the guise that their burlesque show is affiliated with and or sanctioned by plaintiff’s original and renowned Burlesque Hall of Fame,” according to the complaint.
Several burlesque pageant performers and attendees are boycotting the plaintiff’s event because of the confusion as to “which is the ‘real show’ and ‘to wait and see who is still standing in 2012,’” the Hall of Fame says.
It wants the defendants ordered to stop using its marks, and seeks compensatory, consequential, statutory and punitive damages for trademark violations, cybersquatting, unfair competition, deceptive trade practices, and breach of contract.
The Burlesque Hall of Fame is represented by Mark Tratos with Greenberg Traurig.

Newport’s Past Now A Movie Fodder

Monday, May 9th, 2011

 

Written by
Mike Rutledge
mrutledge@nky.com

 

NEWPORT – In the next year there may be two new films about Newport’s vice-filled past.

Ronald Goldfarb, a federal prosecutor who 50 years ago took to court several people accused of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Campbell County sheriff candidate George Ratterman, has optioned the dramatic rights to a 1995 book he wrote on the subject, “Perfect Villains, Imperfect Heroes; Robert F. Kennedy’s War Against Organized Crime.”

A script is near completion and a film could be finished as early as next year, Goldfarb said. Efforts to contact the filmmaker were unsuccessful.

Newport during the mid-20th century was the region’s illicit playground. Newport lured affluent couples to glittering nights of premier show-business entertainers and gambling. It was known for its brothels and strip clubs that catered to business conventions. It also was a nationwide hub for organized-crime betting transactions.

Against that backdropm Ratterman was arrested on morals charges after police found him in a Newport hotel room with an exotic dancer with the stage name April Flowers weeks after announcing he was running for sheriff to clean up Newport. Prosecutors later concluded Ratterman had been drugged.

“It’s such a colorful, interesting case that they don’t have to do anything imaginative with it,” Goldfarb said.

Meanwhile, Jerry Gels of Union and others are working on a documentary, “Newport, Kentucky: Gangsters, Gamblers and Girls,” which they hope will come out this fall. It recaptures what Newport was like when gangsters roamed the town. The documentary-makers, who had hoped to release the film sooner, actually have been helped by delays, Gels said.

In February they visited Las Vegas.

“We found some old gangsters and pit bosses who worked in Newport,” he said. That footage is being added to the documentary, which is financially backed by Eric Haas, co-owner of Newport’s Hofbrauhaus.

Gels is creating the documentary partly to spark more interest in the $15 Newport Gangster Tours he and others operate three times on Saturdays – 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 5 p.m.

 

Kinky and Dazzle’s hot and sexy outfits

Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

 

Here at Kinky and Dazzle we are up to making all kinds of new looks for the Exotic side in everyone…

 

Great outfits for your shows, at the club, fun times at homes and so much more.  We make a quality outfit and sure to have all your fans in awe when you walk out in this hot little number!

Sexy Red White and Blue Chaps!

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

This is a HOT & SEXY red white and blue chaps outfit…

Sure to have some hearts a racing with every shake and move!

This is a custom made outfit and would love to hear from you if this is something you would like to have. We can make this item in a color you would like as well
Great for any daring person that wants to make a statement!

Shoot us an email at kinkyanddazzle@gmail.com or call us anytime!

Look forward to hearing from you.

dancing at the club

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Well I have now been dancing for several months now … it has truly had its ups and downs… I have learned that a bunch of women working together can be very stressful..

It is truly a learning experience and would not have changed anything about this.. I have worked almost everyday or night the past 3 months… and have come to a conclusion that I like the being on stage strutting my stuff… I feel sooo sexy and having all eyes on me made me feel on top of the world! I think the hardest part is learnig who to trust and the not so trust worthy… over all I have not found anyone that is totally truthful…

I have more to post but will be back soon… thanks for listening and look forward to your comments.!

Passion

Detroit strip clubs face booze ban

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Detroit strip clubs face booze ban
Attorney says Detroit’s threat to end liquor sales if dancers don’t cover up is all-out war

Detroit –Detroit may soon deliver an ultimatum to its strip clubs: Cover up or no booze.

The City Council on Wednesday is set to weigh a broad crackdown that would ban alcohol at clubs with topless dancing. The new rules also would stop lap dancing, close VIP rooms and force dancers to wear opaque pasties — even at dry clubs.

The rules are certain to reignite debate over the city’s 31 topless bars, and owners are vowing a fight.

“The city of Detroit has now decided they want an all-out war,” said Michael Donaldson, an attorney for All Stars and the Penthouse Club. “They cannot win. They are being totally stupid.”

But city staffers point to state and national court cases that support the legality of an alcohol ban. Richard Mack, an attorney and member of Perfecting Church, said the city must reject its status as Michigan’s strip club capital and home to 31 of the state’s 81 topless bars.

“Our goal is to do all we can within the law to root them out,” Mack said. “We don’t want the city of Detroit to be the dumping ground for lascivious behavior.”

The crackdown stems from a court battle in which a federal judge in 2007 struck down Detroit’s regulations on where clubs could open and ordered them rewritten. City staffers have recast the laws, but they have added tougher restrictions elsewhere — such as the alcohol ban. Pastors and community leaders have pushed for the changes and persuaded the council to get advice from Scott Bergthold, a Tennessee attorney who has worked nationwide to shut clubs down.

Here are some of the proposed changes:

• Alcohol can’t be served at any existing or new topless clubs. Once the City Council passes the change, existing clubs would have until their license expires, which is renewed every year, or the anniversary of the date the law was passed, to comply. A Michigan Liquor Control Commission official said Monday it’s up to the city to set those restrictions on the liquor licenses.

• Dancers would have to be 6 feet from patrons and on a stage at all times. A stage must be at least 18 inches off the floor in a room of at least 600 feet. That requirement likely would stop clubs from letting customers interact with dancers in smaller rooms, often called VIP areas.

• Dancers would also have to wear pasties..

Several council members did not return calls Monday on whether they would support the proposals. And Mayor Dave Bing’s staff said he hasn’t seen the proposals.

Rob Katzman, owner of the Toy Chest Bar and Grille, said the potential changes would put nearly all of the clubs out of business.

“You could not operate,” said Katzman, who argued that most clubs cause no problems. “You just wonder what the motivation is.”

But Mack argued the clubs lower property values and increase crime.

“Whenever they want to do their dirt, they come into the city and then return to their white picket-fenced suburban communities,” Mack said. “We want the same white picket-fenced communities.”

U.S. District Judge Julian Cook ordered the city to rewrite its rules, finding they gave city officials too much power to deny new clubs and didn’t address how long they had to act on applications. Under the old rules, clubs had to meet 15 broad criteria — including claims they wouldn’t reduce nearby property values — before the city signed on.

Cook ordered the city to revise its rules “forthwith.”

But the city has repeatedly delayed doing so. All the while, the council and mayor’s office have frozen transfers of liquor licenses that would allow clubs to open. The city is facing at least five recent federal lawsuits over its laws governing adult businesses.

CU student aims to open topless café in Boulder

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

CU student aims to open topless café in Boulder
By Amy Bounds (Contact)
Monday, July 6, 2009

BOULDER, Colo. — Boulder’s Dan Kennedy wants to open a coffee shop — but instead of competing with the likes of Starbucks by offering specialty drinks, he wants to steam up basic coffee and pre-packaged pastries with topless waitresses.

He’s looking to open a shop in August, one day a week in the morning.

Kennedy — who said he will be a sophomore at the University of Colorado in the fall after transferring from Whitman College in Washington — has placed ads on Craigslist for bouncers and women willing to work topless, saying he’s interviewing three women and three potential bouncers Friday. He’s offering to pay the women $80 to $100 for a morning.

But he said he’s still researching the steps he needs to make the cafe legal. He also needs a location. His ideal spot would be a conference room at CU, though he’s also looking on University Hill.

By offering only drip coffee and prepackaged food, he said, “There’s no license and no regulations.”

But, CU spokesman Bronson Hilliard said, there are strict regulations governing businesses on campus — plus a student code of conduct that would prohibit operating an adult business at the university.

He said students can rent conference rooms for “normal campus activities,” such as study groups. Bottom line, he said, a topless coffee shop “is not going to be allowed.”

“This is a half-baked idea,” he said.

Kennedy said CU students are a big part of his target audience, and he’s considering charging a $12 cover fee to avoid attracting a crowd just looking to ogle the waitresses.

His job listing for the bouncer says the employee “will be checking IDs to make sure they are 18 plus. Making sure topless girls feel safe and no inappropriate behavior from customers.”

He acknowledged that some people likely will object to his risque business venture.

“It’s probably going to cause a pretty big stir,” he said.

A controversial topless coffee shop in a rural Maine town drew national attention — and was burned down in June by an arsonist after just four months in business. Before the fire, the owner had received 150 applications for 10 positions.

Locally, a strip club off the Pearl Street Mall that opened in late 2007 drew concerns from zoning and building-code officials soon after it opened. The city recently looked into ways to regulate adult businesses before they opened, but the Boulder City Council has yet to agree to any changes.

The city’s options include using zoning rules to limit where such establishments could open. Some cities, for example, forbid strip clubs from doing business within 1,500 feet of a church, school, child-care center, park or other adults-only venue.

The city could decide to issue licenses to strip clubs instead, a process that could resemble the way liquor licenses are handed out now.

Mayor Matt Appelbaum said it may be worth looking at the zoning regulations and giving the community a chance to offer feedback.

“Our regulations don’t really preclude these businesses,” he said. “There clearly are locations where they are not appropriate.”

City Councilwoman Susan Osborne said she doesn’t want the council to spend time on the issue, adding that she hasn’t seen much of a market for strip clubs and similar adult businesses in Boulder.

“There are so many big things going on right now,” she said. “This would just be a distraction.”

Will Pub Become Strip Club…

Monday, July 27th, 2009

In the Poconos a pub owner is trying to sell his business as a strip club and neighboring shops are not happy about it.

Werry’s Pub and Motel in Marshalls Creek is up for sale and one of it’s for sale ads is causing some controversy.

The owner said he took an ad out in an adult magazine trying to sell the spot as the perfect place for a gentleman’s club.

The owner, Middle Smithfield Township Supervisor Bob said, “It’s not 1940. It’s just another entertainment, a facility, it’s no different.”

He added, “It will not decrease property values.”

Township officials said right now the property isn’t zoned for a strip club but a new code book, which is expected to be adopted sometime this fall, would allow it.

“There’s a tree farm, a salon, a car place and then a strip club? It’s not necessary,” said Nicole Barbera. She works at a salon across the street from the property. “The Pocono Mountains is a family-oriented area. I don’t believe that a gentleman’s club is appropriate.”

Seth Richard agrees. He owns the tree farm next door. “I don’t feel it is necessarily a positive addition to our community,” he said.

The owner of the Werry Pub said a strip club might not be the only option. He said there are also talks to put in a drug and rehabilitation facility on the property, something local businesses said they would support.”

“I think that would be a positive addition to the community,” Richard added.

Sex Sells, but does it pay?

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Sex sells, but does it pay? Strippers claim Inver Grove Heights club violated wage law

By David Hanners
dhanners@pioneerpress.com
Updated: 06/03/2009 09:25:36 AM CDT

The King of Diamonds strip club’s Web site touts a “non-stop show” where “your dreams come true.”

Maybe for the customers of the Inver Grove Heights “gentleman’s club.”

But two strippers claim in a federal lawsuit that the club didn’t pay them wages and required them to pay the owners a nightly “house fee” for the privilege of working there.

King of Diamonds classified the women as independent contractors when they should have been salaried employees earning at least minimum wage, according to the suit, filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis.

The women allege that their only income came from customers’ tips. Besides having to pay a house fee ranging from $50 to $100 a night, they claim they were forced to pay the owners “late fees, fees for failing to sign up for their shifts in advance and fees for leaving early.”

“Certainly, in some instances, the entertainers would make money at the end of the night,” said E. Michelle Drake, a lawyer representing the women. “But there were some cases where they lost money. From a legal perspective, they shouldn’t.

“You can’t make your employees pay to come to work,” Drake said. “The law is very clear. Money only flows in one direction, from the employer to the employee.”

The club’s owner, Susan Kladek, said she hadn’t seen the lawsuit and would have to talk to her attorney before commenting on it.

“We have nothing to hide,” she said.

Susan Kladek is the wife of the club’s founder, Larry

Kladek. He gave up ownership in December, the same month he pleaded guilty to a single count of income tax evasion.
In September, a federal grand jury indicted Kladek on nine criminal counts that alleged he cheated the government out of nearly $913,000 by filing false individual and corporate tax returns between 2000 and 2003. He reached a deal with the U.S. attorney’s office, pleading guilty to a single count of income tax evasion. The other counts were dropped.

His sentencing will be July 8.

The women bringing the civil suit seek to make it a class action because they believe more than 100 former or current employees of the King of Diamonds could have been subjected to the same conditions. Drake said she hasn’t figured out how much the women are owed but says the sum “is substantial.”

The claims in the civil lawsuit involve Jessica Van Vliet, of St. Paul, who worked at the club as an entertainer from June 2006 to November 2007, and Rebecca Carlin, of Falcon Heights, another entertainer who worked there from May 2005 to April 2007.

Drake claimed the adult entertainment industry “is notorious” for classifying employees as independent contractors and not paying them wages. A check of two Minneapolis strip clubs — Déjà Vu and Sheik’s Palace Royale — found different approaches to paying performers.

“Most of the places don’t” pay, said a man who answered the phone at Déjà Vu and declined to give his name.

But Gary Scellin, area director of Sheik’s, said all the club’s workers “are paid employees.”

“They all have the opportunity to get tips, but they all make a salary. They get paid an hourly wage,” Scellin said. “As far as the industry goes, it varies from club to club. A lot of clubs have their entertainers contracted as independent contractors, not employees.”

But Drake said the U.S. Department of Labor considers entertainers at strip clubs to be employees. She said the clubs often take advantage of women, believing the workers won’t report workplace violations.

“The club took advantage of the fact that many women in this industry may be reluctant to raise a wage-and-hour claim in the courts because of concerns about coming forward about the kind of profession in which they engage,” Drake said.

“It’s perfectly legal, perfectly respectable, and these people are just as entitled to protection of wage-and-hour laws as anyone else,” she said. “They’re just as protected as pizza delivery drivers, people who work at Starbucks or people who work at Wal-Mart.”

The suit claims Van Vliet and Carlin were hired as entertainers and weren’t required to have specialized training or background.

“Defendants have, however: established specific work schedules for entertainers, required entertainers to dance at specified times and in a specified manner on stage, regulated entertainers’ attire and interactions with customers, and financed all advertising efforts undertaken on behalf of the King of Diamonds,” the suit says.

It also said that while the women got tips “in exchange for performing lap dances and/or for spending time with customers,” they were re-quired to share the tips with bartenders and disc jockeys.

The suit also includes wage-and-hour claims by two other women, one of whom still works at the King of Diamonds. Corbin Dantzscher, of South St. Paul, still works at the club as a “floor host,” while Brittina Hedman, also of South St. Paul, worked there from April 2008 until March.

Dantzscher and Hedman claim they didn’t get paid for all the hours they worked. Also, the suit contends that while they received tips, they were required to share them “with other employees who did not directly serve the customers who gave the non-entertainers those gratuities.”

“As a result of Defendants’ failure to pay employees for all hours worked, Defendants’ practices caused employees’ pay to fall below the minimum wage,” the suit contends.

David Hanners can be reached at 612-338-6516.