Posts Tagged ‘Lingerie’

Strip Clubs “Dying” In City

Monday, May 9th, 2011
BY CRAIG PEARSON, THE WINDSOR STAR MAY 2, 2011

Windsor’s once-mighty stripclub industry is becoming skimpier.

Could Windsor be shedding its Sin City image?

“It’s a dying business for various reasons,” said city solicitor George Wilkki, who is familiar with club licensing. He argues that the border, the dollar and the Internet have cut into the sexy entertainment. “I don’t know if there’s any hope for it.”

In its heyday in 1985 -when the city put a moratorium on issuing more adult-entertainment licences in the city core -Windsor boasted as many as 12 strip parlours.

In that era, the notoriety of “the Windsor ballet” grew in Michigan, where dancers must wear G-strings. Licensed Ontario exotic dancers, however, can take it all off.

According to city clerk Valerie Critchley, over the last decade Windsor has typically had nine or 10 strip clubs. As recently as 2008, there were 10. In 2009, it dropped to nine, in 2010, eight, and now it has fallen to six: Cheetah’s, Leopard’s, Studio 4, Silver’s, T-Zers, and Legends of 2012.

Some of the highest-profile clubs in the city have closed in the last year or two: Jason’s, Danny’s and the Million Dollar Saloon.

The owner of the Million Dollar Saloon building donated the club’s furniture to Habitat for Humanity last week, predicting that the venue’s days as a strip club have ended.

And the former Jason’s -once the starlet of local burlesque, after stepping into the spotlight in 1984 -opened briefly as the new Danny’s all-male revue. Three weeks ago it became the Venue Rock Parlor, offering hard rock, not hard bodies.

“My partners and I didn’t want to take on the strip club angle,” said George Marar, who along with partners Seth Perera and Scott Stevens replaced the former Jason’s stage with a guitar-shaped dance floor. “But what we did want to do is kind of revitalize the rock ‘n’ roll industry. We wanted to attract a new market, so what you have to do is concentrate on throwing a good party.”

Yet while Windsor’s strip-club party has petered out somewhat, the show is ready for a second act, according to Rob Katzman, who owns adult-entertainment emporiums in Windsor and the U.S.

“The adult-entertainment industry did, in fact, shrink,” said Katzman, who noted that his best year came in 1999. “It started in ’07, because of all the same reasons the casino encountered: the changing dollar, the border, passports. It’s fewer Americans. And also, the economic impact.

“So when the economy changed in Windsor, not only did we lose Americans, but we also lost Canadians. At one point we were down 24 per cent from the top revenue years in Windsor.”

The list of nudie bars which have come and gone in the city is lengthy. To name a few: Collars and Cuffs, The Beanery, the Latin Quarter, the Kilarney, The Riviera, Tricia’s, the President’s Club, the Sandhill, and the one that likely kicked off the naughtiness in Windsor, Tracy Starr’s, which offered burlesque shows where condo highrises now stand at Riverside and Goyeau.

But Katzman says his two current Windsor clubs, Cheetah’s and Leopard’s, are taking off again. Three weeks ago, they hosted six bachelor parties, all with American clientele, he said.

“We’re seeing a real resurgence,” Katzman said. “Our numbers now are meeting 2005 revenue levels. And that has just started to happen in the last eight months.”

Katzman said more customers, Americans as well as Canadians, are starting to open their wallets for luxury entertainment. More of his entertainers hail from Europe these days, he now regularly welcomes female customers and he has tried successful special events such as alternative-lifestyle shows.

He feels so confident about Windsor’s rebounding economy, in fact, he plans to open a new adult-entertainment venue -possibly called Roxie’s -in the basement of the former Jason’s. And he hopes to reopen Danny’s at its original space at 1271 Riverside E., after what he calls the “hiccup” of moving it to the high-traffic downtown, where he discovered women felt uncomfortable walking into a male strip club.

Yet he knows a market still exists for sex appeal.

“I’m telling you, Windsor is coming into its own, I can smell it,” he said. “The wave is coming.

“This is the most excitement I’ve felt in a decade.”

* * *

Coun. Alan Halberstadt noted that body-rub parlours have also diminished.

“I think Windsor’s image is changing,” he said. “The smart city stuff is positive. The green industry stuff is positive.

“But we still have a long way to go. Our unemployment rate is still high, our vacancy rate is still high.”

Though Halberstadt likes the idea of fewer adult-entertainment venues, he doesn’t want to see strip clubs simply close with nothing in their place.

“I guess the question is, what’s going to replace these strip clubs?” he said. “At one point, Jason’s was the strip club that made Windsor famous. Now it’s gone.”

The moratorium on more adult-entertainment venues still exists on Windsor’s books, so prospective club owners would have to apply to city council for the right to open a new saloon’s doors.

Over the last decade, when an entrepreneur proposed turning the old Salvation Army building (now the St. Clair College Media-Plex) into a mega adult club, the plan was nixed. When another brought in a group of neighbours who supported his plan to open a strip bar on Sandwich Street, council gave the go-ahead to the President’s Club, though it later burned down.

- – -

Windsor defence lawyer Patrick Ducharme built a mini-industry around defending adultentertainment clubs. Starting in the early ’80s, he went to trial 163 times for indecent theatrical performances and nudity in a public place, representing strip clubs in Windsor, London, Sarnia, Toronto and Ottawa.

He had to appeal a few convictions but, in the end, he won every single case -and helped pave the way for dancers in Canada to perform fully nude.

The legal battles came as the racy clubs revved up. In 1987, the Fifth Estate filmed a profile in Windsor called Tijuana North.

“At Jason’s they would pull up in stretch limos,” said Ducharme, who considers his efforts a triumph for freedom of expression. “They would want to bring in parties of 50 people.

“In those days, the owners were carrying money out of there in wheelbarrows.”

Though the local scene has cooled off, Ducharme said, he still represents hot adult clubs in the Detroit area and elsewhere. He said Windsor’s challenges stem from the border and the Canadian dollar, not from lack of interest.

“The reality is, it’s not that these clubs are not popular,” he said. “These place are going to carry on and do well anywhere customers can go easily.”

- – -

What type of business does striptease represent for dancers today?

“It has been consistent since I started,” said Raven, 22, toned and statuesque in her high heels, who has worked at Cheetah’s for two years and quit a full-time job to take to the stage.

“I was coming here when I was in school. I didn’t think I would come back as much as I did, but I ended up making the move to do this full time.

“During wedding season, with the bachelor’s parties, it’s crazy. Then you think it’s going to slow down but then something else is always going on.”

Her main goal from dancing: buying her own property, which she managed after just her first year.

“I can cover my mortgage, no problem, on an average night,” she said with a smile. “I do well.”

Read more:http://www.windsorstar.com/Strip+clubs+dying+city/4708007/story.html#ixzz1Lt6HtHeu

 

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.

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.

Man Shot Outside Daytona Beach Strip Club

Saturday, December 4th, 2010

DAYTONA BEACH — An Ormond Beach man got into an argument with bouncers at a strip club this morning and yelled racial slurs at them, police said, but when Jace David Keeler shouted the racial comments to people in a passing car someone shot him in the stomach.

Keeler, 21, was taken to Halifax Health Medical Center with a gunshot wound he suffered at 2:32 a.m. today near Diamond Dolls strip club at 301 Madison Ave., said police spokesman Jimmie Flynt.

According to the report of the shooting, Keeler was found lying on the ground near a utility pole and claimed a bouncer shot him. Police contacted the bouncers who told police Keeler got into an altercation with them earlier in the morning because Keeler was trying to sell drugs in the club.

The bouncers escorted Keeler out. Once outside, Keeler danced in the street and slapped his belt on the pavement yelling racial slurs at the bouncers, police said. Keeler kept putting his hands in his pocket as if he was going for a gun but never produced a weapon.

A black Chevrolet Caprice approached Keeler as he walked west on Madison Avenue and the driver asked Keeler what he was saying. Keeler then told the car’s driver, “I am not talking to you. I am talking to the (racial slur deleted) at the club,” police said.

The driver of the car then stepped outside and appeared to fire in the air but the adult club bouncers heard the shot and saw Keeler fall to the ground, the report states

County, strip club feud spills into court

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

County, strip club feud spills into court
By: William C. Flook
Examiner Staff Writer
August 6, 2009

Paper Moon, a Springfield strip club that has operated under Fairfax County’s microscope since it opened a year ago, is asking a judge to reverse the county’s recent crackdown on it.

As one of only two gentleman’s clubs in Fairfax, Paper Moon’s activities have been the subject of extraordinary scrutiny by authorities, who in December cited the club for a handful of parking and occupancy violations. The county has told the Amherst Avenue establishment to correct the problems or shut its doors.

Some neighbors and revitalization groups are hoping for the latter outcome. They see Paper Moon’s presence as a hindrance to economic development in an area desperately in need of it. Lee District Supervisor Jeff McKay, a longtime critic of Paper Moon, denied it was being singled out, however.

“I don’t care what kind of business they’re operating; if they’re in violation of our county codes and ordinances, then they deserve to be in court,” McKay said. “There are laws in our county, and if you break them, we ought to be taking you to task for them.”

The contention stems from the club’s peculiar legal situation. Its predecessor, the Dauphine Steakhouse, was grandfathered as a “commercial nudity establishment” when the use was prohibited in the area in 1980. Paper Moon inherited that exception — but, because it must retain Dauphine’s exact footprint, the club is not allowed to expand in any way.

Paper Moon, in a circuit court filing challenging the Fairfax County Board of Zoning Appeals, says the citations are unwarranted. County authorities say the building exceeded maximum occupancy of 104. The club claims it can legally hold twice as many people.

Paper Moon is the only business on its lot but is only allowed a limited area in which its patrons can park. McKay said inspectors found patrons parking in spaces outside that area — spaces designated for tenants that have since closed up shop — resulting in another citation.

Paper Moon has kept a low profile as a business and has maintained the “curb appeal” of the property, said Nancy-Jo Manney, executive director of the Greater Springfield Chamber of Commerce.

“Is it a desired business in the community? No, it is not,” she said.

Officials with the business in Springfield and at the chain’s headquarters in Richmond did not return calls for comment.

Strip club expansion uncertain, but it certainly doesn’t fit in

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Strip club expansion uncertain, but it certainly doesn’t fit in
MIKE HENDRICKS COMMENTARY

Will the Crossroads district become home to yet another strip club?

Or are the folks who run the “Totally Nude” juice bar, aka Temptations, toying with City Hall by putting up a sign on the vacant building next door that seems to promise another sexually oriented business on Grand Boulevard?

No answers so far, as the lawyer representing the business — or businesses — hasn’t made it clear to city officials — or returned reporters’ phone calls.

But say this for that bright yellow awning at 1515 Grand Blvd.: You can’t miss it.

Not with “Barely Legal” in big, black letters just a block or so from the Sprint Center.

“When you put up a sign like that, it raises eyebrows,” said inspector Derrick Lloyd in the city’s Planning and Development Department.

Eyebrows and hackles both.

“It’s absolutely frustrating to the (neighboring) property owners,” said David Morris, president of the Crossroads Merchants Association.

From the parks board to the Regulated Industries Division, there’s no lack of interest at City Hall.

“So far, no one has applied for a license to operate any kind of a business there,” said regulated industries chief Gary Majors.

But concerns about the sign — and what it might portend — have city lawyers mining the municipal code for answers to whether the “Barely Legal” sign is itself legal.

“We don’t think it is,” said Denise Phillips at the Department of Parks and Recreation, which regulates the city’s boulevard system.

As the awning juts into the public right of way, it might be in violation of the city code governing boulevards, she said.

Or not, depending on whether the awning was there before Grand became part of the boulevard system in 1988.

Meanwhile, city lawyers are trying to determine how the sign ordinance applies while Lloyd and his crew keep an eye out for permit violations.

“We’ve been by there every day,” he said.

Of course, none of this would be at issue had the City Council done the smart thing in 2008 and allowed Temptations to expand into the building next door.

Class the place up a bit — that was the idea. Get a liquor license, which would mean no more nude entertainment. Dancers would have to wear pasties at the very least.

Therefore, Crossroads merchants might have said goodbye forever to the “Totally Nude” sign, which is not at all in keeping with the area’s ever-so-trendy image. In September, an international TV audience will be watching as some of the top bicycle racers in the world zip past in the Tour of Missouri.

But no. The council caved to pressure from prudes who felt the expansion would lead to more sexually oriented businesses.

Yeah, well, that sure worked out swell now, didn’t it?

“I was for it,” Morris said. “It was certainly better than what we’ve got now.”

Which is barely legal — or not.

To reach Mike Hendricks, call 816-234-7708 or send e-mail to mhendricks@kcstar.com.

Suspect named in killing at strip club arizona daily star

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Tucson Region
Suspect named in killing at strip club
By Phil Villarreal
arizona daily star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 08.08.2009

Tucson police have obtained an arrest warrant for a man suspected in the killing of David H. Tyne outside the Candy Store strip club July 30.
Police are looking for Andre “Dre” Lightsey-Copeland, 28. Copeland is 5 feet 10 inches tall, weighs 150 pounds and has brown hair and eyes. He’s considered armed and dangerous, police said.
On July 30 at 5:02 p.m., police say a man confronted Tyne inside the strip club, on South Craycroft Road near East 22nd Street. One man lured Tyne outside where the other man was waiting, and Tyne was shot. He was taken to University Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
One of the men drove away in a white 2005 Chevrolet Impala with Arizona license plate AFW2356 while the other man fled on foot.
Anyone who spots Copeland or the vehicle should call 911 or 88-CRIME.
Contact reporter Phil Villarreal at 573-4130 or pvillarreal@azstarnet.com

Tucson police have obtained an arrest warrant for a man suspected in the killing of David H. Tyne outside the Candy Store strip club July 30.

Air workers in calendar stripper row

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Air workers in calendar stripper row
By Stephen Moyes 22/12/2008

Fun Stories to read from the past

Airport staff were banned from making a nude charity calendar because bosses thought it might put off potential buyers of Gatwick.

The fundraiser for children with cerebral palsy was to feature 40 men posing for raunchy shots round the site.

It had won the backing of the managing director.

But just as workers were ready to strip, the new director of communications banned the shoot as he felt it was inappropriate.

Calendar organiser Alan Skinner was told bad press could affect the airport’s sale.

The BAA security guard said: “I’ve no idea how a calendar with workers raising funds for charity would influence this. If anything it would have shown we’re a forward thinking company. I’m sure we’d have sold hundreds.”

BAA Gatwick replied: “The idea showed real creativity, but the calendar boys theme was felt inappropriate in a work situation. It is important we work hard to protect the airport’s reputation.”

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.

Take me out to the strip club… Judge says play ball

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Ah, baseball.

America’s pastime. Cracker Jack. Cold beer. Hot dogs.

And body glitter?

That’s the upshot of a decision issued Friday by a King County Superior Court judge, who cleared the way for a proposed Déjà Vu strip club — adult cabaret in the court’s parlance — near Safeco Field.

Stripper’s pole meets foul pole.

Over the objections of the Seattle Mariners and the public utility that operates the field, Judge John Erlick found that the City of Seattle did not err in permitting the proposed First Avenue club.

Erlick rejected the Mariners assertion that the City Council meant to keep strip clubs at least 800 feet away from “areas where children congregate” or sports arenas. That language is absent from the city ordinance drafted after Seattle’s wholesale ban on new strip clubs was rejected as unconstitutional.

“If (the council) had intended to require dispersion from all places where children tend to congregate, it would have specifically included that language,” Erlick said Friday. “This court refuses to read words into the ordinance which do not exist in the plain language.”

During an earlier hearing, attorneys for the Mariners argued that the city had erred in permitting the club because Safeco should be considered a park or open space. One area the Mariners pointed to was a park is primarily used for bus parking; another is private property that may be developed in the future.

The proposed Déjà Vu would be on First Avenue South just south of Safeco Field, about 400 feet from the main home-plate entrance. The rear door of the club would be about 120 feet from a parking garage plaza where school buses frequently drop off students attending games.

Opponents of the club will decide in coming days whether to appeal Erlick’s ruling, said Bart Waldman, Mariners executive vice president for governmental affairs.

“We’re obviously disappointed,” Waldman said. “For now, we’re just going to absorb the opinion.”

Lauding the ruling, Peter Buck, attorney for the club owners, said the Mariners’ moralizing throughout the legal proceeding strained credulity.

Buck dismissed the Mariners’ assertions that children would be harmed by the strip club as specious.

Buck noted that a Déjà Vu club across First Avenue from Pike Place Market has done little to discourage or offend tourists there. And, like all Washington state strip clubs, the proposed facility will not serve alcohol.

The Mariners, however, do at Safeco Field.

“The Mariners mainly made a moral pitch, that this facility would be harmful to children,” Buck said. “If they were really worried about children, they’d clean up their own act.”

Erlick’s ruling marked the first serious test of the 4-year-old restrictions on where strip clubs can be. Buck praised it as showing that business owners can get a fair shake, regardless of the business they’re in.

“It means that an operation such as my client’s can rely on the law as it is written,” Buck said. “This law isn’t about someone’s moral values.”

The Mariners have 30 days to file an appeal. If the team doesn’t appeal, Buck said the club will likely open in six months.