Posts Tagged ‘strip clubs’

Are Going to Strip Clubs Cheating?

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Well I have been around strip clubs for over half my life and have often wondered what others thought about the concept of is it considered cheating when going to strip clubs.

When it comes to men’s favorite pastimes such as sports, cars, naked women ranked in the top three.  While taking part in the first two may cause a girlfriend or a wife to voice harmless complaints.  But to indulge in the last one could have you taking up residence in the doghouse.  And could be permanently…..

In some cases men have made the strip club a part of their weekly guy’s night out.  Even though their partner may not approve.

These men argue that no looking plus no touching means no cheating.  But all the while the women believe that enjoying the view of a pole dancer showing off her goodies is just plain and simply put Cheating!

So….. can you stare at a gyrating, hip thrusting G-string without having to repent with a dozen Hail Mary’s afterwards?

Give us some feed back would love your input on the subject.  Just write in the comment box and let us hear what you have to say.

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

 

Akron Woman Robbed in Strip Club Parking Lot

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Police arrested a 41-year-old Akron man who allegedly robbed a woman early this morning in the parking lot of a local strip club.

Police located Kenneth Johnson of Inman Street in the 1000 block of Nadia Court after receiving a call that a 58-year-old woman was being robbed in the parking lot of the Platinum Horse Cabaret, 1027 E. Waterloo Road.

The victim told police Johnson came at her from behind shortly after midnight and knocked her down in an attempt to get her purse and car keys.

Johnson allegedly took the victim’s cell phone, which officers found in his pocket when he was arrested, police said.

Johnson was charged with robbery.

Source: Ohio.com

Strip Club Gets Upgrade– With Strings Attached

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

BEDFORD – New Hampshire’s first and only strip club has changed hands.

Mark’s Showplace, at 390 S. River Road, today officially became The Gold Club restaurant and gentlemen’s club, a chain based in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

The club, about a quarter mile from the Merrimack line in an industrial zone, got a face lift in preparation for tonight’s grand opening, but the entertainment remains the same, according to Michael Rose, The Gold Club’s vice president and chief operating officer.

Dancers at Mark’s wore g-strings and pasties to get around the law, and those at The Gold Club will have to do the same. Bedford’s ordinance banning nudity still applies.

Mark’s Showplace created big waves when it announced plans to move into this upscale bedroom community in 1999. The town got a temporary restraining order to prevent the club’s opening but eventually had to allow it after Police Chief David Bailey determined that partial nudity did not violate the ordinance.

This time around, according to Rose, 38, things weren’t so difficult.

“The town has been very welcoming to us, actually,” he said.

There is, however, one issue that could present a problem. Town law prohibits adult entertainment venues and other establishments that serve alcohol from staying open past 1 a.m. The Gold Club stays open until 2 a.m. Sunday-Thursday and until 4 a.m. Friday and Saturday.

The club does not plan to serve liquor past the legal cutoff of 1 a.m., Rose said. On the weekends, it will operate in the early-morning hours as “Club Insomnia,” featuring a “Legs & Eggs” buffet beginning at 2 a.m.

Bailey, the police chief, could not be reached for comment because he is on vacation this week.

Town Manager Russ Marcoux said he can’t speculate on whether the hours or any procedures at the new club violate town law. The police chief has asked the new owners to put the changes in writing, and those will be reviewed when they’re submitted, Marcoux said.

“If there is a problem, I’ll assure you, we will address it,” he said.

Marcoux said the town never had any problems with Mark’s Showplace while it was in business.

“They’ve always been, believe it or not, a good neighbor in this town,” Marcoux said.

The Gold Club will be open for lunch and dinner seven days a week. The club has multiple stages, a bar, VIP rooms and a mini-nightclub that can be booked for private parties. Renovations included new paint, carpets, furniture, lighting and sound and video equipment. The grand opening starts at 6 tonight.

The club has technically been under The Gold Club’s ownership since Dec. 14, according to day Manager Mike Pombrio, 24, but the Mark’s Showplace name was intentionally left in place prior to the grand opening.

On Wednesday afternoon, two men hoisted in a cherry-picker outside were changing the sign. Inside, a handful of customers milled about. A single dancer was on stage, still costumed.

The main room is dark with multicolored lights mounted to the ceiling. There’s a bar along the left wall and a big center stage surrounded by small round tables with zebra-patterned chairs.

Mark’s Showplace was modeled after a club by the same name in Portland, Maine. Owner Mark Deane sold the Portland club, which was later renamed, about 20 years ago. About a decade later, he opened the Bedford location.

“I felt there was a need, and there wasn’t one in the area,” said Deane said in a telephone interview Wednesday.

Deane, 56, who lives in Portland, sold the Bedford club about a year ago to spend more time with his wife, who had terminal cancer, he said. The new owners then sold it to The Gold Club.

The name of the most recent past owner is unknown, as is the reason for selling.

Deane said business at the club was good. He recalled having a great relationship with most people in town after the initial firestorm died down.

“It was a great business. The people were great,” Deane said. “Their concerns were addressed, and I had a great relationship with everyone from the police chief to the fire chief. Every town official.”

Source: nashua telegraph
Thursday Jan. 21, 2010
By Ashley Smith

Greensboro Files Lawsuit To Shut Down Bar, Strip Club

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

GREENSBORO — The city filed a civil lawsuit Wednesday to shut down a strip and nightclub complex where police say strippers have been engaging in prostitution and owners are violating state alcohol laws.

The clubs’ owner said he feels he is being unfairly targeted and looks forward to fighting the case in court.

Following numerous criminal complaints since 2001 and a seven-month undercover police investigation, the city is trying to close Bare Villa nightclub and Nakitas Play House, a strip club, both at 510 Farragut St.

The two clubs, which operate under one roof, are owned by Sugar Bare Entertainment. Until recently, the clubs were known as Lost Dimensions strip club and Bares Den nightclub.

“The message needs to be sent that if you are going to operate a sexually oriented business, you need to follow the guidelines and statute that are set forward,” police Chief Tim Bellamy said.

“Where unlawful acts occur that threaten the health and safety of this community, GPD is committed to acting aggressively to resolve the matter,” Bellamy said.

A judge has issued a temporary restraining order against both the business owner and property owner that prohibits any illegal activity at the clubs until a court hearing Jan. 28.

According to court documents and police officials, clubs at 510 Farragut St. have been the subject of nearly 60 serious police calls since 2001.

Most notably, the club has been the site of two homicides since 2007.

The most recent — the fatal shooting on April 12, 2009, of 30-year-old Carlton Smith — prompted a renewed interest by city leaders to consider closing the club through state nuisance abatement laws.

According to an affidavit, several undercover officers from the Greensboro Police Department and other agencies have visited the club multiple times since July.

In sworn statements, officers detailed sexual acts they witnessed the strippers performing with each other and patrons.

Officers also said the dancers solicited them for sex in special rooms at the clubs.

Officer statements also said they were able to move freely between the Bares Den, which had a valid state ABC license, and Lost Dimensions, the strip club located in the same building, which did not.

By allowing such activity, the owner would be violating state and local laws that govern alcohol sales and sexually oriented businesses.

Darryl McCarroll, the club owner, said the police department’s and the city’s actions are misguided.

“If they noticed something like (these allegations), they could have brought it to our attention earlier,” McCarroll said.

“We investigate things going on in our business, and we ensure we are following the statutes. It’s unfortunate that they had to use taxpayer money with something to try and close us,” McCarroll said, “when they should be trying to help us keep open. Gestapo tactics are in effect.”

The city’s and the police department’s concerns about the clubs aren’t new. In 2007, city leaders discussed a possible nuisance abatement case against the business, but nothing was done after the district attorney’s office declined to pursue the matter, saying that was the city legal department’s job.

The issue resurfaced last spring after Smith’s death. That prompted a presentation from Bellamy and Capt. Chris Walker about problems with the clubs and the unveiling of a plan to clean up crime in the Randleman Road corridor.

Walker said Wednesday that McCarroll has been warned repeatedly to clean up crime at the clubs.

“We did everything that we could over the past year and a half (that I have been over the southern district) to work with them,” Walker said. “If criminal activity is going to continue, we are going to work and put it to a stop.”

Douglas Smith, the father of Carlton Smith, said he supports any action that will help the community.

“I know closing it is not going to bring my son back, but if it could keep another family from what we’re going through … then yes, it needs to be closed down,” Douglas Smith said.

Source:News-record
By Ryan Seals
Thursday January 21, 2010

Strip club ‘would be a disaster’

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Strip club ‘would be a disaster’

A lap dancing and strip club in Wolverhampton city centre would be a “formula for disaster”, according to police bosses who have strongly objected to the plans.

Divas, which would transform a former bar and restaurant opposite one of the city’s main churches, has attracted a wave of protests from official agencies and local businesses.

Businessman Dharam Singh Jagpal wants to open a “gentlemen’s club” in Darlington Street aimed at Asian men which would employ women wearing traditional dress. He has applied for an all-night licence.

But police chiefs say they have serious concerns about the potential for crime and disorder at the club and accuse Mr Jagpal, aged 26, of putting little research into his application. The fire authority and environment services have also lodged complaints.

In a letter to the city council, Wolverhampton police licensing officer Natalie Holt says: “The operation in question covers alcohol consumption, sexual arousement and late-night opening.

“In fact, it would be the only place in the city to get a drink at that time, which the police see as a formula for disaster.”

She says Mr Jagpal has failed to address a number of issues, including the siting of three booths for private dances. For the women’s safety, there would need to be at least eight permanent security staff.

The police also argue that entry to the club would be via a quiet street, leaving it vulnerable to street robberies and attacks.

Councillor Roger Lawrence, leader of Wolverhampton Labour Group, who represents the area, has raised concerns about the congregating of men, possibly under the influence of drink, at unsuitable hours.

Mr Jagpal has applied for a licence from 9am through to 6.30am the following day.

Estate agents Whitegates has written a strongly worded objection.

The application will be discussed at a licensing sub-committee meeting.

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This article posted on August 5, 2009 at 11:30 am

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.

Incident At Vernon Strip Club Leaves Man In Critical Condition

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Incident At Vernon Strip Club Leaves Man In Critical Condition

By DAVID OWENS

The Hartford Courant

12:04 PM EDT, August 7, 2009

VERNON — – Detectives are investigating an assault outside a Windsor Avenue strip club that has left a man in critical condition at Hartford Hospital.

A Vernon police officer was patrolling the area along Route 83 when he saw several people fighting in the parking lot at Kahoots. People scattered and the officer found two injured men on the ground, Sgt. Dan Moore said.

One refused medical treatment. The other suffered serious head injuries and was taken to Rockville General Hospital, then flown to Hartford Hospital. He remains in critical condition. His name was not released.

“We’re actively investigating and we do have a suspect,” Moore said.