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If clubs can’t evolve that it their own fault. Every type of venue i have mentioned is within walking distance of my apt. Totally irrelevant. Even formerly important clubs are nowadays full of tourists and kids. Back then, the fun was out in the blubs. This trend isn’t only exclusive to the United States; the U.K. has also been experiencing a similar drop in their once world-renowned nightlife scene. I agree with some of your points that the clubs need to evolve, but many other people in the business as well as a large amount of patrons dropped off when smoking laws took effect. Is the Restaurant “scene” the new Night Club “scene” ?? However the font color and font are really hard to read on this these Gen-Y eyes. Traveling to exotic locales ranks among the preferred expenditures of millennials. Because the runaround gets old and they’re expensive. Not just let us in, we will easily spend 100-200 on drinks. With less time, money and energy to spend on going out, fewer things are worth the raging hangover. Stay up to date with all things New Theory. The truth is, we’d rather splurge on an experience at a club while on vacation in Miami, Vegas, NYC, etc. We saw how well that level of materialism worked out for our parents…. Since downloading made any shmo able to get a big collection, there are a lot of “DJs” out there who have no business behind the deck. I love how boomers especially love to crap all over the generation THEY raised. Don’t blame us for not blowing away money we don’t have. Bars are dying,” he said, adding he had heard that 20 to 25 per cent of around 2,000 bars had closed for good, but “it could go higher”. in my case they hate to leave my uber car. ‘Good riddance”. OMG! . This did not happen when I first went clubbing, if we wanted to talk we went outside or removed ourselves from the dance floor to talk on the sidelines. So with that being said, the “music/dance” scene is simply evolving. I feel more secure at home and I do have fun with friends and family. I’m into Goth/Industrial music which is quite a strong scene in Europe, Scandinavia, South America etc and survives as a niche in the States. As a 60 plus “millennial” who frequented the likes of Tramp, Regine, Chinawhite and ventured into a failed nightclub business I agree. You need to hang out with me, I go to the fun plays where people dance and don’t give a fuck about hierarchy. You show me a club where the staff is sugar sweet and I’ll show you a dead club LOL. The target demographics for nightclubs is really the (21-30 for male) (21-28 for female, with a 10% disclaimer for ladies underage who get in somehow). IT’s the CLUBS them selves Today THEY SUCK Nothing more than a bunch of DARK BLACK UGLY PIECES OF SHIT!! The only large club in Miami that is doing well is a club that is camouflaged as a sex club and stripper club. They are typically open, often outside and do not really have a pretentious feel. young folk just don’t know how to meet strangers in public. I’m 29 and the friends and family I hang out with range in age from 25 to 42. Regulations kill freedom. People want to club to have fun, dance, and be carefree with like minded people. The cause of the bad times for the night clubs is not generational or personal, it is actually macro economical… the ratio salary / life cost dropped down in the last 15 years due to the apogee of this stupid brain-less voracious global capitalism we are living nowadays, and this factor alone makes it dumb to spend the nights as we did in the past. Stupid problems abound, that could easily be fixed by a knowlegable event producer – but they won’t listen. “Millennials are a generation of adventure-seekers and thrive of the momentum of living for moments.”. “People mostly find new music on Facebook, SoundCloud, Twitter, Instagram, TV, and through friends,” says an anonymous source. People have always been cheap and bitch about paying a cover to enter a nightclub. Nightclubs that are run well will thrive. Corruption is big problem since some venues are protected from the police while others are not. I think a lot of people like to give some of the reasons stated in this article instead of just saying I cant afford to go out every weekend or multiple times in a week and blow money at a club. I think the author compiled an accurate description of how my beloved generation spends their free time, as a whole. They fought in 3 wars (Morocco in the early 20’s, Spain in the mid 30’s and WWII in the 1940’s)This generation was really adventurous, spirited, idealistic and encompassed the spirit of the XXth century’s first half like no other perhaps in the entire continent. My generation caught the tail end of it – the clubbing craze – before we even reached 18 (fake IDs, sneaking in, charming bouncers; it all worked back then). The problem with many online “publications” is they don’t bother with editors. At a local club in my area I go early before the DJ begins and monopolize the jukebox with older stuff usually disco but some 90s remixes and the floor fills up. Everyone agreeing with you here is probably older (or at least the older side of millennials) and not a part of this generation, and really aren’t taking a true critical look at millennials, but rather reverting back to “our way is the better way” mentality. It was the beginning of Trance, and Tribal, progressive and circuit house.. Dance music is everywhere now. And that whole internet/www/apps things that GX doesn’t understand? There’s a massive trend brewing in America’s nightlife scene. My parents are 63 and 70. If you do manage to find an actually single one who’s there to meet someone, it’s too loud for her to hear anything you are saying anyway. Technology has played a tremendous role in how we source our entertainment and choose to communicate, which is a major change from the past. Also I think the biggest reason club attendance is down is because frankjly the music is SHITE mono-genre every song sounds the same clap-trap. Hahahahahahahaha! Raving is about dancing… you get high with your friend and you spend 10pm-7am dancing your ass off and having a magical experience, a decent party has amazing lighting, crazy super cool deco, a plush chill space were you are your friends can cuddle and even take a nap and security will not throw you out…. Well that did not use to be the case as I said above. he’s right. I do hate line though. Electronic Dance Music. As a Millenial, I dislike the club scene and I always have. We were raised to social, and we didn’t have smart phones and the internet back, so we were forced to go out and socialize. They may be dying, some fear. You too? You don’t know me or my background. There was a direction then as there was in the 70s, 80s, and 90s.. Many llve cheaply in shared warehouse space. “It isn’t like when I moved to London and people could rent places in zones one and two,” he says. New York nightlife isn’t dying. But I wonder who’s been paying for the apps? Britain’s nightlife has quietly shaped countless histories, and not-so-quietly spawned sub-cultures that reshaped the modern world: Northern soul, New Romantics, the 90s rave scene… as Iggy Pop best put it, “We’re what’s happening...”. I can tell you that there used to be superclubs, they were all shut down, and NOW a club is far more likely to have a single room with a single flashing light, etc. There was a time where when the economy was bad, the bars would be doing better, but that was way before the internet, and phones with touch screens where people can communicate and meet.. You clearly have not done much regular clubbing if you think it is all rude drunk regulars. Also what does that have to do with anything? The decision can be traced back to a Saturday night in February 2014. Attitudes Nightclub, St. Louis, Missouri. DJs often times were elitist music curators taking you on a journey from 9-4 so they would play as little radio ready songs as possible. That’s only the first bad grammatical error in this artcle. And the are playing usually stuff before 1996. Are nightclubs dying out? Europeans make it more social than trying to look cool like Americans. I think the next time I do an event, I will make a contract with a checklist on it for things that need to happen in the venue, and unless the manager and owner goes over this list with me and agrees to everything on the list, I don’t do the event, I rent a raw space instead. The long lines and crowded atmosphere is probably from older folks ages 40+. If I’m going out its to a bar or lounge. How about we bring back the RAVE scene? If I can go to a cool bar (possibly with a dance floor) instead, I will. not to mention the Rave Scene changed everything… clubbing was just about getting wasted and maybe dancing and picking up a chick or a dude to fuck maybe…. Nightclubs used to be a single room with a dance floor, DJ, and a few colorful lights beaming back and forth. They have to be, they literally don’t have a choice. I am more out-going now than back then, loneliness is not something to be proud of. But if you go by the numbers, it’s all gone Pete Tong for UK clubs. They don’t have it for real world social interaction. There is a market for exclusivity, expensive microbrew beers and cocktails. It’s incorrect and makes the writer look stupid. I’ve been to some nights where the kid at the booth will the play the same song three times in one night. Hey Bill, clubs have to pay rent on their space and upkeep/repairs, taxes, fines, heating/cooling, lighting and everything else, and make a profit so they can pay staff and themselves. A lot of people come to have families & jobs, which begin to take priority. People are also going to escape rooms such as EscapeIQ! The night club scene needs to reinvent it’s self again. Once you pass your early 20’s these things start to lose their sheen. PS: Do I REALLY need to mention and quality sound and lighting system? The top nightclubs make millions in revenue annually. If not many folks are going out, it would seem there wouldn’t be lines or crowds. We only go to clubs when we are in Vegas or Miami. Nobody is going to nightclubs because “it’s too crowded, the lines are too long, it takes to long to get a drink”, so who are the people in line, getting drinks, and making it crowded? I left for San Antonio in 2010, disappointed that there was still no place for someone like me in the night time, and that everyone just seemed to be copying each other’s 20-song playlist, and it wasn’t even the top hits of the day. The music is far from what I’m into and I won’t even start on drinks and prices. It’s sad, but these are the kinds of things that event producers need to do in order to make sure events run smoothly despite “green” owners who were not around when nightlife was at it’s peak, who tend to be stubborn about others “telling them what to do with their venues” – EVEN IF they are bringing in money for them. That is often difficult to achieve in a room packed with people with music over 85 decibels. Harvard Center identifies GX as 1965-1984. I am not putting down Millennials for being inferior to any other generation, but am calling shenanigans on articles like this that give a false self-important impression of exoticness, when you guys are like any other 20-somethings of any other generation only with more sophisticated social media technology. Niche clubs people fill the floor and DANCE baby! To waste our precious free time with rude or slow service, long bathroom lines, and someone inevitably spilling something on us? Might as well go have fun in an AUTHENTIC way that gives a person true happiness rather than always trying to prove to everyone how damn cool you are because in the end you’ll be broke while the banks screw you over and take your house. The locations may be changing but the dance will go on forever. it was stupid but the biz boomed. The main problem I have in most of these clubs is the other people. boogie, zan, etc)theres a really cool vice article on the birth of club culture in the 80s and how a lot of really dope artists like andy warhol & keith harring and other avant garde/art school weirdos were the designers for the first clubs, and so the club was more like an art installation or application of modern art as a creating/cultivating a specific aesthetic for social interaction of a different kind to take place inwe should get back to that. Going hiking or swimming or whatever it is that they do, is either free or really cheap. But up until recently they were the best option. Experiencing the world live and dancing like no one watching and guess what? I can’t remember the last time I went out to a nightclub and didn’t have at least one drink spilled on me. when I was young we all drove after drinking . With new alternatives, such as online dating apps and websites, many millennial women feel that online dating is a lot safer and much more efficient than the organic ways of years prior. I agree. I wouldn’t go to a night club just because either. The people I consider to fit this description are truly in the minority of any generation, but again when one reads an article extolling the virtues of millennials, written for the gratification of image-crafting millennials, in an online magazine self-described as providing “Milllennial culture at its finest”, expectation of anything short of a massive circle-jerk would be overly optimistic. And for some to hook-up. Nightclubs are horrible. I Agree here, As a DJ any kid with a laptop thinks they are a DJ. A confluence of factors contribute to the rapid disappearance of gay bars and queer spaces across America, according to Zach Stafford, editor-in-chief of … If you don’t already have friends it is not going to be easy making any after a certain age. We know that millennials aren’t frequenting nightclubs often, but why? In general – and we can’t blame them for this -, people look for easy and fast solutions. I went a few months ago to two different clubs in one night and found that most of the people in both of them were from an older generation. Midnight runs, Secret Cinema events, 3am poetry workshops and late-late comedy shows are just a few of the inventive new ways to spend Friday night in the city, while adventurous supper clubs, cocktail-led menus and themed restaurants make a case for eating out-out. LOL! The days of Animal House are over. The Cat Club generally has a filled floor on the weekends. These are not the numbers of a dying industry. Is it technology that pulled us away from interaction or generational preference pushed the technology that way…. There should be an impartial DJ Central Licencing Board, and if you can’t impress them, you don’t get the job PERIOD. I agree with many of the comments previously posted. There just aren’t any here worth visiting and if I were to go to a place with an abundance of nightclubs, I’d be treated as an old fart grandpa by, you know, actual millennials. Time and energy is precious, and I want to spend what I have only on things that are most worthwhile. My Grandmom is a baby boomer. The reason? The large clubs have really lost most of their clientele… some are closed who have been open for decades. Now some of the others I asked said write, and this meant text, music, and poetry, cooking, even knitting was in there. It partially destroys the point this article is trying to make. Reading all the ridiculously, mostly UN-(not even MIS)-informed, ignorant comments is exhausting and, frankly, a waste of time. Ridiculous cover charges, insanely over priced drinks and a snotty attitude on the part of entitled employees. We provide you with exclusive access into the mind of the thought leaders covering inspirational content such as business, health, fitness, fashion, beauty, celebrity news, music, hot topics & more! Justin was saying fellas can’t take rejection bc they don’t have the experience of recognizing when prior are open to approach or not. Most of the clubs have been steadily declining in membership for years. This isn’t an important enough point for you to emphasize it twice, two sentences in a row. Add to that the cost of a DUI as you leave the parking lot which makes for a ‘groovie overnighter’ in jail and $1500 bail. ever watch 4- 20 something girls at a table? The music sucks so people don’t dance. Conversations are for bathrooms, lobbies and vip rooms, and outside. This article isn’t spot on but it does recognize popular trends for sure in terms of night life. I agree to most of the stuff in the article, I personally don’t like that I can’t have conversations with friends, or a girl I would happen to meet there. I do both regularly. Nightclub and bar attendance has been on a steady decline for the past several years and counting. They are a generation of foodies who love venturing into new restaurants and attempt to identify with various cultural experiences. Do drugs so you don’t (hopefully) buy drinks. Very interesting article, and the concepts and vibe of most clubs these days are lame and lacking anti mainstream – most simply put are not cool and a waste of money – u make it cool well ppl will go. I get there’s no harm in trying to see if someone is single but I find when you politely tell them you don’t wanna be bothered suddenly you’re the bitch. On the net you can switch up social websites with a click of a finger. Those issues will always be present and I dont feel have changed with time or will change. Saving on countless entry fees, overpriced drinks and long cab journeys home in favour of a few big blow-outs a year does seem sensible – unsurprisingly, the very word linked to Generation Y. Habitually pigeon-holed as abstinent and ambitious teetotallers; young people today are supposedly too busy getting eight hours sleep and building personal brands to dance until dawn like their hedonistic predecessors. There was a famous one about 10 years ago but it closed down. Its a matter of efficiency. Social engineering by the gov’t (no smoking, no driving after drinking, no hookers, undercover stings etc.) Now i enjoy all of the other activities listed but I still love a good club night once a week. As for nightclubs, I think that very much depends on where you grow up. Millennials have the power to make or break this industry. Plus any halfway decent job requires you to be carried on the company’s insurance, which means a DUI hurts you in the job market for 3 to 5 years. also there expensive, admission and drinks. The clubs I go to in SF are smaller are cater to niche audiences as opposed to trying to get single damn person in the place. :/ There are likely more baby boomers who have kids born between 1976 and 1994 than Gen Xers. Nope.” seemingly using the fact that“nightclubs” weren’t in the list of answers to “what millennials enjoy INSTEAD of going to nightclubs”? This is an interesting read. Over generalized, Specious examples. I can’t believe this is a legitimate magazine. When I got my first gig we were still using 12″ records.. On top of that the music that was coming out in those times was really good.. . This doesn’t automatically mean we don’t have social skills (some of us don’t, but that has been the case in every generation). I’ll take the word of well respected academics on it and leave it at 1980, thanks. The floors were packed and nobody stood around chatting we sweat it out to all that house and techno. Lawrence, The person who wrote this article is definitely not going with a Pulitzer anytime soon. Again, my friends and I maybe the outlier, but I’d like to think we’re as normal as any other group in their mid 20’s. The late 90s was an end of an era. There was a time, which started back in the late 1970s, where you would hear music that was only in a nightclub and not on the radio’s top chart, and the nightclubs were like that all the way up into the mid 2000s when things started to change.. Now it’s the radio top music in the night clubs, and there is nothing good on the radio either… I see alot of poorly managed bars and clubs lately.. At a good party, people are usually happy to spend between $50 and $100 on their night out. It seems the ‘gangster’ mentality of Rap has given ‘going out’, spending money on poor service, a ‘hostile’ environment hampers ‘clubbing’. No more dating, just netfliix and chill is the biggest example…. Every generation has its own topical oddities, that is too be expected, with Millennial’s unbridled self-marketing through VR being their generation’s obnoxious version of the 80’s coke fueled roller disco party stereotype, but calling you out for declaring you are somehow unique for traveling or going to music festivals, even EDM, is appropriate because it is a silly sentiment. They weren’t. $4 for a Heineken. Jaycees are down 64%. Straight up. As a millennial I hate 99% of the music they play at clubs. I’d say 1990 to now. And being amongst people who obviously share your interest in music & with a particular band!! It’s just sad if you are over 30 going to the club. Some do ride a bike, in cities that are designed to create access, but that is almost not existent in many others. Nowaday, people meet up on the internet, and make plans online. Because fucking Christ, this nonsense read like a 10 year old wrote it. Not all, but most. Most of us are deep in debt from college and find lower wages in a highly competitive job market .But we make the best of it and live frugally. It’s a barely literate article. A drink is to get you drunk..it’s probably spiked. They are 70% loud frat guys who want to pick a fight. Nobody knows how to take you on a journey. today its hats and jerseys and jeans that don’t fit. Other than that, we’d much rather go to a really good bar, restaurant, lounge or show. J.C. Diaz remains hopeful that as long as people want a place to hang out, dance, and have fun with friends, the nightclub scene should prosper once again if they attempt to regain nostalgic, or ground-breaking themes. However, it is one of the most poorly written articles I have ever read. Wait, huh? This is key. How hard is that to grasp? Sooo… The only way to save nightclubs is to attend to a crowded place, buy expensive drinks, listen awful music, can’t talk to my own friends and being harassed by assholes? Most clubs are finding it increasingly difficult to find the right calibre of member and many who fail to get into clubs, sometimes form their own as some kind of retaliation too. It is not required at all but I guarantee you make friends quickly that way if it is genuine. I caught that, too. But me and all my friends are children of baby boomers. Millennials don’t have real lives. While our son lives in a medium sized city in the mid-south, he was raised in one of the top 3 metropolitan areas of this country and is use to museums, fine dining, travel, a father who cooks and a family who reads and enjoy the outdoors. One of the major factors that wasn’t even discussed was online dating. It’s simple things, like….you need an elevated DJ booth so that crowd members can’t harrass the performer as they are playing, which will distrupt the music and there for the crowd/drinking/dancing. I still goto clubs but what I’ve found is clubs are notorious for overpriced drinks, top 40 music you can hear anywhere, and the cover charges can be forgivable if there is a prominent DJ spinning that night. Or if you’re me you would rather spend time in pubs with table service, atmosphere and 55 craft beers on tap.

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• 31. Dezember 2020


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