An experimental all‑female nightclub concept made headlines this week after industry insiders revealed it shut its doors shortly after its first official night, with organizers blaming a complete lack of bottle purchases as the main reason for the abrupt closure. The venue, marketed as a space dedicated exclusively to women and designed to create a safer, inclusive nightlife environment, opened with much fanfare in a major city — but according to reports circulating on social platforms and nightlife forums, the night ended without a single champagne or bottle service sale, a revenue stream most clubs rely on to stay afloat.Nightclubs often depend heavily on bottle service and high‑margin alcohol purchases to cover staffing, entertainment, rent, and overhead costs, so an evening with no bottle sales would put severe financial strain on any venue’s business model — especially one trying to establish itself in a competitive nightlife market where drink revenue typically accounts for a large share of profit. Industry observers have pointed out that even innovative or niche nightclub concepts can struggle to attract patrons willing to spend on premium services, particularly in an era when many young adults are cutting back on expensive nights out due to cost‑of‑living pressures and shifting entertainment preferences.Despite this early setback, some nightlife analysts say the closure doesn’t reflect a lack of appetite for women‑centric spaces overall. Successful women‑only or women‑focused venues in other regions have shown that with the right location, pricing, and community support, specialized clubs can thrive and offer social alternatives free from typical nightclub pressures. The all‑female concept may still evolve — and perhaps resurface in new forms — as venues experiment with different ways to attract crowds and sustain business in a rapidly changing nightlife landscape.
- Lauren Chen
First, my shocked face is shocked.
Second, "safer, inclusive nightlife environment," my chaffed hairy ass.
If you're excluding someone you're not being inclusive.
It's like saying a Klan meeting is creating a safer and more inclusive cross burning environment.
I seem to recall lawsuits about all men's country clubs.
But it's hilarious that these women went to an all women's nightclub and seemed to still expect men to buy them expensive drinks.

I'm Sure there are several really good reasons for such a monumental failure that have absolutely Nothing to Do with the very reasonable and forward thinking basic premise of excluding the demographic that historically Spends Money hand over fist in bars. And every leftard,every woman associated with this entertaining FeeFukkinAssCo are All diligently working to make some up. But Learning From the results of that idea?
ReplyDeleteOhh,not happnin, Duude.. For the rest of their lives that story is gonna end with
It really should have worked.
I remember seeing references to an article written by a woman after she had spent time working in an "all-female, only female" law office. She went there full of feminist happiness, hoping to find sisterhood and community, and found herself plunged into a hell of backbiting and nastiness like nothing she'd ever experienced.
ReplyDeleteThere was word floating around on the intertubes a while back about an old-school message dating service in Montreal or Toronto. They would mail out a catalog of personal ads every month, you'd call in and leave a message for "person E3" or whatever. They would listen to their messages and call you back if they were interested. It cost money to leave a message. The service was fairly successful, so they decided to do two more mailings: one for male gays and one for lesbians. The male gay one took off. The lesbians refused to leave messages and that part of the service failed. Mumble mumble, something about men and women are different.
ReplyDeleteDaosus
Technomad: Ask practically any male Radiological Technologist, i.e. , X-ray tech, what is the hardest part of the job, and he'll say "the female techs" or something more colorful.
ReplyDelete