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glowball

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Everything posted by glowball

  1. YYYO WHAT A FUCKING BIG FUCK YOU DAY I AM HAVING, WHY DO WOMEN MAKE THINGS FUCKEN DIFFICULT WTF, THIS FUCK YOU GOES OUT TO MY GIRLFRIEND THAT LOVES TO FUCK WITH ME ON EVERY ASPECT OF OUR LIFE! "FUCK OFF" WOW OMFG I AM DRUNK !!!!!!
  2. fuck that i prefere the dirty underground stuff, enough with this high class look trendy look man ENOUGH~!@!!!
  3. Dam, that sucks man.!!!! no SF now? lol it's all about BS now wtf
  4. Yeah well clubs like arc adn centro suck so whats your point? oh yeah by the way, Lets see you get a club and handle it because if you did you wouldnt be talking
  5. Yeah well clubs like arc adn centro suck so whats your point? oh yeah by the way, Lets see you get a club and handle it because if you did you wouldnt be talking
  6. your right! Now only if we can do that some how:D
  7. Coming from a newbie on this board, I don't think you have any say to what i or anyone says on this board
  8. Listen up Avalon is not limelight anymore nore tunnel nore twilo or anything back then So DEAL with it STFU.
  9. DUDE DROP THE FREAKEN AVALON TOPIC ALRAEDY MAN !!!
  10. Everything I hear man its, Yankees this Yankees that, WTF man does anyone realize the name of the fucken team? lol YANK THESE lol! Which there doing to us with all the money they pull from our sorry assess ha, ha, FUCK OFF ALREADY WHO CARES ITS OLD THANKS.
  11. Ok, what do you all think about a club being a warehouse, sick underground music, sick surround sound system like, “The Tunnel†to get that dark underground feel to it? Would people go? It’s all about the music in this place no high class BS, 18 and over to get in 15 dollar price at the door wear what ever you feel comfy tight security. Place: Bring the NYC scene back with just a huge warehouse to give it that underground feeling to it on the out and inside at the same time a nice spot to chill. Video imagery: 360-degree image projection on floor-to-ceiling video walls with the usual club characteristics of aesthetics and vibe A 360-degree pan motion surround sound system: How’s this for a sick system, Ok picture your self in a club with surround sound! I am talking about DTS Digital Surround DJ station and multi channel sound system in the world. This cutting-edge system is the first to incorporate eight decks and a set of DTS surround decoders to provide a quality of sound that clubbers have never experienced before. The console will give DJs a unique flexibility, allowing them to mix new material live, record it, and play it back in multi channel surround sound, including a powerful dedicated sub bass system. This will enhance the capabilities of Ministry of Sound’s famous audio system. Up to four DJs can each mix on two turntables, live and online with their own dedicated mixer at the same time. The DTS installation is part of a new DJ booth at the London club. Ministry of Sound has ensured that whatever the DJ’s mixer preferences, they can be accommodated at the click of a mouse button. Two BSS Sound webs provide a digital matrix so that any mixer or input source can be matched to any other, without the complex and unreliable swapping of mixers and inputs in real time. The fact that there are eight turntables, sound mixers, and seven other input sources such as CD, mini-disc, DAT, DVD, and even a reel-to-reel tape deck installed, makes such a matrix essential for reliable operation and ultimate sound quality, as the Sound webs are able to be set up for every input and output characteristic. Installing DTS 5.1 digital surround technology into the new DJ booth is the first step in upgrading the club’s sound systems throughout. But I am talking different from this far as speaker setups, meaning you will see the center speakers all around the sides and Arial centers about 10 centers, 15 front rights, 15 front lefts, 10 back rears right, 10 back rears left all mixed in positions to hear the ultimate ambient sound, the way music is supposed to be heard Fuck that give the scene a break and lets roll to the under ground ! I need input on this idea because looking for a warehouse to buy is what I am looking for and shall have!
  12. I am soooo sick of people telling me about the yankees OMFG JUST SHUT THE HELL UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  13. A couple of friends told me that, about tunnle being the new crobar lol , sorry!!
  14. So the old tunnel is the new crobar?
  15. Ok I think its time to close this post since the vague topic as deceased upon us lol. In another words, this thread is boring
  16. Ok now we all know the old places such as Limelight, Tunnel, Twilo were Great places to go, but nothing compares the dirty raw music that tunnel, Limelight, Twilo, produced where you can just be who you want to be in all aspects of clothing dance style or what ever it is that makes up who you are when dancing, I can remember the first time I thought about going clubbing, the Tunnel was a place they called a dance place where you can do what ever you want, I was scared of going for some odd reason, maybe its because I never went to the city at the age of 18 but when I stepped into the space I almost freaked out that’s how sick it was to me at that time, Hearing bass pump from down the street with my cousin getting all hyped, when I stepped into the club I went nuts because the place was sick for the space wise the loudness of bass, the people filling the club, people wearing what ever the fuck they wanted, it was great for me at the time. For the other clubs such as Limelight, I took a friend of mine to the Limelight and boy this dude was amazed because he comes from a rock band back ground, never heard trance or techno, deep hard bass, so he almost jumped off the balcony to the main dance floor that’s how crazy he was about loving the music and crowd dancing like in that movie called BLADE, the first scene when every was dancing. We need to get some sort of this back!!! I can’t dance in a place that is high class and filled with people that look at others and judge, I mean I know I shouldn’t care of what people say but come-on we all know if we are dancing in a high class club or a place filled with ignorant people that talk BS or crap its not going to work, the vibe as to be there! That’s why the dirtiness and darkness was such a great place to dance DAM!! Does anyone feel me on this!!!!!!
  17. Tue. October 21, 2003 DeN 28 the newest addition to nightclub row Another new nightspot is set set to join nightclub row. Its the same area where Amy Sacco's present Bungalow 8 is and the old Twilo and Tunnel nightclubs stood for years. Right now home to warehouses, a scrap-metal processor and a spare-tire shop but in a couple of months call it "nightclubbers paradise" "I'm over here so I can have a cabaret license," says Carlo Anthony Seneca (pictured right on right with Gary Maholtra on left) 2 of the owners of the new DeN 28, a swanky lounge with a huge dance floor in an 9,000-square-foot former auto shop, which will open early next year. Nightclub row will be the hottest clubhopping area. DeN 28 at 511 West 28th will soar onto the scene as one of the most prolific and ingenious new nightclubs. Hiring the world's most renowed designers from Miami Florida to caloborate with top designers in New York it is already being heralded for its "cutting edge features" The cavernous buildings of 27th St. and adjacent blocks will soon be filled with neon lights, booming beats, Veuve Cliquot and, yes, strippers. Scores will open its second location in a 10,000-square-foot brick building on 28th St. (across from a lumber supply lot) in November. By December, the gentleman's club will be joined by Spirit New York a New Age club with a flagship in Dublin ,Crobar, DeN 28 and a lounge designed by legendary architect Philip Johnson. "Chelsea is starting to become a very upscale, trendy area, so why shouldn't there be trendy clubs there?" asks Lawrence E. Fiedler, a professor at New York University's Real Estate Institute. However, while the 27th St. strip is just a shot-glass' throw from hip 10th Ave. bars and restaurants like Bottino, Glass and Bongo, it is sheer necessity that brought most club owners to West Chelsea. Twenty-Seventh St. west of 10th Ave. lies in a manufacturing zone, where, unlike residential zones, cabaret use is permitted by city regulations. The relative lack of development in the area made it attractive to club owners in the market for large spaces. "That's what pushed everyone over to this area." says Carlo Seneca one of the owners of the new DeN 28 "The facilities to house a large number of people are there, the occupancy costs are reasonable compared to other places in the city and the residential component of the neighborhood is not concentrated, so you are less likely to get complaints from people," says Fiedler. Noah Tepperberg and Jason Strauss, co-owners of the Johnson-designed space set to open December 1st in a former garbage-truck facility on the corner of 10th Ave. and 27th St., saw West Chelsea as the only place to accommodate the lounge's design. "We were looking for a long time to find a place that could be custom-built," says Tepperberg, who opened the infamous Hampton's club Conscience Point with Strauss and was a collaborator on Suite 16. "It was hard to find a raw space that we could build to spec. The only place we were able to find it was in this neighborhood." Cal Fortis, who will open Crobar on Nov. 20 in a 35,000-square-foot building on 28th St. so massive that Macy's Thanksgiving Parade balloons were once inflated there, saw West Chelsea as the ideal New York City outpost for the club. "Opening Crobar in a raw space gave us much more freedom in design and allowed us to create a club unlike any other in New York," he says. The main dance area will have 60-foot ceilings. As an adult club, Scores didn't have many locations to choose from when it decided to expand beyond its popular E. 60th St. site. "The only place you can build a strip club is in one of these zones," says Scores spokesman Lonnie Hanover. Good news, fellas: On 28th St., Scores ladies will be topless in 100% of the rooms, as opposed to 40% on the East Side. Nightclubs have long found homes in manufacturing zones, from Sound Factory, Twilo and the Tunnel on 27th St. to the recently reopened Copacabana at 34th and 11th, and groupings of several nightspots in one area are nothing new. "Clubs opening in clusters has been a trend for years," says Tepperberg, citing as examples Lafayette St., where Joe's Pub, Serafina, Pangaea, Butter and Rehab all line the block, as well as the Meatpacking District and W. 21st St.. The difference on 27th St. is that the club owners setting up shop there have a bigger picture in mind. "You've got people with real experience and long-term business models, not people looking to take a bar, renovate it, bang it out for a couple of years without the right licenses and then move on to another place," says Tepperberg. "All of us are spending millions of dollars because we plan on being there for a while, and the businesses are not just about nightclubs." Tepperberg's lounge will be open for drinks five nights a week after 10 p.m., but will primarily serve as an event space for special event such as movie premieres and fashion shows. The owners also plan to capitalize on the surrounding galleries by coordinating events with show openings. Spirit, opening in November at 530 W. 27th, will consist of three separate zones: a full-time wellness center, a raw-food restaurant, and a performance space and dance club. A commitment to growing roots on 27th St. may create the kind of permanent nightlife destination that is more prominent in other cities. "In Boston you have four or five clubs in a row on Lansdowne St., and in Miami there are clubs up and down Collins and Washington Aves.," says David Rabin, president of the New York Nightlife Association. "I don't think it's ever happened like this in New York." The respective owners of the 27th St. clubs were drawn to West Chelsea independently, but the cluster may bode well for an often-controversial nightclub business. "These people are opening nightclubs where they're supposed to open nightclubs, in neighborhoods that are meant for that type of use that aren't going to disturb residents, which is good for our industry," says Rabin. In a competitive business with a quick burnout rate, opening a new club next to four others may seem risky, but the proprietors are embracing it. "We found out afterwards that all these other places were opening up and it was almost like a home run," says Seneca. "The more the merrier." Spirit's owner Robby Wootton agrees. "It would be a lot harder if we were out here on our own," he says. "And what's good over here is that nobody's doing the same thing." The introduction of several spots with various themes will boost business in a part of town that sees decreased foot traffic after dark. "I don't think there's anyone so powerful these days that they can go to some faraway destination and open up the doors and be busy seven nights a week," says Rabin. "You need neighbors." Clubs hoping to become a fixture in the area must also take their noncommercial neighbors into consideration. "We take all these new spots very seriously when they come before us," says Anthony Borelli, District Manager for Community Board 4, whose main concerns are increased traffic and a possible degradation of surrounding neighborhoods by a flood of rowdy patrons. "In order to get to W. 27th St. you have to go through a residential neighborhood," says Borelli. "It's a combat zone over there now," says Cheryl Kupper, a longtime Chelsea resident of 18th St. at Ninth Ave., when asked about the developments on W. 27th St. After living close to the Roxy for years, she knows first-hand that patrons traveling to and from a club are a major disturbance. "They arrive at 11:30 p.m. half in the bag and come back to their cars at 4:30 in the morning, drunk out of their minds, urinating and leaving bottles around," she says. "If every club fills up once on a single night, there will be an extra 10,000 people around the neighborhood." At what point can club owners absolve themselves of responsibility for their customers' behavior? "Owners say, 'I can't control my patrons once they're out the door,'" says Kupper, an active Community Board 4 member. "I keep saying, 'But you invited them here, so they're your responsibility.'" She hopes that owners will consider hiring private security services to patrol surrounding blocks when the clubs open for business. "We will definitely feel something, because the patrons will be looking for parking down where we live," says Sheila Heimbinder, who owns a loft on 22nd St. between 10th and 11th. She is more concerned that the influx of clubs "will affect the community of low-income housing on 27th and 10th." Having met representatives from most of the new venues already, Borelli acknowledged that "for the most part, they agreed to all our stipulations," regarding security, traffic and queuing. Opening a nightspot in an area zoned for cabaret use is not just smart business. It's also a step toward bringing some much-needed boogie back into New York's nightlife. "I've heard people say they've forgotten how to dance," says Seneca. Head to DeN 28 later this year for a refresher course.
  18. Dam, i'm sorry, but if a guy does that to me, i mean violates me in anyway hes getting a punch in the head for that BS
  19. YEAH, well i was on that fucking boat when that shit happend :mad: going home from school !
  20. Ok what is your aim name ?, i want to chat lloll
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