
The "models and bottles" lifestyle of NYC's club crowd are evolving as venues seek a more egalitarian atmosphere.
Take the newly revamped Marquee in Chelsea, which has fewer tables and a bigger dance floor.
Sure, the same bankers and pretty girls will flirt around their reserved bottle service table, but there's also a new line for prepaid ticket holders waiting to get in the door and see the DJ, The New York Post's Hardeep Phull reports.
In that line, no one cares what clothes you're wearing, what you look
like, or how big your wallet is. You bought a $30 ticket, so you'll get
in the door.
"The first time around, Marquee was geared strictly toward the celebrity crowd and the people who were too cool for school," club co-owner Jonathan Schwartz told the Post. "Now it's more of a hybrid where fans can be in the space with the VIPs."
And it's not just in Manhattan. Williamsburg's new club Output bills
itself as a place with no bottle service, no doormen, no nonsense. Via the club's FAQ page:
"Output is open to anyone, but is not for everyone. Output welcomes
individuals who value the communal experience of music over cameras and
bottle service."
The music and dance scenes are now the major selling point at Output, Marquee, and the soon-to-be-opened Space nightclub in Manhattan.
It appeals beyond the Wall Street-types and model-esque women to the
music nerds, tourists, hipsters, dancers, and club rats willing to shell
out $30 to get in and hear great music.
It looks like the era of pretty girls and bottle service is ending,
and the huge dance clubs like Palladium, Roxy, and Limelight from the
'80s and '90s are back in style.
Credit : Business Insider