COVID-19 hasn't killed the club but it's given us an opportunity to bring nightlife back from the brink - Action News
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British ColumbiaOpinion

COVID-19 hasn't killed the club but it's given us an opportunity to bring nightlife back from the brink

The Early Edition's About Here columnist, Uytae Lee, explores how nightclubs were on life support before COVID-19 cleared the dance floor, and how the pandemic could be an opportunity to think about how to improve them when the doors open again.

The Early Edition columnist Uytae Lee explores the death of the nightclub and how it could be revived

Partying in the club isn't possible during the pandemic, but statistics show nightlife venues were already on the decline before anyone had heard of COVID-19. (Anthony Mooney/Shutterstock)

This is an opinion column by Uytae Lee, who is currently a contributing columnist on CBC's The Early Edition. For more information aboutCBC's Opinion section, please see theFAQ.

It's pretty hard to physically distance at a club, so it should come as noshock that the nightlifeindustry is struggling.

In fact, the Vancouver Hospitality Association has warned 90 per centof nightlife businesses in the city are at risk of folding because ofthe pandemic.And whilesomemay lament no longer being able to listento pounding tunes in a crowd while pounding drinks,it can be arguednightclubs were already in trouble long before anyone had heard of COVID-19.

Acrossthe pond in England, halfof London'snightclubs closed between 2005 and 2015.In the Netherlands, the number of nightclubs fell 38 per cent between 2001 and 2011.

In the mid-2000s, Toronto's entertainment district had almost 100 nightclubs. By 2013, that number was 30.

Venue nightclub on Granville Street in Vancouver with its windows boarded up in April. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

One could blame changing tastes on the demise of the club.

Maybe millennials are too busy watching Netflix to bother with a night out. Maybe dating apps have rendered the dance floor redundant for people looking to partner up.

Personally, I blame the clubs themselves because they used to be way cooler.

The clubs of the swinging 60s and disco 70s were about more than just mini-dresses and mirror ballsthey could also be political.

At the Stonewall Inn, a nightclub in New York, for example,a 1969riot in response to a police raid kicked off decades of LGBTQ activism.

And as the disco scene flourished, it began to break down traditional gender norms and encouraged the freedom to assert sexuality.

A sign that was reportedly posted following the police raid in 1969 is displayed in the Stonewall Inn in New York. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

Then, in the 80sand 90s, underground rave events in the U.S. and U.K. injected a new sense of grassroots counterculture to clubbing.

These shows, with the help of new synthesizer technology, created entirely freshmusic scenes and introduced house music, techno, tranceand many other sub-genres of electronic dance music.

Butas time went on,clubs became more and more commercial.

The Kit-Kat Club in Berlin opened in the mid-1990s and is known as a hot spot for both electronic dance music fans and the LGBTQ community. Some clubgoers dubbed the unique music played at the club, primarily trance music in its early days, as 'KittySound.' (The Associated Press)

They marketed themselves to a richer clientele and cover charges became more expensive. Today, most clubs have lost their activist grassroots and are more interested in looking exclusive, enforcing dress codes and making people wait in line.

At the same time, venues all seemto be playingthe same music and servingthe same overpriced drinks.

Sociologists Paul Chatterton and Robert Hollands describe this as the"McDonaldization"of nightlife. They say highly commercializedclubs are leaving club-goerswith an increasingly "standardized experience."

WATCH | Uytae Lee on the decline of the dance club:

Did COVID-19 clear the dance floor?

4 years ago
Duration 9:23
How the nightlife industry was changing long before the pandemic.

We can find clues about how that happened by looking at Toronto's entertainment district.

A declining industrial area in the 1970s, it became fertile groundfor the city's burgeoningclub scene, as empty warehouses with cheap rent on cheap land became some of the hottest clubs in town.

But land values in Toronto have since skyrocketed and some of the hottest spots in the entertainment district are now condos, not clubs.From 1996 to 2019, the residential population in the area rose from 750 to over 35,000.

Many of those residents aren't thrilled to have nightclubs as neighbours and some have been successful atpressuring local government to shut them down.

We shouldn't be surprised that the only nightclub that can survive is the highly commercialized, exclusive club that charges top dollar for cover and drinks, says columnist Uytae Lee. (Ukki Studio/Shutterstock)

In the mid-2000s, Toronto's entertainment district had almost 100 nightclubs. By 2013, that number was 30.A similar story has played out in Berlin, London, Paris andSydney.

Rising land values andupset neighbours were closing clubsbefore COVID-19 cleared the dance floor. We shouldn't be surprised that the only nightclub that can survive is the highly commercialized, exclusive clubthat chargestop dollar for cover and drinks.

So, I have a proposal.

As we come out of the pandemic, I think we have an opportunity to be more intentional about the nightlife we create in our cities. Local governments can protect venues, control commercial rents for nightlife businesses and remind condo residents that they live downtown, not YosemiteNational Park.

Who knows, we might end up sowing the seeds of new movements, new music, or at least, a really good party.

With files from The Early Edition