Her Culture Bi-Monthy Magazine August/September 2015 | Page 30

FEMINIST CLUBBING Does it exist? by Kara Price On any given night the New York City clubs are filled with young, beautiful woman. The streets of the meat packing district wear down the soles of hundreds of high heels. Girls arrive at the velvet ropes whether by themselves, with a friend or with a whole group, looking for the person who will get them in past the rest of the line. Promoters work for the club by finding and inviting girls to come out. They get girls in for free, get them a table with free drinks all night and get paid by the club for making it look popular and cool. I was first introduced to this scene when I moved to New York City for college. Too broke to go out on my own dime and yet still dying to have a piece of the city experience I quickly learned about this system. Friends who had already figured it out told me how it all worked, insisting that I just had to show up looking good and the rest would be taken care of. It only took going out a couple times however before I 30 realized how competitive the business I was entering into was. Waiting online for the promoter who invited me I would get approached by another trying to convince me how he was better. All of these promoters, I might add were men, charming and often attractive themselves. Some of them pitched me the angle that they had the most power, some used their looks and flirting, some of them stood behind a company name, and some of them simply tried to promised that they were the most fun. It was clear they were all desperate for more girls so they could make more money. The transparency made it easy for me to stay in control. Ultimately the girl was the most important piece of the equation and every girl counts when the club is counting heads. While me and my friends realized that we were essentially being commodified, we also got a sense of empowerment. We were working the system to get what we wanted.