The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Famed strip clubs expect business to boom with Super Bowl in town

City silent on industry’s role, but it’s helped draw convention­s for decades.

- By Ben Brasch ben.brasch@ajc.com

As crews hoisted Super Bowl banners along Atlanta’s streets and plastered the reflective facades of downtown hotels with Bud Light ads, preparatio­ns of a different sort were underway half a mile from where the big game will be played.

Adult entertaine­r “Dior” fixed her fluorescen­t-red hair inside Magic City. Here, and at several other fabled female strip clubs in Atlanta, they are preparing to welcome throngs of visitors to an entertain- ment industry unique among cities.

“You meet so many people,” said the 24-year-old Stone Moun- tain native. “The clientele that comes in, the amount of money that’s being thrown, the vibes are amazing.”

They have been around 20 years longer than the Georgia Aquarium, but you may not see Magic City or Blue Flame Lounge listed as destinatio­ns on any official Super Bowl literature. Even so, many Super Bowl visitors are expected to engage with this Southern city’s proprietar­y impropriet­y. Blue Flame alone is expecting upwards of 30,000 guests this week.

Atlanta officials are not eager to talk about the strip club’s role in the city’s hospitalit­y industry. The mayor’s office has neither answered

emailed questions nor made anyone available to comment for this story. The offices of Atlanta City Council members Cleta Winslow and Dustin Hillis, whose districts include some of the city’s most notable clubs, did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

The Atlanta Convention & Visitors Bureau, the city’s tourism chamber, said it does not track the strip club industry’s economic impact. When asked for comment, the agency said: “Major cities across the country have adult entertainm­ent clubs, and Atlanta is no different.”

Despite the city’s silence, the strip clubs will surely benefit from city council’s decision to allow all bars in Atlanta to pour 2 hours later during Super Bowl week.

For decades, the clubs have helped make Atlanta a premiere convention destinatio­n — a draw that has continued even as business convention­s have become less male-dominated. And local rappers have made strip clubs here more visible in recent years by using them to promote their music.

Atlanta rap star Killer Mike sees only upside. “As a city, we should make sure we protect the integrity of our juke joints. We’re still a convention city. We have created so many jobs and commerce around our strip clubs.”

Strip’s trip

Atlanta’s strip club scene, known to hip-hop lovers around the world, had an unexpected start: The hippie rock musical “Hair.”

In Atlanta’s “gentlemen’s clubs” in the 60’s, dancers wore pasties and G-strings — the maximum nudity allowed under the law.

When “Hair” was booked for a run in 1970 at the Atlanta Civic Center, the city cited obscenity laws and pointed to its first act, which ends with an infamous nude scene. In 1971, U.S. District Judge Newell Edenfield ruled that nudity and obscenity were not the same thing, so the show went on.

Alan Begner, an Atlanta attorney who has been representi­ng strip clubs for decades, said the ruling had an unintended consequenc­e: The city’s adult clubs “went nude right away.”

At the time, completely nude dancing wasn’t the standard everywhere, and convention organizers from around the country took note, booking businessme­n’s gatherings in Atlanta. When Atlanta officials tried to regulate what they considered a seedy scene, the free market responded.

“Atlanta Chamber of Commerce quietly — and the city of Atlanta — supported the industry because two or three of the main convention­s wrote and said that if there wasn’t nude dancing” they wouldn’t come, Begner said.

In the mid-90s, Begner estimated 40 clubs with female dancers operated throughout metro Atlanta, stretching to suburbs like Cobb County. The clubs served the city during the 1994 Super Bowl, the 1996 Olympics and the 2000 Super Bowl. Now, there are 16 clubs in the city of Atlanta, according to the police department.

Unlike Atlanta, some metro cities have decided they can bare no more.

Since becoming a city in 2005, Sandy Springs wanted to ban alcohol sales in clubs with full nudity, claiming the combinatio­n drew prostituti­on and fighting. The city’s war recently ended by seeing its three strip clubs close. Chamblee’s only strip club, Follies, is suing the city in federal court claiming the city is trying to shut it down by revoking its liquor license. In September, Brookhaven’s Pink Pony — forced to cut hours — filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, meaning it was looking to reorganize.

While Atlanta hasn’t explicitly set out to close down the clubs, zoning regulation­s have put so many constraint­s on where they can do business that it has been impossible to open new ones. Begner said an Atlanta strip club hasn’t opened in a new location since 1984 because no one has been able to find a space that meets all of the requiremen­ts. “It’s a no-growth industry,” he said.

Forecast: make it rain

American strip clubs are usually subject to three kinds of regulation­s: Whether patrons can touch dancers; full nudity versus toplessnes­s; alcohol licenses versus dry clubs.

Not in the city of Atlanta. “Atlanta has survived and made its clubs the most famous in the country because of the nude and alcohol combinatio­n, which is rare,” Begner said.

More nudity means more money for dancers and the city alike. Clubs are bringing in dancers from other cities for the Super Bowl. Nyla White, house mother for West Midtown’s V-Live owned by Atlanta rapper T.I., said they are bringing in 100 additional dancers for the Super Bowl.

The visiting dancers will pay their own expenses while they’re in town, but White said it’s still worth the trip: “It only takes a couple of seconds or minutes to get $1,000,” she said. “... It’s expected for them to make bags of money.”

Dancers pay $270 a year for their adult entertainm­ent permit, said Atlanta police spokesman Officer Jarius Daugherty, and that money goes to the city. So for just V-Live’s additional dancers, Atlanta will collect $27,000 in fees.

The total amount that strip clubs pay the city every year isn’t readily available because, according to city officials, the online database of adult entertainm­ent licenses was lost in the March cyber attack.

What is clear is that clubs have contribute­d to the tax base through liquor taxes, alcohol permits and property taxes for years.

But for some, the money isn’t worth it.

“If I could wave a magic wand, there would be no strip clubs,” said former Atlanta mayor Shirley Franklin, who said she feels the clubs are degrading to women. “...When you degrade women, you degrade everyone in society.”

Franklin — who served as Atlanta’s first black female mayor from 2002 to 2010 — hasn’t kept up with the current state of the clubs, but she said that during her administra­tion some clubs were known to law enforcemen­t as hotspots for drugs and prostituti­on.

Though she said she hasn’t been to strip clubs in Atlanta, she has been elsewhere.

“I’m not proud that I went along with going as my entertainm­ent,” Franklin said.

‘Real entertainm­ent’

Atlanta’s rappers have used strip clubs as both muse and megaphone.

“Our strip clubs, I would argue, are the fuel for our (Atlanta’s) current artistic dominance all over the world,” said Killer Mike, whose real name is Mike Render. He told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on: “Some of our leading music comes out of the Blue Flame, Magic City, (the recently-closed) Stilettos, the Office.”

He said Atlanta United made it obvious how acceptable the clubs have become when they won the MLS Cup and brought it to Magic City to party.

Brittany Carpentero, better known as the Atlanta rapper “Diamond,” said she appreciate­s the role that dancers have had in popularizi­ng her music, including as a teen member of Crime Mob with their 2004 megahit “Knuck If You Buck.”

How dancers and patrons respond to a song in a strip club shows music executives which tracks are commercial­ly viable. Dancers perform better if they like the song, then patrons feel the energy of the room and start to throw cash, giving executives a clear sign of potential.

Carpentero said she is reminded that Atlanta’s music and strip culture is unique when people in the music industry from the West Coast are shocked to hear that she regularly goes on dates at strip clubs.

“You just see money flying everywhere, girls dancing everywhere, girls hitting splits ... It’s just, like, real entertainm­ent,” she said.

As a woman, Carpentero said she’s happy to support the dancers, many of whom have dreams that require capital.

Daryl Mapp, director of branding for Magic City, said they expect Super Bowl visitors looking for the “opportunit­y to come to Magic City and to party in the same place one of your idols may have partied in.”

“Dior” who has been dancing at Magic City seven months, said there are many common misconcept­ions about strippers. The AJC agreed to not use Dior’s real name due to concerns about her personal safety outside the club.

“Being an entertaine­r, it takes a lot more than just certain dance moves, like twerking, it’s more than that: It’s the conversati­on that you have with your clientele. It’s how you present yourself every single time you come to work. It’s about the art of seduction, and not just so much dancing.”

When asked how she is preparing for the Super Bowl, she said: “We don’t have to prepare for what we already have. When you stay ready, you don’t have to get ready.”

 ?? RYON HORNE / RHORNE@AJC.COM ?? Adult entertaine­r “Dior” has been at Magic City for seven months and says “the vibes are amazing.”
RYON HORNE / RHORNE@AJC.COM Adult entertaine­r “Dior” has been at Magic City for seven months and says “the vibes are amazing.”
 ?? RYON HORNE / RHORNE@AJC.COM ?? Daryl Mapp, Magic City’s branding director, is expecting Super Bowl visitors who want to party in the same place one of their idols may have partied in.
RYON HORNE / RHORNE@AJC.COM Daryl Mapp, Magic City’s branding director, is expecting Super Bowl visitors who want to party in the same place one of their idols may have partied in.

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