Corporate Dream Dancing
dictionary.com says a corporation is an association of individuals, created by law or under authority of law having a continuous existence independent of the existence of it’s members.
Merriam-Webster calls a corporation a large business or organization that under the law has the rights and duties of an individual and follows a specific purpose.
The dancers in Dream Dancing, link:https://www.amazon.com/Dream-Dancing-JJ-Lair-ebook/dp/B00I8WD1RQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1468066441&sr=1-1&keywords=dream+dancing dance at Babe’s or Babes West. Both bars are owned by the same corporation. Some of the employees work at both bars. Jake tells us this also.
This was a rare occurrence when Dream Dancing came out. Sure an investor would own a bar or two, but a chain was rare. I based that idea on Delilah’s Den. It was difficult to do research on that company. Naturally every search site went to adult clubs and there was no history website for this establishment. I found one site called stripandgrowrich.com that said Delilah’s was created in 1993. I knew of one bar in Pleasantville New Jersey in 1996. Today Delilah’s has bars in Toms River, Manville, Hazlet and South Amboy. In each case, they bought out an existing bar. This corporation redesigned the bar and re-named it.
Another company that is branching out into the corporate world is Scores. Once it was Howard Stern’s favorite Manhattan adult club, but now they have a bar in Philadelphia and are looking at other places.
Crazy Horse was a bar in Las Vegas. They too are opening bars in the east.
Did I think in 2007 that there would really be corporate chain franchised adult clubs? No. At the time the book was released, that culture was changing. In Seattle, dancers opened a club. The books I reviewed in the past few weeks came out within a few years of each other and showed different types of clubs.