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David is an occasional blogger, software engineer, Nintendo fanboy, liberal, news magazine addict, voracious TiVo user, and bibliophile. He was born in St. Louis, grew up in southern Indiana, and returned to St. Louis to attend Washington University. He hasn't managed to escape yet. He's a fan of free wine tastings, too many tv shows to name, and eating out. David makes his living developing web applications used internally by his employer. He doesn't blog about work because he's heard too many stories about that causing workplace troubles. There's more on the about page. |
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I have the feeling that a video game lounge similar to the ones discussed in this article could be fairly successful on the loop. The only open question I still have is whether the lounge would cater to 20-somethings and have a bar or cater to a younger crowd and not serve drinks. Of course, a Blueberry Hill-style setup where you're all ages in the day and check IDs at night could also be successful.
Posted by on 21 April 2004 at 9:17 AM
I don't like BB Hill's policy of the ID thing at night. They don't let people in who can't drink after 8 PM or something, right? I don't get this -- why can't they let others come in to eat and hear the music? They could tag people after checking their IDs such that it could be obvious to a bartender whether you've been tagged and are therefore worthy of alchohol.
I say it's discrimination to keep people 18-22 out of a business just because they want to serve alchohol to everybody there.
Posted by rkc on 1 May 2004 - 8:05 AM


