Ninja party is canceled this year

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  • LosT
    Contest Creator / Goon
    • May 2004
    • 1389

    #61
    Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

    Since we are talking about closures, SharperImage is going away (not that I'm crying about that)- BUT you can buy anything, even the fixtures and furniture...

    Back on topic:

    The sad fact of the matter is that if the Ninja party moves away from the CON hotel it will cut numbers (maybe a good thing in this case?)-

    Comment

    • icetre
      Aristocrat
      • Oct 2003
      • 70

      #62
      Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

      I meant to post the link, but didn't..

      For anyone that was curious and didn't find it;

      http://www.circuscircus.com/meetings/floor_plans.aspx

      The last plan on that page is the one I was talking about, It's $1600..

      They were supposed to be sending me a catering menu, but I haven't seen anything yet. I'm pretty concerned actually, because I was talking about taking the suite for 4 days. I don't understand why they'd shrug off 6400 like that, but I guess I'm just small potatoes.

      Adam

      Originally posted by icetre
      Being that defcon is canceled; I don't think it matters. :)

      I've already called. Circus Circus has a SWANK suite that's perfect for the needs of a party like the Ninja's or ours. $1600 a night, the room can handle 150 people and it's got a dancefloor type area with a balcony. Not one but two bathrooms and up to 6 bedrooms.

      Take a look at this page, and look at the last floorplan the 'executive suite'

      Problem is, It's got the exact same issue; house food and booze only.

      This is going to be a real problem as long as we stay in Vegas (I know, I know) Other cities have similar rules, but it seems to be much easier to make people turn a blind eye elsewhere.

      Comment

      • TheCotMan
        *****Retired *****
        • May 2004
        • 8857

        #63
        Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

        Originally posted by LosT
        Since we are talking about closures, SharperImage is going away (not that I'm crying about that)- BUT you can buy anything, even the fixtures and furniture...

        Back on topic:

        The sad fact of the matter is that if the Ninja party moves away from the CON hotel it will cut numbers (maybe a good thing in this case?)-
        Having it away from the Riv decreases opportunity for Goons to attend, but if they could still attend anyway...

        Having it off-site, but nearby could be fun... A party could publish a series of clues which help to solve riddles that would direct people to the location of the party. The game with riddles and clues could even take place over Friday and Saturday ending on Saturday night, with people at the clue locations to validate answers, or give people the next step in the puzzle.

        Sure, this kind of thing has been done on reality TV, and as a spectator event, it would be rather boring, but participating could be great fun.

        You could even use a system of gates that open based on certain times, so anyone that is really stuck at an early phase is permitted to advance. With some cooperation from other people running other contests, you might even be able to have clues exist in other contests on the contest floor.

        And the goal? Find the party.

        What? You say this kind of thing has been done before? This idea is not original? So?

        Comment

        • Deviant Ollam
          Semi-Professional Swearer
          • May 2003
          • 3417

          #64
          Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

          Not to frown on anyone else's suggestions... but anything that is off-site is a totally bad idea, in my opinion. You totally blow the "roaming" factor... people who can scoot upstairs to grab something they wanted in their room, people who can wander over into the movie night if the party is too packed, etc, etc, etc.

          If it's at a skybox, you can send a txt message to a dozen people at 2 AM and say "holy crap... i thought they were done but Lope is pulling out her records now and it looks like we're in for another set... get down here!" and you'll have like ten of those people show up. Off-site, you'd be met with nothing but grumbles and "oh, man... wish i could... maybe i can find a way to get there in a half hour or something" sort of replies.

          I would personally hold out hope that DT or someone can pressure the Riv into a better situation for us. Let it be no bar at all in the skybox (a pair of hallway bars would suffice, for the suckers not bringing their own booze) and people can just walk around carrying their own drinks in whatever cups or containers they wish. Let everyone be responsible for their own liquid entertainment (community ingenuity will win through on that one) and let the chips fall where they may.

          I realize that Barkode and others have said that they are backing out now, and i understand the whole point of putting their foot down. But for god's sake... DEFCON without a Ninja party? i mean what the hell, next we're going to find out that the HackerPimps will be hiring local school teachers to stand on table tops and just instruct us all about fractions.
          "I'll admit I had an OiNK account and frequented it quite often… What made OiNK a great place was that it was like the world's greatest record store… iTunes kind of feels like Sam Goody to me. I don't feel cool when I go there. I'm tired of seeing John Mayer's face pop up. I feel like I'm being hustled when I visit there, and I don't think their product is that great. DRM, low bit rate, etc... OiNK it existed because it filled a void of what people want."
          - Trent Reznor

          Comment

          • lil_freak
            Innocent and Cute
            • Jul 2003
            • 808

            #65
            Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

            Very sad indeed.

            Who will attack me with ninja weapons in the hall after the party ends now? Barkode, you guys have always rocked in my book with your parties and memories of them or at least the parts we remember will live on.
            "It is difficult not to wonder whether that combination of elements which produces a machine for labor does not create also a soul of sorts, a dull resentful metallic will, which can rebel at times". Pearl S. Buck

            Comment

            • barkode
              Member
              • Jul 2002
              • 83

              #66
              Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

              Originally posted by Deviant Ollam
              I would personally hold out hope that DT or someone can pressure the Riv into a better situation for us. Let it be no bar at all in the skybox (a pair of hallway bars would suffice, for the suckers not bringing their own booze) and people can just walk around carrying their own drinks in whatever cups or containers they wish. Let everyone be responsible for their own liquid entertainment (community ingenuity will win through on that one) and let the chips fall where they may.
              Oh we could probably run the event dry, I'm sure the Riv would agree to that, and make people go fishing for booze elsewhere. But what's a party without a bar? In reality, people would spend half of their time on the mission to get a drink.

              If there was to be another DEFCON at the Riv, what we need is simple - a waiver or substantial discount on corkage for sub-events, and a reasonable fee for bar setup assuming that we have to use Riviera bartenders. That's it. That would keep the "overhead" to under $1k per bar, and we could probably live with that.


              Originally posted by Deviant Ollam
              I realize that Barkode and others have said that they are backing out now, and i understand the whole point of putting their foot down. But for god's sake... DEFCON without a Ninja party?
              Yeah, Saturday night is going to be really weird. I guess I'll just go get dinner and go to bed? Also half of my July just became free (sans HOPE) as we no longer have to build all this stuff.

              If all that's left is a couple small dj-in-a-room type things running cash bars, and other gatherings getting harassed and/or shut down by the hotel over booze, I get the feeling Saturday night is going to be pretty dead. People will probably just go their separate ways.

              Pretty anti-climatic, and it really blows that we won't get everyone together again.

              Comment

              • Gadsden
                Goon
                • Jul 2002
                • 1241

                #67
                Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                Hmm.. maybe a BYOCB party? (Bring your own Camel Back).
                I am sure the Riv staff would have a fun time trying to figure out why everyone is running around with 3 liter hydration packs on. And the bonus: you can drink while taking a piss and never have to touch your drink container! :-)
                Happiness is a belt-fed weapon.

                Comment

                • Deviant Ollam
                  Semi-Professional Swearer
                  • May 2003
                  • 3417

                  #68
                  Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                  Originally posted by che
                  Hmm.. maybe a BYOCB party? (Bring your own Camel Back).
                  I am sure the Riv staff would have a fun time trying to figure out why everyone is running around with 3 liter hydration packs on. And the bonus: you can drink while taking a piss and never have to touch your drink container! :-)
                  i strongly support a Camelback party.

                  I'd like to publicly ask... Barkode, what would it take for you and the Ninjas to participate in some sort of party this year? There was just so much work that it seems like you did, pre-planning and all. If we told the hotel that there was going to be a skybox party but that it was without any bar service at all.. i think that would be a good thing. Tell them that they are free to setup bars out in the hallways in the corners (they've done that in the past) but to just stay outta the skyboxes (the argument could be made that we don't want to get hit with additional like you were last year)

                  I would personally contribute as much of my time and resources possible to see camelbacks go to many, many interested people. How about a system that invovles colored glow bracelets and/or necklaces? Red == fruity rum cocktail, Orange = Vodka screwdriver, Yellow = Gin and Tonic with Lemon, etc etc. Then that actually encourages people to seek out other partygoers and so forth until the free drinks run out. I just imagine the fun of people sidling up, asking for a quick fix like deadheads trying to score one toke out of a bowl. When anyone's Camelback goes dry... they just take off their glow necklace.

                  I picture the Minibosses going to town and a room full of people who feel special since they have "secret" knowledge while at the same time the hotel bar just outside in the hallway would still be doing some fair degree of business anyway, keeping them happy.

                  Hell... even if we can't do this in a skybox, this should totally be the plan for the B&W ball and have the minibosses play there. I don't know... i'm just trying to pull out any ideas possible that can involve us still having what is arguably the most important part of DEFCON for many people.

                  Anything I can do I will do to help.
                  "I'll admit I had an OiNK account and frequented it quite often… What made OiNK a great place was that it was like the world's greatest record store… iTunes kind of feels like Sam Goody to me. I don't feel cool when I go there. I'm tired of seeing John Mayer's face pop up. I feel like I'm being hustled when I visit there, and I don't think their product is that great. DRM, low bit rate, etc... OiNK it existed because it filled a void of what people want."
                  - Trent Reznor

                  Comment

                  • Dallas
                    Goon and Aristocrat
                    • Jul 2006
                    • 336

                    #69
                    Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                    Out of Curiosity, it seemed to work well last year at some parties to have the Riv on one side, and the Defcon bar outside in the seats or at the 2nd bar (in the larger rooms).. I know we paid one bartender a $ 200 tip to go with it.

                    - Dallas


                    Originally posted by Deviant Ollam
                    i strongly support a Camelback party.

                    I'd like to publicly ask... Barkode, what would it take for you and the Ninjas to participate in some sort of party this year? There was just so much work that it seems like you did, pre-planning and all. If we told the hotel that there was going to be a skybox party but that it was without any bar service at all.. i think that would be a good thing. Tell them that they are free to setup bars out in the hallways in the corners (they've done that in the past) but to just stay outta the skyboxes (the argument could be made that we don't want to get hit with additional like you were last year)

                    I would personally contribute as much of my time and resources possible to see camelbacks go to many, many interested people. How about a system that invovles colored glow bracelets and/or necklaces? Red == fruity rum cocktail, Orange = Vodka screwdriver, Yellow = Gin and Tonic with Lemon, etc etc. Then that actually encourages people to seek out other partygoers and so forth until the free drinks run out. I just imagine the fun of people sidling up, asking for a quick fix like deadheads trying to score one toke out of a bowl. When anyone's Camelback goes dry... they just take off their glow necklace.

                    I picture the Minibosses going to town and a room full of people who feel special since they have "secret" knowledge while at the same time the hotel bar just outside in the hallway would still be doing some fair degree of business anyway, keeping them happy.

                    Hell... even if we can't do this in a skybox, this should totally be the plan for the B&W ball and have the minibosses play there. I don't know... i'm just trying to pull out any ideas possible that can involve us still having what is arguably the most important part of DEFCON for many people.

                    Anything I can do I will do to help.
                    +++ Dallas +++

                    Comment

                    • astcell
                      Human Rights Issuer
                      • Oct 2001
                      • 7512

                      #70
                      Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                      Seems many people would love to have our population in Las Vegas.

                      http://www.independent.co.uk/news/wo...as-860513.html

                      Down and out in Las Vegas

                      The good-time capital of the US has hit a losing streak. Guy Adams reports on an epidemic of bankruptcies, foreclosures and mass lay-offs

                      Saturday, 5 July 2008

                      Since the day Las Vegas was created in the shimmering Nevada desert, visitors have been drawn by one simple promise: "What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas". The motto adorns the city's road signs, and has inspired everything from its souvenir T-shirts to the local tourist board's seductive advertising campaigns.

                      These days, that motto is imbued with a worrying sense of irony. Because America's most outrageous city is facing a growing multitude of problems, and they all boil down to a single, unavoidable point: right now, far too little happens in Vegas, because not enough people are actually staying there.

                      The onset of global slowdown, high petrol prices, and a nation-wide housing slump is spelling disaster for a town that owes every aspect of its wealth – from that gaudy replica of the Eiffel Tower to those scale models of Venetian canals and the Pyramids of Egypt – to its ability to inspire free-spending hedonism.

                      With Americans cutting back on luxuries, and the price of transport rocketing, the so-called "Vegas vacation" is facing the axe. This week, as the nation celebrated Independence Day, major hotels were taking stock of a fall in all-important room occupancy rates from their usually impressive 95 per cent levels to nearer 80 per cent.

                      More worryingly, new figures showed gambling revenue has also dropped – a further 3 per cent this month – starting a price war between worried firms anxious to lure punters back. Hotel rooms, which last year averaged $130 each, now go for less than $100 (£50).

                      At the vast Planet Hollywood resort, the clatter of fruit machines and poker chips was this week replaced by an uneasy – and, for Vegas, very unusual – calm. A large if slightly tatty double room could be found for less than $80.

                      No tourist resort can afford to lose its buzz. Yet the slump now runs so deep it's starting to hurt even the town's Elvis impersonators, wedding chapels, and sex industry. When money's tight, the prospect of stuffing another $20 bill into a lap-dancer's gyrating stocking-top somehow doesn't seem quite so enticing.

                      "This year already we've seen the Minx closing, the Mensa club closing, and the Crazy Horse closing," says Dolores Eliades, owner of the OG, the second biggest "adult cabaret" venue in the world. "By another 12 months from now, I expect another two or three major venues will have gone.

                      "We've seen a drop in custom here too: maybe 180 people coming in when before we got 200. It's a difficult business, but the girls still have to make a living. We will survive because we own our own premises, we have a good name and location, we don't buy on credit, and we've been around for a long time. But we're very lucky in that respect."

                      To quantify the Vegas slump, look to the stock market. Shares in casino operators, the engine room of an economy reliant on its liberal attitude to public morality, have been haemmoraging value like a down-on-his-luck gambler.

                      Las Vegas Sands, which controls the Venetian and Palazzo resorts on the famous neon-lit Strip that runs through a "miracle mile," has dropped below $50 a share, a third of its value last September. MGM is at $28, from over $100 a year ago. Wynn resorts, owned by the ebullient billionaire Steve Wynn – a Texan version of Donald Trump – neared $70, from almost $180 last year.

                      This week, in an attempt to prevent financial meltdown, Nevada's Tourism Alliance convened an "Air Crisis Briefing" in an effort to prevent airline plans to halve the number of flights to the resort. The city's gut-busting "eat all you can" buffets are also being scaled back to account for the US's 4 per cent food inflation. Where a long queue of obesity once trailed across The Bellagio hotel restaurant's ornate carpets, demand for its famous (but now pricey) lunch buffet had on Thursday slowed to a trickle. In what sounds suspiciously like a panic measure, the Golden Gate Hotel this month even said it was doubling the price of its signature 99 cent shrimp cocktail.

                      For the inhabitants of the desert resort, which was founded in 1905 and became prosperous after gambling was legalised in 1931, it's no joking matter. The growing unemployment crisis (MGM just axed another 400 middle-managers), plus a downturn in the tips that form a significant portion of the Vegas economy, has a human cost, too.

                      Local bankruptcies have quadrupled. The property market, which rode the wave of a boom for most of the past decade is now below its peak by anything from a quarter to a third (depending on whose figures you believe), while Nevada now boasts, if that is the right word, the nation's highest foreclosure rate.

                      The number of empty homes has caused a health scare after it emerged that mosquitoes – possibly carrying the killer West Nile virus – are breeding in abandoned swimming pools. "We've had crews pumping out pools every day this week," Devin Smith, who manages the city's Neighborhood Response Division, told the Las Vegas Review Journal. "Two years ago, we may have pumped six pools in a season. Now we're probably pumping that a week."

                      Other sectors of Las Vegas aren't looking too healthy, either. Attendance at conventions, which account for roughly a quarter of the city's income, dropped by 7 per cent this year as impoverished firms cut back on their delegations to recession-hit events such as the Homebuilders Convention.

                      "The current rate of overall unemployment in this state is 6.2 per cent, the highest since May 1994," said Jered McDonald, an economist with the Nevada Employment, Training and Rehabilitation Department. "Las Vegas seems to be getting the worst of it. Other parts [of the state] aren't so bad; in fact the gold-mining industry is booming, so the drop in employment in big metropolitan areas is actually bigger than that figure suggests.

                      "With the high oil prices, people don't have much disposable income to spend on gaming and entertainment. So we are looking at a short-term slump, certainly. In the longer term, everything depends on what's going to happen to oil prices."

                      But the biggest threat of all is that Las Vegas might somehow be perceived to have lost its buzz. Like any tourist economy, the city's fortunes depend squarely on being seen as a "hot" destination, a tag that becomes difficult to justify if potential visitors hear reports that the place is struggling.

                      As a result, no major strip operators are publicly advertising their new low room rates. None would be interviewed for this article, regardless of the concerns shareholders might have for their fortunes. A spokesman for Wynn Las Vegas, for example, said "Respectfully, we must decline" the opportunity to discuss trading conditions.

                      And on the horizon is further strife. As a hangover from the frenzied growth of two years ago, Las Vegas is also in the grip of a speculative building boom, with dozens of cranes towering over the Strip.

                      Wynn Resorts is building a $2.2bn hotel, and Encore and MGM are spending $9.2bn on a 76-acre project called CityCenter. More than 40,000 new rooms will exist in four years, in a city that has 7 per cent of America'shotel beds. The prevailing emotion among business leaders is a mixture of optimism and denial. The Association of Greater Las Vegas Realtors, for example, claims the housing market is finally turning the corner after a "correction" to the long-running bull market that had made Vegas America's hottest location for almost a decade. Rick Shelton, the association's vice- president, insists that the long-term future is rosy and, to illustrate his point, draws a diagram on a napkin in a local cocktail bar. It consists of a circle with the initials "BLM" written outside it.

                      "This is the map of Vegas," he said. "Inside that circle is the city. Outside it, everything is owned by the Bureau of Land Management. So there's really nowhere else for the city to expand. And yet, the census bureau has forecast that the population of Vegas will grow from two million now to three million by 2016. There's nowhere for those people to go. So this town is another Tokyo, with land as a commodity. You fly in here and you see desert and you think, 'Building, building, building'. But it can't be built on, so prices must go up. And all those Harvard economists are missing that key component when doing their prognosis of our market. The way I see it, we have been in check, and are now aligned for the next spurt, and I'm talking a power arc that's got between seven and 10 years to run."

                      Dolores Eliades says the history of Las Vegas shows it will find a way to adapt and survive. "Historically, Las Vegas is able to withstand the problems of the rest of the country. When people face hard economic times, they come here to get away from their problems. In the US, people are escape artists, and they deal with problems a little differently from the rest of the world. I believe the history of this town proves I'm right, I really do."

                      Comment

                      • astcell
                        Human Rights Issuer
                        • Oct 2001
                        • 7512

                        #71
                        Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                        Originally posted by valkyrie
                        Barkode --

                        I was never invited to your fine party, though I heard many good words about it. This is a travesty. Your alls party is a DefCon treat! How does this get fixed going forward? Or does it get fixed at all? Seems the folks in LV don't love us any more. OOOOO! I have an idea! Let's transplant Con to Tejas! It's hot, dry and there is a lake near by. Sounds like LV to me!

                        Regards,

                        valkyrie
                        I see simple math. Let's say that we ask the hotel to provide the bartenders and booze. Now let's say we get 4 bartenders and they can make a drink a minute. This is fast for them, I have seen how slow they move.

                        Now we have 4 drinks a minute, or 240 an hour. A four hour party means 960 drinks. At $6 a drink they get $5,760. Subtract their expenses, wages, dishes, maybe they net $5,000. Max. So someone ought to figure out what they get for a profit and that ought to be their corkage fee, Any more is literally robbery. Let them work for it and regret it.

                        Have their bartenders there. Riviera bartenders are as useful to me as a kotex dispenser. I'll just walk right by and go get my own damn drink. Who is to say they cannot be at the party? We just won't use them.

                        I am on the fence about tipping them. Does it go to the bartender or into a big coffer? What if the Ninjas set up the party an no one bought from the hotel bar staff in the party skybox?

                        Another sad thing is the way they treat us, as if we have already done something wrong. The AP eventually decided that defcon will simply buy them new walkway lights every year. No one was concerned. No guns were draw or warrants served over a walkway light. They got over it very fast. AS for their guards, chalk up their antics to ignorance.

                        We were told (warned) years ago that things were very different at hotels that have casinos in them. And indeed they are. Security sees anyone not dressed like them as a potential threat. That is their job. I am sure they watched Oceans Eleven 157 times and figured out how they can stop the bad guys and they are itching for the day they can strut their stuff. And if we act like idiots we hand then their headline on a silver platter.

                        The worst part for ALL concerned (including the hotel) is the lack of commo. Icetre had a deal with one person that was soon worthless. Security can say "This party is shut down because ______" and make up the rest of the blank. Their left and right hands don't talk. Their left hand is in our till and their right hand is on the trigger. Almost makes one want to hire the mob for protection and alcohol.

                        Rest assured, cooncon will never have this issue!

                        Comment

                        • TheCotMan
                          *****Retired *****
                          • May 2004
                          • 8857

                          #72
                          Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                          From Oct, 2007:
                          Originally posted by TheCotMan
                          Las Vegas will become a modern ghost town. Costs of electricity, transportation of goods, access to water, and more will cause it to become too expensive to keep it running while other gambling locations like tribal gaming, Lake Tahoe, or Reno are available and closer to access people from LA and Orange County.
                          Originally posted by astcell
                          Seems many people would love to have our population in Las Vegas.

                          http://www.independent.co.uk/news/wo...as-860513.html...
                          I don't think *this* down-turn is going to be the one that turns Vegas into a Ghost town, but it is a shadow from the future. This down-turn isn't enough, by itself, to kill Las Vegas -- far from it. however the same weapons used in its future suicide are in plain sight right now.

                          Comment

                          • barkode
                            Member
                            • Jul 2002
                            • 83

                            #73
                            Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                            Originally posted by Deviant Ollam
                            i strongly support a Camelback party.

                            I'd like to publicly ask... Barkode, what would it take for you and the Ninjas to participate in some sort of party this year? There was just so much work that it seems like you did, pre-planning and all. If we told the hotel that there was going to be a skybox party but that it was without any bar service at all.. i think that would be a good thing. Tell them that they are free to setup bars out in the hallways in the corners (they've done that in the past) but to just stay outta the skyboxes (the argument could be made that we don't want to get hit with additional like you were last year)
                            The overall vibe we are getting from the hotel is "we are going to fuck with you this year unless you do this our way, period."

                            I think if a few hundred people were suddenly drinking from matching camelbacks that quite obviously were *intended* to bust up their monopoly on booze, they're most certainly going to shut it down and are also going to flip out on DT, Charel, etc.

                            So do we throw an event knowing that there's a moderate chance the hotel will just arbitrarily shut it down? For instance, they look inside and see a bunch of people with drinks, accuse us of breaking the rules, and just shut it down?

                            The hell with that. We've got a vote of no-confidence on these people, so no matter how good the plan is, we can't throw an event at the Riv. It's not worth the risk of an arbitrary shut-down. Not with the amount of work we put into it.

                            If we were to do something it would be offsite and it would be big as hell and probably paid for by a sponsor. But that's probably not going to happen this year, as we're not actively courting sponsors.

                            We're really just bitter about the whole thing.

                            Comment

                            • barkode
                              Member
                              • Jul 2002
                              • 83

                              #74
                              Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                              Originally posted by astcell
                              I see simple math. Let's say that we ask the hotel to provide the bartenders and booze. Now let's say we get 4 bartenders and they can make a drink a minute. This is fast for them, I have seen how slow they move.

                              Now we have 4 drinks a minute, or 240 an hour. A four hour party means 960 drinks. At $6 a drink they get $5,760. Subtract their expenses, wages, dishes, maybe they net $5,000. Max. So someone ought to figure out what they get for a profit and that ought to be their corkage fee, Any more is literally robbery. Let them work for it and regret it.
                              This was essentially what the hotel wanted to do - but the math is a little off.

                              There's also bar-setup fees, and the drink costs could be anywhere from $6 to $8. We also calculated out about 6 hours (9pm to 3am, roughly). The cost comes out to just north of $10k for drinks, then add setup fees + tips + cleanup + etc, which ends up being more like $13k-$15k.

                              This versus $2,000 for booze and setup from Lee's Discount Liquor, and running our own bar at the Alexis Park.

                              Or alternatively, paying a $2500 corkage fee (more than the entire booze cost) to the Riviera, and leaving our total booze-related costs at $4500, already high but something we could -consider- if we essentially gave them the profits from the Ninjagear table.

                              I understand that the food and beverage people need to make money, but they also need to reasonably compromise when they're dealing with sub-events at existing, large events. There's a middle ground where everyone can be happy, and they're just not willing to meet us there.

                              Comment

                              • astcell
                                Human Rights Issuer
                                • Oct 2001
                                • 7512

                                #75
                                Re: Ninja party is canceled this year

                                Sounds like if you DID agree to their terms, the terms may just be changed again if they smell money, like with Icetre.

                                I bet the mob hates the competition!

                                Comment

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