slomo says:
The point is we are the only venue in Sheffield that at a SHOW (not club nights) has to seperate out under 18's from over 18's in specific designated areas. This wont happen at a club night because you CANNOT be in corp if you are under 18 for a club night. And a few customers have been annoyerd at the rigorous I.D'ing of everyone who comes through the door.
The point with the seperation means you as an adult cannot stand at the front and enjoy the show with a beer, because you will be in an area with under 18's. Yet you can go into a pub at 16 without drinking alcohol and be surrounded by drunk people. It is discrimination at the end of the day that corp is the ONLY venue that has to do this at LIVE SHOWS. It can cause crowd problems and overcrowding at areas that are having to 'pen in' people to seperate them from the rest of the crowd. And in alot of cases parents bring their kids which means if dad wants a beer, he canot be with his son.
The whole basis is it is unfair. Thats the simplicity. Catty comments and 'assumptions' aside, would you really want to see Clutch and have to stand right at the back because you wanted a beer? For alot of you I would doubt it.
The Clutch gig last year was one of the ones that most people on here were at, all at the front without a beer.
Kev, i'm giving my experiences and views of the segregation, come on, it's pathetic that the corp is having to segregate folks when any other place that serves beer there's no segregation, if it's not needed in pubs and social clubs and festivals where families are present then why is it neccasary at corp, there's no difference is there, they are all places were people get drunk in the presence of minors.
As for your comment about it always being law, yes it has always been the law but there's never been the consequences like there is today, i've working in a supermarket since i was 17, when i was 17-20 i worked on the checkouts, there were many under 18's that got served as there wasn't much chance of anyone batting an eyelid. Most of my friends started drinking in pubs and clubs when they were 16 years old and were rarely asked for ID. Thesedays there's a lot more restricitions in place to prevent underage drinking, at work our staff have to ask for ID if people look under 25 as there's a hefty fine if anyone serves someone underage, there's more of a clamp down on underage drinking now than there's ever been. [Edited by Eggy at 20:20 on 10/06/09]