logo
#

Latest news with #EntertainmentCommission

No drinking or late nights: How 20-year-olds are changing S.F.'s nightlife scene
No drinking or late nights: How 20-year-olds are changing S.F.'s nightlife scene

San Francisco Chronicle​

time21-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

No drinking or late nights: How 20-year-olds are changing S.F.'s nightlife scene

When the San Francisco Entertainment Commission held its annual nightlife summit in May, the room at the city permit center on South Van Ness Avenue was packed with the folks who make the city hum after the sun sets — nightclub owners and impresarios, party promoters and publicans. On the agenda was a panel exploring a pressing post-pandemic question: 'Where did our customers go and how do we get them back?' In a city that is rapidly aging, it was the youngest panelist, 22-year-old party promoter Caden Velasquez, who was the center of attention. The recent UC Davis graduate was bombarded with questions about Gen Zers in their 20s: Why are they mostly missing from the city's struggling bars and nightlife scene? When they do show up, why don't they drink alcohol like the generations before them? What would it take to get them back to San Francisco and out in the bars and clubs? 'There was a three-year period during COVID that people my age didn't learn how to party,' Velasquez said. 'People my age are just realizing things — like going to trivia night on a Tuesday night is a fun thing to do. Because it is! Everyone here is welcome to tell Gen Z how to party.' The discussion underscored parallel demographic threats that have sent the city's entertainment industry into a tailspin: The city is aging faster than other metro areas in the nation, creating a bar and nightlife economy increasingly dependent on people in their 40s and 50s and 60s for revenue – groups often too busy raising families, paying mortgages or caring for aging parents to spend much time catching live bands or happy hour with colleagues after work. Meanwhile, unlike with previous generations, the city's twenty-somethings aren't filling the gap. About 20% of residents in their 20s left town during the pandemic and many of those who stayed have not embraced the drinking culture that has long supported the city's nocturnal economy. That confluence of aging customers, pandemic population shifts and the fact that the people of partying age are no longer partying has led to waves of bar and restaurant closures, while many establishments are barely holding on. 'The fact that we are breaking even is a miracle,' said Ben Bleiman, the president of the Entertainment Commission, who recently reopened downtown tavern Harrington's, which had gone out of business during the pandemic. San Francisco County now has the second-lowest share of people under the age of 30 among the 150 largest counties in the United States, at about 30%. From 2013 to 2023, the share of San Franciscans between the ages of 22 and 29 decreased from 16% to 13% — about 25,000 residents. The city's dwindling pool of young people, and its growing share of Gen Xers and boomers, is reshaping health care, education and housing. And it could have a crippling effect on San Francisco's hospitality sector, the bars and clubs that have always relied on the trade of young professionals — often people in their 20s with disposable income and no kids to pick up from school. As the city fights to bring people back to downtown neighborhoods and restore the vitality that vanished during the pandemic, it has become clear that nightlife must be a big part of the solution, said Sarah Dennis Phillips, director of the Office of Economic and Workforce Development. The hospitality industry generates $6 billion a year in direct economic impact in San Francisco while employing 54,000 workers. 'We started to realize that entertainment and nightlife was going to be one of the fundamental remaining reasons to live in a city or come to a city,' Phillips told the audience at the entertainment summit. But beyond the decrease in Gen Z population is the puzzle of catering to a generation detached from the alcohol-centric culture that has kept everything from jazz venues to sports bars to rock clubs afloat. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows a massive drop in drinking between millennials and Gen of the latter group spend $3.1 billion annually on alcohol, a massive drop from the $25 billion in booze sales to Boomers. Millennials, meanwhile, spend $23.4 billion, with Gen X shelling out $23.1 billion, according to the government report. 'They drink hop water and Red Bulls. They drink tap water,' Lynn Schwartz, co-owner of Bottom of the Hill, a rock venue in Potrero Hill, said about Gen Z. 'It's really good that they are healthier than we were coming up, but it's bad for the business model.' 'Gen Z has been wiped off the map from COVID,' said Bleiman. 'I haven't given up on them as a generation, but in terms of hospitality, we need to write them off.' The fallout from these parallel demographic shifts can be seen at places like the century-old Great American Music Hall, where manager Fred Barnes said he's been forced to completely shift his strategy since the COVID shutdowns. 'We basically had to change the way we are doing everything,' he said. 'If you were to book bands now based on what would have been a safe strategy before the pandemic, it would be an epic failure.' Some of the shows that would have been 'instant sellouts' before COVID — like the Bay Area's rich network of Grateful Dead 'adjacent' bands — are no longer sure bets. That makes sense, he said. It's natural that older people retire elsewhere or go out less as they age. But like other club owners, Barnes has been focusing on understanding the tastes of the Gen Z audience. They tend to be broader and more eclectic than earlier generations, he said, and less based on genre. A metal band that is trending on TikTok might pack the place, while a seemingly similar group might play to a mostly-empty house. The allure of jam bands may be fading, but there is a growing audience for Cumbia, the high-energy Latino genre rooted in Columbia. All-night raves have been replaced by daytime DJs and coffee-shop pop-ups. Which has forced Barnes to become more creative in finding talent that will appeal to a fickle and unpredictable audience. On a Monday night in April, he booked 70-year-old ambient Japanese saxophonist Yasuaki Shimizu's first U.S. tour. The show sold out. 'You think, 'This is going to be a really old crowd — the guy is in his 70s,'' Barnes said. 'It was the complete opposite.' But even shows featuring bands that attract a young fan base may not turn a profit given the decrease in alcohol consumption, said Schwartz, co-owner of Bottom of the Hill. The club works hard to book bands with younger followings, and to keep ticket prices low, even if it means not making much money. That was the case with a recent bill featuring the Nashville 'egg punk' band Snooper, an act whose live shows include papier-mache puppets and animatics. She said, 'Snooper killed it and the kids showed up for them.' 'We consider some of the all-ages shows to be a loss leader,' Schwartz said. 'It's how you introduce young people to the club — show them such a good time they will keep coming back. Eventually they will be able to afford higher ticket prices and a Shirley Temple — maybe even a real cocktail.' Still, she said, there are too many nights when the crowd is a sea of gray hair and bald heads. 'Some shows are like, 'Whoa,'' Schwartz said. 'You get 20 calls for reserved seating — people who can't stand for a long period of time, who have a bum hip, who use a cane.' The decade prior to the pandemic, San Francisco became an epicenter of the artisan cocktail movement, with patrons drawn to increasingly bespoke, and expensive, drinks. One group at the forefront of that trend was Future Bars, which today owns 13 establishments in San Francisco, including Bourbon & Branch, Local Edition and Rickhouse. Future Bars CEO Brian Sheehy said the cost of living in San Francisco, combined with the sluggish pandemic recovery, has slowly driven away many young people who worked and drank in his bars. In the last 15 years, the average age of his patrons has increased from late 20s to the mid 30s, while the average age of employees is even older. Sheehy said his company is 'running to break even for the fifth year in a row.' 'We are spinning our wheels, doing the work, holding on and holding out for things to get better,' he said. 'At some point we might have to make some tough decisions.' In order to bring in more patrons, especially younger ones, Future Bars is pivoting from an experience focused mostly on ambience and cocktails to one that also includes art and music. Today, the two most successful Future Bars establishments — the Dawn Club and Local Edition — both feature live jazz. Sheehy is opening a Cuban bar in North Beach that will feature music as well as an art gallery, and he's reconfiguring other places to include rotating exhibits. In a way, the company has come full circle: 23 years ago, Sheehy and a friend, the late Dahi Donnelly, both immigrants from Ireland, put on packed art openings at their first bar, Anu at Sixth and Market. 'Up until the shutdown, we didn't have to worry about putting art in our bars,' Sheehy said. 'We are going back to our roots.' Nightlife entrepreneurs say the crisis stems not just from the flight of young customers, but also workers. About 70% of leisure and hospitality workers were laid off during the pandemic when hotels and restaurants shut down. Many left town. 'People can't wait around to go back to work, and they didn't,' said city economist Ted Egan. Compounding the problem, those workers, many of them young, tended to be among their industry's most reliable customers. A $20 tip left on the bar at Ocean Ale House near City College may end up at the Royal Cuckoo on Mission Street or Specs in North Beach. 'A huge portion of the business was the service industry. They are gone,' said Blieman of the Entertainment Commission. 'They used to go out, they used to party, they used to spend the tips they just made at your bar after their shift.' Even after the pandemic ended and bars and restaurants reopened, servers in a depressed San Francisco were making a lot less than they had been, which in turn prompted a flight of talent to other markets, Sheehy said. A whole group of Future Bars servers and managers relocated to New York, lured by tales of tips exceeding $400 a night. 'They have created their own ex-pat community of San Francisco hospitality folks in New York,' Sheehy said. 'They have a great lifestyle and make more money. It's hard to blame them.' Despite the unsettling sales and migration data, Gen Z members believe there's hope for the city's nightlife scene — even if they have to look to the daylight hours for inspiration. Recent San Francisco transplants say the statistics don't reflect the vitality of the arts and entertainment scene taking root at places like the Faight Collective in the Lower Haight or Casements in the Mission, or at parties put on by Cave Rave, which recently threw a dance party in the tunnels by Sutro Baths. Velasquez, the party planner, said 'there has been this weird stain' on San Francisco since the pandemic, 'but a new narrative is forming that San Francisco is alive.' Day parties are popular, Velasquez said, explaining that Gen Zers value 'community' and tend to be loyal to particular venues or collectives they feel part of. His generation may be drinking less, he said, but more importantly is 'partying differently.' He has been contacting coffeehouses, asking to put on events at 10 a.m. — and seeing hundreds of people show up. One of the venues that has figured out how to attract Gen Zers, the Faight Collective, is part art gallery, nightclub, retail space, theater, yoga studio, live music venue and recording studio. 'It's the era of community organizers. It's the era of coffee pop-ups and day parties,' said Daniel Bondi, 30, who founded the venue with Andrew Wasilewski in 2023. 'We did a techno brunch where everyone wore black and sunglasses. It was a Berlin club but at 11 o'clock in the morning.' Casements, an LGBTQ-friendly Irish bar in the Mission with a festive beer garden, has cultivated a loyal customer base through a combination of old-school hospitality and curated events. There might be a chicken schnitzel party on a Wednesday and a 'Seanchoíche' — a night of Irish storytelling — the next night. On a recent Saturday, Casements hosted an 11 a.m. Virgo Supperclub Pop-Up followed by a 3 p.m. lesbian and queer friendly wine pop-up hosted by Somebody's Sister followed by a drag bingo. The establishment serves four types of non-alcoholic beers and an extensive list of low-alcohol cocktails. 'We have immersive interactive events because folks are looking for experiences-driven things,' said co-owner Jillian Fitzgerald. She said she has seen more 20-somethings moving to San Francisco primarily for community or culture, rather than just for a high-paying tech job. 'Before the pandemic there were a lot of people here who didn't want to be in San Francisco — they would have much preferred to be in Houston with a big backyard,' she said. 'San Francisco has always been a city of unexpected things and that died for a while. Now it's starting to come back.' Leah Woods, a 28-year-old composer who lives in the Haight, runs the Tuesday night open mic at the Faight. She said the city needs to do a better job promoting itself as a place for artists and musicians. 'S.F. is so casual about the art that comes out of it. It doesn't really care,' she said. 'You drive into the city and every billboard is about AI and you have no idea what any of it means. How about a billboard promoting a frickin show or an artist's new single or a performance in the park?' While the Faight still generates revenue selling drinks and tickets, Wasilewski and Bondi emphasized that the Gen Z audience responds well to 'layering,' an array of activities like crocheting or watercolor painting that 'calm the nerves' and can appeal to people not used to socializing with strangers. One recent Faight open mic participant was Elijah Milak, a 24-year-old guitarist and singer who moved to San Francisco in 2021 after graduating from Howard University. 'When I got here nightlife was pretty dead,' he said. 'Now it feels like the city has come out of its shell. You can come to a community like the Faight and there is a genuine energy. ' At the entertainment commission summit, Faight co-founder Wasilewski said that venues, instead of guessing what customers in their 20s are looking for, should empower the next generation by bringing in young promoters or collectives who know what their contemporaries want. 'Give them the freedom to come in and take over the space to do their thing,' Wasilewski said. 'Get creative. Don't be cheap. Don't be lazy. Give people good non-alcoholic options. People want to enjoy having a good-looking drink in their hands. It doesn't have to be alcohol.'

Portola Music Festival is returning to S.F. despite history of noise complaints
Portola Music Festival is returning to S.F. despite history of noise complaints

San Francisco Chronicle​

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Portola Music Festival is returning to S.F. despite history of noise complaints

Portola Music Festival is coming back to San Francisco's Pier 80 for a third year despite its history of noise complaints from residents across the Bay Area. The permit required to host two nights of bass-thumping live performances at the waterfront space on Sept. 20-21 was unanimously approved by the Entertainment Commission during a public meeting in March. Goldenvoice, the festival's producer, also secured the necessary authorization from the Port of San Francisco. Goldenvoice just needs to ensure that the festival is up to date with fire codes and emergency response access, among other precautions, to receive a final approval from SFFD, according to Lt. Mariano Elías. Captain Jonathan Baxter said that the event plan is expected to be finalized during a meeting with Goldenvoice on July 23. Meanwhile, Goldenvoice has teased the festival's return in an X post shared on Monday, May 5. 'Blue smoke has just been spotted coming from Coit Tower, signifying a new Portola lineup has been chosen,' Portola Festival's official account declared, along with an edited video of cobalt blue smoke coming out of the North Beach landmark. Last year's event saw performances by 'Friday' singer Rebecca Black, controversial rapper and producer M.I.A. as well as headlining sets by French DJ Gesaffelstein and English electronic duo Disclosure that drew 42,000 attendees per day. 'There's a whole generation that missed what dancing and going out was about,' festivalgoer Deron Delgado told the Chronicle last year, reflecting on the pandemic era. 'There's more appetite again for it.' But while Portola Festival is becoming a beloved tradition for EDM lovers, the event has evoked equal frustration among the hundreds of Bay Area residents nearby who have filed noise complaints since it began in 2022. Even with increased efforts to reduce noise from the performances last year — such as reorienting its two outdoor stages, hiring someone to monitor noise levels and enlisting additional call center staff — Portola Festival still drew 224 complaints over the festival weekend. That doesn't seem to be discouraging city officials who already approved a new Pride music festival to take place at Pier 80 next month. Dubbed SoSF and scheduled for June 28, a day before San Francisco's official Pride Parade, the event boasts performances by Oakland R&B star Kehlani, 'Nasty' singer Tinashe and pop artist Kim Petras, who in 2023 became the first openly transgender artist to receive a Grammy Award for best pop duo/group performance (for 'Unholy') and the second transgender woman to win a Grammy following electronic music composer Wendy Carlos. It is unclear if SoSF will be both indoors and outdoors, like Portola Festival. But with the event scheduled to begin at 2 p.m., musical performances are likely to extend well into the evening, when noise complaints tend to surge.

3 illegal gambling dens, 2 unsanctioned nightclubs shut down in San Francisco
3 illegal gambling dens, 2 unsanctioned nightclubs shut down in San Francisco

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Yahoo

3 illegal gambling dens, 2 unsanctioned nightclubs shut down in San Francisco

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — Three illegal gambling dens and two unsanctioned nightclubs were shut down in San Francisco in recent months, according to San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu's office. The illegal establishments, which were located in the southeast of the city, created a 'public nuisance and fueled illegal activity,' Chiu's office said. Working with city departments on enforcement actions, the city attorney's office sent demand letters to property owners, requiring them to put a stop to the raucous illegal activities occurring on their properties. 'I appreciated that the property owners cooperated with our demands to put an end to this wildly illegal conduct,' Chiu said. 'This outcome brings real relief to the neighbors who endured the chaos caused by these illegal gambling dens and nightclubs.' Oakland school mourns student shot and killed Monday The San Francisco Police Department executed a search warrant at one of the properties — a commercial space located at 57 Leland Avenue in Visitacion Valley — in January. SFPD, according to officials, seized nine gambling machines, a stolen firearm and ammunition. After receiving the city's letter, the property owner had the tenants vacate the property. In August 2024, SFPD responded to a report of shots fired in the Outer Mission at a commercial unit located at 5530 Mission Street. Multiple cartridge cases were found inside and outside the unit. The city launched an investigation and executed a search warrant. Six gambling machines, firearms and ammunition were seized. The property owners evicted the tenants. In another incident, SFPD executed a search warrant in the Cayuga Terrace at 1201 Cayuga Avenue following an armed robbery. Ten gambling machines and methamphetamine were seized from a ground-floor unit. The city attorney's office sent a demand letter to the property owner alleging a violation of the Red Light Abatement Law due to illegal gambling. The property owner evicted the tenant. Following numerous noise complaints regarding a Bernal Heights commercial space at 3261 Mission Street, SFPD and an investigator from the Entertainment Commission observed a loud, illegal after-hours nightclub in November and December. The nightclub featured a bar, a DJ, gambling machines, and alcohol being served without a proper license. Parties at the property were advertised on social media, according to the city attorney. The property also lacked an after-hours permit and an entertainment permit for live music. The city attorney's office sent a letter to the property owner who reached an agreement with the tenants to bring them into compliance. In another incident, SFPD responded to a crowd of people entering a space located at 4461 Mission Street in the Excelsior at a commercial space where loud music was playing late at night. Tenants at the unit denied SFPD and Entertainment Commission inspectors entry on two occasions, saying they were hosting a 'private party.' The property didn't have proper permits for operating after-hours or live music. The city attorney sent the property owners a demand letter and the tenants vacated the premises. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store