THE NIGHT STUFF
Summer Camp crowd fired up at The O Lounge
Waiting in line to get into clubs is often part of my job. But it's not always all that bad.
One of the perks is the opportunity to hone in on OPC (other people's conversations) and write about them. For example:
Dude at halfway point in queue to get into Summer Camp at The O Lounge: "If they play any Dave Matthews Band in there, I'm outta here! ... I never wait in line!"
Dude in butt-end of queue to get into Summer Camp at The O Lounge: "Well, you are now, dude!"
Laughter followed.
Christa (also in line, and who didn't want her last name to appear in a column her dad reads religiously each Friday with his first cup of office coffee) confessed that she'd met her "future ex-boyfriend" at the very first Summer Camp in May.
"He'll be so outta there by the time this comes out," said Christa, 21, laughing.
The Wednesday night weekly's overwhelming success since opening is likely due to a trio of circumstances:
The result? A party-hungry gathering of 18- to 30-year-olds wall to wall at O Lounge in the middle of the week, every week.
Summer Camp has become one of the lounge's three busiest nights, said owner Elizabeth Hata Watanabe. So busy, in fact, that she decided to extend it beyond the hot season. (It was just renamed Endless Summer Camp this week.)
The set list was heavy on post-millennial Top 40 hip-hop and R&B with a good dose of reggaeton thrown in (see side box). If you couldn't move to it, it simply wasn't on the decks.
By 1 a.m., The O Lounge dance floor was a grinding, sweaty sea of moving bodies that had beat down its original boundaries and expanded into the lounge. Patrons were dancing in cozier spots throughout the venue.
Atta Ho was checking out a couple of girls in matching white low-cut tank tops, grinding near the DJ booth to the Pussycat Dolls' "Don't Cha." Memories of a lion stalking gazelle on an Animal Planet documentary briefly flashed in my head.
"The drinks are cheap. The music is good. ... I've hooked up here many times," Ho said about Summer Camp's appeal.
Christa, from the velvet rope, wasn't looking for any of that.
"I just come with my girls to dance," she said, smiling.
You can sleep comfortably tonight, dad.