Is the salsa scene a meat market?

brujo

Well-Known Member
I was talking to a lindy hopper friend of mine, she said that the salsa scene gives her a pickup scene/ meat market feeling. Is this true? Does this explain all the creepy old men hanging out? Do you find this impression stops some people from actually trying out salsa clubs?
 
In a word, yes.

There are lots of committed couples out there, and quite a few serious dancers, but hey, first, last and foremost, a meat market.

But not all the men are creepy. :D It's all in how you look at it.

The first time I went to a certain Latin club in town, I walked up to the bar to order a drink. A really handsome, distinguished Latin gentleman turns around, takes one look at me, says, "permiso" (which I think means excuse me?) and plants a big, juicy kiss on my cheek. Definitely a meat market. But he made my night. :lol:
 
Hmmm, this is what I've noticed. If you go to clubs where it's a 'latin music' night (a combo of salsa, merengue, bachata, spanish rock, latin house) it's a pure meat market. If you go to a 'salsa night' (let's say 75% or more salsa) I find it's almost entirely serious dancers with a few lurkers.
 
Good observation, youngsta. I'll check this out the next couple times I'm out, and see if I see the same difference you mention.

And by the way, congrats on making it to merchant class. 100 posts goes by quick, doesn't it? :D
 
OK, I'm not sure I understand the question.
Your going to pack a bunch of people (mostly single) onto a dance floor, sell them booze, and play some hip shakin salsa.
What else would you expect?
What are the characteristics of a vegetarian market?
 
hysterical reply Dancementor!! thanks for the laugh- i needed that! :D

I have to agree with youngsta. Clubs that are salsa dance spots usually attract dancers and carnivores are steared towards the mix music clubs. It is somewhat similar to a social in which women dress down (as oppsed to barely dress at clubs), liquor is not sold (H2O being the top seller) and guys ask for your hand to dance and not your number.

An interesting analogy is this website. Strictly dancers wanting to talk about dancing as opposed to migente.com where there are all sorts of forums which creates the meat market atmosphere. i dont mean to knock it totally though, afterall, i met my boyfriend there :wink:
 
***WARNING: The following post is not policatlly correct, read at your own risk ****


DanceMentor said:
What are the characteristics of a vegetarian market?

:shock: Wheelchairs :shock:
 
meaty marketing :-)

When I first started salsa dancing, I was very leery of the meat market reputation of salsa clubs. My response is that it varies greatly by particular club, and even by particular night, depending on the focus (what kind of music). One of the larger clubs in Seattle is quite meat markety IMO, and the music is much more "club" like -- mixed, no breaks, a bit of rap/reggae mixed in, flashing lights, the whole kit and caboodle. I'm not crazy about that place. I can feel the eyes on me. And not in a good way. :-)

The club I frequent (let's just say I am a die-hard regular) is more of a neighborhood feel. Most of the dancers are untrained (like me) but love the music, a nice mix of salsa, merengue, cumbia, with a bit of bachata and tropical mixed in for good measure. It's more casual, dancers are not as flashy (see "untrained"). It's a restaurant/bar that has a dance floor and DJ at night.

But overall, I do think the men can be more agressive than I've experienced at non-Latin clubs.

Melissa
 
Loved your post subject. :)


And I don't believe in stereotypes, but there are cliches out there about Latin men overall being more aggressive than men of other nationalities. Maybe that's part of where the meat market thing comes from :?: I've actually dated men from a couple different countries, and they do differ in style. What's considered aggressive in one place may be considered positively wimpy someplace else.

But, back on topic, my story from earlier in this thread. The same night I got my juicy kiss, I also saw several couples in at least their sixties, dancing away with their spouses like they were in their livingrooms. Maybe it's a mix :?:
 
Yeah the salsa dancing scene can be like that. It also depends
on where you go...

I think that if it is pure salsa then the chances of it getting too bad
go down, however, throw a mixed night in there and you've got
yourself higher chances of being hit on...;-)
 
incredible!!

young active adults - who know how to get down & boogy- not wanting to get hit on?!?! are we all getting old? :lol:

just kidding, but i'm fascinated by the maturity of the the true salsa scene as well as the members of this website. older adults usually associate music & dancing ("clubbing") with roudy, rambunctious & irresponsibly behaving youth. salsa showed them. :P

kudos to dance-forums.com :!:
 
The mixed format clubs usually cater to the non-dancers (read DRINKERS) which is why it becomes at meat market. Personally I don't believe it has anything to do with latin men because you'd find the same thing in any hip-hop or rock club that caters to non-dancers.

The pure salsa nights are catered to dancers (a LOT of H2O consumption). My weekly regular spot is about 75% salsa and it's not even close to being a meat market.
 

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