Joaz Banbeck wrote:jts wrote:Joaz's analogy reveals its own limits. The beefy guys in front of nightclubs ... do not do is wander around the club, evaluating people on their knowledge of fine alcoholic beverages, on the urbanity and wit of their conversation, or on their dancing...
True. Such decisions are best when they are simplest. The more complex the decision and the finer the metrics of evaluation, the more effort it takes. There is a diminishing rate of return for that extra effort.
So there will always be a margin of error in the bouncer's judgement. And there will always be someone who hates him for it.
Good luck, Stalkor.
As a nightclubowner i feel i have an obligation to my visitors to give them a good time. Not having a bouncer and needing to call the cops for minor incidents is whats the problem.
Just imagine that a visitor starts harrassing ppl or is mad and starts breaking things. its getting ugly fast and you need action now. Calling the cops takes a couple of minutes or longer and he could do lots of damage, so a bouncer is a good middleway to cope with these kinds of things ad hoc.