HUSTLER CLUB REJECTED

Detroit council rejects Hustler strip club

The Detroit City Council today voted 5-3 against transferring a topless dancing permit from a downtown bar to potential owners wanting to open a Larry Flynt Hustler Club.

The property at 415 E. Congress is currently home to the Zoo Bar. An owners group, known as HDV Greektown, has asked for the license transfer.

An attorney for the owners said earlier this week that the club would employ up to 125 people.

Before the vote, an attorney for the Perfecting Church in Detroit urged City Council to vote down the license transfer.

Attorney Richard Mack of Detroit said the Zoo Bar is licensed for topless entertainment but hasn’t been an adult entertainment club for at least two years. The venue is mainly used as a concert hall, he said.

However, during the weeklong festivities before Super Bowl XL, adult film star Jenna Jameson hosted a party at the Zoo Bar that featured topless dancing.

“We must stand against this,” Mack said. “In this case, the club will be one of the largest strip clubs in the area – if not the state – within one block of a child day care center where parents may have to pick up their children at night.”

Mack said downtown crime will surge and property values will decline with a strip club in the area.

The City Council declined to act on a previous request to transfer the permits in 2003, prompting the owners to sue for the right to open.

The bar owners first took the council to court when it tried to prevent the opening of a Deja Vu strip club at the same location. A judge had ruled that the club could open.. At that time, owners also had talked about opening as a Hustler club.

The previous ruling permitted the owners to open a Deja Vu nightclub, but the council never transferred the liquor license.

Attorney Frank Palazzolo, who represents HDV Greektown, said the owners filed another lawsuit this year after the City Council declined to act on the transfer.

Palazzolo said: “My client is disappointed with today’s vote and we’ll just continue with the litigation that has already been institued.”

Council members who voted against the transfer were: Brenda Jones, Kwame Kenyatta, Martha Reeves, JoAnn Watson and Monica Conyers.

Sheila Cockrel, Alberta Tinsley-Talabi and Ken Cockrel Jr. voted for the transfer.

Sheila Cockrel declined comment except to say her vote reflected the “serious litigation” that is still pending.

Kenyatta countered that he’s not worried about the lawsuits.

“I think we’ll weather the storm on this,” said Kenyatta, who voted to reject the license transfer.

INVESTING IN PORN

Getting in the skin game

An entrepreneur tries to make it easier for everyone to profit from one of the economy’s dirty little secrets.

(Business 2.0 Magazine) — Wall Street is largely a boys club, a place packed with hypercompetitive tough guys proud to wear their machismo on their sleeves. Yet there’s still one investment the Street is generally wary of: porn.

That’s why Francis Koenig, a onetime Wall Street hedge fund executive now based in Los Angeles, believes there are riches to be made by matching investors with “adult entertainment” companies. He believes that plenty of people would back the industry if there were vehicles commonly available to do so.

His reasoning is simple: Porn is a lucrative part of the American economy, hovering around $12 billion a year. And there are hundreds of porn outfits hungry for financing to become more than bedroom operations.

Make money in porn

“There just hasn’t been a good way to invest in this market,” says Koenig, 31.

An opportunity for small-time investors?
He launched AdultVest late last year to change that. He’s been courting investors and combing the country for small and medium-size porn businesses, some of which boast profit margins upwards of 60 percent. The response has been strong: Koenig says he’s signed up well over 1,000 potential investors since January.
For now, he’s catering to investors with big money, although he says his approach will eventually evolve to serve the investing masses. He’s raising money for two funds: a $100 million fund that requires a minimum investment of $1 million, and a $10 million fund with a $100,000 minimum.
Accredited investors can sign up on AdultVest.com to qualify, and Koenig says people are signing up at the rate of 15 per day. Roughly 300 companies – including website-porn subscription businesses, escort services, and strip clubs – have registered. Investors can also use the AdultVest marketplace to hook up directly with companies.

Koenig has a good track record: The New World Partners hedge fund, where he was a managing director, posted double- and triple-digit returns through the late ’90s – and he thinks similar returns are possible with porn. His funds are set up like any venture capital fund and will invest in a range of businesses, with a portion of each earmarked for buying and running strip clubs.

Adding some Wall Street finesse

The overarching strategy is to take majority stakes in businesses that AdultVest will then help manage and consolidate. Koenig won’t say how close he is to raising the total $110 million, but to help the sell, he and his team won’t charge any performance fee until the funds return 100 percent.

“There’s never been big money from the outside,” says Paul Fishbein, president of the leading porn trade tracker, AVN Publications, about the industry. “It’s a logical next step.”

Koenig is also working with large investors who are looking to take direct stakes in companies. Part of the pitch is that he ensures all investors total anonymity. “They’re creating a market that’s never existed in an industry that’s highly private,” says one Miami-based investor who’s looking to back firms with $5 million to $30 million in revenue.

For all the skittishness about investing in adult entertainment, Koenig points out that the smart money is catching on.

Playboy, for example, recently acquired the far racier empire of porn star Jenna Jameson for $17.6 million. And in August, New Frontier Media, a pay-per-view video distributor, received a buyout offer from Warren Lichtenstein, a tough-as-nails New York hedge fund manager who’s been going after companies he sees as ripe for turbocharged growth.

To Koenig, such moves show the promise of bringing Wall Street sophistication to what is now a supremely inefficient market.

In fact, he’s had talks with several brokerages interested in syndicating deals to sell to their Main Street investors. “People just need to get less shy,” Koenig says, “and they’ll realize that there’s silly money to be made here.”

THE ONLY REASON TO WATCH THE SUPER BOWL

Adult film star and porn empire queen Jenna Jameson is set to host a pre Super Bowl party in Detroit. The game matches the Seattle Seahawks against the Pittsburgh Steelers. So will the well endowed performer turn Super Bowl XL into a wardrobe malfunction XXX party?

Not quite.

Jenna says she will bring some of her Club Jenna stars to the Motor City’s Zoo Bar on Friday Feb. 3, but they won’t be naked.

But she does promise some lingerie and a sexy show.

“That’s not what it’s really about,” Jameson said of partying naked. “I just accept myself and I think a lot of women out there kind of relate to me. Everybody is sexual; I just happen to be really honest about it.”

Tickets are a stunning $500 and the pre-game party will offer party goers a chance to meet the adult film stars and a lingerie fashion show, open bar and autograph sessions with the girls.

Best guess – the bar will have plenty of activity and traffic.

One note: Super Bowl XXX was actually played in Phoenix in 1995 with Dallas defeating Pittsburgh 27-17.