Brooklyn gay sex party

broken image

“There’s a whole community and ecosystem that relies on this place, and I don’t know what all these people are going to be able to do without it.” Now many of those performers could lose work. “It’s possible some weeks we were paying 30 to 40 performers,” the co-owner said. Rash was a relative newcomer along the Myrtle Avenue strip, a popular nightlife district in Bushwick, a historically Hispanic and industrial part of Brooklyn.The club saw itself as a launchpad for up-and-coming acts, especially queer artists who “maybe hadn’t had bookings like this before, haven’t performed at this scale before”, said Sillen.īefore it burned, the club was organizing seven shows a week, some shows with up to six DJs.

broken image
broken image

The interior of Rash night club after a suspected arson attack.

broken image