Now I know this sounds like I've written a pamphlet or summat but it is quite a good game when your off your t*ts and also helps everyone in your chosen place of Soul Heaven for the evening; the promoter, atendees etc at the same time.
When a floor is empty the usual thing to do is get up from where you are sat and dance in the space in front of you - easy access to your beer, the wife, whatever, understood.
If you want to help a floor you need to look at the demographic in the place, suss the obvious cold-spots on and around the dancefloor and aim specifically for them.
Like if it's early doors and everyone is parked up the front leaving the back end of the venue and dancefloor feeling a bit lonely and daunting, everyone then tends to stick themselves up the top end of the dancefloor, where they feel safe and surrounded to a degree.
If you stick yourself up the back end, or wherever you reckon the cold spot is, you watch, there will always be someone willing to cover the space inbetween you and the front end/cold spot, spreading people more evenly across the floor and encouraging more, less confident, dancers to the fore - as you are the last man, covering them.
Have a go, it really works. I've had years of fun out of it.
Send: £1.99 to FET Promotions c/o Shaun Gibbons Tea Room, End Of The Pier, Morecambe NE1 NEe's
Now I know this sounds like I've written a pamphlet or summat but it is quite a good game when your off your t*ts and also helps everyone in your chosen place of Soul Heaven for the evening; the promoter, atendees etc at the same time.
When a floor is empty the usual thing to do is get up from where you are sat and dance in the space in front of you - easy access to your beer, the wife, whatever, understood.
If you want to help a floor you need to look at the demographic in the place, suss the obvious cold-spots on and around the dancefloor and aim specifically for them.
Like if it's early doors and everyone is parked up the front leaving the back end of the venue and dancefloor feeling a bit lonely and daunting, everyone then tends to stick themselves up the top end of the dancefloor, where they feel safe and surrounded to a degree.
If you stick yourself up the back end, or wherever you reckon the cold spot is, you watch, there will always be someone willing to cover the space inbetween you and the front end/cold spot, spreading people more evenly across the floor and encouraging more, less confident, dancers to the fore - as you are the last man, covering them.
Have a go, it really works. I've had years of fun out of it.
Send: £1.99 to FET Promotions c/o Shaun Gibbons Tea Room, End Of The Pier, Morecambe NE1 NEe's
Edited by Barry