feat(web): Wave 4 — prose layouts + /policies on Tailwind typography
diff --git a/content/posts/2026/dancefloor-dynamics-gender-ratio/index.md b/content/posts/2026/dancefloor-dynamics-gender-ratio/index.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..74471b0 --- /dev/null +++ b/content/posts/2026/dancefloor-dynamics-gender-ratio/index.md @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ +--- +title: "Dancefloor dynamics: gender ratio" +pubDate: 2026-04-05T20:04:47.000Z +updatedDate: 2026-04-05T20:04:47.000Z +draft: false +excerpt: "Nobody in the underground scene wants to talk about gender ratio on the dancefloor. It sounds like nightclub marketing from the 2000s. But the dynamics are real, the economic implications … Read more" +categories: + - Guides +tags: + - community + - format-guide + - tone-instructional + - venues +featured: + src: https://cdn.slist.net/posts/dancefloor-dynamics-gender-ratio/cover.png + alt: "Diverse crowd dancing on underground dancefloor under dramatic lighting" +legacy_wp_id: 15983 +--- +Nobody in the underground scene wants to talk about gender ratio on the dancefloor. It sounds like nightclub marketing from the 2000s. But the dynamics are real, the economic implications are measurable, and ignoring them costs you money and atmosphere every single event. + +## Why ratio matters for bar revenue + +For non-queer scenes, a balanced gender ratio directly correlates with higher drink sales. This is not speculation — it is observable across dozens of events. When the room skews heavily male, bar revenue drops. When the demographics balance out, people spend more time at the bar, more money per head, and stay longer. +Diff truncated (64 lines total). View full commit on GitHub →