London’s night-time economy dilemma | FT World
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The UK’s once thriving nightclub scene is dwindling. Now Fabric, one of the country’s best known clubs, faces permanent closure after its license was revoked. The FT’s Daniel Garrahan reports on what this means for the night-time economy. ► Subscribe to the Financial Times on YouTube: http://bit.ly/FTimeSubs For more video content from the Financial Times, visit http://www.FT.com/video Twitter https://twitter.com/ftvideo Facebook https://www.facebook.com/financialtimes
Comments
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I took a pill in Ibiza
To show Avicii I was cool
And when I finally got sober, felt 10 years older
But damn it, it was something to do. -
And this is how the illegal rave scene started :) poor people, no money but still an urge to dance! re start the unity n make it stronger!
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kids in london cannot afford to go out that much anymore. everything is too expensive.
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Too many fights and the government wants you to get drunk instead. The buzzy area point was very good.
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London's a dump full of foreigners.
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Captions/SUbtitles please.
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partying in the coming london is for the rich. the rich take cocaine in masses and the police looks away, but young people partying in clubs, dancing and taking drugs is a problem. there is a reason why the uk has a problem with binge drinking.
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no one goes to london to have fun or party anymore. continental europe is far more exciting and liberal today.
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