The Transition Of PJ’s (1972)
Just as Nash knew to cater to the kids in 1987 – turning the Seven Seas into Club Hollywood, just in time to catch the dance club-ecstasy chomping-teeth grinding craze, in 1972 the Nash knew things were changing as well. The sixties were over, and so the groovy sixties version of PJs had to change. But it did not immediately become the rock palace known as the Starwood. There were some bumps in the road, including a Vegas-style strip show with “not enough tease in their strip.”
From January 1, 1972.
jimmy 2:09 pm on February 16, 2017 Permalink |
I would work for Eddie , not breaking heads but with all the clubs and liquor licenses he had one could probably move up in the ranks pretty quick if loyal and ambicious
John 11:36 am on February 17, 2017 Permalink |
Ed always rewarded loyal employees. He might even vouch for someone and testify during the sentencing phase, so a former employee might avoid the death penalty for capital murder, like he did for Linell Dumas, who killed a cop’s mother during a robbery.