Hi all, i am thinking. Shall i or sharnt i post
So i have decided to go ahead stick in a post into this section for the hell of it
.
So i thought i would say hi and tell you about how it was when i worked.
I have had very little to do with working the doors these days, though i do have alot of friends who still work them. In my spare time at the weekends i used to work the clubs from 1986-1998. I worked in the Midlands and even worked in Wigan in 1989 for a company run by a guy called Mick Lyons who was a mate of the now deceased Karate Ka Gary Spires. Quite a heavy outfit back then, but good loyal lads.
I have read some of the threads in this section and found them very interesting, and a world apart from the days when i worked.
When i was working the doorman used to be the handy lad that the club/pub used to hire to keep the Peace. The local bad lads used to look upon the doorman as the fast gun and would target him for a fight. Yes some in my time used to have a bit of a heavy handed approach, but you must remember how things were back then. Not many if at all respected the doorman. We used to have the local football hooligans target particular clubs because they knew the doormen were handy lads
There was also a lot of resentment towards the police by a lot of doormen back then as well. The reason for this was because, we the doormen used to sort out the fights and trouble. More so even in the streets, and the police were no were to be seen until the trouble was over (well in fact they were around the corner). They knew the doormen would be in the thick of it doing what they could not do out in the streets. When it was all over only then did they arrive and single out the easy target....the doormen, the drunken lads all disappeared into the back ground.
Then over time things got worse and worse, and then came the arrival of the students...in there masses. My home town of Derby became a student city over night, that's when things really changed. Suddenly students would think it easy game for them to attack doormen and then cry foul when they did not get it there way
, and over night they all knew there rights when you put a hand on them to escort them from the property.
The police were directing there vendetta more and more towards the doormen, and little collaborations between them and the landlords became apparent. Why the collaborations? Because the police threatened the landlords licence so they had to play ball. Schemes such as "Pubwatch" were set up were door staff were asked to volunteer to attend training courses. Even the ones that did, the police were still making a B-line towards the doorman at the end of an incident
. We nicknamed the scheme "Doorman watch"
You know what, in about 1997 IIRC the doormen of Derby were so pissed of that we all got together in various meetings and were going to do a series of flash strikes at the weekend. We were sick of cleaning up the trouble in the streets out side our clubs while the police were standing by watching, and then they would target the doorman when it all stopped. Our theory was that if we did a lightning strike on a Saturday night then the police would have to sort out the trouble, in which they could not with out doormen. So the clubs and pubs would have no choice but to close up loosing the city millions of ££s. It was a interesting time and got the police very worried. So much in fact that we grabbed the headlines of the two local newspapers and we even had meetings with the head of the Derbyshire Constabulary...twice. We put out point across and they were listening. Were it all went wrong was that a few doormen had subscribed to the local voluntary schemes that the police had set up, so they did not feel impelled to strike
Boy do they regret that today now that the little pilot schemes have now become the controlling factor that is the sia). But had they not been the little yes men of the police who knows... We had 200 doormen at the meetings and other doormen from surrounding cites were attending and watching. Think about it, there were and are more doormen that postmen in the UK and they had/have a union, a voice...think about it. What voice do doormen have now....the sia LOL!!!!
Like i said earlier at the beginning of my ramblings, i don't have anything to do with the doors anymore. But i do speak to some of the existing lads who now work along side the "new wave" doormen. And boy have things changed, they are now the yes men of the police and the whole Sean has changed. I am so glad i am out of it, it was only a bit of spare cash and not worth the hassle anymore
I will say this though before the floor is open to attack me. No matter what DS course and little shiny badge you may have, and with a flowers on
Or how professional a persona you think your giving of. You will always be seen as a lowly doorman by the general public, few will respect you and see you as an easy target, and will look at your chosen career as a joke. I had several people (usually women) say to me in my time, your a doorman because you cant do anything else
Boy that used to piss me of, if only they knew what i did for a living
.
You guys who are working the doors now, you have no choice but to play ball with the controlling factors, and you have my pity as well as my respect. But watch your back out there boys and girls, stay safe
So i thought i would say hi and tell you about how it was when i worked.
I have had very little to do with working the doors these days, though i do have alot of friends who still work them. In my spare time at the weekends i used to work the clubs from 1986-1998. I worked in the Midlands and even worked in Wigan in 1989 for a company run by a guy called Mick Lyons who was a mate of the now deceased Karate Ka Gary Spires. Quite a heavy outfit back then, but good loyal lads.
I have read some of the threads in this section and found them very interesting, and a world apart from the days when i worked.
When i was working the doorman used to be the handy lad that the club/pub used to hire to keep the Peace. The local bad lads used to look upon the doorman as the fast gun and would target him for a fight. Yes some in my time used to have a bit of a heavy handed approach, but you must remember how things were back then. Not many if at all respected the doorman. We used to have the local football hooligans target particular clubs because they knew the doormen were handy lads
There was also a lot of resentment towards the police by a lot of doormen back then as well. The reason for this was because, we the doormen used to sort out the fights and trouble. More so even in the streets, and the police were no were to be seen until the trouble was over (well in fact they were around the corner). They knew the doormen would be in the thick of it doing what they could not do out in the streets. When it was all over only then did they arrive and single out the easy target....the doormen, the drunken lads all disappeared into the back ground.
Then over time things got worse and worse, and then came the arrival of the students...in there masses. My home town of Derby became a student city over night, that's when things really changed. Suddenly students would think it easy game for them to attack doormen and then cry foul when they did not get it there way
The police were directing there vendetta more and more towards the doormen, and little collaborations between them and the landlords became apparent. Why the collaborations? Because the police threatened the landlords licence so they had to play ball. Schemes such as "Pubwatch" were set up were door staff were asked to volunteer to attend training courses. Even the ones that did, the police were still making a B-line towards the doorman at the end of an incident
You know what, in about 1997 IIRC the doormen of Derby were so pissed of that we all got together in various meetings and were going to do a series of flash strikes at the weekend. We were sick of cleaning up the trouble in the streets out side our clubs while the police were standing by watching, and then they would target the doorman when it all stopped. Our theory was that if we did a lightning strike on a Saturday night then the police would have to sort out the trouble, in which they could not with out doormen. So the clubs and pubs would have no choice but to close up loosing the city millions of ££s. It was a interesting time and got the police very worried. So much in fact that we grabbed the headlines of the two local newspapers and we even had meetings with the head of the Derbyshire Constabulary...twice. We put out point across and they were listening. Were it all went wrong was that a few doormen had subscribed to the local voluntary schemes that the police had set up, so they did not feel impelled to strike
Like i said earlier at the beginning of my ramblings, i don't have anything to do with the doors anymore. But i do speak to some of the existing lads who now work along side the "new wave" doormen. And boy have things changed, they are now the yes men of the police and the whole Sean has changed. I am so glad i am out of it, it was only a bit of spare cash and not worth the hassle anymore
I will say this though before the floor is open to attack me. No matter what DS course and little shiny badge you may have, and with a flowers on
You guys who are working the doors now, you have no choice but to play ball with the controlling factors, and you have my pity as well as my respect. But watch your back out there boys and girls, stay safe