Night Life
Alex Coolman
Ah the predatory waters of the bar scene! Has a more treacherous and
unforgiving environment ever been the subject of a “National Geographic”
special? Has a wetsuited and goggled scientist ever flopped off a dinghy
to encounter a sight more fierce?
Naturally, I was scared as I motored my fishing boat, I mean my Toyota,
into the parking lot of Shark Club, the Costa Mesa bar and nightclub
renowned for its aquarium full of man-eating sharks and its dance floor
full of carnivorous Beautiful People. I wasn’t wearing a chain-mail
wetsuit or anything by Prada, and the possibility of being chewed up by
the social scene seemed all too likely.
Fortunately, I had persuaded intrepid Daily Pilot city editor Jenifer
Ragland to come along on the journey. Ragland, an amateur ichthyologist,
is fascinated by sharks, and was eager to see the toothy creatures
cruising around in Shark Club’s 2,000-gallon aquarium. If attacked by any
particularly vicious club-goers, I planned to throw Ragland in front of
me and run away to the car.
Shark Club just got a bunch of new computer equipment, G3 Macs and fancy
projectors to display very large images of computer screens doing very
fast Web browsing. I was wondering how all these high-tech gizmos would
be incorporated into the clubbing experience. Would people be having
“cyber sex”? Would all the drinks at the bar now be “smart drinks,”
whatever that means?
No. The scene I encountered after I dished out my $10 was less
intimidating -- and less exciting -- than I’d anticipated. There was
hardly anyone around, for one thing, and the vibe in the club felt less
like the blood-crazed feeding frenzy I had expected than some kind of
high school dance in a creatively decorated gymnasium.
Even worse, the computers were being kept locked away from the grubby
hands of people such as me. Only corporate clients attending private
parties would get a chance to see the stuff, much less use it.
And the sharks? My god, they were puny! They were the size of trout!
Ichthyologist Ragland was very disappointed by these creatures, a pair of
which were swimming to and fro in their little glassed-in world. Of
course, when you’ve seen as many sharks as Ragland has, it takes a lot to
be impressed.
The point of these creatures, though, is that they’re little fishy
metaphors. They’re references to “pool sharks” for one thing, as the club
has 24 pool tables. And they’re also symbols of the relentless,
repetitive and numbing motion of the single scene. What I meant to say
was, the cool, sexy, adventurous world of the single scene. Choose one of
the above.
At any rate, there were a couple people shaking it on the dance floor and
a couple other people wielding cues at the tables. I quickly drank a
drink and began, in fine journalistic fashion, to bother everyone I
could.
“Say there,” I said, glomming on to the nearest group, “what do you think
of all this nonsense?”
“We’re a little underdressed,” said the guy I was bothering, whose name
was Mike. “I’ve got thongs on. It doesn’t matter to me, but the doorman
made a big deal about it.”
Mike showed me his feet; he was indeed wearing flip-flops.
Encouraged by this initial bit of success, I bothered Tracy, the woman of
the group.
“I like the sharks in the tank,” she said, claiming not to mind the fact
that they were so small.
“Before I came here, I heard it was a cheesy meat market. But it’s a good
place to play pool,” Tracy said. “Maybe it’s late-night cheese.”
So far so good. Next, Ragland and I attacked a pair of dapper men who
were surveying the club from the bar.
“Abend. Wie geht’s Euch denn so?” I asked them, having read somewhere
that all the coolest night life types work bits of German into their
party chat. I had no idea what I had just said, but they seemed pretty
impressed.
“It’s a little slow,” was the response that the first guy, Robert,
offered, ignoring me and looking at Ragland. “It might have potential.”
All the rest of the conversation was completely lost to me because I
couldn’t hear it over the smash disco hits the DJ was spinning. I kept
smiling and nodding just the same as Robert and his friend, Bryant,
exchanged hilarious anecdotes with Ragland.
Later, when we had abandoned them and were searching for more people to
bother, she told me the clean parts of what they had told her.
“During happy hour is good,” she reported. “And Saturday night.
“Friday nights, it’s all techno,” she said.
Coincidentally, we had just wandered into a small room that was being
strafed with techno music by a DJ perched like a sniper up in a little
booth near the ceiling. There were only half a dozen people in the place,
but one of the women was dancing in front of a mirror so it looked like
there was one more.
Of all the people at the club that evening, this particular woman and her
mirror image were the most shark-like. There was something predatory in
the way she was ogling herself. Her weird, quasi-seductive dance reminded
me, sort of, of a hammerhead circling around a sunburned kid on an orange
Styrofoam body board just before taking a first, investigatory bite.
I tried to explain this to ichthyologist Ragland, but she, with her
scientific approach to things fish-related, could only stare at me,
puzzled. Probably, if we both had had several more drinks, the nature of
this vague connection between fish and human would have become clear.
Instead, we watched her grind and undulate, dancing the night away in
that faintly sharky way. She was weird and occasionally beautiful; she
was night life made physical. I kept waiting for her to try to bite her
own reflection.
WHAT: Shark Club
WHERE: 841 Baker St., Costa Mesa
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. Wednesdays, 2 a.m. Thursdays and 3 a.m. Fridays.
7 p.m. to 3 a.m. Saturdays. Closed Sundays.
HOW MUCH: $10 cover Thursday through Saturday after 8:30 p.m.
PHONE: (714) 751-6428
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.