Le Prive

Le Privé was a successful Korean club or "K-Club" in Los Angeles which was believed to be the largest Asian dance club in North America.

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Significance and Design

The significance of this club had been reported in a variety of news media including LA Weekly, Asianweek, KoreAm Journal and the Seoul Times.

The club featured Gothic accents, gargoyles with lights piercing from their eyes, plush velvet couches, private karaoke rooms, a large dance floor with integrated floor illumination system, and marble trimmed bathrooms. The club was located on 721 S. Western Ave and opened in 2000, but closed in 2006. In 2007, it reopened under new ownership and a new name, Le Cercle.

Booking

"Booking", a unique Korean club practice in which waiters introduce club patrons to each other, was common at Le Privé. Booking is a practice in which waiters bring women (sometimes forcibly) to a table to sit with men. The men can then sit and talk to the women or tell them to leave depending on interest. This is one of the few instances in Korean culture where tipping is encouraged, as waiters usually give a better effort depending on gratuity.

Clientele

Approximately 65% of the patrons were Koreans (Korean Americans and immigrants), 20% Chinese (Chinese Americans and immigrants), 5% other Asians, 10% non Asians. The club hosts an average age range from 21 to 30, as well as a number of underage persons who have managed to sneak past the bouncer checking ID at the door.

Celebrities who came to Le Privé were Ben Affleck, Nicolas Cage, Vince Vaughn, Owen Wilson, Jackie Chan, Chang Chen, Brian McKnight, Mickey Rourke and Oliver Stone. This is also where Nicolas Cage met his wife, Alice Kim. Shaquille O'Neal held his birthday party there as well.

Trivia

Jennifer Lopez, DMX, Sugar Ray and Gerald Levert have filmed music videos at Le Privé.

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