Much better were the old-school socials that were never advertised in public, had a very selective guest list, and were actually about socializing, as opposed to marketing. They were fun, enabled folks to get to know each other well, and had essentially no risk for the parties involved. Originally Posted by blowpopThe problem with that is that you need a critical mass of people in your invite pool to keep it going. You have to be constantly adding people as people dropped off. Otherwise you are left with just a handful of people.
The problem with that is that you need a critical mass of people in your invite pool to keep it going. You have to be constantly adding people as people dropped off. Otherwise you are left with just a handful of people. Originally Posted by BigLouieThat's indeed a fact, and the first people to move on, due to the transitory nature of the business, is the women. With no women the guys stop coming; they can get together for drinks anytime.
Holding a big hobby social looks like a PITA and is a huge security risk. Unless the organizer knows everyone personally (and I mean personally, as in Real Life, not via the board) it's trivial for someone uninvited to sneak in. And then it's just a matter of time before someone does something stupid.
Much better were the old-school socials that were never advertised in public, had a very selective guest list, and were actually about socializing, as opposed to marketing. They were fun, enabled folks to get to know each other well, and had essentially no risk for the parties involved. Originally Posted by blowpop
Unless you attended some of the socials back in 1999-2001, you really don't have a clue what you're talking about. Originally Posted by DEAR_JOHNI remember those socials, those were the good old days..... I would never attend a publicised social (I mean just look at how people act behind a keyboard, many of us have way too much to lose for public drama), Austin has really nice private ones.
Maybe we should ask Magica..... ah, fuck it.Actually, I stopped going when the events got too big and high profile. And shortly after, the big bust happened. I came to the conclusion that the reward didn't justify the risk, so I restrict my attendance to private events that fly far below the radar.
You stopped going/getting invites when they seized giving out free "hummers". Originally Posted by Dorian Gray