35 comments

  • hack_fraud13 a day ago

    You’ll face a high regulatory and liability burden, but neither of those are insurmountable (note that I am not a lawyer or financial advisor and this is not legal or financial advice). Liquor license to serve drinks is the first that comes to mind. Then there’s the risk factor that running a bar involves dealing with unsavory people (people who start fights, harass, other levels of petty crime and violence). You also need to screen guests for valid IDs.

    You need a rent-a-bouncer service for your hosts, too at the very least.

    Again, not impossible but difficult (and solving the difficulty is the whole value prop of a business). Consider synergies with other event organizers, especially in the music scene.

    • informal007 a day ago

      Totally right, regulatory and liability burden take the huge part of cost.

      However, Consumers can take some of these responsibilities, That's why the price of service mentioned by OP can be less expensive.

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      Yeah, your right. There are certainly some regulatory challenges with liquor and if a host a serving food. But to get around the liquor license issue, it could be byob. The events also do not necessarily have to involve a party - it could be other events focused around a theme or activity.

      Bouncers for hosts would probably not be necessary. I've used airbnb experiences before and this is basically the same concept. Airbnb doesn't have bouncers for their hosts. The ability to leave reviews by both hosts and guests would deter bad behavior. But this is an issue I need to dig deeper into.

  • sky2224 18 hours ago

    Addressing the bar kind of scene you're talking about: I just don't think it'd work for those that are of the legal age to drink (speaking from the US perspective). People go to bars/clubs for the intense environment of people getting drunk, dancing, etc. For the people that want something more chill, they just go to a more mellow dive bar.

    But most of all, there's not much of a plan when going out for a lot of people. Friends will get together and say, "let's go to the bar" and the night goes from there. With your idea, there's a requirement of finding a location, scheduling a location, renting out that location. Oops, double booked? Night ruined.

    I think overall this idea gets really dicey when there's a service other than renting out the space to a customer. And if all you're doing is renting the space, why wouldn't I just use airbnb?

  • bhag2066 2 hours ago

    Great idea to try, good luck!

  • arch-ninja 16 hours ago

    I love the idea! It combines social-network capabilities with in-person hangouts. Let me know if you need a C++/Rust/Zig developer for backend work. The required infrastructure sounds simple to build if you outsource payment processing. The most complex component will be a reputation system.

    • nyclawyer 4 hours ago

      Thanks man. I appreciate it. I'll def let you know when the time comes. Would you be down to beta test?

  • rclairville a day ago

    Love the idea! I think the biggest barrier would be neighbors who do not want parties in their neighborhoods.

    If you could find a way around that, that neighborhood would be a hit with millennials and gen z.

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      Thank you! And yes, those concerns are valid. Though I'm envisioning the use case to be wider than just a party. It could be hosting a book club, kids play date, a movie night etc. Would you be interested in beta testing it?

  • p1esk a day ago

    How is this different from simply inviting your friends for a party?

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      The idea is that you can open the app at any time and see what events are happening IRL in your location. Would that be something you'd find useful?

  • al_borland a day ago

    What would differentiate this from renting an AirBnB and inviting people over? Assuming I don’t want random strangers crashing my party.

    I mentioned AirBnB, but a lot of them now explicitly state “no parties.” I’m sure this wasn’t without having some bad experiences. Don’t imagine people like you using the service, imagine the people who are trashing hotel rooms. What will the cleaning fees be like? If events are posted publicly, who is liable for damage when randoms show up? I’m picturing these places looking like college rentals after a short period of time. Too many rules to guard against this kind of thing and people will get too worried to have any fun.

    When parties get out of hand, how would that be handled? Private security? The police?

    I could see buildings, or cities banning this pretty quickly.

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      I think your right - hosting parties could present various issues i.e. building restrictions, HOA rules etc. But do think it could work if the event is not necessarily a party? Say for instance your a suburban mom and your looking for a play date for your kids for Friday afternoon. You hop on the app and you can see which families are hosting a play date on Friday. Think of it as an app that tells you in real time what events are happening in either your immediate vicinity or a specific area of interest.

      • al_borland a day ago

        I’m not a parent, so I can’t speak too much to that. Though my first reaction is that a lot of parents are too protective to want play dates posted online for anyone to show up to.

        If you had nicer homes signed up, I could see MLM people renting them out to host their gatherings to sell whatever it is they are selling… if it would be financially viable. I think that community has a lot of fake it till you make it attitude.

        I wonder if garages or workshops would be an option. Some cities have maker spaces, for people who need some tools or space, but don’t have access to a shop or the money to buy a bunch of tool. Being able to find a nearby neighbor who has some tools and some space to build a one off thing could be interesting.

        If specifically looking for things where events are posted and public, I think it then starts crossing into the Meetup space. More recently when I browse that site it seems more and more meetups require membership and are limited in the number of people that can sign up. I think this is inevitable, as few places can handle an unlimited number of people, and they want to keep out the creeps and weirdos.

  • fragmede 18 hours ago

    AirBnB kicked overnight parties off their platform because they disturbed neighbors, property damaged, items stolen, neighbors calling the cops. The problem with small groups is they can still do that on airbnb, so why would they use your platform other than cost - except you need to monetize somehow as well.

    There's an established warehouse rave party scene. Connect with them and work those parties for long enough to gain experience with the with involved and the various failure modes that they deal with before jumping in.

    The idea of profiles isn't enough because you can kick people off the platform once they misbehave, but by then the damage is done. And who knows who really stole the laptop that was in the locked closet, anyway?

    That's not to say don't do it. it's totally a niche in the market since airbnb had to shutdown party hosting places on their platform, but you're gonna need insurance, experienced people from the underground party scene, and enough money to fund this without profit for longer than you think.

    You'll want bouncers of it's open invite to randos, plus a team of cleaners who specialize in post-event cleanup on call.

    Parents are a specific niche that this might work for, although finding a babysitter that the parents will trust could be a challenge.

  • gardenhedge 9 hours ago

    You should start it as specific things like sports events. E.g someone with a big TV shows the game or ufc fight or gaming nights. Mario kart sessions etc

    • nyclawyer 9 hours ago

      That's a great idea.

      • gardenhedge 6 hours ago

        Remember me when you make it big

        • nyclawyer 5 hours ago

          Haha what's your email and I'll add you to the beta once its available?

  • theWreckluse a day ago

    I love it! Keep me posted if you ever get a beta out

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      For sure. What's a good email address I can reach out at?

  • sarah_eu a day ago

    I would not pursue this idea.

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      Could you elaborate why not?

  • stephenr a day ago

    Potential issues? What potential issues could there be with people running faux bars in their own home without a liquor license?

    Why not go all in. Run an app to let people invite strangers into their house and do major surgery/critical care on them. Call it AirAandE.

    After all the obvious evidence to the contrary, why do people think this "who needs laws what could go wrong" approach will work out?

    • nyclawyer a day ago

      The sassy tone is really not necessary. Also, airbnb's entire business is predicated on inviting strangers into your house. Do you have anything else?

      • stephenr a day ago

        (A) Airbnb is the poster child for "fuck the law I do what I want"; it's becoming increasingly obvious to people that it's a really good way to have a shitty time. If you want to emulate that business model, it says a lot about your priorities.

        (B) Airbnb "hosts" don't invite people and then serve them alcohol. There's no way this brilliant idea doesn't run afoul of liquor laws.

        • nyclawyer a day ago

          I think its clear you didn't read the entire post. But thank you for your contribution.

  • cranberryturkey a day ago

    i love it. like airbnb but for the night life.

  • purple-leafy a day ago

    No