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New guidelines are out from the State Liquor Authority about live entertainment at New York food businesses, and it’s mostly bad news for restaurants and bars.
In the latest update to its phase three and four dining guidelines, the state agency is now prohibiting some restaurants from offering live music and other forms of outdoor entertainment. The new guidelines specify that restaurants and bars can only offer “incidental entertainment” that their licenses specifically allow for. “Advertised and/or ticketed shows are not permissible,” according to the new guidelines. “Music should be incidental to the dining experience and not the draw itself.”
Forms of destination entertainment — including comedy shows and karaoke — are no longer allowed at restaurants and bars as part of the new policy, even for businesses who are permitted to host them. Additionally, customers who are viewing a performance of any kind are prohibited from doing so while standing and performers must be spaced at least 12 feet from patrons, according to the new guidelines. Spotify playlists and elevator music appear to still be on the table for now. Eater has reached out to the State Liquor Authority for more information.
The new guidelines were issued on Thursday morning in response to a user-submitted question, which asked, “Can I have live entertainment or a DJ in my indoor or outdoor dining area?” Some restaurant owners say they were notified of the changes by email earlier this week, however. Yudai Kanayama, the restaurateur behind Chinatown’s newly opened Hokkaido restaurant Dr. Clark, says he first learned of the changes on Tuesday, August 18, in an email from the state agency.
According to Kanayama, a person who identified themselves as a worker with the SLA visited Dr. Clark and appeared to conduct an informal inspection of the restaurant’s outdoor karaoke set-up. “They wanted to see our menu and asked if they could take photographs,” Kanayama recalls. Shortly after that visit, the restaurant received a form email from the State Liquor Authority clarifying the new guidelines. At the bottom of the email, an additional note specified that “karaoke is not presently permitted for reasons of health and safety.”
Dr. Clark reopened for outdoor dining in late June and socially distant karaoke is one way that the newly opened restaurant has managed to stay afloat. “There are regulars who come here to sing everyday,” says Kanayama, whose license at Dr. Clark allows for late-night karaoke. Customers at the restaurant are required to order food with karaoke and also wear masks, in compliance with previous guidelines from the State Liquor Authority.
“A lot of people made reservations for dinner and karaoke together,” Kanayama says. “We are now turning everyone down. It’s our first week without karaoke and we’re doing our best.” Meanwhile, other restaurants and bars across the city have also used live entertainment as a way to raise funds for staff and encourage customers to linger while outdoor dining.
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