Dumbfounded young clubbers turned up at nightclubs with McDonald’s happy meals after Covid 19 with no idea how to go clubbing, according legendary Scots nightclub boss.

As Scotland’s nighttime industry got back on its feet after a turbulent pandemic lockdown, the owner of the world’s longest-running underground nightclub, Glasgow’s Sub Club, says young people stuck at home for two years had no clue about how to act in venues.

Mike Grieve who, after 40 years in an industry that’s, “in his blood” says there “will always be an appetite” for clubbing and music that’s “part of our human existence”.

At the helm of Glasgow’s renowned Sub Club for three decades, Mike and fellow late night industry heavyweights have seen a change in behaviour among young people, “stuck at home for nearly two years”.

Mike claims that this “ground zero moment” of nightlife means young people have missed out on learning how to act in venues from “older friends and siblings”. Predicting’ these “behaviour patterns” is a challenge that Mike says he is “still trying to navigate”.

Speaking on The Human First podcast, He has opened up on the “innumerable challenges” of running a nightclub – one that’s survived a fire and the explosion of rave music as well as a global pandemic.

Adrian Murphy (R) and Sub Club Owner Mike Grieve (R)
The Human Firs podcast host Adrian Murphy (R) spoke to Sub Club Owner Mike Grieve (R) (Image: Provided)

Hosted by financial planner and CEO of Murphy Wealth, Adrian Murphy, the episode delved into Mike’s incredible career in the industry. Mike said: “During the pandemic it was almost like a fire break when people were stuck at home for, in our business, nearly two years.

“When particularly the young student population had to stay at home, it restarted and there was an influx of people getting into clubs, maybe for the first time.

“People had nobody to learn behaviour from like older friends or siblings. Young people were appearing at clubs not really knowing what to do. We had young people appearing at the door trying to get in with a McDonald’s and when we said no – they couldn’t understand why.

Glasgow nightclubs. Arches, Cathouse, Sub Club,
Many Scots will know all about the iconic nightclub (Image: Daily Record)

Clubbing is peer-led, led by oldest siblings or friends. That all went. So we experienced this ground zero moment with nightlife. I think that’s what we’re still trying to navigate.”

While some punters in their late teens my need educating on how to conduct themselves in clubs, Mike feels those a little older might have become accustomed to staying in at the weekend.

He added: “Then you have people in their mid-to-late twenties. Maybe, they have gotten used to staying in. Maybe, now, they don’t feel the same pressure to go out.”

The club owner feels a shift in working patterns could be partly to blame. The numbers are quite stark when you see them, how people’s behaviour has changed,” he said.

Signage for the Sub Club nightclub in Glasgow
Glasgow nightclub, Sub Club,

“They show how many people got into the way or working from home. Hybrid working has become much more commonplace.

“Mondays and Fridays are by far the preferred days for most people to work from home. People have gotten used to building their lifestyles around that and that has profound effects on the city centre, not just retail, but hospitality businesses as a whole.

“That’s had a really massive impact on Glasgow city centre in general.”

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But Mike maintains people will forever gravitate back towards the joy that comes from clubbing.

He said: “I always think there is going to be an appetite for nightlife. This goes so far back into human existence, listening to music and dancing. I think it will always be there. I think trying to predict what the behaviour patterns are is our challenge going forward.

“This industry is one of these things that’s in your blood. It’s something that I’ve taken a lot of pleasure from and developed a skill set in – that’s come from the adversity. As with a lot of things, you don’t learn something from having an easy life.”

Mike, who moved from the Aberdeen night scene to help run iconic Sub Club in 1992, met his wife Lynne at the clubbing hotspot.

A fire in the post office next door gutted the building, resulting in Sub Club’s three-year closure, which “catapulted” Mike into an ownership role.

Sub Club dominates any kind of conversation that I might have, it’s in my blood,” he added.

“There are very few establishments that have strayed true to their beliefs and stayed pure to that dance music ethos that have lasted that length of time without becoming more commercial and “selling out” as we would say.

“I’m very proud to have been a part of that.”

Hitting retirement age, while allowing legendary Mike to reflect upon years gone by, isn’t stopping him any time soon.

He said: “If someone told me I’d still be doing this at the age of 65 I’d have laughed. I don’t know if I’ll ever be retired as such, but it’s not really physically possible to keep the pace up at night and day.

“I can’t envisage a time when I’m not involved in it in some way. It’s always important that there’s a younger energy coming through.”

The Human First podcast is a new series from Murphy Wealth CEO Adrian Murphy. He discusses life, money, motivation, and family with some of the most prominent and recognisable faces in Scottish business.

The five-part season, which launched back in August, includes interviews with guests including former Scotland and Glasgow Warriors international turned entrepreneur Adam Ashe.

Other guests include celebrity architect and Scotland’s Home of the Year judge Danny Campbell and Scots entrepreneur and TAG Digital founder Laura Davidson.

For more information on Murphy Wealth, you can visit his website here.

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