Strip Club Dancers Start Food Delivery Service After Club Ordered To Close

With the current health crisis, it’s important that businesses that are not essential to people’s health and well-being are closed down. However, instead of taking a vacation when the government ordered them to shut, dancers at the Lucky Devil Lounge strip club in Portland, Oregon launched a food delivery service called Boober Eats PDX.

  1. It’s unlike any other delivery service, that’s for sure. While Boober Eats will bring some delicious food to your door, the one difference is that it will be hand-delivered by a pair of strippers who will be wearing some pretty suggestive clothing (or rather, they won’t be wearing much of anything).
  2. The menu looks pretty great. From 7 p.m. to 1 a.m., you can order food from Boober Eats’ pretty extensive menu, which includes everything from chicken fingers and mini corndogs to bacon cheeseburgers and mac and cheese. Delivery rates are around $30 depending on where you live. “If someone wants to give us a couple hundred bucks to go to the coast, we’ll do it as long as the girls are taken care of,” owner Shon Boulden told Oregon Live.
  3. It’s a way to bring some levity to a tough situation. As Boulden revealed, customers are delighted with Boober Eats and really supportive of the club’s new business venture. “All the calls, people are just giddy and fun,” she said of the orders they receive. “Sometimes it’s a surprise for someone, sometimes it’s a birthday, sometimes it’s people that are really stoned.”
  4. Don’t get any funny ideas. The strippers sent out on deliveries are always driven to the delivery location and accompanied by a security guard in case any of the customers decide to get handsy. This ensures their personal safety, which is always a good thing.
  5. There are about 25 dancers currently employed by Boober Eats. Most of them were scared when the strip clubs they were employed at were forced to shut down as it was their sole source of income. Being able to do food delivery gives them a way to keep cash flowing in during this scary time. “Losing this job is devastating,” said a woman named Kiki, who started her first Boober Eats shift last weekend. “For the majority of us, it’s been an almost complete loss of income. I’m here supporting my community and trying to keep maintaining an income flow as best as we can.”
  6. So where can you order? If you’re in the Portland area, you can check out the menu and place your order online HERE.
Piper Ryan is a NYC-based writer and matchmaker who works to bring millennials who are sick of dating apps and the bar scene together in an organic and efficient way. To date, she's paired up more than 120 couples, many of whom have gone on to get married. Her work has been highlighted in The New York Times, Time Out New York, The Cut, and many more.

In addition to runnnig her own business, Piper is passionate about charity work, advocating for vulnerable women and children in her local area and across the country. She is currently working on her first book, a non-fiction collection of stories focusing on female empowerment.
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