Free Shots At LIV Nightclub, COVID-19 Vaccine Shots That Is
MIAMI (CBSMiami/AP) — In an effort to get a younger demographic vaccinated against COVID-19, LIV is offering free shots outside the South Beach nightclub club where high rollers spend up to $20,000 just for a table.
The start-studded nightclub, where Super Bowl champs celebrate at parties so legendary they've inspired lyrics from Drake and Kanye West, set up a pop-up COVID vaccine site over the weekend. So did STORY nightclub, both hoping to entice younger people to roll up their sleeves for a shot. Unvaccinated young and middle age people are rapidly filling up Florida hospitals as the delta variant rapidly spreads across the state.
Clubs LIV and STORY were shuttered for roughly a year during the pandemic and reopened back in April. Owner David Grutman, the king of South Beach's nightlife scene, who also owns a restaurant and hotel with Pharrell, said, "We are excited, we want to stay open, and we know the only way to make that happen is if people get vaccinated, so we want to make it as accessible as possible."
He partnered with CDR Health, which has administered over 2 million vaccines since the outbreak, to offer free shots outside the clubs over the weekend, with the possibility of extending it for additional weekends.
The overwhelming majority of COVID-19 patients hospitalized in Florida are unvaccinated. Of the more than 10.5 million fully vaccinated Floridians, approximately 0.019% are in a Florida hospital with COVID-19, according to the Florida Hospital Association.
Twenty-five-year-old Elizabeth Bahamonde remembers the last time she partied with friends at LIV. It was just months before the pandemic and they danced the night away, "shoulder to shoulder" as Latin pop superstar Bad Bunny performed.
"The club scene in Miami is a lifestyle. If you live here you just know that," said the Uber Eats driver.
Even though it was hard, she stayed home for most of the pandemic and didn't start going out again until the end of 2020, saying she was sick of the isolation. But as the clubs and restaurants across Florida grew more crowded and masks and other restrictions were lifted, she stopped clubbing.
She'd been on the fence about the vaccine and had planned to get it, but got COVID two weeks ago, calling it "the most horrible experience of my life."
"I wasn't anti-vax but I was waiting it out," said Bahamonde, who said half her friends are vaccinated and half are not. "As ignorant as it may seem, I had to go through it to want to do it."
Bahamonde said she's planning to get vaccinated now and thinks it's cool that LIV is using its influence to promote the vaccine to young clubgoers, saying her unvaccinated friends "are actually going out more."
"LIV is using their image and platform to spread that incentive that, 'Hey, it's cool to party, but it's also cool to be vaccinated.' I think it puts people in a more comfortable situation," she said.
Dr. Leonardo Alonso, an emergency room physician in Jacksonville where the outbreak is especially rampant, said he's seeing large numbers of healthy young and middle-aged patients coming in with COVID pneumonia and alarmingly low oxygen readings.
"The variant is more virulent," he said. "I didn't see anywhere near the numbers of young people so hypoxic and sick last year," noting many are requiring additional oxygen.
"And it's partly because this group of people disproportionately did not get vaccinated out of choice," he added.
Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis has encouraged vaccinations, yet repeatedly stressed he will not impose statewide mask mandates or business lockdowns, calling such restrictions harmful, destructive and ineffective.
(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)