Wednesday, 26 April 2017

Elderly take the floor in Seoul's 'maturity discos'

SEOUL: As the mercury outside dives to short 10° on a super cold Monday evening, the move floor inside the Kukilgwan Palace is pressed with silver haired Korean couples moving to the rhythms of high-volume disco.

Jun was one of around 200 men and ladies on the floor — all occupied with the same, rather static, knee-swaying move routine, with the odd ease back movement whirl to liven things up. The quiet way of the moving unmistakable difference a conspicuous difference to the decibel level of the music, which gradually wraps the climbing lift as it methodologies the ninth-floor move club.

The armed force veteran is one of thousands of resigned South Koreans hitting the move floors at "Colatecs" — extraordinary discos for the elderly that are thriving the nation over.

South Korea's quickly maturing populace might be a noteworthy cerebral pain for policymakers, yet its individuals are resolved to live it up, moving the years away at clubs where 50-year-olds are dismissed for being "excessively youthful". Colatecs first developed in the late 1990s as move lobbies for young people, where liquor was restricted and the main beverages on offer were soft drinks like Coca Cola.  

View more about our services:-Bulk SMS Marketing

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.