“It’s about me this weekend,” Bryant wrote, followed by three kissy-face emojis. In it, she and her friend sang along to the music. We snappin’.”īryant mingled with her favorite drink in hand – Patron on the rocks with a splash of lime – and posted a short video to Snapchat at 11:57 p.m. “When we got there, everything was cool,” she said.
Cameo is like a small town that way, she said: Everyone knows everyone. They walked in and saw a bunch of people they knew. Club-goers said the place routinely was packed despite the sometimes-hefty cover charges – people arriving late Saturday paid about $50 to get in, witnesses said.īut Bryant and her friend arrived early enough to get in free. Since 2013, it’s been Cameo, a hip-hop nightclub whose dance floor attracted world-famous rappers like Lil’ Wayne and Drake. Years earlier, it was Michael G.'s Restaurant and Banquet Hall, where people celebrated weddings and birthdays. Several years back, it was Adonis, a gay club whose swimming pool was regularly featured on LGBTQ lists of must-visits in Cincinnati.
The building on Kellogg Avenue has been a lot of things over the years.