3750 The Midway
Dallas, TX 75210
SPC ENTERTAINMENT is an elite conglomerate free enterprise & equal opportunity employer with lots of incentives & fringe benefits. SPC DREAM TEAM operates an upscale modeling & adult entertainment agency that manages and also promotes a wide variety of erotic adult jobs ranging from modeling shoots, calendar shoots, video shoots for all of you talented dancers & sexy video vixens, bachelor parties, private 1 on 1 strip teases, nude modeling, couple shoots, erotic house cleaning services while modeling the latest intimate lingerie & trendiest fashions, webcam shows, back rubs, full body rubs, sponge baths, full body scrubs, professional escorting, domination and S&M role play positions, inclusive dinner dates as well as many other discreet upscale paid outing events.
DFW's go to full scale Event and Productions company. Specializing in concerts, festivals, sponsorship and ad campaigns. We are also able to provide live entertainment and DJ's, photographers, celebrity impersonators ETC. for private/public and corporate events. There is no budget or event to BIG or too small for Dixieland Rock.
Love vintage chairs? So do we! At Chairs with Character we'll have your guests sitting pretty in our refurbished wood & white toned vintage chairs for your next event. Perfect for any soiree needing that special vintage or rustic charm, our chairs can entertain a group as intimate as 10 or as large as 200. Chairs with Character is a P.O.S.H. Couture Rentals Company.
The Sportatorium, located in downtown Dallas, Texas (not to be confused with the Hollywood Sportatorium in Hollywood, Florida or the Tampa Sportatorium in Tampa, Florida), was a barn-like arena used primarily for professional wrestling events. The building, which stood at 1000 S. Industrial Blvd, or the intersection of Industrial Boulevard and Cadiz Street (near the I-30/I-35E Interchange), had a seating capacity of approximately 4,500.Early historyBuilt in 1934 by the Cox Fence Company, the original Dallas Sportatorium was constructed in the shape of an octagon, and seated approximately 10,000. Its inaugural wrestling event, promoted by Burt Willoughby, took place on December 9, 1935. Willoughby promoted wrestling at the Sportatorium until 1940, when the company was bought out by its former concessions manager, Ed McLemore.From 1948 until 1966, the Sportatorium was also the site of the Big D Jamboree, a weekly country music showcase similar in format to the Grand Ole Opry and Louisiana Hayride; portions of the Jamboree were broadcast nationally on the CBS Radio Network.The Sportatorium was partially destroyed by fire on May 1, 1953, in what was rumored to be an act of arson by a rival wrestling promoter. It was quickly rebuilt at the same location as a rectangular venue (with a modified octagonal seating configuration similar to the original), and reopened on September 22 of that year, billed at the time as The Million-Dollar Sportatorium. The arena also held boxing events and concerts featuring up-and-coming rock stars over the years, very much in the same manner as its Los Angeles counterpart, the Grand Olympic Auditorium, did during this time frame.