WORKING -- Sean Donegan
--Story by Deepa Bharath; photo by [tk]
HE IS
Making sure people are having fun -- without getting out of control
PEOPLE SKILLS
Sean Donegan has worked in a bar since he turned 21. He knows he is
not like other bouncers, not big enough to intimidate, at 6 feet and 175
pounds.
“That’s why I use my brain more than I use brawn,” said the
33-year-old Newport Beach resident, who works as a part-time bouncer and
bartender at Class of 47, a bar near the Balboa Fun Zone.
“I try to talk to people and reason with them,” he said. “Some people
actually listen.”
While it is human interaction that attracted Donegan to his part-time
avocation, handling people is also the tricky part of the job, he said.
“It’s something you learn on a trial-and-error basis,” he said. “You
also learn a lot from experience and sometimes, no matter how much
experience you have, you can still make mistakes. I am human after all.”
OUTSMARTING FAKE IDs
After more than nine years of tending bar and working as a bouncer,
Donegan has seen a lot. But nothing has changed as much as the technology
of manufacturing fake identification cards, he said.
“They get better every time,” Donegan said. “That is definitely the
biggest challenge I face on the job.”
Taking a three-hour class held by the Alcohol Beverage Control League
has also helped him weed out underage wannabes, he said.
Donegan learned the art of tending bar from his father. His first job
was at Tale of the Whale near the Balboa Pier.
“My first problem was with this guy who got drunk and started
harassing females,” he said. “I tried talking to him, warned him twice.
But he wouldn’t listen. So I escorted him out.”
THE ART OF INTIMIDATION
It isn’t always easy to intimidate people, Donegan said.
“You always come face to face with guys who are much bigger than you
are and can intimidate you,” he said. “There have been times I thought,
‘OK, my face is going to cave in now.’ But at times like that, you have
to think. You try to talk logically and sensibly. I even tried yelling
really loud once and got everybody’s attention.”
But the last thing Donegan wants is to get into a physical fight, he
said. His technique is defensive rather than offensive.
“I do my best to make sure I don’t manhandle people,” he said. “The
last thing I want to do is hurt people.”
When he is not working in a bar, Donegan is in the business of
installing and fixing heaters and air conditioners.
He said he enjoys working in bars because it is good money and he
enjoys communicating with people.
“It makes me feel better when I’m down and out because I meet people
worse off than me,” he said. “At the same time, when I meet someone
really happy and cheerful, that rubs off on me too.”
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