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Prince George Citizen January 7, 2021

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20 GOOD THINGS ABOUT 2020 IN PRINCE GEORGE – PAGE 3 SPANISH FLU HIT PRINCE GEORGE HARD, ARCHIVES SHOW – PAGE 8

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ENTERTAINERS UPBEAT FOR NEW YEAR – PAGE 7

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Your community newspaper since 1916

Thursday, January 7, 2021

PGCITIZEN.CA

PRINCEGEORGECITIZEN

Liquor mogul’s story interests Hollywood TED CLARKE Citizen staff

When Prince George liquor baron Cameron Thun published a collection of real-life short stories that documented his time as co-owner of a strip club/brothel/car wash in the Dominican Republic, he had no idea his book was about to spark the interest of Hollywood film producers intent on making it into a TV series.

But apparently it has. The book has inspired two scripts written for a film production, based on Thun’s adventures in the booze and sex industry in the Caribbean and the colourful characters his bar attracted. The project includes elements of Thun’s life in Prince George, working for his parents in their downtown hotel and bars, which could bring filmmakers to the city to shoot the series. “I’m dying to bring production back to Prince George, and we would have already been there but COVID stepped in the way,” Thun said. “I want to bring economic development back to Prince George. I’d love to see film crews come in and Tammy and I be responsible for millions of dollars coming through Prince George and it’s right there. It’s so close to being done.” In 2003, while on their honeymoon in the Dominican, Thun and his wife Tammy got the idea to buy a nightclub, which they remodeled into a 400-seat venue they called The Maneater Club. Having grown up in Prince George as the son of Al and Pauline Thun, owners of the National Hotel on First Avenue, Thun has been familiar with the liquor industry since he was eight years old. By the time

he opened the Maneater, he already had decades of experience as the holder of six permanent liquor licences for liquor stores and pubs in the city. At the Maneater, the twin runways of stripper stage were built into the shape of the male anatomy and the bar became famous for its live sex shows. He and Tammy endeared themselves to the club’s staff, mostly Dominicans and Haitians, and improved working conditions by paying for their health care and providing lodging and food. But after 18 months of dealing with prostitutes and their customers, machine gun-toting thugs, police bribes, corrupt politicians and narcotics agents, and some questionable behaviour from Thun’s business partner, a Colombian he refers to in the book as Snake #1, the Thuns decided to get out of the business. They sold their half-interest in the club for $100,000 US to an 85-year-old Colombian man (Snake #2), who gave Thun a $30,000 deposit. The business deal went sour when the prospective new owner tried to keep Thun from returning to the country. The man used falsified documents and accusations to trump up eight fraud charges, which were tested in court and proven to be groundless. Eventually the club was bulldozed to make room for a four-lane highway and Thun never received the $70,000 he was owed. “It’s so corrupt over there,” Thun said. “I was extorted, there was mafia, we’ve got crooked government, drugs, weapons, prostitution, everything you could think of in this, and it’s all true.” See IT’S A PRETTY WILD TALE on page 4

CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE.

COLD DIP FOR COLD CASH Carol and Mark Stofer react to the

temperature of the icy water of Ness Lake on New Year’s Day afternoon during their unofficial Polar Bear Dip fundraiser at Ness Lake Bible Camp. The Stofers raised $20,561, which will be used to help send kids to camp.


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