Kuzinich’s business dropped off immediately and a return to the normal bar format did not fly. “I was running a legitimate business and they stopped me even though I had no police problems,” says Kuzinich, who still tells his saga proudly. “My dignity was taken away because I could not support my family and was losing my house and cars and had kids to feed.”

In 1970 he installed X-rated movies, supplied by the Mitchell Brothers of “Behind the Green Door” fame, and charged $5 admission to a place that served liquor. Business took off again, but the Alcoholic Beverage Control board was miffed about the new format. And then the district attorney’s office came after him on pornography charges. On a weekly basis Kuzinich was hauled off to jail, about a dozen times, and 25 films were confiscated.

“They put me in a corner, and the only way I could see was to use movies to pay my bills, even at the risk of going to jail,” Kuzinich says. “It was my only way of getting my day in court.”

His day in court became three years of short, successful trials that ultimately allowed him back into the nude dancing business (without his liquor license) by 1973.

Then in 1984 a decision from the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that cities had the power to zone away adult businesses. But in a stroke of good fortune, the court ruled that the one previously existing nude dancing establishment would be forever grandfathered in: the Pink Poodle.