If you follow Brussels nightlife even loosely, TUESDAY tv is one of those projects that quickly earns your trust. It consistently opens doors to places that are usually hard to access — or simply not open to the public in that way — and pairs them with an excellent programme, polished production and prices that remain genuinely reasonable.
That combination is rare. TUESDAY tv feels less like a one-off party brand and more like a carefully built nightlife platform: one that understands how to curate atmosphere, choose a strong location and make the whole experience feel special without turning it into an over-priced spectacle. For Ket, that makes it an easy coup de cœur.
A project built on access and quality
The heart of the appeal is simple: TUESDAY tv has a habit of opening unusual or otherwise inaccessible spaces to a broader crowd. That sense of discovery matters in a city like Brussels, where the venue can be as important as the line-up, and where nightlife audiences are always looking for something that feels a little more curated than ordinary club programming.
The project also stands out for its consistency. It doesn’t rely on hype alone; it builds a reputation through careful production, good sound, smart programming and a crowd that comes for the full experience, not just a name on a flyer. In a queer nightlife context, that kind of attention to detail goes a long way, because the quality of the environment shapes how free people feel on the dancefloor.
The 8 May event at The Standard Brussels
The next big date is 8 May 2026, when TUESDAY tv takes over The Standard, Brussels for a special night built around club culture. According to the venue listing, the evening is a celebration of the hotel’s first anniversary, with one night and four DJs promising a mix of groove-led house and deeper club textures.
That setting alone is enough to make the event interesting: The Standard is not a typical club, and TUESDAY tv has a strong track record of making unconventional locations feel alive. When a project like this brings nightlife into a space that is usually experienced differently, it changes the emotional temperature of the night and gives the crowd something more memorable than a standard club session.
Why Ket should care
For a queer audience, TUESDAY tv resonates because it understands that nightlife is not only about music — it is about context, access and atmosphere. A good party can be built on sound alone, but a great one needs a sense of place, and that is exactly where this project excels.
Its reasonable pricing also matters. In a city where club tickets can climb quickly, it is refreshing to see a project that keeps the door open to a wider crowd while still delivering a high-quality production. That makes TUESDAY tv feel aligned with the kind of inclusive nightlife culture Ket often celebrates: stylish, community-driven and not disconnected from the real world.
Useful links
Follow the project on Facebook and Instagram. For the 8 May event, check the official listing for TUESDAY tv x The Standard, Brussels.
KET Magazine is a community‑driven, non‑profit magazine run by volunteers based in Brussels. Get in touch to share your thoughts or tell us about your activities. You can also promote your events on our website or support our work with a donation. Contact us at Info@ket.brussels.
You may also like
-
Queer feet, green beats: Paradise City gets your summer moving (softly)
From 26 to 28 June, Paradise City returns to Kasteel de Ribaucourt in Perk with
-
Queer Paris in Your Pocket: A New Guide to the City’s LGBTQIA+ Memory and Momentum
Released on 4 June by First, Queer Paris is a new pocket guide that maps out the French capital through
-
Let Your Heart Be Heard: The Queer Finale Brussels Has Been Warming Up For
After months of rehearsals, teasers and city‑wide build‑up, Various Voices Brussels 2026 is heading towards its big
-
One Last Warm-Up: Brussels Still Has Time to Join the Biggest LGBTQI+ Choir at ING Arena
Brussels has already been singing queer for weeks, and now one of the most open
-
Dress to Bury the Old World: A Queer Funeral for Dictators at AB
On Friday 5 June, Ancienne Belgique turns into a political dancefloor with “DICTATOR’S FUNERAL”, a
