South Salt Lake City is a municipality of some 9,800 people, located immediately south of Utah’s capital. The City’s main artery, State Street or U.S. Highway 89, was the primary north-south highway in the area prior to construction of Interstate-15. State Street is the locus of a virtually uninterrupted string of gas stations, retail outlets, fast food restaurants, pawn shops, used car dealerships, old-fashioned drive-up motels, and the like; much of the City is occupied by light industry and the remaining area by modest single-family residences and apartments. The City’s Chamber of Commerce touts the municipality as “Utah’s Center of Industry.” 1 Almost hidden among the warehouses and workshops of light industrial South Salt Lake City are — or were — three establishments featuring nude dancing.
The City Council recently enacted an ordinance prohibiting nudity within sexually oriented businesses. South Salt Lake City, Utah, Ordinance No.2001-04 (the “Ordinance”) (effective May 7, 2001) (codified as South Salt Lake City, Utah, Code, ch. 5.56 (the “Code”)). Under the Ordinance, dancers at the establishments mentioned above may no longer drop the last stitch. Id. § 5.56.3100. The Plaintiffs-Appellants in this case, female dancers who object to the requirement of wearing “G-strings” and “pasties” during their performances, brought suit to enjoin the enforcement of the Ordinance, and filed a motion for a preliminary injunction in district court.
The district court denied their request for a preliminary injunction, commenting:
The specific proposition stated by Plaintiffs, that nude dancing is a protected form of expression not subject to any limitation, has not been passed upon by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. It is this Court’s opinion that if and when they consider this proposition, the modest limitations imposed by the ordinance will not be considered a burden on expression of erotic dancing in a sexually oriented business.
Order Upon Pls.’ Mot. for Prelim. Inj. and Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss (“Order”), at 2 (Jan. 29, 2002), App. at 191. In response to a question from Plaintiffs’ counsel regarding what issues would be open in the litigation on the merits, the district court declined to provide guidance beyond what was said in the ruling on the preliminary injunction.
The district court’s reluctance to elaborate the law applicable to nude dancing is understandable. Twice in the past fifteen years, the United States Supreme Court has considered the constitutionality of ordinances banning commercial nude dancing under the Free Speech Clause, and both times the Court produced fractured decisions with no majority opinion and no clear statement of controlling doctrine.
*1185
See Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,
In their briefs and arguments in this Court, the Plaintiffs devote much of their attention to issues beyond the propriety of the denial of a preliminary injunction. In particular, they argue that they are entitled to trial on certain of their claims, which the Defendants stoutly deny. The procedural posture of this case, however, is not a direct challenge to the Ordinance or even a motion for summary judgment. It is an appeal from the district court’s denial of a preliminary injunction against enforcement of the Ordinance. Our appellate review is limited by this posture.
See, e.g., Hawkins v. City & County of Denver,
Background
Under South Salt Lake City’s prior Sexually Oriented Business Ordinance, originally enacted in February, 1991, commercial nude dancing was permitted, subject to regulation and licensing. The three establishments at which Plaintiffs work, or wish to work, provided nude entertainment for more than ten years under this licensing scheme. Around 1999, the City Council became concerned about what are called “negative secondary effects” — -such as crime, prostitution, and lowered property values — thought to be associated with sexually oriented businesses. For approximately a year, City officials gathered police reports and studies from around the country regarding the connection between sexually oriented commercial business and these secondary effects.
The Ordinance was amended on January 10, 1996, and, after the studies, again on May 2, 2001. As currently formulated, the Ordinance .forbids employees of such businesses 3 to “[ajppear in a state of nudity before a patron on the premises of a sexually oriented business.” Code § 5.56.310, 310(G). 4 The Ordinance also forbids pa *1186 trons of these establishments to “[ajppear in a state of nudity before another person on the premises of a sexually oriented business.” Code § 5.56.320, 320(C). The Ordinance continues to permit semi-nude commercial dancing; dancers may perform wearing “pasties” and “G-strings.” Plaintiffs maintain that these new restrictions violate their freedom of expression under the First Amendment, as applied to state and local governments through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Plaintiffs originally filed this action in the Third Judicial District Court for Salt Lake County, Utah. It was removed to federal district court on May 7, 2001. In their Complaint, filed April 30, 2001, and by motion, Plaintiffs requested a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction against the enforcement of the Ordinance. The City filed a motion to dismiss on the pleadings.
The City argued that the Ordinance is justified by the City’s interest in curtailing what it found to be the negative secondary effects of establishments featuring totally nude dancing. The targeted secondary effects the City identified included: venereal disease, prostitution, general poor sanitation, criminality, and offenses against minors, among others. See Preamble to Ordinance; Ordinance, “Purpose and Findings,” (1)-(25). The City based its findings and conclusions on a number of sources cited in the Ordinance, including findings incorporated in decisions of the Supreme Court and this Court, as well as numerous other studies and statistics from the City police department and other municipalities. 5
*1187 The district court held a hearing on January 8, 2002, on the Plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunctive relief and the City’s motion to dismiss. The only evidence before the district court at the time of the hearing was the Ordinance itself, the preamble of which contained citations to the studies and reports on which the City relied, and affidavits and testimony of four of the Plaintiffs regarding their perceptions of future economic harm that they would suffer absent an injunction. Although the nude dancing establishments, represented by Plaintiffs’ counsel, had presented certain contrary studies and evidence to the City Council during its deliberations, Plaintiffs did not submit this or any other evidence contrary to the City’s findings to the district court for consideration on their motion for a preliminary injunction.
In denying both motions from the bench, the district court observed:
I’ll deny the motion for a preliminary injunction....
It would appear to me that the modest effort at limitations provided by the ordinance as enacted by South Salt Lake City requiring the use of G strings and pasties in no way in my opinion limits expression. It would appear to me that expression allowed is at the outer limits that counsel has referred to and that the modest requirements set forth in the ordinance as to semi-nude vers[u]s nude is an appropriate exercise of municipal power.
I think that the issue presented, I hate to say the naked proposition but the specific proposition asserted by counsel for plaintiffs does indeed present an interesting question. That specific proposition as far as I know has never been passed on by the Tenth Circuit but my opinion is that if and when they consider it that the modest limitations imposed by the ordinance will not be considered a burden on expression of erotic dancing in a sexually oriented business establishment.
It would appear to me that the justification set forth in the ordinance as to the secondary questions are legitimate questions for a city to be concerned with and that the modest limitations imposed in no way deprive the artist, the performer, the dancer from expression which is violative of the First Amendment ....
Tr. of Hearing dated Jan. 3, 2002 (“Tr.”), at 102-04, App. at 184-86.
After the hearing, the district court entered a short order memorializing its observations from the bench. Four of these observations are relevant to our review here:
4. The South Salt Lake City ordinance requiring the use of G strings and pasties in sexually oriented businesses does not limit expression.
5. The modest requirement of the ordinance permitting semi-nudity and prohibiting nudity in sexually oriented businesses is an appropriate exercise of municipal power.
6. The specific proposition stated by Plaintiffs, that nude dancing is a protected form of expression not subject to any limitation, has not been passed upon by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. It is this Court’s opinion that if and when they consider this proposition, the modest limitations imposed by the ordinance will not be considered a burden on expression of erotic dancing in a sexually oriented business.
7. The secondary harmful effects of nudity in a sexually oriented business are concerns that a municipality may legitimately address.
Order at 2, App. at 191. After making these findings, the order memorialized the *1188 denial of the motion for preliminary injunction which the district court had made from the bench.
Analysis
I. Standards of Review
We review the district court’s decision to deny a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion.
Utah Licensed Beverage Ass’n v. Leavitt,
we give due deference to the district court’s evaluation of the salience and credibility of testimony, affidavits, and other evidence. We will not challenge that evaluation unless it finds no support in the record, deviates from the appropriate legal standard, or follows from a plainly implausible, irrational, or erroneous reading of the record.
United States v. Robinson,
It is well settled that a preliminary injunction is an extraordinary remedy, and that it should not be issued unless the movant’s right to relief is “clear and unequivocal.”
Kikumura v. Hurley,
But while the standard to be applied by the district court in deciding whether a [party] is entitled to a preliminary injunction is stringent, the standard of appellate review is simply whether the issuance [or denial] of the injunction, in light of the applicable standard, constituted an abuse of discretion.
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
We must be mindful, therefore, as the Supreme Court has cautioned, that “a preliminary injunction is customarily granted on the basis of procedures that are less formal and evidence that is less complete than in a trial on the merits.”
University of Texas v. Camenisch,
II. Preliminary Injunction Factors
Before a preliminary injunction may be entered pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65, the moving party must establish that:
(1) [the movant] will suffer irreparable injury unless the injunction issues; (2) the threatened injury ... outweighs whatever damage the proposed injunction may cause the opposing party; (3) the injunction, if issued, would not be adverse to the public interest; and (4) there is a substantial likelihood [of success] on the merits.
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Cruce,
III. Application of Preliminary Injunction Factors: The Equities
A. Irreparable Harm
To constitute irreparable harm, an injury must be certain, great, actual “and not theoretical.”
Wisconsin Gas Co. v. FERC,
The Plaintiffs presented no evidence that enforcement of the Ordinance during the time it will take to litigate this case in district court will have an irreparable effect in the sense of making it difficult or impossible to resume their activities or restore the status quo ante in the event they prevail.
See, e.g., Greater Yellowstone Coalition v. Flowers,
*1190
The Supreme Court has made clear that “the loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury.”
Elrod v. Burns,
For First Amendment purposes, the important point is that the Plaintiffs are able to convey their chosen message — not that they are able to do so in a state of undress. Appearing nude is not a First Amendment interest in the abstract, but only insofar as nudity is a means by which some message is conveyed.
See Pap’s,
But to say that a harm is “minimal” is not to say it is nonexistent. In the realm of performance art — to which the activity here is at least a distant cousin — the manner of presentation is part of the artistic enterprise. To tell Mahler he could not convey the message of thunder using the kettle drum might leave open ample alternative means for communicating the desired message, but no one would say that the restriction was of no artistic consequence. Because our precedents dictate that we treat alleged First Amendment harms gingerly, we find that this element tips slightly in favor of the Plaintiffs.
See, e.g., Kikumura,
B. Balance of Harms
To be entitled to a preliminary injunction, the movant has the burden of showing that “the threatened injury to the movant outweighs the injury to the other party under the preliminary injunction.”
Kikumura,
As with Plaintiffs’ claim of hardship, however, the City’s interest is less than substantial. Much of the City’s professed concern about negative secondary effects arises from sexually oriented businesses in general rather than commercial nude entertainment in particular. The City offers no specific evidence that the requirement of pasties and G-strings will produce a significant incremental improvement with respect to the negative secondary effects. Moreover, the City has tolerated nude dancing establishments for many years, and even after embarking on a different policy took over a year to put the restrictions into effect. This invites skepticism regarding the imperative for immediate implementation.
Thus, the balance of hardships in this case is fairly even: neither party has shown that it will suffer grievous harm if it loses on the preliminary injunction motion.
C. Public Interest
A movant also has the burden of demonstrating that the injunction, if issued, is not adverse to the public interest.
Kikumura,
IV. Application of Preliminary Injunction Standards: Likelihood of Success on the Merits
The final question before the district court was whether Plaintiffs demonstrated that they were likely to meet their burden of showing that the City’s ordinances are facially unconstitutional infringements on their First Amendment rights to expression.
A. Constitutional Standards: The Appropriate Level of Scrutiny
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the *1192 press, or of the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
U.S. Const. amend. I. Since
Gitlow v. New York,
The Supreme Court has held that nude dancing “falls only within the outer ambit of the First Amendment’s protection.”
City of Erie v. Pap’s A.M.,
Rather, the Supreme Court’s analysis of restrictions on nude dancing combines two lines of First Amendment doctrine that, while in principle distinct, have become effectively merged. The first line of doctrine rests on the distinction between “speech” and “conduct.” While the Court has recognized that conduct is often expressive in character — burning a flag or sitting in at a segregated lunch counter are well-known examples of expressive conduct — the state has broad latitude to regulate expressive conduct if its interest in doing so is “unrelated to the suppression of free expression,” if the regulation furthers “an important or substantial government interest,” and if the “incidental restriction on alleged First Amendment freedoms is no greater than is essential to the furtherance of that interest.”
United States v. O’Brien,
The second line of doctrine rests on the distinction between the prohibition of certain messages based on their content and the enforcement of reasonable time, place, or manner restrictions — such as requiring that street demonstrations occur at times other than rush hour, that billboards be located away from scenic highways, or that sound trucks not exceed a certain decibel level.
See Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
In
City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
The principal conceptual distinction between the two lines of doctrine is that the former — the “O’Brien test” — applies to generally applicable regulations of both non-expressive and expressive conduct, not targeting or singling out expressive conduct, while time, place, or manner regulations can be directed specifically at expression (such as billboards or street demonstrations), so long as the governmental purpose is unrelated to disagreement with the message and there are adequate alternative channels of communication.
In
Pap’s,
a majority of the Court held that general prohibitions on public nudity, including commercial nude dancing, are subject to scrutiny “under the framework set forth in
O’Brien
for content-neutral restrictions on symbolic speech.”
This case does not involve a general prohibition on public nudity, like that in
Barnes
and
Pap’s.
Rather, it is a more narrowly tailored ban on nudity of either employees or patrons within sexually oriented businesses. Accordingly, it might be argued that the case is most accurately analyzed as a “manner” regulation. This would seem to have been the Court’s point in
Pap’s
when it noted: “The public nudity ban certainly has the effect of limiting one means of expressing the erotic message being disseminated at Kandyland. But simply to define what is being banned as the ‘message’ is to assume the conclusion.”
*1194
In one important sense, the South Salt Lake Ordinance is less constitutionally problematic than the general public nudity bans upheld in
Barnes
and
Pap’s:
it is more narrowly tailored. In
Barnes
and
Pap’s,
there was dispute regarding the applicability of the prohibitions to legitimate theater or dance involving nudity, such as the plays
Equus
or
Hair
or the ballet
Salome.
The broad sweep of the public nudity prohibition seemed to present a dilemma: either the prohibition would apply to such performances and thus appear overbroad, or it would not apply and thus appear to be administered in a content-discriminatory manner. By limiting its nudity ban to sexually oriented businesses — a classification that itself is “content-neutral” within the meaning of this Court’s cases,
see Z.J. Gifts,
We turn now to Plaintiffs’ arguments that the district court abused its discretion in finding that they had not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits.
B. Plaintiffs’ Arguments for Heightened Scrutiny
Plaintiffs argue against application of the relatively relaxed standard of review employed in
Barnes
and
Pap’s.
They point out that
Barnes
and
Pap’s
involved general prohibitions on public nudity, while the South Salt Lake Ordinance bans nudity only within sexually oriented businesses.
*1195
Accordingly, they argue that the South Salt Lake Ordinance is subject to strict scrutiny as a “content-baséd” restriction on speech. Their argument finds some support in two district court decisions,
Nakatomi Investments, Inc. v. City of Schenectady,
We reject Plaintiffs’ argument for two independent reasons. First, the narrower scope of the South Salt Lake Ordinance, as compared with the general public nudity prohibitions of
Barnes
and
Pap’s,
does not necessarily make the Ordinance “content-based.” The prohibition is still on a form of conduct, and unless the category of businesses to which it applies is defined by their expressive content, the Ordinance remains “unrelated to the suppression of free expression.”
O’Brien,
Second, even if the South Salt Lake Ordinance must be distinguished from that in
Barnes
and
Pap’s,
and cannot be justified as a generally applicable regulation of conduct, it still is subject to no more than intermediate scrutiny under the
Renton
line of cases, because the governmental purpose is based on the secondary effects of nudity in sexually oriented businesses rather than on disagreements with the content of the message.
Schultz,
In
Pap’s,
the plurality explicitly rejected the dissent’s characterization of a nudity prohibition as a “complete ban on expression.”
The fallacy in Plaintiffs’ argument is to assume that the “adequate alternative avenues of expression” required under the
Renton
line of cases refers exclusively to location. Time, place, or manner regulations all are partial limitations, but each is partial in a different way. “Place” limitations require alternative locations; “time” limitations require alternative times; and “manner” limitations require alternative ways in which a message may be communicated. A ban on nudity within sexually oriented businesses is a “manner” regulation,
Fly Fish,
C. Plaintiffs ’ Argument Regarding Evidence of Secondary Effects and the Record Before the District Court
Plaintiffs complain vigorously regarding the supposed inadequacy of the factual record in this case to support the City’s claim that the Ordinance is justified by the need to control the negative secondary effects of commercial nude dancing. Indeed, they assert that “[tjhere is no evidence that such effects have occurred, or are in imminent danger of occurring, in South Salt Lake. Plaintiffs believe that all evidence is to the contrary.” Appellants’ Br. at 24. However, as counsel conceded at oral argument before this Court, at the hearing in the district court on their motion for preliminary injunctive relief, the Plaintiffs did not present any evidence in support of their position. In their briefs in this Court, Plaintiffs refer to various studies that they submitted to the City Council, but did not trouble to present to the district court, and to other evidence that they submitted in unrelated litigation in state court, but likewise did not see fit to introduce below.
See
Appellants’ Br. at 24-26. Under these circumstances, it is obvious that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying their motion. Plaintiffs simply had not met their burden of showing that their right to relief was “clear and unequivocal.”
Kikumura,
We turn, nevertheless, to the four elements of intermediate scrutiny, as set forth in
O’Brien,
7
to determine whether
*1197
the district court abused its discretion in concluding, on this one-sided record, that Plaintiffs did not have a substantial likelihood of success on the merits. Under intermediate scrutiny, a restriction on speech must: (1) be within the constitutional power of government to adopt; (2) further an important or substantial governmental interest; which (3) is unrelated to the suppression of expression; and (4) be no greater restriction on First Amendment freedom than is essential to furtherance of the government’s purpose.
O’Brien,
There is no doubt that the Ordinance is within the lawful powers of South Salt Lake City.
See Pap’s,
The second factor is probably the most important and contested. To survive intermediate scrutiny, the government must be able to demonstrate that the challenged speech restriction serves a “substantial governmental interest.”
O’Brien,
In
Renton,
a six-Justice majority of the Supreme Court held that “[t]he First Amendment does not require a city, before enacting such an ordinance, to conduct new studies or produce evidence independent of that already generated by other cities, so long as whatever evidence the city relies upon is reasonably believed to be relevant to the problem the city addresses.”
In
Bames,
the three-Justice plurality (Chief Justice Rehnquist, joined by Justices O’Connor and Kennedy) sustained a prohibition on public nudity, as applied to nude dancing, on the basis of the “substantial government interest in protecting order and morality,” without the need for any empirical evidence regarding secondary effects.
Barnes,
In
Pap’s,
a four-Justice plurality (Justice O’Connor, joined by the Chief Justice, Justice Kennedy, and Justice Breyer) voted to uphold a general public nudity ban almost identical to that upheld in
Barnes,
but did so on the basis of secondary effects. The Court emphasized that the city did not have to produce new studies and was permitted to rely on the evidentiary foundation in earlier cases.
Pap’s,
Two Justices concurred on the ground that a regulation of conduct is unconstitutional only where the “government prohibits conduct precisely because of its communicative attributes,” making it unnecessary to inquire into the empirical basis for the secondary effects justification (about which these Justices were skeptical).
Id.
at 310,
In
Alameda Books,
the Court granted certiorari to “clarify the standard for determining whether an ordinance serves a substantial government interest under
Renton.”
Even as to that connection, the plurality reiterated that the Court had “refused to set such a high bar for municipalities that want to address merely the secondary effects of protected speech.”
Id.
at 438,
This is not to say that the municipality can get away with shoddy data or reasoning. The municipality’s evidence must fairly support the municipality’s rationale for its ordinance. If plaintiffs fail to cast direct doubt on this rationale, either by demonstrating that the municipality’s evidence does not support its rationale or by furnishing evidence that disputes the municipality’s factual findings, the municipality meets the standard set forth in Renton. If plaintiffs succeed in casting doubt on a municipality’s rationale in either manner, the burden shifts back to the municipality to supplement the record with evidence renewing support for a theory that justifies its ordinance.
Id.
at 438-39 (citing
Pap’s,
Justice Kennedy concurred separately. However, he did not criticize the plurality’s approach to the evidence necessary to support a secondary effects justification. If anything, Justice Kennedy’s comments on that issue appear somewhat more deferential to the cities: “As a general matter, courts should not be in the business of second-guessing fact-bound empirical assessments of city planners.”
Id.
at 451,
Applying these precedents, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in concluding that the Plaintiffs failed to show a likelihood of success on the merits. The evidentiary record compiled by South Salt Lake City is similar to
*1200
the record on which the Court affirmed the ordinance in
Pap’s.
Presumably, the City Council of South Salt Lake is entitled to as great a degree of deference as that of any other. The Plaintiffs failed to submit any evidence in district court that might call the City’s empirical judgments into question. Without “actual and convincing evidence from plaintiffs to the contrary,”
Alameda Books,
The third O’Brien factor, that the government interest is unrelated to the suppression of free expression, follows from the second. As explained above, from Renton onward, the Court has consistently held that the control of negative secondary effects, such as those invoked by South Salt Lake City, is unrelated to the suppression of free expression.
Finally, the district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the Ordinance satisfies the fourth and final
O’Brien
factor — that the restriction is no greater than is essential to the furtherance of the government interest — for the same reason that factor was satisfied in
Pap’s:
the requirement that dancers wear “G-strings” and “pasties” has a
“de minimis ”
effect on their ability to communicate their message.
Pap’s,
In summary, as the case is now postured, the Plaintiffs put on no evidence before the district court to establish a likelihood that O’Brien factors two, three and four favored their case on the merits. Because they failed to put on, such evidence, the Plaintiffs have not demonstrated a substantial likelihood of success on the merits.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reason, the decision of the district court denying the Plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunction is AFFIRMED. However, because the record before us is very limited, we note specifically that we express no opinion on the ultimate merits of this case. Plaintiffs’ motion to supplement the record with materials not before the district court is DENIED.
Notes
. South Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, at http://www.southsaltlakechamber.com.
. The best account of the theoretical difficulties may be found in Vincent Blasi, Six Conservatives in Search of the First Amendment: The Revealing Case of Nude Dancing, 33 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. 611 (1992).
. The Code defines a "Sexually oriented business” as "an adult arcade, adult bookstore, adult motion picture theater, adult novelty store, adult theater, adult video store, adult cabaret, and adult motel[,]” each of which is defined in the Code's "Definitions” section. Code § 5.56.050.
.The Code defines "[njudity or state of nudity” as "the showing of the human male or female genitals, pubic area, vulva, anus, or anal cleft with less than a fully opaque covering, or the showing of the female breast with less than a fully opaque covering of any part of the nipple.” Code § 5.56.050.
. The cases and studies on which the City relied include the following:
City of Erie v. Pap's A.M.,529 U.S. 277 ,120 S.Ct. 1382 ,146 L.Ed.2d 265 (2000); City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,475 U.S. 41 ,106 S.Ct. 925 ,89 L.Ed.2d 29 (1986); Young v. American Mini Theatres, [Inc.],427 U.S. 50 ,96 S.Ct. 2440 ,49 L.Ed.2d 310 (1976); Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,501 U.S. 560 ,111 S.Ct. 2456 ,115 L.Ed.2d 504 (1991); California v. La Rue,409 U.S. 109 ,93 S.Ct. 390 ,34 L.Ed.2d 342 (1972); O’Connor v. City and County of Denver,894 F.2d 1210 (10th Cir.1990); Z. J. Gifts D-2, L.L.C. v. City of Aurora,136 F.3d 683 (10th Cir.1998); Dodger's Bar & Grill, Inc. v. Johnson County,98 F.3d 1262 (10th Cir.1996); Dodger’s Bar & Grill, Inc. v. Johnson County Bd. of County Com’rs,32 F.3d 1436 (10th Cir.1994); American Target Advertising, Inc. v. Giani,199 F.3d 1241 (10th Cir.2000); MS News Co. v. Casado,721 F.2d 1281 (10th Cir.1983); Cortese v. Black,87 F.3d 1327 , (10th Cir.1996); Salt Lake City v. Wood,1999 Utah App. 323 ,991 P.2d 595 (Utah Ct.App.1999); Salt Lake City v. Roberts,7 P.3d 789 (Utah Ct.App.2000); United States v. Freedberg,724 F.Supp. 851 (D.Utah 1989); reports of the South Salt Lake Police Department; and documents concerning the secondary effects occurring in and around sexually oriented businesses, including, but not limited to, Phoenix, Arizona — 1984; Minneapolis, Minnesota— 1980; Houston, Texas — 1997; Indianapolis, Indiana' — 1984; Amarillo, Texas; Garden Grove, California — 1991; Los Angeles, California — 1977; Whittier, California — 1978; Austin, Texas — 1986; Seattle, Washington — 1989; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma— 1986; Cleveland, Ohio — ; and Dallas, Texas — 1997; St. Croix County, Wisconsin— 1993; Bellevue, Washington — 1998; Newport News, Virginia — 1996; New York Times Square study — 1994; Phoenix, Arizona — 1995-98; and also on findings from the paper entitled "Stripclubs According to Strippers: Exposing Workplace Sexual Violence,” by Kelly Holsopple, Program Director, Freedom and Justice Center for Prostitution Resources, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and from "Sexually Oriented Businesses: An Insider’s View,” by David Sherman, presented to the Michigan House Committee on Ethics and Constitutional Law, Jan. 12, 2000; crime statistics of the City of South Salt Lake for the past seven years; and the Report of the Attorney General’s Working Group On The Regulation Of Sexually Oriented Businesses, (June 6, 1989, State of Minnesota).
Ordinance, sec. 1(B) ("Findings”).
. We are not troubled by the fact that this reasoning runs counter to Marshall McLuhan’s iconic dictum that "the medium is the message.” Marshall McLuhan, Understanding the Media: The Extensions of Man 23-35 (1964). Whatever might have been its merits in its own pop cultural context, McLuhan's dictum is incompatible with the basic thrust of modern First Amendment law, in which distinctions based on content (“the message”) are subject to a different mode of analysis than distinctions based on time, place, or manner ("the medium”). See Geoffrey R. Stone, Content-Neutral Restrictions, 54 U. Chi. L.Rev. 46 (1987); Content Regulation and the First Amendment, 25 Wm. & Mary L.Rev. 189 (1983). That would be nonsensical if the medium really were the message. Other scholars have long maintained that media, or modes of expression, do not inherently convey a particular meaning, but generate meaning through the way they are used in particular settings. See, e.g., John Dewey, Art as Experience 60-64 (Perigree, 1980) (1934); Stanley Fish, Is There a Text in This Class? The Authority of Interpretive Communities 317-18 (1980); Clifford Geertz, Local Knowledge: Further Essays in Interpretive Anthropology 119 (1983) ("It is, after all, not just statues (or poems or paintings) that we have to do with but the factors that cause these things to seem important-that is, affected with import-to those who make or possess them, and these are as various as life itself.”).
. The elements of intermediate scrutiny for time, place, or manner regulations are only slightly different. In such a case, we ask simply whether the regulation is "narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and
. .. leave[s] open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.”
Clark,
. It is not obvious that intermediate scrutiny cases from other contexts are necessarily applicable to nude dancing or other sexually oriented speech, in light of the Court’s position that “society's interest in protecting this type of expression is of a wholly different, and lesser, magnitude than the interest in untrammeled political debate."
Barnes,
