Would you like a side order of disco dance party with your can of sardines, Ma’am/Sir?
That’s exactly the energy at Seafood City’s Late Night Madness—a grocery-aisle rave where your pamalengke and your playlist finally happen in the same place.
Part brilliant marketing stunt, part full-on celebration of Filipino joy, Late Night Madness began at Seafood City California, in September 2025 as a one-off promo night for Filipino street food and Filipino-American History Month.
The first party went viral, so Seafood City turned it into a traveling pop-up series, expanding to locations in Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Seattle and Houston—and then crossing the border into Calgary and Winnipeg.

Canada’s turn came in November 2025, when Late Night Madness landed at Seafood City Mississauga (800 Boyer Blvd.) and Seafood City Scarborough (20 Lebovic Ave.), with no-cover-charge parties from 8 p.m. to midnight on select Fridays and Saturdays.
On a chilly December Saturday, Mabuhay Canada dropped by the Mississauga event to find a dance floor carved out of three grocery aisles—where bins of langka, durian and mangoes usually sit—now cleared and dressed up with fiesta-style bunting, sparkling icicle lights, pastel parol lanterns and hanging paper globes.
The crowd? Packed.



Hundreds of people, from toddlers to titas, were dancing to “Otso-otso,” 70’s and 80’s bangers and classic party anthems.
Behind the booth, host and stand-up comedian Big Norm Alconcel teased the crowd with banters of “Gang Gang Sinigang”, while DJ Andrea mixed Pinoy favourites with tracks like “Follow Me” and “100% Pure Love,” turning the supermarket into a full-blown house party.
The loudest screams of the night weren’t even for the music—they were for the giveaways.
The host tossed bags of fresh pandesal and pancit canton into the noisiest sections of the crowd, while bottles of soy sauce (sensibly not thrown) were handed out like trophies.
You’d think they’d announced a million-dollar jackpot.

Datu Puti vinegar shots were consumed, along with sinigang powder lamon contests.
In true Pinoy fashion there was line dancing, of course—because what Filipino party is complete without at least one tightly synchronized formation in the middle of the floor?
All around the dance area, shoppers juggled carts, carried their Jollibee takeout, or sat in the food court munching on smoky pork BBQ skewers hot off the grill.
Yes, Pinoys can be multitaskers, doing a weekly grocery run, hanging out with family and friends and still hitting the club—all without stepping outside into the chilly Canadian winter.
Beyond the disco lights, Late Night Madness is also about community and kababayan pride.
The series runs on select dates until December 13, 2025 in Canada, wrapping up a season of grocery-aisle conga lines and grocery carts parked beside the dance floor.
For many in the crowd, the real highlight isn’t the free bread or the playlist: it’s that moment when a familiar Filipino song drops, everyone sings the chorus in unison, and a suburban supermarket feels, just for a few hours, like home.
Please, Ma’am/Sirs of Seafood City, we’d like some more.