Posts Tagged ‘flirty’

Go-Go Joint is gone-gone

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Oct 25, 2006

Vargas, who owns Lenny’s Deli on Triangle Street, recently bought the Go-Go property from Vincent Mavilia and plans to sign an agreement with the city not to have topless entertainment, although zoning allows it.
On Tuesday, Vargas met with the Unified Neighborhood Inspection Team at the former club to give an overview of her plans for the 1,200-square-foot building.
She plans to remove the circular bar, which still has full bottles of beer and half-full bottles of hard liquor, and renovate the interior to include a small stage for live music.
Vargas doesn’t plan to serve a full menu of food but will serve appetizers, liquor and other beverages. She also plans to add a patio and a plasma television.
“I want to bring in a mariachi band and maybe some jazz,” Vargas said.
City officials have received complaints for at least two years about the Go-Go Joint, which was previously known as Bada Bing and Wiggles.

In March, a judge ordered Mavilia to install a video surveillance system so police could monitor activity inside the Shelter Rock Road strip club.
Judge Douglas Mintz required the cameras about a year after local police and personnel from the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney shut down the club under the state’s nuisance abatement law.
Police arrested six women in August 2005 who were charged with prostitution for offering to have sex with undercover officers for money.
Another dancer was charged with prostitution in February after asking an undercover officer for money in exchange for sex.
According to the city, Mavilia never installed the cameras. He put the building up for sale.
A sign outside the building says the property is for sale for $375,000, cash only. Vargas would not say whether she paid cash.
“You are doing us a favor. This is a very positive thing for the city,” Rich Antous, a member of the city’s Unified Neighborhood Inspection Team, told Vargas on Tuesday.
City officials plan to help Vargas get the necessary permits to get the new café up and running. Vargas said she hopes to have it open by December.
“I am just really pleased that we have been able to resolve this neighborhood issue, and I wish her the best of luck with her business,” Mayor Mark Boughton said Tuesday.

Strip clubs vow to fight Burl. City restrictions

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Attorney Daniel R. Aaronson said the ordinance is an attempt by the city to put the strip clubs out of business. He said the ordinance violates the First Amendment and will not stand up in court.
At a City Council meeting last night at which a vote was originally scheduled, Aaronson said the strip clubs will sue the city if the ordinance is approved.
“This is not a threat,” he said. “It is a fact. It is a promise … We will fight back.”
The council postponed the vote on the ordinance from last night until next month, but several council members voiced their support for it.
The ordinance was proposed by the Police Department. Detective Joseph Caruso last night explained to the council why the department believes the ordinance is necessary.
“There is more crime at sexually oriented businesses than any other business in Burlington City,” he said.
Caruso said police responded to 164 calls to one sexually oriented business in the past two years. He said those calls include sexual assault, aggravated assault, carjacking and robbery.
Caruso said police have cited many people for urinating in public outside the strip clubs, and have been called to one club after members of the Crips gang were spotted there.
He said an investigation of a go-go bar in August found evidence of prostitution, drug use and drug dealing. In another investigation in September, Caruso said two dancers solicited undercover police officers for sex. He said the dancers offered to have sex with the men in private dance rooms.
Lawyers for the two strip clubs in the city, Club Risque and the Playhouse, deny that strip clubs increase crime, and said they are prepared to fight the ordinance.
Aaronson, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., was hired by both clubs. He told the council that strip clubs do not reduce the value of neighboring properties, and in some cases actually increase property values.
He denied that strip clubs cause blight or spread sexually transmitted diseases.
He said the city will spend at least $250,000 in legal fees to fight a lawsuit. He urged the council to table the ordinance and talk with the strip club owners to reach a compromise.

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The Playhouse hired a second attorney, Patricia Ronayne of Mount Laurel. Ronayne told the council that the Playhouse has been a part of Burlington City since 1988.
“They have not been a burden on this community,” she said. “They have not been a problem.”
She said the city does not have the right to tell the strip clubs how to decorate their businesses, such as restricting lighting or private booths.
“This is a fight we are confident we will win in Superior Court,” she said. “This is going to be struck down …”
“This ordinance violates the First Amendment. Nude dancing is a protected right, whether we like it or not.”
City attorney Anthony Val-enti changed some wording in the ordinance at last night’s meeting. Valenti recommended the city readvertise the ordinance before a final vote. The council scheduled that vote for its next meeting Nov. 9.
Several council members spoke in support of the ordinance. Councilman Edward Canivan said the city is not trying to put strip clubs out of business, but instead is asking them to “conduct their business out in the open.”
Canivan said the city must regain control of sexually oriented businesses. “We are here to provide a quality of life and safety for our residents,” he said.
Councilwoman Helen Hatala said she will vote in favor of the ordinance. “I feel that this ordinance is long overdue,” she said.
Some residents urged the council to approve the ordinance. One resident, a neighbor of a strip club, said she has seen people urinating outside the club and her grandchildren find used condoms on the ground.
There are six sexually oriented businesses in Burlington City, police have said.
The ordinance would require all of them to do away with private viewing rooms or dance rooms, and would permit police to inspect at any time during operating hours. The ordinance would require each business to obtain a city-issued license and pay an annual $1,000 fee.

Cyber Flicker/Silver Bullet Review

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Item Description
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Editorial Review
Every woman should own a Cyber Flicker/Silver Bullet vibrator, because it is one of the most treasured sex toys of all time. Years and years of playing with my Cyber Flicker/Silver Bullets and I am still amazed at how well this simple and small vibrator stimulates my clitoris. I have cases of different sex toys in my closet – some that I adore, others that didn’t quite hit the spot. My Cyber Flicker/Silver Bullet rests comfortably in my bedside nightstand, right next to my Rabbit and E-glass Pure Pleasure. That means I play with the Cyber Flicker (and the other two toys) most nights.

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The pole vaults into a new role

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

46923934The pole vaults into a new role
Pole dancing, long associated with strip clubs, is sliding into the mainstream as an art and a (clothed) competition sport.
By Susan Josephs
May 24, 2009

Wearing a gauzy blue two-piece costume that resembles a circus acrobat’s uniform, Laura Martin climbs up an 11-foot steel pole in a move popularly called the “Caterpillar Crawl.”

Aggressive and athletic yet fluid and hyper-flexible, she proceeds to blaze through a pole-dancing routine of inverted suspensions, spins and slides.

Hoots and whistles from the female-dominated crowd compete with the live music provided by the rock band Avowed. One woman screams to a friend, “It’s just like trapeze!”
Martin, a former exotic dancer, appreciates the comparison of what she does to something other than adult entertainment.

“I want to see pole dancing get away from the stripper connotation,” says the 30-year-old San Diego-based performer and personal fitness instructor. “I want people to see it’s like any other dance form.”

The weekly showcase at Club Good Hurt in West Los Angeles represents the latest evolution in pole dancing’s migration from the strip club to the fitness class to the mainstream performance venue. It features Southern California pole dancers performing to live rock music in a setting where, according to show producer Emilee Wilson, there’s “no tipping and no stripping.”

While pole dancing has been gaining acceptance in recent years as a form of physical fitness — classes are offered in gyms and dance studios across the country — there have been few performance opportunities outside of exotic dance clubs for dancers who spend years perfecting their skills and seek professional, artistic recognition.

Though the fact that the dance poles are easily portable and installable on a variety of surfaces point to a range of performance possibilities, Wilson and others say the opposite is true.

“There’s just not a lot out there right now so that people can see pole dancing as a serious dance form,” says Leigh Acosta, a 30-year-old pole dance instructor, aerial artist and recent performer at the showcase. “I think a lot of people still see it as something scandalous, the way people thought burlesque was scandalous, or belly dancing.”

That may change, however, considering that Cirque du Soleil hired a champion pole dancer in January to perform in its Las Vegas-based “Zumanity,” and pole-dance competitions judged by dancers and choreographers have sprung up all over the world.

The year-old New York City-based US Pole Dance Federation, for example, plans to sponsor annual competitions and pledges on its website to promote pole dancing as a “sensual and athletic art form.”

Locally, there’s Wilson’s effort to produce an “acrobatic pole show for women who want to perform but not in a strip club.

“What I’m doing is offering women a safe space where they get respect,” says Wilson, a 27-year-old actress and pole dancer who used to perform at Jumbo’s Clown Room, a Hollywood bikini bar. “Most of the women I met at Jumbo’s were really artistic, and none of them had implants. They were there because they really wanted to perform, and performers need an audience.”

About 100 people — with a roughly 3-2 female-male ratio — packed the red-paneled bar and checkered dance floor area on a recent Monday to watch a lineup of performers that included Acosta, Nicole Williams, a popular local pole-dance instructor, and Mina Mortezaie, whose forte seems to be perfectly executed vertical and inverted split maneuvers.

Mortezaie, 26, trained in gymnastics, modern dance, jazz, ballet and hip-hop before discovering pole dance. “I got addicted to it immediately because it combines everything I’ve been obsessed with: strength, flexibility, grace.”

Though she considered working at strip clubs, Mortezaie has created her own performance opportunities, which have included staging “pole nights” at the Culver City restaurant and bar Rush Street and forming her own burlesque dance troupe that incorporates the pole in its repertoire.

“I didn’t want to dance for men in clubs,” she says. “I wanted to dance for myself.”

For her performance, Mortezaie wore a tiny pink-and-black bikini and sported thigh-high shiny black boots. All of the performers wore bathing-suit-type costumes, a necessity, they say, since bare skin allows them to perform moves that require gripping with various parts of the body. As for their high heels, “every dance has its shoe,” observes Anna Grundstrom, the co-founder of the US Pole Dance Federation. “In high heels, you can grip higher on the pole.”

As a dancer, Mortezaie seemed to accentuate the sexy elements of her movements. She considers this “empowering,” while other dancers, like Martin, favor a less overtly sexual approach.

“I actually try to numb that part down,” says Martin, a self-taught pole dancer who cross-trains in martial arts, yoga, boxing and running. “You can’t take a woman’s natural seductiveness away from her, but I tend to stay away from the shake-your-ass maneuvers.”

Acosta, who demonstrates a languid, graceful performance quality in her routines, feels she’s “not a very sexy performer” but defends the dancers who are.

“I think it would be wrong to take out the sexual appeal of it, otherwise pole dancing would be nothing more than just stunts and gymnastics,” she says. “So much of dance is sexy. I’ve seen modern dance performances where it looks like the dancers are having sex.”

Judith Lynne Hanna, a dance scholar at the University of Maryland, points out that many dance forms contain sensual or sexual elements and were stigmatized at various points in their histories.

Hanna, who has served as an expert witness on more than 100 court cases related to exotic dance regulation, also mentioned examples of highly regarded choreographers such as modern dance pioneer Anna Halprin, who received a warrant for her arrest in 1967 when she presented a dance involving female nudity in New York.

“And then you have belly dancing, which contended with stigmas similar to pole dancing,” Hanna says.

Though some people attempt to trace contemporary pole dancing to the traditional Indian sport of Mallakhamb, or pole gymnastics, Hanna says the form really got its start in the 1980s, when strip clubs “became more upscale and elegant. I’m not sure when it became so gymnastic, but at some point, pole dancers became very skilled,” she says. “After all, if everyone’s doing the same thing but you do something different, you could attract more tips.”

Outside the strip clubs, pole dancing continues to evolve, with new tricks and terms being invented and dancers exchanging information by posting performance and instructional videos on YouTube.

“What I call an outside leg hook might be called ‘the firefly’ in one studio and ‘the fireman’ in another,” says Grundstrom, who mentions efforts to “put a Web page together with names of moves we all agree on.”

Grundstrom feels that pole dancing is “in the middle” of significant evolution. “Some people have kept the flowing, circling movements, others are more athletic,” she says, noting the recent petition to get pole dancing included as an event in the 2012 Olympics.

“The athletes will see it more as a sport and the dancers as more of an art,” she said. “Our goal at the Federation is to make pole dancing credible . . . the more you put pole dancing in other places, the more you change people’s minds.”

calendar@latimes.com

Strip club set to serve ‘Drunken Captains’ for Fleet Week ’09,

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Strip club set to serve ‘Drunken Captains’ for Fleet Week ’09, with proceeds going to the troops

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/05/19/2009-05-19_strip_club_set_to_serve_drunken_captains_for_fleet_week_09_with_proceeds_going_t.html#ixzz0IQS3QcHf&D

Welcome to New York, sailors!

As Fleet Week rolls into town Tuesday, one Manhattan strip club will be waiting with a special drink called the Drunken Captain and, the owners say, all proceeds will go back to the troops.

HeadQuarters, located just blocks from the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum on the West Side, is selling the cocktail for $16 during Fleet Week. Military personnel can buy it for $10.

“All of us here at HeadQuarters appreciate all the men and women who put themselves at risk every day to allow us to have the freedom to express ourselves,” general manager Serafina Fiori said.

“We welcome them always so they can see firsthand what they’re fighting for!”

The Drunken Captain is a mixture of coconut, mango and pineapple rums with a little pineapple juice and a splash of cranberry.

Fiori said proceeds from the sales of the drink will go to the Soldiers’, Sailors’, Marines’, Airmen’s & Coast Guard Club in Murray Hill. The club has been housing soldiers and veterans while they visit the Big Apple for the past 90 years.

The annual Fleet Week celebration isn’t all about letting loose. It’s also a chance for the Navy to show off some of its finest war ships.

This year’s main attraction is the amphibious assault ship Iwo Jima. The vessel has been deployed in support of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and responded during Hurricane Katrina. This is its third appearance at Fleet Week here.

The week is filled with events for the public, including search-and-rescue demonstrations, tours of the ships, concerts and crew competitions.

“Fleet Week is a salute to the sea services,” said Lt. Jonathan Blyth.

It’s also an opportunity to “thank the citizens of New York City for showing their appreciation to those of us who serve and protect our nation,” he said.

sgaskell@nydailynews.com

http://www.nydailynews.com/ny_local/2009/05/19/2009-05-19_strip_club_set_to_serve_drunken_captains_for_fleet_week_09_with_proceeds_going_t.html#ixzz0IQSWkPNO&D