Posts Tagged ‘Stripper News’

Working As An Adult Entertainer

Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

Pat Shannahan for msnbc.com

Carla couldn’t find work in the legal profession, so she’s dancing in a topless bar now.

 

 

When Carla graduated 10 years ago, she thought her law degree would be a permanent ticket to a high-paying job.  But instead of selling her mind, Carla is selling her body. After student loans, debt, a layoff and unemployment battered her bank account, she now finds herself in an almost unbelievable position – dancing in a topless bar.

“Did I ever think I’d be taking my top off for rent money? No. I was in my mid-30s and had never danced before,” said Carla, who asked that we use her stage name and withhold her identity and some personal details. “As a little girl, I never thought to myself, ‘I just want to grow up and be a stripper,’ or, ‘All I ever wanted to do in life is climb in the lap of sweaty stranger and take my top off.’

“But, with our economy the way it is, especially in smaller cities … you strip or you starve,” she said.

Carla grew up in the Midwest and moved to the West Coast in the late ‘90s to fulfill her dream of earning her law degree. After graduation, she worked for nine years putting her degree to use, but she had entered the crowded legal profession at the wrong time. When she was laid off in 2009, she couldn’t find work. 

Last month, as part of our coverage of America’s economic malaise, we chronicled the story of a young father who took a job as a firefighter in Iraq after he couldn’t find work in Miami. Then we asked msnbc.com readers: What crazy things are you doing to make ends meet? This is the second of three reader stories we’ll share. Last week, we wrote about a man who has turned to dumpster diving to keep food on the table for his three children.  Now, we tell Carla’s story.

“At first, I worked as a waitress, and a cashier in gas station,” she said.

“I went around to see if could get a job as cocktail waitress, but there was not a single retail or waitress job.  No one was hiring, except for the topless places,” she said.  “It was an act of desperation.”

‘Act of desperation’
As her prospects grew dim, she went back to school to earn a master’s degree, hoping to bolster her credentials. But her financial aid came in lower than expected, her credit was battered and she struggled to find part-time work in her new town to keep her afloat.

She started out serving drinks as a waitress, but moved quickly to dancing “because that’s where the money is, and that’s what I needed.”

On an average day, she earns $20 an hour, but on a good weekend night, she might pull in $50 an hour –enough to get her finances back on track. She can set her own hours, which means she can squeeze in reading and writing papers around her work schedule.

“Sometimes it sucks, it’s degrading and I hate it, but it is necessary right now and I’m glad I have the option of doing it,” Carla said. “My parents and a few friends know and they were horrified at first. But now they are proud of me for sucking it up and doing what I have to do.”

Carla has set her limits, as does the topless bar she works in.  She stays away from private rooms even though women can make $500 to $100o a night there.

Local rules allow lap dances- as long as the patrons don’t touch the dancers- and Carla sometimes performs them.  The bar doesn’t have a full nudity license, and that’s just as well with Carla: She’d need a personal license to work at a place like that and she wants no record of her temporary stint in the dancing business.

“While I am proud of making a living by any legal means available to me, I realize that some will think of me as just a glorified legal prostitute and I would very much like to move on with my life and career at the earliest available opportunity,” she said.

Ugly moments

Despite these precautions, Carla sad she has had her share of ugly moments. Not all men follow the rules; some have tried to over power her and “grab her, bite her, kiss her, or get their hands under the bottoms (I) wear.”  Bouncers come to her aid, but they can’t be everywhere all the time

“I’ve had men overcome me,” She said. “Luckily help has arrived and nothing has happened. But I have been scared.”

Carla agreed to talk about her experience in part because she said it has been profound- in one sense, the job is less hostile than any law office she’s worked in, she said.  Coming from the cutthroat legal profession, she has been stunned by the camaraderie among the women she work with.

“I thought the other women I worked with would be competitive and not supportive.  We are ‘Fighting” over the same dollars,” She said.  ”But my female coworkers are the best coworkers I’ve ever had.”

Many are in the same situation she is, she said: forced by their economic situation to perform work they would have never considered in the past. 

“I work with war widows, a nurse, a med student, women who have had to go to work to save their home after their husbands have lost their jobs, and others who do this as a means to an end and who do not fit the profile of junkie/prostitute/dancer. … What we all have in common is being in a tight spot financially and living in an economy that provides limited options right now, ” she said.  “I’d be willing to bet that there are women like me working in it all over the country, out of necessity and not because our goal in life was to appear topless in front of … creepy guys.”

She’s also been horrified by the way dancers are treated by some men she encounters.

‘Some real creeps’
“I was shocked at how horribly some men treat us. I realized that I was much more naive than I thought I was,” she said. On the other hand, the bar and its patrons sometimes surprise her. “While there are some real creeps that come in, there are also some very sweet guys who are regular customers and who I genuinely enjoy knowing . The stereotype that says that only dirty old men frequent nudie bars is incorrect.”

She gets asked out often, she said, in situations that would be amusing if they weren’t so sad.

“Men aren’t quite as sneaky as they think they are,” she said.  Even in a strip club, they try to convince her that they aren’t just hunting for sex.  “They think their motivations are transparent, when they aren’t at all.”

Believe it or not, she said she feels lucky, because she has a male friend at school who’s in a similar financial situation, “but there’s no male equivalent to what I’m doing. At least I have the option,” she said.

She says she’s been humbled by the experience, too.

“I am no better than the next dancer by virtue of my education or previous work experience.  The universe has a funny way of putting a person in their place,” she said. “I have learned that I still have a lot to learn about life but now I have some incredible female mentors who continually inspire me with their courage and work ethic.”

She’s also learned to “never say never,” about things you may do in life. She’s almost finished with school, and hopes to stop dancing soon, but figures that “realistically, I’ll probably have to keep dancing until I get offered a full-time job. Which means I’ll be doing it for another six months, at least.”

When she does take a new job, she’s leaving the medium-sized city she’s in, with no plans to return.

“I cannot wait to start my life over elsewhere doing something different but I will always be grateful for the lessons I’ve learned dancing and will never again look down on anyone who works in this industry,” she said.

Lawyer Turns Topless Dancer To Pay Bill

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Pat Shannahan for msnbc.com

Carla couldn’t find work in the legal profession, so she’s dancing in a topless bar now.

 

 

When Carla graduated 10 years ago, she thought her law degree would be a permanent ticket to a high-paying job.  But instead of selling her mind, Carla is selling her body. After student loans, debt, a layoff and unemployment battered her bank account, she now finds herself in an almost unbelievable position – dancing in a topless bar.

“Did I ever think I’d be taking my top off for rent money? No. I was in my mid-30s and had never danced before,” said Carla, who asked that we use her stage name and withhold her identity and some personal details. “As a little girl, I never thought to myself, ‘I just want to grow up and be a stripper,’ or, ‘All I ever wanted to do in life is climb in the lap of sweaty stranger and take my top off.’

“But, with our economy the way it is, especially in smaller cities … you strip or you starve,” she said.

Carla grew up in the Midwest and moved to the West Coast in the late ‘90s to fulfill her dream of earning her law degree. After graduation, she worked for nine years putting her degree to use, but she had entered the crowded legal profession at the wrong time. When she was laid off in 2009, she couldn’t find work. 

Last month, as part of our coverage of America’s economic malaise, we chronicled the story of a young father who took a job as a firefighter in Iraq after he couldn’t find work in Miami. Then we asked msnbc.com readers: What crazy things are you doing to make ends meet? This is the second of three reader stories we’ll share. Last week, we wrote about a man who has turned to dumpster diving to keep food on the table for his three children.  Now, we tell Carla’s story.

“At first, I worked as a waitress, and a cashier in gas station,” she said.

“I went around to see if could get a job as cocktail waitress, but there was not a single retail or waitress job.  No one was hiring, except for the topless places,” she said.  “It was an act of desperation.”

‘Act of desperation’
As her prospects grew dim, she went back to school to earn a master’s degree, hoping to bolster her credentials. But her financial aid came in lower than expected, her credit was battered and she struggled to find part-time work in her new town to keep her afloat.

She started out serving drinks as a waitress, but moved quickly to dancing “because that’s where the money is, and that’s what I needed.”

On an average day, she earns $20 an hour, but on a good weekend night, she might pull in $50 an hour –enough to get her finances back on track. She can set her own hours, which means she can squeeze in reading and writing papers around her work schedule.

“Sometimes it sucks, it’s degrading and I hate it, but it is necessary right now and I’m glad I have the option of doing it,” Carla said. “My parents and a few friends know and they were horrified at first. But now they are proud of me for sucking it up and doing what I have to do.”

Carla has set her limits, as does the topless bar she works in.  She stays away from private rooms even though women can make $500 to $100o a night there.

Local rules allow lap dances- as long as the patrons don’t touch the dancers- and Carla sometimes performs them.  The bar doesn’t have a full nudity license, and that’s just as well with Carla: She’d need a personal license to work at a place like that and she wants no record of her temporary stint in the dancing business.

“While I am proud of making a living by any legal means available to me, I realize that some will think of me as just a glorified legal prostitute and I would very much like to move on with my life and career at the earliest available opportunity,” she said.

Ugly moments

Despite these precautions, Carla sad she has had her share of ugly moments. Not all men follow the rules; some have tried to over power her and “grab her, bite her, kiss her, or get their hands under the bottoms (I) wear.”  Bouncers come to her aid, but they can’t be everywhere all the time

“I’ve had men overcome me,” She said. “Luckily help has arrived and nothing has happened. But I have been scared.”

Carla agreed to talk about her experience in part because she said it has been profound- in one sense, the job is less hostile than any law office she’s worked in, she said.  Coming from the cutthroat legal profession, she has been stunned by the camaraderie among the women she work with.

“I thought the other women I worked with would be competitive and not supportive.  We are ‘Fighting” over the same dollars,” She said.  ”But my female coworkers are the best coworkers I’ve ever had.”

Many are in the same situation she is, she said: forced by their economic situation to perform work they would have never considered in the past. 

“I work with war widows, a nurse, a med student, women who have had to go to work to save their home after their husbands have lost their jobs, and others who do this as a means to an end and who do not fit the profile of junkie/prostitute/dancer. … What we all have in common is being in a tight spot financially and living in an economy that provides limited options right now, ” she said.  “I’d be willing to bet that there are women like me working in it all over the country, out of necessity and not because our goal in life was to appear topless in front of … creepy guys.”

She’s also been horrified by the way dancers are treated by some men she encounters.

‘Some real creeps’
“I was shocked at how horribly some men treat us. I realized that I was much more naive than I thought I was,” she said. On the other hand, the bar and its patrons sometimes surprise her. “While there are some real creeps that come in, there are also some very sweet guys who are regular customers and who I genuinely enjoy knowing . The stereotype that says that only dirty old men frequent nudie bars is incorrect.”

She gets asked out often, she said, in situations that would be amusing if they weren’t so sad.

“Men aren’t quite as sneaky as they think they are,” she said.  Even in a strip club, they try to convince her that they aren’t just hunting for sex.  “They think their motivations are transparent, when they aren’t at all.”

Believe it or not, she said she feels lucky, because she has a male friend at school who’s in a similar financial situation, “but there’s no male equivalent to what I’m doing. At least I have the option,” she said.

She says she’s been humbled by the experience, too.

“I am no better than the next dancer by virtue of my education or previous work experience.  The universe has a funny way of putting a person in their place,” she said. “I have learned that I still have a lot to learn about life but now I have some incredible female mentors who continually inspire me with their courage and work ethic.”

She’s also learned to “never say never,” about things you may do in life. She’s almost finished with school, and hopes to stop dancing soon, but figures that “realistically, I’ll probably have to keep dancing until I get offered a full-time job. Which means I’ll be doing it for another six months, at least.”

When she does take a new job, she’s leaving the medium-sized city she’s in, with no plans to return.

“I cannot wait to start my life over elsewhere doing something different but I will always be grateful for the lessons I’ve learned dancing and will never again look down on anyone who works in this industry,” she said.

New Hot Outfits By Kinky and Dazzle

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Hello All!

 

We are now adding new outfits daily on our site so keep coming back and check out what we have to offer..

 

Call or email us with any questions

We also custom make outfits as well!

 

 

Newport’s Past Now A Movie Fodder

Monday, May 9th, 2011

 

Written by
Mike Rutledge
mrutledge@nky.com

 

NEWPORT – In the next year there may be two new films about Newport’s vice-filled past.

Ronald Goldfarb, a federal prosecutor who 50 years ago took to court several people accused of conspiring to violate the civil rights of Campbell County sheriff candidate George Ratterman, has optioned the dramatic rights to a 1995 book he wrote on the subject, “Perfect Villains, Imperfect Heroes; Robert F. Kennedy’s War Against Organized Crime.”

A script is near completion and a film could be finished as early as next year, Goldfarb said. Efforts to contact the filmmaker were unsuccessful.

Newport during the mid-20th century was the region’s illicit playground. Newport lured affluent couples to glittering nights of premier show-business entertainers and gambling. It was known for its brothels and strip clubs that catered to business conventions. It also was a nationwide hub for organized-crime betting transactions.

Against that backdropm Ratterman was arrested on morals charges after police found him in a Newport hotel room with an exotic dancer with the stage name April Flowers weeks after announcing he was running for sheriff to clean up Newport. Prosecutors later concluded Ratterman had been drugged.

“It’s such a colorful, interesting case that they don’t have to do anything imaginative with it,” Goldfarb said.

Meanwhile, Jerry Gels of Union and others are working on a documentary, “Newport, Kentucky: Gangsters, Gamblers and Girls,” which they hope will come out this fall. It recaptures what Newport was like when gangsters roamed the town. The documentary-makers, who had hoped to release the film sooner, actually have been helped by delays, Gels said.

In February they visited Las Vegas.

“We found some old gangsters and pit bosses who worked in Newport,” he said. That footage is being added to the documentary, which is financially backed by Eric Haas, co-owner of Newport’s Hofbrauhaus.

Gels is creating the documentary partly to spark more interest in the $15 Newport Gangster Tours he and others operate three times on Saturdays – 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 5 p.m.

 

Dad in Stripper Pole Case To Request Change of venue

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

EASTON, Pa. — A Pennsylvania father accused of hosting a teen party featuring alcohol and a stripper pole says he can’t get a fair trial because of media coverage.

Steven A. Russo will ask a Northampton County judge for a change of venue after the judge rejected a plea agreement last month. A hearing on the request is scheduled for Friday.

The 37-year-old Bethlehem Township man was charged with corruption of minors, providing then with alcohol and other charges. He was charged after racy photos surfaced of students drinking and dancing at a stripper pole at his house.

Defense attorney Erv McLain says the story has been so sensationalized that Russo can’t get a fair trial locally.

Russo is currently in prison after being convicted of stalking an ex-girlfriend.

Man Picked up at Myrtle Beach Strip Club doesn’t pay taxi fare

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

A Myrtle Beach taxi cab driver told police a man he picked up from a gentleman’s club left him without paying the fare, according to a police report.

The driver, a 69-year-old Pawleys Island man, told police that at 5:30 a.m. Friday he picked up a man at the Penthouse Club and the man asked to be driven to Club There, police said.

When they arrived outside Club There and the man saw it was closed, the driver said the man asked to be taken to an area at Watts and Canal streets, according to the report. The driver said the man told him he had to go inside to get money for the $12.70 fare, but instead jumped from the cab and ran away.

The driver said he went back to the club and staffers told him the man was a regular at the strip club, according to the report. Police searched the area where the man was last seen, but did not find him.

Akron Woman Robbed in Strip Club Parking Lot

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Police arrested a 41-year-old Akron man who allegedly robbed a woman early this morning in the parking lot of a local strip club.

Police located Kenneth Johnson of Inman Street in the 1000 block of Nadia Court after receiving a call that a 58-year-old woman was being robbed in the parking lot of the Platinum Horse Cabaret, 1027 E. Waterloo Road.

The victim told police Johnson came at her from behind shortly after midnight and knocked her down in an attempt to get her purse and car keys.

Johnson allegedly took the victim’s cell phone, which officers found in his pocket when he was arrested, police said.

Johnson was charged with robbery.

Source: Ohio.com

Dark Stripping Secrets Revealed

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

I love strippers. The whole concept is wonderful. When I think about the low lights and the bumping bass and constant motion of a strip club I smile. Maybe it is just because I am a guy but the idea of a dozen or so women in various states of undress writhing and grinding in wanting ways for just my arousal is one of the top five things I can picture for any days plans. I really love strippers. But outside of dating a few in my early twenties, I never really stopped to think about the mental landscape they must live in. Then I read Searching for Suzi by Nancy Stohlman.

This book is a fast firing flash fiction about womanhood, sexuality, exploitation, emotional evolution and the world of stripping. It is the tale of Natalie, a thirty something mother who retraces the steps of teenaged beauty pageantry and stripping to search for the first woman she slept with. The trail takes the reader on a ride through time that reveals a life of emotional abuse, squalor and eroticism.

It makes the reader think about the lives of strippers and the esteem issues inflicted on women in a world that tells them that they have to be beautiful. It asks serious questions about the effects our sexuality has on our lives.

Without becoming porn, this book looks truthfully at the world of strippers and gets quite saucy. The shifting point of view keeps the reader feeling like they are flowing in and out of the consciences of the narrator. It forces you to wonder how you would feel if you were 17 and your high school principal just walked into the strip club you work at. It keeps a dark subject light in the right places by reviewing stripper tips, like stripper tip #6: underarm deodorant glows under black light or stripper tip #11: smoking pot in the bathroom only makes the night drag on forever.

Sure there are plenty of dirty words to keep your attention and at least two sex scenes that will make you look around to make sure you are alone while you read it, but better than that is the underlying understanding of the story. It is a story about the scars sexuality can leave on us, and how those scars shape us into the sexy little beasts we become. It is also about the connections that you make in life and how things change over time. It is a story about real life and I am glad I read it
Source: Written: Jan. 28, 2010 scn

Teacher In Trouble For Pose With Stripper

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

BROWNSVILLE, Pa. (AP) — The ACLU is coming to the defense of a Pennsylvania high school teacher suspended over a Facebook picture.

The female Brownsville teacher was shown in what’s said to be a provocative pose with a male stripper. The picture was posted by someone else on the social networking site.

American Civil Liberities Union officials say the suspension is troubling because the photo was taken at a private event, a bridal shower. But school board officials defend the 30-day suspension. They say others could face the same punishment if similar pictures of them are posted.

source: wcpo.com

Friday in the Poconos: Benefits of a strip club; second chance for Michael Vick

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

Friday in the Poconos: Benefits of a strip club; second chance for Michael Vick

August 07, 2009
Middle Smithfield Supervisor Bob Spano is saying a strip club is a good thing. Residents aren’t buying it.

Likewise, residents aren’t happy about a plan for the Bushkill Group to buy undeveloped land from Country Club of the Poconos.

It was a tough day all around for Middle Smithfield supervisors.

Speaking of tight situations, the state budget (or lack of it) is hitting home for Monroe residents. Social service agencies are struggling to provide services and pay employees.

And school districts are waiting for more than $7.3 million in frozen state aid. That money is used for essentials: salaries, books and supplies, and transportation.

Our readers aren’t waiting to send us great summer photos. You can submit yours. It’s free and easy. How often do you hear that?

Lots going on today in Local Sports.

Pocono Mountain East High School football coach Phil Dorn says he wouldn’t hire Michael Vick. Stroudsburg’s Fred Ross would give him another chance. Even clergy leaders can’t agree. Would you hire him? Take our poll.

Fear this. Pleasant Valley’s Pat Kregeloh was the first PV player to be named first-team All-State by the Pennsylvania State Coaches Association this summer and he’s only getting better.

The Yankees meet the Sox this weekend. The first game goes to the Yanks: 13-6. One thing’s for sure with this series. We’ll have plenty of drama.

On a high note, Pocono area students learned from the best at Camp Jazz last week. Even if you can’t play, you can listen to some great music. We’ll tell you all about this weekend’s entertainment in our Pocono midday report.