Posted by: BathroomCoffee November 22, 2005
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This Is Dahlia- Confessions Of A Call Girl
"I wanted to be tasted. Licked. Touched. I wanted to be needed.
Desired. I wanted someone to feel hunger for me. I wanted someone to ache for
me. I wanted it all desperately, but I didn't know how to get it. How
do good girls get it? Good girls don't get it, because good girls don't
want it. I wanted to be wanted like a bad girl gets wanted . . ."
"I'd always felt very repressed sexually in my 'normal life', I wasn't
satisfied with the typical 'sexual expectations' that other girls I
knew seemed to be happy with and I wanted more but I didn't know how to
get it.
And in fact, the sex industry work was incredibly empowering for me ?
at that time ? because it gave me a way to develop this other side of
myself that I couldn't manage to develop otherwise, that side that likes
being dirty and trashy . . . (more)"
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New York's No Dancing Laws Face Court Challenge
Village Voice nightlife commentator Trish Romano called on revellers
and clubs to actively support a lawsuit challenging New York's infamous
anti-dancing Cabaret Law this week, suggesting fear and apathy is
preventing people from getting involved.
"Club owners are afraid to testify, and patrons and proprietors alike
simply don't care, because the city's not messing with them too much.
For now, anyway," said Romano.
"Such self-centered self-preservation is short sighted. The cabaret
law, as long as it's on the books, will be dusted off whenever the city
needs a magic weapon to wield against the unseemly world of nightlife."
Under the infamous Cabaret law, New Yorkers are allowed to dance in
just 221 venues compared to over 12,000 premises in the 60s, with clubs
and bars facing closure if patrons violate the no dancing rule, though
cops have recently relaxed enforcement somewhat, according to Larry Tee.
"Just as cigarettes are becoming more commonplace again in many
establishments here in New York City, the general feeling in the clubs is that
there is less and less enforcement of the Cabaret laws," said Larry.
"Many hot clubs have even run dance floors for long periods of time
without any interference from the nightclub monitors."
Larry, who currently runs Thursday weekly Distortion Disko at the
licensed venue Duvet, admitted he didn't know much about the campaign to
overturn the law, though agreed that the threat from the Cabaret Law
remains very real.
"The interest in changing the laws is still very intense because the
spectre of having enforcement appear again could definitely arise again
with one nasty incident that gets the media attention," said Larry.
"Local politicians still hold an unhealthy disregard of the importance
of a vital nightlife scene to the economy of New York."
Joe's Pub owner Serge Becker, who is backing Paul Chevigny's case with
sworn statements agreed, telling the Village Voice "We can't let it
stand and leave it to the benevolence of the powers that be."
"History has clearly shown us that a closet fascist like Giuliani is
just around the corner," he warned.