ChatterBank0 min ago
What Are Your Views On This?
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http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-53 09275/G UY-ADAM S-2-000 -head-C ity-cha rity-ba sh.html
It made headline news on last nights TV news, obviously any illegal sexual assault, such as hands up skirts or the grasping of boobs should have been reported and the perpetrators punished, but this was a male club and the women were employed as highly paid hostesses, they must have known what to expect when the wine, beer a champagne started to flow.
It made headline news on last nights TV news, obviously any illegal sexual assault, such as hands up skirts or the grasping of boobs should have been reported and the perpetrators punished, but this was a male club and the women were employed as highly paid hostesses, they must have known what to expect when the wine, beer a champagne started to flow.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.//Last Thursday, at least two of the 130 young female hostesses paid £150 (plus a £25 taxi allowance) to spend the evening at The Dorchester with 360-odd male revellers were not entirely as they seemed.
Rather than being aspiring models and actresses, or hard-up students earning some extra pocket money, they were undercover reporters working for the Financial Times.//
Who's brief was to make it as lurid as possible. "Me to" will become big business it seems.
Rather than being aspiring models and actresses, or hard-up students earning some extra pocket money, they were undercover reporters working for the Financial Times.//
Who's brief was to make it as lurid as possible. "Me to" will become big business it seems.
//Undercover FT reporter Madison Marriage who attended the event described how she and other women were ordered to wear figure-hugging dresses, matching knickers and ‘sexy shoes’, and women reported being groped multiple times with ‘hands up skirts, hands on bums …//
//"I am shocked and filled with horror" said Nicola Horlick!!??
I am convinced that the names are meant to be serious.
//"I am shocked and filled with horror" said Nicola Horlick!!??
I am convinced that the names are meant to be serious.
-- answer removed --
I think I have the answer as to my question from the other day.
Perhaps the 'They Knew What To Expect' brigade has now won, and that women are seen as a free-for-all.
Sad.
Oh and by the way - anyone who thinks that being a hostess at a club evening is the equivalent of being a male stripper, who takes off all his clothes, and then proceeds to have oil rubbed on him by the crowd - is a moron.
Perhaps the 'They Knew What To Expect' brigade has now won, and that women are seen as a free-for-all.
Sad.
Oh and by the way - anyone who thinks that being a hostess at a club evening is the equivalent of being a male stripper, who takes off all his clothes, and then proceeds to have oil rubbed on him by the crowd - is a moron.
//Oh and by the way - anyone who thinks that being a hostess at a club evening is the equivalent of being a male stripper, who takes off all his clothes, and then proceeds to have oil rubbed on him by the crowd - is a moron. //
You sound like someone with personal experience in such matters sp.....Do Tell.
You sound like someone with personal experience in such matters sp.....Do Tell.
This snippet taken from an article written by Richard LIttlejohn sums it up quite nicely:
Certainly, it doesn't justify the absurd call to ban all-male gatherings in future. Otherwise, you might as well outlaw all-female parties, too. Hen nights are hardly bastions of decorum and sexual continence.
Plenty of women have been known to behave 'inappropriately' towards handsome male waiters in tight trousers and hurl themselves at Chippendale-style dancers.
The tragedy here is that an organisation which has raised millions for charity feels obliged to disband because of the alleged behaviour of a handful of guests.The whole business is blown so far out proportion that even the Prime Minister is compelled to interrupt an international conference to pass comment.
We live in an absurd age of knee-jerk moral outrage, fuelled by social media and 24-hour rolling 'news', in which everyone is expected to genuflect before the altar of militant feminism — just so that politically motivated, university-educated, middle-class women with an exaggerated sense of their own importance can draw attention to themselves.
Certainly, it doesn't justify the absurd call to ban all-male gatherings in future. Otherwise, you might as well outlaw all-female parties, too. Hen nights are hardly bastions of decorum and sexual continence.
Plenty of women have been known to behave 'inappropriately' towards handsome male waiters in tight trousers and hurl themselves at Chippendale-style dancers.
The tragedy here is that an organisation which has raised millions for charity feels obliged to disband because of the alleged behaviour of a handful of guests.The whole business is blown so far out proportion that even the Prime Minister is compelled to interrupt an international conference to pass comment.
We live in an absurd age of knee-jerk moral outrage, fuelled by social media and 24-hour rolling 'news', in which everyone is expected to genuflect before the altar of militant feminism — just so that politically motivated, university-educated, middle-class women with an exaggerated sense of their own importance can draw attention to themselves.
This is what actually happened to one of the "hostesses"
http:// www.bbc .co.uk/ news/av /uk-428 26662/p residen ts-club -ex-hos tess-on -gropin g-at-ga la
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