Throughout the 80s and up to 1995/96/97, the clear weakly wage for the average stripper was $900.00-$1,200 00, showgirls cleared anywhere from $2,300.00 - $2,700.00. Some showgirls who were booked for one month minimum tours in Mexico were pulling in an average $5,000.00 US weekly with airfare, accommodation, meals, limited free drinks and taxi service with bodyguard. There was about a 15year stretch where "EXOTIC DANCERS" (STRIPPERS) made very big money.
The big money girls came with former talents, mainly gymnastics and bodybuilding. We had one girl that traveled the circuit with a complete crew, 2 semi haulers, cube van and limo while she flew to destination, that broad was $20,000.00 a week less 30% if held over, didn't drink, no drugs and very hard to get along with. She was in it for only the cash, and she carried a library of law books, she was studying to be a lawyer, today she's with a law firm in Vancouver.
Many of these broads had only business in mind, many fucked up too.
Being involved in this lifestyle presented a learning experience unattainable in conventional society, there was also a wealth of information undisclosed to the general public that certain dancers were good at obtaining for us...we had shit on cops that they thought was privy only to them, in fact one high ranking cop went down for dealing blow that he was stealing from the evidence vault. I had a girl who worked the Detroit Grand Rapids circuit who acquired enough dirt on this fucker to bring him down. (by his own doings)
Eventually, waking up in the middle of Montana with their hair turning gray, there's no account for the time that dissappeared and that hits hard.
Zyklonbeekeeper 0 points 5 months ago
There's 2 types of lawyers, there's the best and there's the worst, the best don't come out of the "classroom" per se, they come from worldly experience...up to about 3 years ago it was my intention to get a law degree, I had the prerequisite and I could have completed the process through a correspondence process, I would've aced it, I've had my share of time dealing with the legal system with the majority of cases defended under my direction to the lawyers working for me, I layed out the approach, the questions and assumed counter response...got a government issued "criminal pardon" and was going for it....two years ago I was told "you may meet the requirements but you will be refused the exam"....the system is rigged, becoming a lawyer is not as complicated as one thinks....it's the system that complicates the process. The "UPPER CANADA LAW SOCIETY" today is jewed and very selective as to who gets to the "Bar", I've went up against Alan Greenspan in court, was on the stand for 3 days, one court session went into the evening hrs, I MADE FOOLS OF HIM AND HIS 4 LOSER LAWYERS...and this is the jew who the media hyped as Canada's "#1 legal mind"...becoming a lawyer is not hard