My First Strip Club Experience*

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So I went to a strip club the other day and afterwards thought to myself, "could humanity sink any lower?"
-The three "Upscale" places I had gone to shared the same decor: a theme restaurant meets and Indian casino.
-The carpet in 2 of the places were puke worthy.
-The DJs sounded like Morning Zoo outcasts. I was half expecting fart sound effects.
-Who made patform high heels the offical shoes of strippers? I can not imagine an uglier, more uncomfortable pair of footwear anywhere else on the planet. And about a 1/3 of the women had the tags still attached to their shoes. (Huh?)
-I feel very sorry for the girls who work there. They had to rub themselves against some of most vile, ugliest creeps I've ever encountered. Seriously, these guys were giving off major serial killer vibes. And for what? so the girl could get a $10 tip? urgh!
-One would think that in theory a beatiful woman gyrating against a pole would be one of the sexiest thing that a straight man can ever see. And while these girls for the most part were up to par in the looks department, their 'preformances' were about as erotic as burnt toast.

While it wasn't as nightmarish like I thought it would be (in fact, I was pretty amused through the whole thing), I still felt vile and icky afterwards. The situation was so pathetic that it was nearly laugh out loud funny at first then later crying-in-the-shower depressing. My friend oftered to buy me a lapdance just before we left. I told him Would rather suck the buckshot out of a rifle.

(*actually I lied, I've been to a Strip Club once for a bachelor party, but i read Sylvia Plath the whole time there so I don't count it.)

Lurker L MrLurkerstein, Saturday, 22 April 2006 20:52 (twenty years ago)

Mmm, yeah baby, burnt toast. Burn it. Burn it hotter, baby.

nabisco (nabisco), Saturday, 22 April 2006 20:57 (twenty years ago)

Maybe you just don't like girls?

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 22 April 2006 20:59 (twenty years ago)

i don't get all rockist about strip bars except for the fake tiddays, which are always a major turn-off (and always just ubiquitous).

a regal trolley (aaron a), Saturday, 22 April 2006 21:01 (twenty years ago)

Are you the same faggot who didn't liek when teh chick got all raw with you?

Jimmy Mod: My theme is DEATH (The Famous Jimmy Mod), Saturday, 22 April 2006 21:06 (twenty years ago)

i never understood strup clubs -
if i see naked women i want to fuck them or masturbate.
if i cant do both - whats the point?
plus, i dont think it will turn me on to watch them with 20 more men, drooling all over.yaaaach...

cerf, Saturday, 22 April 2006 21:09 (twenty years ago)

men that dont love stripclubs - C or D or psycho or prudeish or just plain weird and prone to creepy tendencies?

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 22 April 2006 21:12 (twenty years ago)

I've been to a Strip Club once for a bachelor party, but i read Sylvia Plath the whole time there

who makes this stuff up?

someone let this mitya out! (mitya), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:26 (twenty years ago)

I dunno, my very limited experience is that strip clubs are indeed pretty lame and/or depressing and/or creepy. (Those three adjectives would be arranged along a spectrum of how "classy" the place is.)

And that's even given that 1/3 of my "limited experience" took place in a Canadian strip club where everything was remarkably clean and the strippers were strangely polite and wholesome-looking.

nabisco (nabisco), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:36 (twenty years ago)

What kind of shoes would you like to see the strippers in instead?

Abbott (Abbott), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:39 (twenty years ago)

plimsols?

This cunted circus never ends... (papa november), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:41 (twenty years ago)

http://www.railibro.rai.it/images/articoli/plath7_b.jpg

pablo (Pablo A), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:41 (twenty years ago)

I don't think most men actually find strip-clubs to be a turn-on or enjoyable in and of themselves. It's more something you do with the boys - fun by proxy. Like 'we're supposed to get loaded and pay girls with fake boobs to jiggle them for us, it's what men do.'

milo z (mlp), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:44 (twenty years ago)

I love that asterisk, it makes me think somebody involved was on steroids.

teeny (teeny), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:47 (twenty years ago)

isnt there an "indie" stripclub in portland where all the girls dance to like MIA and postal service?

phil-two (phil-two), Saturday, 22 April 2006 23:50 (twenty years ago)

do you mean mary's?

http://www.marysclub.com/outsidehorizontal.jpg

even cathy berberian's nose (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:03 (twenty years ago)

i dont know. ive never been to portland. i just read about it in some magazine

phil-two (phil-two), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:06 (twenty years ago)

I've never been into the peelers much, myself. I don't think that makes me weird.

Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:26 (twenty years ago)

Although there's this one place here that has the greatest "fliers" I've ever seen:

ihttp://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v622/dysign/ilx/?action=view¤t=BabyDolls.jpg

plus they gave me pot!

Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:28 (twenty years ago)

I've been to a Strip Club once for a bachelor party, but i read Sylvia Plath the whole time there

Do your parents know you're gay?

van igloo (van smack), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:33 (twenty years ago)

oops, here we go:

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v622/dysign/ilx/BabyDolls.jpg

Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:38 (twenty years ago)

Yeah, I'm the same 'faggot' who didn't like raw chicks however I do like girls. It's funny out of the 15 some odd dancers we saw than night I think there was only 3 that was noticeably fake. I would rather see strippers look comfortable in their choice of footwear than not. I would like to see a girl come out barefoot, wearing sneakers or anything else for that matter. And how does my Sylvia Plath story make me gay?

Lurker L MrLurkerstein, Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:45 (twenty years ago)

if you have to ask,

pablo (Pablo A), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:47 (twenty years ago)

http://cache.gawker.com/images/2006/04/lorenkreiss.jpg

FAG

Jimmy Mod is a super idol of The MARS SPIRIT (The Famous Jimmy Mod), Sunday, 23 April 2006 00:48 (twenty years ago)

the first time i went to a strip club, i got paid to go. our alt-weekly was doing one of those "sex issues", so a whole group of us went to a stip club and wrote it from various perspectives: straight male, gay male, straight female (we were lacking for a lesbian). and yes, i know, that's the most alt-weeklyish thing in the world. but we got our admission, drinks and tips expensed. i was too shy to tip at first. which made me feel bad, because then you feel like if you're not tipping you shouldn't even be watching. but then it seems rude to not watch someone who's dancing naked for you. so anyway i overcame my shyness and distributed some tips. i found the whole thing pretty odd, as i have my handful of subsequent strip-club sojourns. one of my friends said it was basically a pantomime of courtship at its most traditional: the men bring the money, the women shake their tits and asses, everybody smiles nervously.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Sunday, 23 April 2006 02:05 (twenty years ago)

That Sylvia Plath thing just takes the cake, doesn't it?

Lurker, you sound like someone who is so desperate to show his Sensitive New Age Man credentials to the world that he's completely forgotten how to have fun. There's a tendency among the young & overeducated to wilfully overlook the fact that a) many women like sex too (SHOCKA) and b) not everyone who does sex work is abused, drug-addled, or self-hating.

You still haven't hung out with that "closet slut", have you???

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Sunday, 23 April 2006 02:09 (twenty years ago)

No, he's terrified of her, remember?

Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Sunday, 23 April 2006 02:12 (twenty years ago)

Oh, right.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Sunday, 23 April 2006 02:15 (twenty years ago)

Oh, and:

one of my friends said it was basically a pantomime of courtship at its most traditional: the men bring the money, the women shake their tits and asses, everybody smiles nervously.

O T F M!!!

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Sunday, 23 April 2006 02:17 (twenty years ago)

"Sensitive New Age Man"? Tantrum, you have given me way too much credit. The Sylvia Plath thing happened because I was bored and I had a copy of Ariel in my booksack so I figured, "why not?" Trust me, it was not to impress anyone.

Back in my hometown, I actually knew a handful of dancers who did like sex and who were not crazy or a junky. However I had never seen them preform and I think that there is the key. I saw them as people seperate from their jobs and I never paid what they did for a living any mind. But now having actually seen what they do, I can't help coming out thinking that their profession is highly degrading. In a job where one is reduced to a pair of tits, an ass, and a g-string, it's kinda hard to believe that a girl could be perfectly normal to do it time after time. Andf I know it sounds fucked up and woman hating but it's my opinion and although I wish I could think otherwise, it's what i believe.

It's also kinda funny that Gypsy Mothra brought the connection between strip clubs and the nature of courtship to light beacuse (and perhaps it's just me) everyone there seemed to be into the role playing. And I thought that was tragic for 2 reasons: a) In theory, anyone should attract the gender of their choice. But strip clubs are living proof that it's not so and there are people who will exploit a guy's loneliness and desperation for a money and b)and that there are people on this planet so delusional that will buy into a fantasy no matter how transparent, how fleeting just because they are waving a couple bucks around.

I can not see how that is in anyway 'fun'.

Lurker L MrLurkerstein, Sunday, 23 April 2006 03:21 (twenty years ago)

FAG

Jimmy Mod is a super idol of The MARS SPIRIT (The Famous Jimmy Mod), Sunday, 23 April 2006 03:37 (twenty years ago)

not gay JM, just a potential serial killer. but hey, what's a man to do in a world full of people who are so evil as to exploit a guy's loneliness and desperation for money?

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Sunday, 23 April 2006 03:54 (twenty years ago)

Hey, I've been to Mary's in Portland! It was actually my first proper stripclub experience. Here's the story I recounted to a list devoted to the Smurfs and Misery-solo:

Speaking of stripclubs and Morrissey...I was cleaning out my mailbox
and came across an old message I sent to a friend. Here's an excerpt
about going to a strip club in Portland, OR during the tour last
summer...(names deleted to protect the guilty)
================
So, here's the story...after the fantastic show in Portland (the best
on the tour so far) I ended up with hanging out at the bar (with my
head on the bar) of MOrrissey's hotel. I don't stalk Morrissey at his
hotels, but I'm in the rental car with others who do.
xxx's cousin who lives in Portland is drinking with us, and since
he's Irish, he wants to take us to more nightclubs in Portland to
drink. bbbb and I beg off, preferring to sleep in the car. But
somehow we are persuaded to go to a club nearby that is playing loud,
horrible techno. Fortunately, for some reason we don't go in. I don't
know why, but we go to a place called Mary's Club, which is across the
street.

The strains of the Verve's Bittersweet Symphony usher us inside. Hmmm,
surprisingly good music for a strip club. But they are progressive in
Portland. For example, they allow full nudity in clubs that serve
alcohol. This club is no exception. After I commented about the
music, the owner of the club (presumably Mary) proudly informed me that
the dancers get to choose their own music. They do so by picking
selections from the wall-mounted jukebox to the left of the small
rectangular stage.

I half-expected to see Gary Day in the joint because he's been spotted
at titty bars before. Instead, we encounter bbb and --- at a table
in the second row away from the stage. The first row is a bar right up
in front of the stage. It is reserved for the serious tippers who gaze
up dumbly at the undulating dancers.

This is actually the first time I've ever been in a strip club, I mean
one that caters to straight men. It's not as sad and sleazy as I
thought it would be. There's the smoke, but it's not too bad. The
drinks are watered down, but the dancers are pretty and not scary like
the pornlets I'm used to.

Except there's one dancer whom I did not like. She wouldn't dance to
Morrissey/Smiffs even though I'd tip $20 for it. She knew who they
were (one of the dancers claimed ignorance), but she said the only
SMiths song they had was a cover of How Soon Is Now by Snake River
Conspiracy. It is a foul cover by a vile band. Anyway, she already
played a SRC song, so she refused to play another. That's okay because
I thought she looked like a skank. She looked like a biker
chick with her tattoos. She also had blonde hair but a shaved pussy,
which makes me think she's another repulsive blonde-in-a-bottle type.
Big turn off. But ----- was attracted to her. The dancer had large,
firm boobs. She was a chunky girl, so the big boobs looked believable
on her frame. But when she hung upside-down on the pole, I noticed
that her firm breasts were too firm -- they didn't move naturally.
That's a damn good boob job! But ----- didn't like hearing that. She
protested that maybe this girl was 18 so she could have naturally firm
and high breasts and all. I said, no, if they're that big (and
natural) there's no way they'd stay up like that. I've seen more tits
than a dairy farmer, so I ought to know! ------ further argued that
her own sizable breasts don't move. I disagreed and told her that I've
seen her breasts move (and due to gravity hers are also a lot lower
than the trollope's on stage). She seemed shocked that I'd scoped out
her breasts and said she felt cheap and used. Well, I retorted, would
you feel better about it if I had paid you for the privilege? She said
that was a low blow. Well, of course I look! Don't try to tell me you
don't look, either!

I tipped one dancer for playing Joy Division's Love Will Tear Us Apart
and also for "keepin' it real" because she didn't alter her lovely
breasts with horrible plastic surgery. But she didn't dance to the
Smiths cover.

Since we were heckling every dancer to dance to Morrissey or the
Smiffs, one of the patrons at the bar in front of the stage asked me if
I had been to the Morrissey show that night. Of course! He pointed
out a pretty, slim woman wearing the black tour "wifebeater" shirt with
"Morrissey" in olde English script standing in the back. SHe had a
cascade of gorgeous, brown corkscrew curls. She was his co-worker at a
posh restaurant called Pastis (sp?) where Morrissey had dinner that
night. The unfortunate girl asked for the night off to go see
Morrissey. But if she had worked that night, she could've served him
his meal! I asked the guy what Morrissey ate. He said Morrissey had
angel hair pasta with basil and tomatoes. Sounds right.

When a seat in front of the stage became available, this lovely fan
grabbed it and spent the rest of the evening gazing up at all the
dancers. I thought it was odd that she should stare at the women on
stage when she seemed to be way better-looking than them.

The guy who told me about his co-worker was kind of odd in that he
seemed too good-looking to be here, too. I thought he looked so pretty
that he was gay. But he was one of the most ardent admirers of the
dancers and tipped copiously. Later on, I saw him hugging on the
pretty lesbian Mozfan co-worker of his. They were kind of swaying in a
slow dance. I could tell that he was in love with her. But she had
eyes only for the strippers. Seeing her gaze longingly at the peelers
on the stage while she was being hugged by this man was too poignant a
scene for the end of the night. It was such the illustration of "I
Want the One I Can't Have." I thought of the lyrics "Sad-veiled bride,
please be happy. Handsome groom, give her room. Loud, loutish lover,
treat her kindly, though she needs you more than she loves you..."

We stayed until closing... Then I drove to the airport because I had an
early morning flight to Salt Lake City.

Oh yeah, I met Maf (Matthew), the subject of Momus's patron-pop Stars
Forever song, in Portland that night. He seemed charmingly flustered
when I told him that reading MOmus's online tourdiary entry about
illegal sexual practices in Salt Lake City tempted me to engage in the
outlawed practices while in SLC. When I saw him again in Santa
Barbara, he asked if I had found oral sex in SLC. That is another
story for later...

Melinda Mess-injure (Melinda Mess-injure), Sunday, 23 April 2006 05:00 (twenty years ago)

The Sylvia Plath thing happened because I was bored and I had a copy of Ariel in my booksack so I figured, "why not?" Trust me, it was not to impress anyone.

So a) why'd you tell us? and b) if you had to tell us, why not just say you read "a book", and c) wtf is a booksack?

JimD (JimD), Sunday, 23 April 2006 05:18 (twenty years ago)

a bookbag.

even cathy berberian's nose (Jody Beth Rosen), Sunday, 23 April 2006 05:23 (twenty years ago)

A potential serial killer?!?! Yeah, I think there's a lot of uglyness and evil in the world and I don't care much for Strip Joints but what makes you think I'm going to kill people? You're a fool and a madman for that assertion.

And as for the Sylvia Plath nonsense a) it's funny story b) the detail makes it funnier (i.e. getting into a fistfight while listening to the Cocteau Twins) and c) a sack of books.

Oh and another thing about Strip Clubs: The freaking music! I've never expected to hear a note of Kid Rock ever again!

Lurker 'Lurky' MrLurkerstein, Sunday, 23 April 2006 07:06 (twenty years ago)

And that's even given that 1/3 of my "limited experience" took place in a Canadian strip club where everything was remarkably clean and the strippers were strangely polite and wholesome-looking.

the only strip clubs i've ever been to were in edmonton, canada, when myself and a photographer and PR got stranded there after our flight to LA on 9/11 got diverted due to the closed american airspace. it was a weird time to be stranded thousands of miles from your loved ones with no idea when you'll be able to go home again, so our heads were all a little fucked up to begin with, but it was a weird night.

we went to one place that our waiter had reccommended, but when we got there, the owner told us that as they do lapdances there they couldn't legally serve teh booze, and the PR - a girl whose idea the whole strip club trawl had been - said we weren't nearly drunk enough yet, so we went to this abysmal place called the pink pussycat, which was like a huge aircraft hangar with chairs and a stage, where disinterested boobless, pubeless, buttless girls cavorted while drunks cheered em on. there was one dancer who didn't dance to Kid Rock, but to some insane penumatic R'n'B track, who was *awesome, and the photog and I got to chat to her later and she gave us autographed posters of her (nekkid, natch) mostly because the photog (6' 4") had dispatched a punter who was hassling her.
we then went on to the original place, chez pierre (i think), an old skool darkened room where the stones had appara once visited. as i'd already raised PC objections to our trip, i was bought the first lapdance - a bump and grind from a mostly naked eastern euorpean girl who whispered filth in my ear while putting her hands all over me. i was at first kind of disturbed by it, then found it insanely erotic for a minute or so, and then everything seemed grubby again when i realised this was only happening because the PR had put her credit card behind the bar. the proprietor later told us that the soundtrack for the dancing was one of a series of mixtapes he'd made for the club from his favourite tunes, each edited to a strict two and a half minutes to maximise profit from the dances. mostly they were cool rock tunes, though i had the misfortune to receive my dance to the lilting tones of chris de burgh's lady in red.
i dunno. i was pretty skeeved out by the whole thing, and wouldn't wanna do it again. but its not like i object to it.

i am not a nugget (stevie), Sunday, 23 April 2006 10:14 (twenty years ago)

I have never stepped foot in a strip club. It's kind of weird -- it's the kind of thing you think I'd have done at some point, but I never have.

phil d. (Phil D.), Sunday, 23 April 2006 12:25 (twenty years ago)

not gay JM, just a potential serial killer.

This is a really, really shitty and destructive thing to say.

but hey, what's a man to do in a world full of people who are so evil as to exploit a guy's loneliness and desperation for money?

I think you're inadvertently betraying your sociocultural roots here, S. Clover. However foregrounded the haha-"ironic" dimension may be in NYC, Portland, et al., in most cases strip clubs are very much about "exploiting guys' loneliness and desperation for money" (not to mention women's desperation-for-money). I mean, dude, try talking to an actual real-life stripper, or failing that, at least reading some articles -- this one maybe, though there was a terrific one I saw a while back that really nailed the mutual-exploitation angle, but can't find now...

But, you know, I wouldn't want to interfere with your turning McLurkerstein into the straw man you clearly need him to be! Do continue calling people names when they don't say their shibboleths in the proper order, instead of engaging with them as human beings; it's a truly noble, admirable trait, and definitely makes the world a better place.

lurker #2421, Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:17 (twenty years ago)

poor exploited guys! pity them!

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:33 (twenty years ago)

I felt lucky to have a Yale degree to fall back on, because despite the financial problems I had to deal with after quitting so suddenly, I didn't have it in me to dance for one more day.

I guess its not so tough for strippers seeing as how they generally have Yale degrees to "fall back on" too.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:36 (twenty years ago)

i also love that the original poster claims to hate strip cubs yet talks about "the three 'Upscale' places' he had gone to. dude, if you don't like it, why do you keep going?

just another exploited guy trapped in the life, i guess.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:40 (twenty years ago)

That's right, man! We shouldn't even TALK about that angle (because, y'know, it definitely has no bearing on anything in the situation)! And the strippers who do write about it (and who do, in fact, "pity them") should be censured! Sterling Clover knows best!

xpost Ah, the privileged disapproving of the privileged. Good show!

lurker #2421, Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:40 (twenty years ago)

And we certainly can't have this:

CODY: You know, I think a lot of people assumed going into stripping that I would start to think of men as, you know, chauvinist pigs who wanted to objectify women. But in fact, I developed a lot of sympathy for men after stripping, because when they are in the club, when they are in that situation, they're kind of powerless, and they're there because they are looking for companionship and they're looking for intimacy. And it was up to us to provide that.

HAMMER: So you kind of felt sorry for them?

CODY: Yes, a little bit.

HAMMER: You weren't just there to take their money and their dollar bills.

CODY: No.

HAMMER: You were actually providing a service of putting a smile on their face?

CODY: Exactly. Which made it all the easier to be condescending.

(P.S. I don't find this point of view, or interview, to be entirely unproblematic...not to mention that it's a CNN interview, and all that that entails...but I'm a hell of a lot more inclined to defer to a stripper's judgment on whether it's appropriate for mutual exploitation to be a part of the dialogue about stripping than I am to defer to Sterling Clover's judgment about said topic.)

lurker #2421, Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:47 (twenty years ago)

consolidated's 'no answer for a dancer' to thread (or not)

i am not a nugget (stevie), Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:51 (twenty years ago)

That "ha, ha strippers don't listen to Morrissey" story is one of the most patronizing things I've ever read on ILX.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Sunday, 23 April 2006 15:53 (twenty years ago)

Clearly I need to try harder.

Dan (Did I Mention I Went To Harvard?) Perry (Dan Perry), Sunday, 23 April 2006 16:37 (twenty years ago)

I like porn but dislike strip clubs - I think C.S. Lewis's food analogy in Mere Christianity is apt, though I find his overall take on sex relations as problematic as one would expect, given that he was at that point working almost entirely from theory rather than experience. Here's the key line (the set-up, about an imaginary planet, I don't have to hand):

"There is nothing to be ashamed of in enjoying your food: there would be everything to be ashamed of if half the world made food the main interest of their lives and spent their time looking at pictures of food and dribbling and smacking their lips."

With porn, it's like "sure: visual stimulus for masturbatory purposes, makes sense to me!"; with stripclubs, it's more like "here's a whole bizarre roleplaying universe where one gets to feign a sort of Bizarro-world courtship (with little or none of the fun, subtle intricacies that make courtship both delightful and daunting/scary) and roleplay in a way that doesn't seem especially rewarding or worthwhile." Obviously, others' mileage varies on this question, and as a married guy I can only really imagine being at a point where I was like "if I do not see a Live Nude Girl I am gonna die of starvation here pretty quick."

I am very puzzled by how reactionary people get over men claiming they don't enjoy strip clubs; "don't go to them then!" seems like an oblique way of saying "let's not discuss this matter, some people enjoy them, THAT'S ALL!" which resembles the odious "discussing music DESTROYS THE MAGIC" folderol

though finally, yes, the Plath line is priceless, I'd assumed it was a joke - the lighting's much better at the bus stop, if you're so bored in a strip club that you'd rather read you oughta go home and read

Thomas Tallis (Tommy), Sunday, 23 April 2006 16:46 (twenty years ago)

So I asked a friend once, what's the appeal, especially considering that you're basically having a sexual experience IN PUBLIC, surrounded by all your male friends. Which was pretty much counter to his whole idea of masculinity, so I was perplexed. And he said that it's not even a sexual experience, that when you go with a group it sort of disarms the sexuality and it becomes about the fact that you've now seen X many more women's breasts, out of all the women in the world. Because, he said, men walk around every day trying not to be caught looking, and wondering what women look like sans clothing, and at strip clubs you actually get to find out and relax yr...discretion vigilance and just flat out stare.

I still can't decide whether I think that's utter bullshit or a quite reasonable take on the idea.

Laurel (Laurel), Sunday, 23 April 2006 17:01 (twenty years ago)

Because, he said, men walk around every day trying not to be caught looking, and wondering what women look like sans clothing, and at strip clubs you actually get to find out and relax yr...discretion vigilance and just flat out stare.

There's definitely some truth there. Your friend is also right in that any sexual arousal gets dialed down a lot, especially if you're with a group.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Sunday, 23 April 2006 17:13 (twenty years ago)

No, they fall in love with Xander and want his attention and shit -- that's totally different from just wanting to fuck him!

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:09 (twenty years ago)

Or am I misremembering that episode?

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:10 (twenty years ago)

the way women behave in axe commercials is exactly the way 1,000,000,000 commercials portray their loyal customers behaving when they get near the Vaunted Product, i.e. so overcome with their compulsion for the product that they behave in ways most people would describe as literally insane. the product marketers of the world wish their consumers to have the same relationship to their product that men fantasize women would have with their cocks

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:11 (twenty years ago)

Anyway the point is that duh obviously it's not so great, in like countless ways, exaggerated by who it comes from and when it comes along and what it replaces and a MILLION other things -- but the end thing is that guys nearly never get a shred of it, and so of course we're going to fantasize about idealized situations to revel in it. That doesn't mean it's great, just that it's foreign and therefore exciting.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:12 (twenty years ago)

Ha xpost that's why I'm branding my cock as luxurious but edgy, like a Range Rover, or a Ketel One and Red Bull.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:13 (twenty years ago)

but, as Giles points out (it's possible I recently rewatched this episode, shut up), they don't really love him. they just seem to want to own him, which has sexual connotations. Jenny Calendar all feels him up and asks him if he's been working out at some point! and it's the really physically threatening nature of their attraction which ends up being the "evil" of the episode. they basically almost tear him apart. which is maybe interestingly analogous to the negative part of women's ambivalence about male attention, the threat part of sexuality.

ahem. or I'm a huge geek.

horsehoe (horseshoe), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:13 (twenty years ago)

sorry. i hope I didn't kill the thread with my Buffy dork-out.

horsehoe (horseshoe), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:15 (twenty years ago)

Dude nothing on ILX has ever been killed by Buffy dork-out, only enhanced. Anyway that episode is a poor example, since the attention was concentrated for single-episode lesson-learning -- in a real-world switch he could probably get by a little longer before the vague leers spooked him.

I like Tracer's phrasing, though, because it suggests another way of framing this male fantasy: "we are impersonally excited by and drawn to YOUR bodies, so why can't you openly do the same for us?" As if we're actually burdened by the attraction/need and would like that to go both ways.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:20 (twenty years ago)

Anyway that episode is a poor example, since the attention was concentrated for single-episode lesson-learning -- in a real-world switch he could probably get by a little longer before the vague leers spooked him.

heh. what I dig about you is how you don't dismiss my totally rigorous Buffy-episode example out of hand.

"we are impersonally excited by and drawn to YOUR bodies, so why can't you openly do the same for us?" As if we're actually burdened by the attraction/need and would like that to go both ways.

the times when I've been in mixed company and women have openly expressed impersonal attraction to, ahem, the male form, it seems to make the dudes present kind of uncomfortable. but maybe that's insecurity, because the women aren't talking about them?

horsehoe (horseshoe), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:27 (twenty years ago)

Well maybe that plus it's just rare and unexpected. Which is something to note about the male fantasy here, right: it would be disconcerting if it actually happened, just because it's not supposed to -- the same way it'd be disconcerting if you actually found yourself in some kind of Penthouse letter situation. Ha: the last time a strange woman approached me acting all lascivious and guy-like, I felt pretty sure it was part of a plan to rob me. Which is maybe similar to the downside for women, but not quite the same.

Anyway I feel like despite all this talk it's not really anywhere near that black/white for men/women, so maybe the whole conversation is a bit aimless. Plenty of guys managed to turn heads, and plenty of women don't, and in the end I'm not convinced the experience of the hetero sexes in this arena is nearly as different as it starts to seem when we've spent a while picking it apart.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 17:45 (twenty years ago)

Maybe insecurity, but just from my perspective, it was probably more of it being the kind of thing men never experience, so we don't really know how to respond to that when it does happen. Like in my case, some years ago, when having my ass randomly grabbed by an attractive lady.

ALLAH FROG (Mingus Dew), Monday, 24 April 2006 18:26 (twenty years ago)

yeah Dan I mean the whole thing's elsewhere now but I sorta thought everybody already understood bachelor parties to be a safe space for men to feel intimate with one another, ditto stripclubs

evidently not, but as I say, it's not an opinion I pulled out of my ass (block that metaphor) - I first heard the take from an MFCC with 30+ years' experience who was one of the most respected (and non-radical) voices in the entire Californian therapeutic community - and it's not a "tiny box called 'gay'" - it's an enormous box called "sexuality," which for every man includes heteroerotic & homoerotic urges, but these latter ones are generally frowned upon by society. I'd still argue that the experiencing of sexual feelings in a public space around a shared object (I use the word "object" a little pointedly here) is a largely homoerotic experience, but it's not like I wanna go to war about it with you - you say tomato, I say penis, 'sall good

Thomas Tallis (Tommy), Monday, 24 April 2006 19:59 (twenty years ago)

Is there any reason an MFCC's opinion about this would be any more or less valid than yours or mine? I mean, it doesn't really seem like the sort of thing that's at all testable.

31g (31g), Monday, 24 April 2006 20:22 (twenty years ago)

hmm. id say, as i think someone did above, that going to a strip club with the guys (if it has anything to do with these issues) is more about proving your NOT gay (ie, it's homosocial) than finding a way to be secretly gay with each other. that's what i find uncomfortable about it, personally. you have to pretend exaggerated interest in naked women, for the sake of some homosocial solidarity. it's very ritualistic i think.

hetero men are "gay" together when there are no women present, like sports, etc. a woman present enforces the heterosexual norms.

ryan (ryan), Monday, 24 April 2006 20:24 (twenty years ago)

to clarify, going to a strip club with other dudes is sort of tense in that way (to me)--it's enforced heterosexuality. playing sports, on the other hand, provides the sort of relaxed atmosphere to experience those feelings for other men that Thomas is getting at so bluntly.

ryan (ryan), Monday, 24 April 2006 20:28 (twenty years ago)

Yeah, that's what I was saying upthread, a little buried in long paragraphs: it's weird because you're led to playact a set of expected guy behaviors.

nabisco (nabisco), Monday, 24 April 2006 21:03 (twenty years ago)

I'm glad there was a distinction drawn between titty bars (beer and g-strings) and strip clubs (creepy alcohol-free full nudity) somewhere on this thread. I've been to both. Going to strip clubs with guys is about two steps away from watching pornos together, and three from masturbating each other while watching pornos together.

Titty bars are breasts-as-decorations. That isn't gay. It's objectification of women.

josh in sf (stfu kthx), Monday, 24 April 2006 23:28 (twenty years ago)

this thread is kinda depressing. in my overly idealistic mind i just think its sad that people go to such ridiculous lengths to avoid talking about what they want or fantasize about. and listening to each other.

awesome is as awesome does (lucylurex), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 00:09 (twenty years ago)

Could you offer some examples of what you mean?

(I thought this was a good thread, and from what I can tell many other people here did too -- so, um...)

lurker #2421, Tuesday, 25 April 2006 00:13 (twenty years ago)

"You say tomato, I say penis"

Tracey (Recipe for disaster) Hand (tracerhand), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 00:15 (twenty years ago)

This thread is the funniest thing I have read in weeks. The Onion, on its best day, could never come up with a bachelor party featuring Hipster McMorrissey, lord of the touchy feely sensitive men, thumbing through his dog-eared copy of Sylvia Plath and lamenting the plight of humanity whilst the strippers cavort around him. I am still giggling about this.

I have only been to strip clubs in connection with bachelor parties, but none of my experiences made me reach for the Sylvia Plath. Are the strippers only talking to you because you have money? Of course. Are lapdances weird? Yup. But in my mind strippers are not greatly different from the aggressive bartenders and waitresses at legitmate establishments who will flirt with you for a bigger tip.

It comes down to this, if you don't like strip clubs, don't go. If it's a bachelor party, tell your friend the groom that you'll catch up with him before and/or after the stripper part of the evening. I'm not sure who you think you might be impressing with the smug world weariness.

Ash (ashbyman), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 00:24 (twenty years ago)

Is there any reason an MFCC's opinion about this would be any more or less valid than yours or mine? I mean, it doesn't really seem like the sort of thing that's at all testable.

Yes; they have extensive education & experience in human behavior and its meanings. I know I'm kinda outta step in advocating (or at least subscribing to) this kind of orthodoxy, but yes: the opinion of a person whose schooling & career involves the description and explanation of human behavior carries a lot more weight for me than the opinion of somebody who's just sorta comin' up with stuff on the fly. Similarly, I would rather have somebody who went to Julliard explain Mozart to me than somebody who never studied music.

Thomas Tallis (Tommy), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 01:01 (twenty years ago)

there's a pretty obvious disproof of this theory tho, which is fairly empirical. if strip clubs are about repressed homosexuality then one would imagine that they increase in proportion to the homosocial taboo. but actually, as far as i know, countries that are more libertine about homosexuality are also more libertine about strip clubs -- i.e., there are more, they are more accepted and discussed socially, etc. which lends itself to the obvious interpretation that in more sexually repressed countries guys who like dick can't be so open about it and guys who like titties can be open about it, but can't be so casual about just going out to see some titties.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 01:12 (twenty years ago)

sterl I think there'd be a few more stats 'n' variables to work in there. But I mean...I dunno, I don't wanna spend a lot more time & energy on the question, the discussion went elsewhere...but, anyhow, it's not "repressed homosexuality" that I mean - that's a gross oversimplication of what I'm talking about. I'm not saying "guys at strip clubs are actually gay." (Though I did suggest they should and still maintain it might benefit them if they did suck one dick.) I'm saying that strip clubs are a space in which straight men can share their sexuality with one another in a group setting. That going to one is less about seeing boobies than seeing-boobies-with-other-guys, and that a man involving other men in his arousal is at some level enjoying a homosexual experience. Which I frankly think is terrific, though I wish it didn't usually take place in an ugly & misogynistic environment.

Thomas Tallis (Tommy), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 01:23 (twenty years ago)

but the confusion is between "sharing sexuality" which can also mean "demonstrating masculinity" and "sharing SEX" which is something entirely different. i think there's a sort of latent homophobia in that actually, a "dude, that's sort of... gay" behind every experience.

also where's the evidence that there's much more about "seeing boobies with other guys" than "seeing boobies" going on?

also to what degree is it that the "other guys" (to the extent this is a group expedition) make it feel more comfortable to see the boobies rather than vice versa, a sort of safety in numbers game?

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 01:30 (twenty years ago)

sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, eh Sterling?

Thomas Tallis (Tommy), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 01:52 (twenty years ago)

and sometimes a cigar is my dick in yr. mouth.

Sterling (I'm so so sorry) Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 01:59 (twenty years ago)

Do you still snip the tip before lighting it on fire in that situation?

Dan (Ow) Perry (Dan Perry), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 02:47 (twenty years ago)

O the slashfic visions.

Trayce (trayce), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 03:08 (twenty years ago)

just another mohel-meets-sterl story.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 03:55 (twenty years ago)

hey lurker i was referring to a couple of astute things that nabisco said, one regarding men's desire to watch strippers...

The desire would be to somehow gaze without consequences -- without intimacy, responsibility, or anything. And it seems like it's hard for plenty of men to fully understand why that gazing would seem invasive or threatening or an issue of power and control, because men have pretty much zero experience of anyone just wanting some removed sexual gratification from their bodies.

...and the other about women's attitude to being the object of the male gaze.

Well I think there's some severe cognitive dissonance in most women concerning the idea of being found sexually attractive: on the one hand it can be inconvenient, invasive, even degrading, but then on the other hand most women in some way revel in it, court it, expect it, even demand it, or base some bit of their self-worth on it. There's a constant push and pull surrounding that, and some nuanced distinctions being made about the way they want men to be (or not to be) physically attracted to them. And I think the upshot is that women are mostly trying to harness that sexual attention and redirect it into something slightly different.

i didn't mean that anyone on the thread was having trouble getting their point across.

awesome is as awesome does (lucylurex), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 22:00 (twenty years ago)

I'm not sure who you think you might be impressing with the smug world weariness.

That's right, all behavior is based in attempting to impress others. That's the only way to interpret what happened in that story.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 22:08 (twenty years ago)

but actually, as far as i know, countries that are more libertine about homosexuality are also more libertine about strip clubs -- i.e., there are more, they are more accepted and discussed socially, etc.

hey on a tangent i'd like to ask sterl what he means by this - do you mean liberal in a legislative sense or in a social? i ask because the nz government has legalised prostitution, which i think is more pertinent to your example than homosexuality (and nz has civil unions as well), but i don't think either strip clubs or homosexuality are exactly socially accepted.

The Lady Ms Lurex (lucylurex), Tuesday, 25 April 2006 22:15 (twenty years ago)

i meant in a social, though the whole thing is sort of vague and handwavey in that its a huge generalization that doesn't take into account places i know less about, e.g. new zeland (tho since i meant social then yr. points tend to go with it rather than against it).

one aspect is even i think that gay culture as such (i.e. expressly gay things) has a large camp and sexually libertine element (that isn't the same as the simple fact of homosexuality, but is sort of homosexuality and then) that extends to strip clubs (if partially as camp/fetish objects) etc.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 00:54 (twenty years ago)

whats the deal the humans body is a beautifull thing? a tit never killied no one

animal, Wednesday, 26 April 2006 00:59 (twenty years ago)

i ment killed

animal, Wednesday, 26 April 2006 01:00 (twenty years ago)

what if its a tit bazooka?

awesome is as awesome does (lucylurex), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 21:15 (twenty years ago)

nice pare of bazookas yo lol

animal, Wednesday, 26 April 2006 21:20 (twenty years ago)

it could be quite dangerous to be hit on the head by a falling lovely pair of coconuts.

estela (estela), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 21:23 (twenty years ago)

they have wiplash lawyers they need striplash lawyers

animal, Wednesday, 26 April 2006 21:25 (twenty years ago)

man, me & sterling go to all that trouble to wrap the thread up all roffly and people just fuck up our timing

ingrates

Thomas Tallis (Tommy), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 22:06 (twenty years ago)

pantomime of courtship at its most traditional: the men bring the money, the women shake their tits and asses

This does not really bring to mind "courtship at its most traditional"!

Curt1s St3ph3ns, Wednesday, 26 April 2006 22:32 (twenty years ago)

when i was 18 i went to my first strip club...the fuzzy grape in webster, ma. the stripper took my nordiques hat and stuck it in her snatch. it smelled like pussy for two weeks...i loved every mother fuckin minute of it.

slow jamz and white guy indie acoustic shit (Chris V), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 22:47 (twenty years ago)

I knew that was poops before I even read the name.

Tracey Hand (tracerhand), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 23:27 (twenty years ago)

two years pass...

wow, I went to a strip club last night for the first time (in Toronto, so wholesome and polite, as above) and we ended up at the House of Lancaster/Paradise but we were actually looking for this place:

http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v622/dysign/ilx/?action=view¤t=BabyDolls.jpg

plus they gave me pot!

― Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Sunday, April 23, 2006 12:28 AM (2 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

We couldn't find the place though, we drove up and down Ossington. :(

she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Saturday, 7 March 2009 16:04 (seventeen years ago)

i'd be shocked if that place were still open!

The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall, Saturday, 7 March 2009 17:18 (seventeen years ago)

i had some friends that went on a sunday morning/afternoon (after a night of partying) and said it was both amazing a horrifying.

The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall, Saturday, 7 March 2009 17:19 (seventeen years ago)

we found it listed under La Mirage and Baby Doll Club when we were googling trying to find places.. but Paradise ended up pretty fun. Four girls in a nudie bar is still a bit of a novelty I guess, everyone seemed to like us (but no lap dances.. too shy)

she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Saturday, 7 March 2009 17:33 (seventeen years ago)

ha ha - so what inspired the ladies night out?

The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall, Saturday, 7 March 2009 17:47 (seventeen years ago)

One co-worker broke up with her girlfriend this week and needed to go out and stare at some fresh boobies I think! Just one of those suggestions that turned into a "yeah, let's do it!"

she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Saturday, 7 March 2009 18:22 (seventeen years ago)


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