<![CDATA[Jezebel: brothel]]> http://tags.gawker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/jezebel.com.png <![CDATA[Jezebel: brothel]]> http://jezebel.com/tag/brothel http://jezebel.com/tag/brothel <![CDATA[Nice Guys Are Bad Pimps]]> A mild-mannered Aussie farmer's disastrous attempt at brothel-owning is chronicled in a new documentary. Spoiler alert: hilarity, tragedy ensue.

Farming, as we know, is rough. Chris Rohrlach, a New South Wales sheep farmer, had fallen prey to a drought and crop failure, and with a small child, a baby on the way, and a wife whose medical care (she was rendered quadriplegic after a stroke) was more than he could afford, the answer was obvious: a brothel.
As the Independent recounts, Rohrlach and a friend built First Choice Stress Relief from scratch, with his wife's blessing, "with polished timber floors, a solid pine reception desk and four "working rooms", one with a spa, another with mirrored walls and ceiling." While the brothel was legal, the small town of Inverell, conservative and Christian, was appalled and mounted protests. The town's remote location made it hard to "attract staff," especially younger sex workers who were more inclined to go for the opportunities of bright lights, big city. Oh, and Rohrlach was totally unsuited to the pimpin' life. Says the article, "he hated the late hours, and felt uncomfortable around the staff and customers." These, you see, were problems. So, not shockingly, the business closed after less than a year, Rohrlach took a big financial hit, and he's gone back to farming.

The doomed enterprise, the story's tragic undertones - and the conflation of doting father and incompetent brother-owner - proved a compelling subject to filmmaker Safina Uberoi, who chronicles the disconnect in a new documentary A Good Man. We're eager to see it, as it seems to offer a unique perspective on sex work and people's reactions to it. One thing that's immediately striking about the story is that Rohrlach seems to have been totally shocked by people's reactions to, what seemed to him, as straightforward an enterprise as farming. And yet, clearly he was personally uncomfortable with sex work, which mirrors the attitudes of a lot of people. We're thinking the combo of "good guy" and "stern moralists" is going to be a quirk film in 3...2...1, although whether it'll be a Full Monty-style romp or a serious look at the issues involved depends entirely on what Australian actors are available.

The Saga Of The Worst Little Whorehouse In Australia [Independent]

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<![CDATA[Daughter Of Bikini Waxing, Creepy Dad Featured On Cathouse]]> Remember "Summer," the 18-year-old Tyra guest whose dad not only used to give bikini waxes, but persuaded to go into prostitution (which she later confessed to hating)? Well, HBO recently ran a the Moonlight Bunny Ranch called Cathouse: Menage, and Summer (whose real name is Christina) was featured in it, performing a three-way and discussing how she hates being picked on by the other women. Apparently, the others think she's sleeping with brothel owner Dennis Hoff because she was given a coveted sun room at the Ranch. Airforce Amy wonders if Summer's agent, aka her dad, fucked Dennis to get the room for her, implying that her dad is gay. Clip above.

Earlier: Father Gives Daughter Bikini Waxes, Rides To Work At A Brothel
Dad Who Waxes Daughter's Bikini Area Returns To Tyra

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<![CDATA[Journalist Quits Job At Paper To Open Whorehouse]]> Jody Paterson, a managing editor and columnist for the Victoria Times-Colonist is trading in service journalism for servicing men as a madam at a co-op brothel, run by and for prostitutes. (Leave it to the Canadians to try and level the playing ground of the pimp-ho game.) Paterson said that her work for the paper—stories about sex workers—is what led her down this new career path. Through interviewing them, she got to know prostitutes in Victoria, and was touched (figuratively, of course) by the women and their struggles. Feeling she needed to make a difference, 50-year-old Paterson—who once was opposed to the sex trade, deeming it exploitative of women—quit her job at the paper and joined a prostitute support group: Prostitutes Empowerment Education and Resource Society (PEERS). At PEERS, Paterson discovered that prostitutes are actually most interested in making their jobs safer.


The time has passed for moralizing about why men buy sex and why people sell it. Let's step forward and into the reality of it and have a safe, fair, good workplace for it.

Paterson said that once the brothel is up and running, she will be working there as a volunteer only, and will not be paid for her time. As a co-op brothel, it's a bit hippy dippy in that it will be run and funded by the women working there, and a portion of the profits will be used for issues like drug detox and helping women get out of the industry if they so choose. The only real problem with Paterson's whole plan is that prostitution remains illegal in Victoria, but she plans on getting around that by registering the brothel as an escort service.

Brothel will empower women, ex-writer says
[Globe and Mail via Salon]

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