For some Chinese college students, sex is a business ...

来源:百度文库 编辑:超级军网 时间:2024/04/27 15:48:29
http://articles.latimes.com/2010 ... na-escorts-20101021

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For some Chinese college students, sex is a business opportunity
In a country fast-changing economically and culturally, some middle-class women become mistresses to live a better life. A university pimp explains how it works.
October 20, 2010|By Megan K. Stack, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Beijing — The girls from the drama academy cost the most. Actresses are pretty, after all, and pretty is the point. Steady access to their sexual favors could cost a man more than $25,000 a year, not to mention the perks and gifts they would expect.

The gentleman on a budget had better browse through students at the tourism institute, or perhaps the business school. Women there can be had for as low as $5,000 a year.

Those are the prices advertised by the young man who calls himself "Student Ding," a senior at Shanghai University who, in the grand tradition of Chinese entrepreneurship, is earning his money by working as a pimp.

Ding calls himself "an agent, a fixer," but his job is all pimp. He started out small: fliers passed on the street to the chauffeurs of expensive cars. He has found his niche arranging long-term, cash-for-sex arrangements between wealthy men and aspirational students, taking a 10% commission off the top.

He is nonchalant about the work, even vaguely proud. He insists that he is doing a service to the men who don't want to hire streetwalkers, and to his middle-class, ambitious and frostily pragmatic college friends.

"Most of the girls are financially comfortable, but they see their classmates carrying Louis Vuitton or Gucci bags, and they're jealous," he said on the phone from Shanghai. "These girls want to have better lives."

But she insists she is drawn by something deeper than the cash and perks. She says she has fallen in love with him. Sometimes, she says, she even takes him out for a meal.

She can't imagine getting married anymore, because she has lost faith in male monogamy and hates the idea of playing the role of the wife, sitting at home while her husband steps out with a young woman like her.

"There are quite a few of us girls," she said. "We are thinking of ways to make our lives better."

Using sex as a commodity, it turns out, goes a long way. And in a fast-changing China, rationalizations are easy to cobble together.

"Years ago, when people heard somebody was a prostitute, they would criticize her very harshly, so girls who might want to copy her would change their minds," she said. "These days, people's attitudes have totally changed. They laugh at poor people, but they don't laugh at prostitutes."

Yi Haiyan, a former prostitute who now pens a blog documenting the plight of sex workers, agrees.

"The importance of virginity and sexual purity is not as strong as before. People are realizing that sex won't have a huge impact on our future lives compared with other things that happen to you," she said. "Life is more than just being pure. It's not that important."

Student Ding put it more succinctly.

"Many girls are gold diggers," he said, but don't know how to find a "sugar daddy."

As for the men, he said, they find it degrading and time-consuming to troll for hookers in karaoke bars and hotels. They want young, fresh women who are less apt to carry diseases. But their daily activities don't take them into college campuses to meet women.

"They don't have time and they don't know how to find them. They can't drive their posh cars around campus asking girls if they want to be their mistresses," he said. "I feel I am very important. I act as a bridge between these two groups."

As for the list he distributed, putting a price tag on women from each university, he says it was mostly just a gimmick.

"The price of the girl depends on her face and her features," he said. "And how good her figure is."

He is feeding on a wave of prostitution that, academics and sex workers say, has spread throughout universities and among young, would-be professionals in recent years. This semester, at least two universities introduced rules banning students from working as escorts or mistresses.

But the motivation is strong. The young women are coming of age at a time when China's family structure has eroded and staggering class divisions mean living, for the first time, in a country where shiny things are dangled carelessly under the noses of those who can't afford them.

In China, everybody seems to be selling something these days. Advertising crowds the skyline and the roadsides. A closed country has opened up in a span of decades, and is experiencing an economic boom that has introduced new desires and an "anything goes" mentality.

"More and more students are making this choice, taking a shortcut to a better life" said Lan Lan, a former prostitute who now advocates for the rights of sex workers in China, where prostitution is technically illegal but often tolerated. "They find a rich lover, post services on the Internet or just walk into a high-end club and sell themselves. The end result is the same."

Lan Lan has years of street-level research in China's sex trade; today, she runs an organization that raises HIV awareness and distributes condoms to sex workers.

Just a few decades back, premarital sex was looked down upon by respectable families. Now, some members of those families are not just having premarital sex; they're selling it.

Lan Lan calls the Chinese prostitution market "very complicated," with various manifestations of sex work at each economic level, from relatively cheap streetwalkers catering to migrant workers to the students. Many in the latter group are reluctant to think of themselves as hookers and are therefore lax about protecting themselves.

"If they're trying to become a mistress, they won't take a condom when they go to meet this man," she said. "They want to show their purity and loyalty."

The women are generally careful not to get trapped in a life selling their sexual favors. This is paid sex as a strategy, a way to look more elite, get a better job, find new opportunities.

"They move on to other jobs after a while," Lan Lan said. "It's not that they're too poor to make a living. The younger generation wants to wear all the brand names, the expensive cosmetics, use the newest cellphones and computers."

But even if that's true, few women want to admit it. And, perhaps, sex and love aren't quite so simply parsed.

Xiao Yi, a 27-year-old woman from the southern province of Guangdong, insists that she and the other young, paid mistresses are misunderstood.

She met her lover when she was an intern at an advertising agency, and he was a much older boss, nestled in the comforts of money and family. In the years since, she has taken his money, and he has set up profitable business opportunities and what she calls "financial aid" for several of her relatives. (Her family, she insists, doesn't realize that she's sleeping with this man, and takes him for a friend.)

"He can look after people," she said. "And as a very independent girl, when I'm with him, even I can rely on somebody."http://articles.latimes.com/2010 ... na-escorts-20101021

只能看懂,不会翻译(欢迎高手)... 不合规矩版主就转走吧.

For some Chinese college students, sex is a business opportunity
In a country fast-changing economically and culturally, some middle-class women become mistresses to live a better life. A university pimp explains how it works.
October 20, 2010|By Megan K. Stack, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Beijing — The girls from the drama academy cost the most. Actresses are pretty, after all, and pretty is the point. Steady access to their sexual favors could cost a man more than $25,000 a year, not to mention the perks and gifts they would expect.

The gentleman on a budget had better browse through students at the tourism institute, or perhaps the business school. Women there can be had for as low as $5,000 a year.

Those are the prices advertised by the young man who calls himself "Student Ding," a senior at Shanghai University who, in the grand tradition of Chinese entrepreneurship, is earning his money by working as a pimp.

Ding calls himself "an agent, a fixer," but his job is all pimp. He started out small: fliers passed on the street to the chauffeurs of expensive cars. He has found his niche arranging long-term, cash-for-sex arrangements between wealthy men and aspirational students, taking a 10% commission off the top.

He is nonchalant about the work, even vaguely proud. He insists that he is doing a service to the men who don't want to hire streetwalkers, and to his middle-class, ambitious and frostily pragmatic college friends.

"Most of the girls are financially comfortable, but they see their classmates carrying Louis Vuitton or Gucci bags, and they're jealous," he said on the phone from Shanghai. "These girls want to have better lives."

But she insists she is drawn by something deeper than the cash and perks. She says she has fallen in love with him. Sometimes, she says, she even takes him out for a meal.

She can't imagine getting married anymore, because she has lost faith in male monogamy and hates the idea of playing the role of the wife, sitting at home while her husband steps out with a young woman like her.

"There are quite a few of us girls," she said. "We are thinking of ways to make our lives better."

Using sex as a commodity, it turns out, goes a long way. And in a fast-changing China, rationalizations are easy to cobble together.

"Years ago, when people heard somebody was a prostitute, they would criticize her very harshly, so girls who might want to copy her would change their minds," she said. "These days, people's attitudes have totally changed. They laugh at poor people, but they don't laugh at prostitutes."

Yi Haiyan, a former prostitute who now pens a blog documenting the plight of sex workers, agrees.

"The importance of virginity and sexual purity is not as strong as before. People are realizing that sex won't have a huge impact on our future lives compared with other things that happen to you," she said. "Life is more than just being pure. It's not that important."

Student Ding put it more succinctly.

"Many girls are gold diggers," he said, but don't know how to find a "sugar daddy."

As for the men, he said, they find it degrading and time-consuming to troll for hookers in karaoke bars and hotels. They want young, fresh women who are less apt to carry diseases. But their daily activities don't take them into college campuses to meet women.

"They don't have time and they don't know how to find them. They can't drive their posh cars around campus asking girls if they want to be their mistresses," he said. "I feel I am very important. I act as a bridge between these two groups."

As for the list he distributed, putting a price tag on women from each university, he says it was mostly just a gimmick.

"The price of the girl depends on her face and her features," he said. "And how good her figure is."

He is feeding on a wave of prostitution that, academics and sex workers say, has spread throughout universities and among young, would-be professionals in recent years. This semester, at least two universities introduced rules banning students from working as escorts or mistresses.

But the motivation is strong. The young women are coming of age at a time when China's family structure has eroded and staggering class divisions mean living, for the first time, in a country where shiny things are dangled carelessly under the noses of those who can't afford them.

In China, everybody seems to be selling something these days. Advertising crowds the skyline and the roadsides. A closed country has opened up in a span of decades, and is experiencing an economic boom that has introduced new desires and an "anything goes" mentality.

"More and more students are making this choice, taking a shortcut to a better life" said Lan Lan, a former prostitute who now advocates for the rights of sex workers in China, where prostitution is technically illegal but often tolerated. "They find a rich lover, post services on the Internet or just walk into a high-end club and sell themselves. The end result is the same."

Lan Lan has years of street-level research in China's sex trade; today, she runs an organization that raises HIV awareness and distributes condoms to sex workers.

Just a few decades back, premarital sex was looked down upon by respectable families. Now, some members of those families are not just having premarital sex; they're selling it.

Lan Lan calls the Chinese prostitution market "very complicated," with various manifestations of sex work at each economic level, from relatively cheap streetwalkers catering to migrant workers to the students. Many in the latter group are reluctant to think of themselves as hookers and are therefore lax about protecting themselves.

"If they're trying to become a mistress, they won't take a condom when they go to meet this man," she said. "They want to show their purity and loyalty."

The women are generally careful not to get trapped in a life selling their sexual favors. This is paid sex as a strategy, a way to look more elite, get a better job, find new opportunities.

"They move on to other jobs after a while," Lan Lan said. "It's not that they're too poor to make a living. The younger generation wants to wear all the brand names, the expensive cosmetics, use the newest cellphones and computers."

But even if that's true, few women want to admit it. And, perhaps, sex and love aren't quite so simply parsed.

Xiao Yi, a 27-year-old woman from the southern province of Guangdong, insists that she and the other young, paid mistresses are misunderstood.

She met her lover when she was an intern at an advertising agency, and he was a much older boss, nestled in the comforts of money and family. In the years since, she has taken his money, and he has set up profitable business opportunities and what she calls "financial aid" for several of her relatives. (Her family, she insists, doesn't realize that she's sleeping with this man, and takes him for a friend.)

"He can look after people," she said. "And as a very independent girl, when I'm with him, even I can rely on somebody."
"But she insists she is drawn by something deeper than the cash and perks. She says she has fallen in love with him. Sometimes, she says, she even takes him out for a meal.

She can't imagine getting married anymore, because she has lost faith in male monogamy and hates the idea of playing the role of the wife, sitting at home while her husband steps out with a young woman like her.

There are quite a few of us girls," she said. "We are thinking of ways to make our lives better."

Using sex as a commodity, it turns out, goes a long way. And in a fast-changing China, rationalizations are easy to cobble together.

"Years ago, when people heard somebody was a prostitute, they would criticize her very harshly, so girls who might want to copy her would change their minds," she said. "These days, people's attitudes have totally changed. They laugh at poor people, but they don't laugh at prostitutes."

Yi Haiyan, a former prostitute who now pens a blog documenting the plight of sex workers, agrees.

"The importance of virginity and sexual purity is not as strong as before. People are realizing that sex won't have a huge impact on our future lives compared with other things that happen to you," she said. "Life is more than just being pure. It's not that important."

Student Ding put it more succinctly.

"Many girls are gold diggers," he said, but don't know how to find a "sugar daddy."

As for the men, he said, they find it degrading and time-consuming to troll for hookers in karaoke bars and hotels. They want young, fresh women who are less apt to carry diseases. But their daily activities don't take them into college campuses to meet women.

"They don't have time and they don't know how to find them. They can't drive their posh cars around campus asking girls if they want to be their mistresses," he said. "I feel I am very important. I act as a bridge between these two groups."

As for the list he distributed, putting a price tag on women from each university, he says it was mostly just a gimmick.

"The price of the girl depends on her face and her features," he said. "And how good her figure is."
个人不太赞同为了更好的生活这个理由.
中国大学生妹清纯之夜

对于一些中国大学生来说,性是一个商业机会
在一个经济和文化迅速变化的国家,为了过上更美好的生活一些中产阶层女性成为二奶。一所大学的皮条客解释援助交际是如何运作的

北京报道--戏剧学院的女生最贵的,毕竟女演员都很漂亮,而漂亮是重点。包养一年需要花费超过2.5万美元,更不用提她们期待的额外津贴和礼物。

预算上的绅士最好去寻找旅游学院或者商业学校的学生。 那里的女性的包养花费可以低至5000美元一年。

这些价格都是自称“学生丁”的年轻人介绍的,他是一位上海大学高年级学生,他继续了中国创业的大传统,正作为一个皮条客挣钱。

丁自称是“一位代理人,一个协调者”,但他所有的工作就是拉皮条。 他开始进行小的:向街头名贵轿车的司机发送传单。 他已经找到了自己的长期合适职业:在有钱的男人和渴望富裕的女学生之间安排援助交际,他收取总费用的10%作为佣金。

他对这份工作若无其事,甚至隐约感到自豪。 他坚持说他在为那些不想嫖站街女的男人以及他中产阶级的野心勃勃的坚信实用主义的女大学朋友提供服务。在从上海的打来的电话里他说“这些女生大部分经济宽裕,但她们看到自己的同学携带路易威登或古奇的包,她们产生嫉妒心理,她们希望有更好的生活”。

他以介绍援助交际潮为生。据学者和性工作者说,卖淫已经在大学和青年人普遍存在,未来几年可能将会成为一个职业群体。 这学期,至少有两所大学开始在校规中禁止学生当三陪或者情妇。

但驱动是强劲的。年轻的女性都处在中国家庭结构受损和普通生活被惊人地以阶级划分的时代,第一次在这个国家,一个闪亮的事物无意地挂在那些支付不起的人面前。

在中国,现在每个人似乎都被推销东西。 广告出现在在人群聚集的低空和马路边。 在几十年的时间里一个封闭的国家开始开放,而且正在经历经济繁荣,不断推出新的欲望和认同“怎么都行”的心理。

兰兰(音译)说:“越来越多的学生做出这样的选择,采取快捷的方式过上更美好的生活,她们找个有钱的情人,通过在互联网上发布服务抑或只是走进一家高档俱乐部推销自己,最终的结果都会是一样的”,这位曾经的性工作者,现在是中国性工作者权利的倡导者,在中国色情活动在技术上是非法的,但它往往会被容忍。

兰兰对有中国街道层面的色情交易有多年研究,今天,她运营着一个组织,旨在提高对艾滋病毒的认识和向性工作者分发避孕套。

就在短短几十年前,婚前性行为是受人尊敬的家庭所看不起的。 现在,这些家庭的一些成员不只是有婚前性行为,她们正在出售它。

兰兰认为中国的卖淫市场“非常复杂”, 其中有各个经济层面和各种形式的性工作,从相对便宜的主要服务农民工的站街女到上述这些女大学生。在后者中,很多人都不愿意把自己看成是妓女,因此自我保护意识松懈。

她说“如果他们试图成为一个情妇,当她们去见这个人时,她们不会带安全套,她们希望展示自己的纯洁和忠诚。”

这些女性一般都小心不让自己被困于性交易的生活中。 性交易只是作为一项看起来更精英,能找到更好的工作,寻找新的机会的途径。

兰兰说:“一段时间后她们会从事其他工作,她们并不是穷得没办法谋生。年轻一代想穿的品牌,使用昂贵的化妆品、最新的手机和电脑。”

但是,即使这是真的,很少有妇女想要承认。 而且,也许性与爱情并不能被简单解析。

来自南方广东省的27岁女人肖奕(音译),坚持认为她和其他年轻被包养情妇被误解。

她是在一家广告公司实习时,遇到了她的情人。他是一个年纪大的老板,拥有金钱和睦的家庭。 这些日子以来,她拿了他的钱,他已经建立起盈利可观的商业机会和为她的几个亲戚进行她所说的“财政援助”。 (她坚持她的家庭不知道她和这个人上床,而是把他看做一个她的朋友。)

她说:“他会照顾人,而作为一个非常独立的女孩,当我和他在一起,甚至我觉得他是可以依靠的人。”

但她坚持说她是被比现金和津贴更深的东西所吸引。 她说她爱上了他。 有时候,她说,她甚至带他外出出席宴会。

她不再想像结婚了,因为她对一夫一妻制已失去信心,讨厌做一个妻子的想法:当她的丈夫走出了与像她这样的年轻女子约会,她只能坐在家里。

她说:“我们中有一些女孩,正在考虑如何使我们的生活更美好。”

事实证明性作为一种商品,还有很长的路要走。 而在一个快速变化的中国,合理化很容易凑齐。

她说:“几年前,当人们听到有人是一个妓女时,他们会很严厉地批评她,所以要模仿她的女孩们可能会改变主意,现在人们的态度已经完全改变了。笑贫不笑娼”

叶海燕(音译,不一定是流氓燕),一名曾经的性工作者,现在在写博客记载性工作者的困境,她表示赞同

她说:“贞操和性纯洁的重要性并不像以前一样强烈。人们已经认识到性不会比其他事情对我们未来的生活产生巨大的影响。生活不只是单纯的。这不是那么重要。”

学生丁说得更简洁。他说“很多女孩都是淘金者,但不知道如何找到一个“糖爸爸”。

他说:至于男人,他们发现去找在卡拉OK酒吧和饭店的妓女有失身份和耗费时间。 他们希望年轻,不太容易携带疾病的新鲜女性。 但他们的日常活动并不会去大学校园偶遇这些女性。

他说:“如果他们找情妇,他们没有时间,不知道如何找到她们。他们不可能在校园里开车四处询问女孩。 我觉得我很重要。我作为这两个群体之间的桥梁。”

至于他散发标上各大学女学的价格的广告传单,他说这是大多只是一个噱头。

他说:“这些女学生的价格依据她们的相貌和特点,以及当下她的身材如何。”

==========================================
什么叫做婊子立牌坊?
这就是
中国的援交看来也开始普及了嘛
http://article.yeeyan.org/view/13840/145437

在中国,一个经济和文化迅猛发展变化的国家,一些中产阶层女性为了更好的生活,纷纷投入了二奶的行列。在资深皮条客的带领下,让我们更深入的了解一下这个行当。
   
以北京为例,戏剧学院的女生花费最多。未来的大明星们都很漂亮,这是重点,是本钱。先不提给这群小妖精买礼物的钱,包养一个戏剧学院女生的基本费用每年就要超过2.5万美元。

能力有限的款爷们如果觉得贵,不妨去旅游学院或者商学院转转。那里的美女们就便宜很多,大约5000美元包一年。

这些女大学生都在网上被“小丁”明码标价的。小丁是上海大学的大四学生,同时他也拉拉皮条赚点零花钱。小丁自称是“代理人,性欲解决砖家(译注:请用砖头拍我)”,但他干的实际上就是中国最古老的职业之一,拉皮条。小丁的皮条是怎么个拉法?起先,他给大街上来往的名牌轿车里塞传单。等到有客户上门,小丁就给他们安排和女大学生见面。当客户和迫切地想出售自己的祖国的未来之花把包养费什么的谈妥之后,小丁就会抽取10%的中介费。

小丁对自己的龟奴身份毫不羞愧,甚至隐有自豪感。他认为他只是在给那些不想玩街上下等货的款爷们和他的那些并不富裕的、现实的同学们提供一种双赢的服务。

“大学数(卖的)女生都不是穷,但当她们看到有同学提着LV或者gucci这类的名牌包袋时,(译注,插嘴:这两个牌子就是被这种无知的东西毁掉的lol。)她们会嫉妒。”小丁通过电话在上海接受了我们的采访,“这些女生希望活的更好(更奢侈?)”

小丁乘着近年来席卷全中国的女大学女卖身赚钱的浪潮,赚了不少钱。色情业已然是一股不可阻挡的巨浪。今年,至少有两所大学明文规定禁止女大学生当小姐或者二奶。

可惜这种规定只能是华丽的酱油,年轻女孩们对金钱的渴望是如此强烈。她们生于这样一个国家、这样一个时代。贫富差距日益明显,社会动荡不安****,任何风吹草动都可能成为压倒骆驼的最后一根稻草。世间百姓迫于无奈,不得不缩手缩脚犹如行尸走肉。这是中国,这是笑贫不笑娼的时代。

中国,这个封闭的改革开放了几十年的国家,(似乎)正经历着一个经济繁荣。人人向钱看,人人浮躁不安、急功近利。电视里、马路上铺天盖地的广告,展现的皆是人之所愿。人之所愿皆是利、欲。如此物欲横流的时代,产生了“有钱怎么都行”这一心态。

“越来越多的学生选择投身这一有钱途的事业,卖肉赚的实在是太快了”前小姐兰兰如是说。虽然从法律角度来说,在中国,色情业是非法的,可惜相关法律如今也是些华丽的酱油。“想找个有钱的包养还不容易?只要上网发个广告或者走进一家高档俱乐部。只要愿意卖,总有款爷会进洞。”

兰兰曾是街边的资深老妓。如今,她经营着一个组织,该组织旨在民众对提高艾滋病的认识和给性工作者分发避孕套。同时,她还投身于为色情工作者们谋求其应有的权利。

几十年前,婚前性行为在中国是要受大家鄙视唾弃的,尤其是家里人。而如今,有些人搞婚前性行为也就算了,他们还要卖这个婚前性行为。

兰兰说中国的色情市场是非常复杂的,各个经济层面上都有人在卖,从相对便宜的服务于农民工之流的街头妓女到供款爷取乐的天之骄子。后者大多都不愿意把自己看成鸡,因此他们的自我保护工作非常不到位。

“如果他们做了情妇,开工前他们一般不会让款爷们带上安全套,”她说。 “她们是大学生,她们得装纯。”这些大学生一般都小心,不要让自己当下的工作影响到自己的学习和将来的事业。她们认为这种“卖”只是一种手段,一种能让自己成为精英、能在将来找到更好工作或者赚钱机会的手段。

“她们”卖”一段时间后就会转行”兰兰说,“其实她们并不是穷得没办法生存。这些孩子只是为了能穿名牌、用昂贵的化妆品和拥有最新的手机或电脑。她们纯粹是为钱而卖。”

诚然事实如此,当事人中却绝少有人承认这点。或许,性爱性爱,性和爱不是那么容易就可以去分析的?或许真有日久生情?

Xiao Yi,一位来广东省的27岁女生,坚称她和其他年轻女孩们都是被误解的,她们不是情妇,不是卖身赚钱的。

她在一家广告公司实习时遇到了她的款爷(译注:好想翻成客户),此间公司的老板,一个家庭事业皆有所成的老男人。从此,他给她钱,他给她提供各种机会,他操他。这些皮肉钱只被XiaoYi看成是一种对她家庭的“财政援助”。 (她说她家里人不知道她和这个男人上床,只当他是Xiao Yi的朋友。)

“他很会照顾人。”她说,“虽然我本人是个独立的女孩,和他在一起时我很有安全感,感觉有人可以依靠。”为此她认为她并非贪图他的钱或者权势才陪他睡觉,只因为她爱上他。“有时候我们甚至还一起出去吃饭!”(译注:受不了了,kill me。阿娇你好傻好天真。)

Xiao Yi已经不再信任婚姻和爱情,她不打算结婚。她不想当别人的老婆,她害怕有一天自己的丈夫也会勾着和自己一般的年轻女子回家上床。

“有很多我这样的女孩,”她说,“我们只想活得更好。”

卖身,其历史可谓源远流长。无怪乎在日新月异的当下中国,很容易就用一些歪理使其合理化。“以前如果大家听说谁是鸡,就会指着脊梁骨骂把人骂到死。于是那些想卖的女孩子就要先掂量掂量,也许她们就会放弃,放弃投身这个当下无比光荣的行当。但如今,世道变了。大家笑贫不笑娼。”

Yi Haiyan,前小姐,她现在用自己的blog记录着性工作者的困境。她也很认同这个观点。她说:“贞操和性纯洁的重要性已远不如过往。人们发现,相比其他事物,比如钱,性的纯洁与否并不会对我们未来的生活产生多大的影响。”她说, “生活并不意味着保持纯洁。如今纯洁与否已无关痛痒。”

小丁说的更透:“许多大学生就是拜金,为了钱什么都愿意做,她们只是没有门道傍上大款。

至于款爷们,他们认为在卡拉OK、酒吧或饭店找妓女有辱人格还费时费力。款爷们想找年轻的、干净的、没病的大学生。但是他们一般没有时间也不知道怎么样去大学找女人。总不能叫他们开着名牌跑车上去直接问“hi,小姐你卖不卖?”所以我是很重要的,我就像一座桥梁,链接了这两个人群。”

至于他开出来的明码标价的女大学生清单,他本人也承认,这只是一个噱头。“能卖多少还是要看当事人自己的质量。”


列举的这些都是中低皮条客和常规援交

高档一般都面向一些隐秘的高级会所,去那一次你就知道什么叫华丽丽的糜烂。。。。。

列举的这些都是中低皮条客和常规援交

高档一般都面向一些隐秘的高级会所,去那一次你就知道什么叫华丽丽的糜烂。。。。。
hi,小姐你卖不卖
空虚,太空虚了。
现实
不就是大腿间那东西吗,有什么不可”冒犯“的。别搞那么神秘行不行?不是你,就是我,最多他。总的有人吧?;P:D
这种事情已经存在很久了。哪儿都一样。

在中国,一个经济和文化迅猛发展变化的国家,一些中产阶层女性为了更好的生活,纷纷投入了二奶的行列。 ...
hawkee 发表于 2010-10-25 12:18


好翻译,要是再YD点就更有趣了,感觉这不就是援助交际那一类嘛,本质跟chicken也没什么分别,
只不过这个品种肉质口感比较好(就像现在的有机蔬菜一样),吃起来也比较少禽流感,唯一的缺点就是比较贵
所谓有中二存在着自然会有婊子的产生,每个人都有不同的活法,我们可不能歧视哦,呵呵
那些真正的高贵是这些靠牌子的人没办法理解的,也省得浪费口水,我比较期待那个xiaoyi四十岁之后的遭遇
在中国,一个经济和文化迅猛发展变化的国家,一些中产阶层女性为了更好的生活,纷纷投入了二奶的行列。 ...
hawkee 发表于 2010-10-25 12:18


好翻译,要是再YD点就更有趣了,感觉这不就是援助交际那一类嘛,本质跟chicken也没什么分别,
只不过这个品种肉质口感比较好(就像现在的有机蔬菜一样),吃起来也比较少禽流感,唯一的缺点就是比较贵
所谓有中二存在着自然会有婊子的产生,每个人都有不同的活法,我们可不能歧视哦,呵呵
那些真正的高贵是这些靠牌子的人没办法理解的,也省得浪费口水,我比较期待那个xiaoyi四十岁之后的遭遇
都是卖

允许男人出卖劳力

为何不允许女人出卖肉体。
允许别的女人卖,为啥不允许自己的老婆卖?
唉,你们知道包养一个艺校MM的成本有多高吗?
回复 15# pupu
对贝勒爷来说只是一个零头而已。
RigidBody1979 发表于 2010-10-26 15:28


    啊!贫穷的我从来没有包养过戏剧学院的女生
吃力的看完,软了[:a1:]