Wednesday, November 8, 2017

New York, Strippers Go on strike because they are not quite get "Respect"

Via Zerohedge:
rich Wall Street Types of funding will need to find a new way to entertain
their wealthy clients asset management and # 8211; at least for now & #
8211; because the strippers are on strike.
The source of the dispute is a dispute simmering between dancers from New
York and a cohort of more Instagram-famous "startenders" wearing outfits
that are almost as revealing as the strippers wear, but also promote club
social media & # 8211; bringing a loyal following of customers and # 8211;
while serving drinks.
The owners of the club, not wanting to lose the income bartenders bring
have sat idly by while bartenders influence within clubs has increased,
while the strippers, who typically pay the house expenses clubs for dance,
see their incomes fall evening.

The result? A stripper who spoke at the station, she said used to make $
1,000 a night. But now she draws closer to $ 400.
"No dancer in New York is more than $ 1000 per night & # 8221.
Of course, the strike is still in its infancy. But according to the
Washington Post, it is rapidly gaining support.
Panama is a stage name and she refused to give his real name. It's for
real, however, said Mona Marie, the owner of a dance studio in New York,
where many dancers train called Poletic Justice. And, she said, so are
their mounting grievances, so that some of them have declared the strike a
stripper. It is not known how many dancers involved and what the impact on
the club was. The strike is about a week.
This is not your normal labor disputes between employees and employers. It
is between bartenders and strippers on the one hand, and between strippers
and club promoters on the other, which tend to the other with bartenders
because after all, they are bartenders that they believe provide customers
via social media.

As it is, the advent of photo sharing apps like Instagram and Snapchat
violently disrupted the activity of being an exotic dancer. To offset the
decline in their distribution in NYC nightclubs, dancers now travel more
because they can earn more money in the southern clubs, or clubs in small
towns where the faces of girls can win more money.
Because of the indifference of the club owners, many of the best dancers
jumping NYC quite a stripper says.
A dancer named Gizelle Marie is one of the strike organizers. "Bartenders
[New York] tell clients not to look. They block our clients as we dance our
money or they sweep off the stage while we dance, "she told the Post.
Several videos taken of clubs in various displayed on Instagram seem to
support his request.
Gizelle Marie says that most customers can not tell bartenders outside
strippers more fundamentally because they all dress the same and "club
promoters and owners encourage behavior and # 8221.
Gizelle Marie had the idea to mobilize the New York Strippers strike after
traveling to Washington last month to dance in a club during the homecoming
from Howard University.
"I made a lot of money. It made me think to myself that many great dancers
do not dance in New York anymore. They moved to other cities to work or
they just completely stopped ", said Gizelle.
After two days, she posted on Instagram word and 30 strippers met last week
Poletic Justice in the Bronx for a meeting.
Panama said: "The dancers used to be the most respected in the club, and
now it's like the dancers are at rock bottom. And the dancers with dark
skin are all the way at the bottom of the barrel and # 8221.
Among other considerations, the strippers on strike demanding a reduction
in house costs and the black dancers also have the opportunity to be hired
as bartenders.
In the past, the dancers were mostly silent about their problems for fear,
she said. "People were in fear of losing their jobs if they spoke. Many of
these women have other careers, are the parents themselves are put to
school so that the fear factor played a role quite in & # 8221.
They want their house costs reduced. They want bartenders pay house fees,
too. Black dancers want the opportunity to be hired as bartenders. And they
want the bartenders to stop stealing their money.
They also want management stop opposing the strippers and bartenders
against one another. The dancers believe everyone can work together
harmoniously if the rules are established.
"All we want is respect at the end of the day," Gizelle Marie said. "If
this does not change for us to go to the owners, we will take other matters
legally and # 8221.

However, the incipient strike faces a major obstacle: the reaction of the
club promoters in the strike goes indifferent to downright hostile.
club promoters are not sympathetic to the demands of strippers. Sean
Simmons, director of promotion As New York, said the strike
was "nonsense. "He said that there is no racism in nightclubs and he used"
all ethnic groups "as the dancers and bartenders at the club before he was
arrested a few months since.
"The whole industry itself has changed," Simmons told the Post in a brief
telephone interview. "Some clubs are trained bartender, but that's just
because the bartenders are beautiful women," Simmons said there should be
rules and regulations between the dancers and bartenders, but
said: "Nothing will come of strike and # 8221.
Yet women plan to continue to fight.
"No matter how people perceive your work environment, work environment is a
work environment and everyone must be respected and treated equally. If
there is something you can do to help or change your business, you must do
it ".
Read the article
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