From what I saw on cops those electric things can be entertaining. ZZzzzt!Originally Posted by madmaxine
A little bit like holding their leash too and yelling "Bad boy! Bad bad boy!"
From what I saw on cops those electric things can be entertaining. ZZzzzt!Originally Posted by madmaxine
A little bit like holding their leash too and yelling "Bad boy! Bad bad boy!"
She wore the diamonds at work... ran into him AFTER work at the waffle house.Originally Posted by Helle
They werent diamonds. If I was going to wear something like that Id wear cz or something that looked real but wasnt.
However my necklace was about 300 bucks. But Tiffany told me to ship it to them and theyd fix it.
AmyLynne
I still dont get why you would wear a $300 necklace to work... anyone with half a brain knows thats not the smartest thing to do.





Agreed ... inside a club, if there happens to be an incident of any sort there are a multitude of witnesses (bouncers, other dancers) who will back up the position of a dancer who 'assaulted' a customer - and if cops are called to the club they are likely to believe that the customer was NOT a victim.Hitting customers is something I think is better left in the club and should be handled by club security whenever possible
On the other hand, outside of a club, any incident is likely to be much less favorable to the dancer. In a 'normal' environment, cops will tend to view the incident as occurring between an otherwise 'fine upstanding citizen' (even though he was a club customers an hour or two previously), and a 'stripper' (and we all know how untrustworthy those thieving, drug addicted whores can be), leading to a much more likely conclusion on the part of the cops that the GUY was actually the victim. This is especially true if the dancer initiates the incident in a 'normal' environment, and if there are other witnesses who are totally ignorant about anything which might have transpired several hours earlier inside a club.
It's entirely possible that if a pissed off previous club customer is confronted by a dancer in a 'normal' environment which is totally unrelated to the club in both time and place, and if the cops called to the scene at the 'normal' environment are coming into the situation 'cold' with no personal knowledge of an 'original' incident in a club several hours earlier, that assault charges against the dancer can result. This is the reason I posted about 'lucking out' - because had it not been for the pure luck of the same officer being involved at both ends of the incident things could have turned out much differently !
aww. it broke! I would be devastated. Me and my friends wear our Tiffany necklaces @ work all the time. It's like our trade mark. Guys love em, and they notice that you have good taste when they see em. Wearing a Tiffany necklace @ work isn't the problem, and it not a bad idea. The guy pulling on it period is the problem. You shouldn't have to not wear your fave peice of jewelry because " oops, some guy might yank it off me while im on stage tonight! Better not wear it! " Guys like that need a 7 inch heel up their ass.
Im sorry, but you would never ever ever catch me wearing a $300 necklace at work. I do lap dances with contact... no way in hell am I risking something that expencive being broken. And you know there is a chance of it happening. Guys are grabby... its bound to happen. They're drunk and stupid they dont know any better. Its like being a daycare worker and wearing an expencive necklace... kids grab things. It just so happens men are a little stronger and can break things easier. So why not wear a cheaper version of the necklace where if it gets broken its not as costly to replace.Originally Posted by Ecstasy85
I really wouldn't recommend hitting people, as much as the temptation is sometimes there. Let's face it, men are bigger and stronger than we are. Unless you have a black belt in aikido, you run the risk of getting seriously hurt.
^^^
Indeed. I wonder what everyone would have thought if he just hit you back.
Not to mention the fact that it is illegal - and "he broke my necklace 3 hours ago" doesn't constitute any kind of self-defense. I don't see how he had anything coming - he was just sitting in a waffle house eating.
I have taught that the sky in all its zones is mortal and its substance was formed by a process of birth
I agree cookie... and yes I did kick a guy in the nuts fri night but the guy seriously had it coming, and im not usually a violent person but when i ask a guy a hundred times over not to touch me and give him stern warnings then he grabs my pussy... my self defence reaction is to nail the fucker in the nuts. When i think back to it, it was a stupid move but at the same time... He had it coming damnit! And I went straight to the manager to tell him what I did. Its something I will probably never repeate, it felt good to do but stupid.Originally Posted by smartcookie
In the long run though we really run the risk of getting ourselves hurt by fighting back...





I'd bet if she had a knockoff that looked half as good, and cost 10% of what her Tiffany did, nine guys out of ten couldn't tell the difference, or could care less.Originally Posted by Ecstasy85
I can think of several reasons unrelated to this incident NOT to wear such expensive jewelry, or bring expensive beauty supplies, or drive an expensive car to work. Simple wear and tear could've broken the necklace. It also could've gotten stolen.Wearing a Tiffany necklace @ work isn't the problem, and it not a bad idea. The guy pulling on it period is the problem. You shouldn't have to not wear your fave peice of jewelry because " oops, some guy might yank it off me while im on stage tonight! Better not wear it! "
Agreed.Guys like that need a 7 inch heel up their ass.
Former SCJ now in rehab.
Hon, guys ain't looking at your necklace.
The "classy" of strip clubs are just as fake as the "intimacy."
Save the good jewelry for weddings.
I agree a knockoff is just as good. I wear knockoff stuff all the time, and guys honestly don;t know, they barely know what any of the designer names are anyways I think hitting somebody 3 hours after it happened is unclassy and unecessary that what bouncers are there for. It just gives dancers a bad name. You are very lucky charges were not pressed.
I'm glad you punched him, though yes, of course it was a foolhardy thing to do.
But since all is well, I'm glad he got hit by a chick in waffle house.![]()
Feature costumes for sale!
Right on! Track him down and punch him again!

I dunno...I'm having a hard time believing this.
Maybe it's my general lack of trust, or maybe the story sounds contrived...
the whole thing is just so melodramatic--the Tiffany necklace, punching the guy three hours later...
but hell, maybe you are telling the truth, what the fuck do i know?
or care...


funny story, I was at Crazy Horse Too which isn't that nice of a club and was wearing a fake tiffany bracelet and some guy asked if it was a tiffany, just told that story because someone said guys dont notice that stuff.
some of them do.
Agreed. I've broken quite a few pieces of jewelry at work, not just from lap dances or 'people grabbing them', but usually from doing a pole trick, hitting the stage the wrong way, etc.Originally Posted by Cally
But I gotta agree with confessed or whoever... story sounds like stripper shit.
oh come on. cut this girl some slack. it was actually a great opportunity to get this guy. why analize what could or could not happen
she got away with it.
and to those that talked shit about her choice to wear her jewelry .......... that is her choice and not for you to judge. her potential loss. that really in the long run isnt the point...........
Originally Posted by Cally
I wore a necklace last night to work that cost much more then that.
Sometimes customers notice that kind of thing, something they would buy their wife or loved one and it screams that she has a little class.
If you are that worried about fixing a 300 dollar necklace, how do you feel about parking your car in the parking lot?
Originally Posted by logan820
Guys don't always notice knock off designers but they can un doubtfully pick out a valuable piece of jewelry. Well, the guys who are accustomed to buying for loved ones. The customers who are most generous at work.
If you can find a cheap knockoff of that necklace why not wear that? Most high class jewelry you can find knock offs.. I know I wear them and I have yet to have a guy able to tell the difference. Everyone has their opinions.. im sorry if i came off rude.Originally Posted by tampafldancer
As for a car... thats why I dont drive to workeven if I did own a car... never would you catch me driving there. I have a driver take me back n forth because there is always that small chance I might have one or two drinks and the cops here are rutheless....
True, but throughout the course of a night, if you are running around the club, going from guy to guy, running into waitstaff, other dancers, snagging things on stage and on the chairs, the risk simply isn't worth it. I stopped wearing earrings alltogether at work because I was always losing them or getting them snagged. But then again, I am (was) a pretty rough with my things, and have lost/broken too many expensive pieces all over the place, not just @ club.Originally Posted by tampafldancer
"Have you ever been to American wedding? Where is the vodka, where's marinated herring?" - GB
"And do the cats give a shit? No, they do not. Why? Because they're cats."-from The Onion
Originally Posted by Mia M





I wear fake rhinestone stuff from Claires at work. A lot of folks think it looks classy. I have yet to have a customer call me out on not wearing diamonds in a strip club. The good stuff stays in a lockbox except for weddings, funerals, and dinner that costs more than my car payment.
Number of times Rickrolled on stage: 6
*******************************
Marasmus ... "Ladies don't fart. They butt-laugh."
Marasmus says, "Oh no, that wasn't gas, it was merely a rectal chuckle."
Marek says, "A friend of mine got punched in the face by a dominatrix stripper about two weeks ago and I thought of you."
^^I heart Claires too. Most of my jewellery's from there and I found some really nice lace gloves as well.
"Mix well the sperm of four men"
Anais Nin on the recipe for happiness
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