Silk / Solid Gold / Airport
Its been a few years but here is my share.
Silk-Milwaukee. I have pulled a few (3) dancers from silk at no extra cost by just being "Mr. Nice Guy". I am fairly young still and just do it for the enjoyment purposes, but of the occurrences I did not act like I was desperate. I carried on simple conversation and was not interested in blowing all my money at the club, just for a chance to persuade them to come home with me.
Solid Gold. I only had 1 dancer and that was in the club where I bought a few lappers from and had her asking for my number. Same story though, just be personable and don't try to throw money around.
Airport. Pretty strict club in which the owner is their almost all the time. He even makes frequent stops in the back room to keep an eye on his dancers. Find the right girl and be upfront with her and it's almost pretty guaranteed.
It's Perfectly Acceptable.
[QUOTE=CharlieKane200;1489242]So that $300 starting point is a tad high. That's not the amount they get, but it's the amount they know you will part with. Damn, ended a sentence with a preposition. ". the amount with which they know you will part." Better?[/QUOTE]It's perfectly acceptable to end a sentence with a preposition, as long as the preposition is necessary. Consider "Where is he at?" The "at" is unnecessary as "Where is he?" is complete without it. On the other hand some sentences simply do not lend themselves to a syntax without the preposition at the end.
Winston Churchill famously chided an editor of a newspaper for rearranging a statement Churchill made to avoid the final preposition. Upon reading the edited quote, Churchill dashed off the following note [red][b] 'This is the sort of English up with which I will not put."[/b][/red]
When you end a sentence with a preposition, it's called a [b]HAPPY ENDING[/b]!