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Member #1164,
In October the whether is BEST in Korea. You could imagine an autumn of New England...
Porn DVD? It's completely illegal in Korea.
Dan
[QUOTE]Originally posted by Member #1164
[i]Hello all I am going to Korea in October and was wondering how the weather is and also where I can get me some porn dvd's
Thanks [/i][/QUOTE]
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Hey guys can you help me out. I know Seoul quite well and I know the KTV's and bars and also the pick up joints for freebees.
However in the past I have had a regular girlfriend in Seoul so didnot need to look for working girls. What I want to know is are there any bars that the working girls frequent and where I can get an all nighter back to my hotel?
What I dont want is street girls, call ins, short time girls or the phone calls for out calls (I dont speak enough Korean to use a phone).
Idealy what I want to do is hit a few regular bars, the drinks bars on Itaewon maybe but then go somewere where I can get a working girl at the end of the night.
Thanks for any suggestions.
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Hey NY Yankee,
The place was across 7-11. I usually go after I send time with family, so probably around 11pm. She said she was going to leave at 8am after she woke up, but ended up sleeping to 2pm. Had to rush her out after 3pm cause my inlaws were downstairs waiting to go out. I don't know if she was going to stay later if she woke up at 8, but got alot of time out of her.
Happy Hunting!
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Hi, I'm new to this board, but will be visiting Seoul several times over the next month.
Does anyone know if there is any call in service to the Westin Chosun? Are there any problems having girls come to your hotel? And what price should be considered fair?
Thanks for the info.
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Has any of you ever tried to meet girls using services like adultfriendfinder.com ?
I have just enrolled and it looks like there is a dozen of girls in Seoul, and anywhere else actually, who are looking for sex partners. Some of them wrote that they would like to get some money for it, some did not... I am sending some emails but am wondering whether there is a chance or not...
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Rene02,
I have met a lot girls over the internet thru adultfriendfinder.com. But I was looking to meet some girls from Korea and all I am getting is girls from South American, Russia, Philppines, and a few from Thailand. I have hook up with one of the girls in Thailand, and we have a great time everytime when I go to Thailand. She is from a upper class family and just wants to have some fun, with a American and her family is died set against it. So we e-mail each other and see each other, when I am in Thailand, it is great!
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Random in Tokyo -
Email me at lonestarkorea@hotmail.com
FYI for all - the main entrances to Miari now have huge banners reading "Foreigner off-limits"
Not a big loss to me as I think those areas are rather 'icky' but it's worrisome nevertheless since they are posted in a PUBLIC area.
Will post pic soon.
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1 photos
Does anyone know this girl?
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Asset man,
Why do you ask ? Where did you get this photo ?
Did you take it yourself or get it from someone else ?
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Just want to confirm what "assetman" said. I went to Miari over the holiday weekend and, unfortunately, it was closed to foreigners. (I'm American.) As you leave exit 10, there are five or six alleyways leading off to your right. Well, all but the last one had banners overhead saying that foreigners were not allowed. The ajumas at those alley entrances would not look at or speak to me. When I got to the last entrance, there was no banner, but the ajuma put her hands on my stomache and pushed me back -- not in a threatening way, just her way of saying that I couldn't come in there.
Anyone know what is up with this, and how long it will be before we can get back in there?
It was a disappointing thing to see.
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Which is the best bath those days ? In Hotels ?
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I've posted a pic of the Miari "Foreigners Off-limits" banner in thge photo section.
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Hey I think I know that girl she goes to Pasadena City College here in California!
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From Korea Herald, Sept. 17, 2003
Foreigners not welcome: brothels
The red light distric in Miari, northern Seoul, hoists a banner rejecting foreigners.
A leading red light district in Seoul seems to have found a new scapegoat for its financial woes: not the economic downturn or a police crackdown, but migrant workers from less developed countries.
Proprietors of brothels in Hawolgok-dong, northern Seoul, commonly known by its nickname of an obscure origin "Miari Texas Village," have come to a new business policy of denying service to migrant workers who they look at as potential transmitters of SARS or other critical viruses.
As a public display of their resolve to "purify their working environment," the owners' association have proudly erected nine large banners reading "Foreigner off-limits place" at major entrances to the area, setting a precedent by formalizing an announcement that borders on racism.
"The main culprits behind the ever-dwindling number of local patrons are foreign laborers," said Jeon Kyung-bong who leads a self-disciplinary committee of the owners. "Koreans are staying away from here for fear of the possibility of contracting SARS and AIDS."
According to the owners, their sales have dropped more than 50 percent with most of the mid-sized shops registering slim takings at 200,000-300,000 won per night. Plus, the once prosperous red light district is rapidly losing much of its luster with the number of shops dropping to 200 from some 300 a year ago.
The lack of demand has seen a market downturn to the extent that prices have dropped enough to attract a slew of migrant workers in recent months.
However, most of the foreigners who are denied access are from Southeast Asia, China and Africa, giving rise to claims that the brothel owners are practicing racial discrimination.
"To make the groundless judgment that foreign workers are practitioners of promiscuous sex and deny them access to certain areas, even if that area is a red light district, is nothing more than racial discrimination," Choi Hyun-mo, director of the Human Rights Protection Center for Migrant Workers in Korea, said.
(khjack@heraldm.com) By Choe Yong-shik
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From Korea Times, Sept. 17, 2003
SARS Forces Brothels to Shun Foreigners
By Soh Ji-young
Staff Reporter
"Miari Texas", a red-light district in Seoul, is causing a stir for its new policy of refusing foreign customers.
From this month, banners reading "foreigner off-limits" have been put up in front of entrances to the brothel district situated in Songbuk-dong, for the first time since it began business 45 years ago.
Brothel owners are saying the measure was unavoidable as the recent increase of foreign customers, mostly from Southeast Asian countries and China, are seriously affecting their business.
"As there is widespread belief that foreign workers spread AIDS and severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), Korean customers are being driven away" said Chon Kyong-bong, a brothel owner who conducted business in Miari for more than two years. He is serving as the head of the owners’ committee that adopted the resolution of not accepting foreigners.
Female employees themselves also show reluctance to provide services to them in fear they will contract diseases, he said.
"Although we feel bad for the migrant workers who are here in a foreign land, we have to think of the health of our employees, who have weak immune systems since they drink a lot of alcohol while working" Chon told The Korea Times.
Previously known as the leading red-light district in Seoul, Miari Texas had once boasted more than 300 establishments but strict police crackdowns and loss in customers had driven more than 100 to close.
Although tourists from Japan and other countries have occasionally visited the district in the past, it was pretty much unknown to foreigners until the last two to three years, when migrant workers began flocking to the district, the owner said.
Since then, Miari Texas is being called a second Itaewon, due to the large number of foreign workers who come from nearby cities and hang around the area until morning while waiting for buses and subways to resume, Choi said.
Justification of the reasons surrounding the measure aside, the newly-enforced entrance ban against foreigners is expected to cause controversy as it is perceived to be based on racial prejudice.
"Assuming foreign workers easily spread AIDS and SARS and expressing that view publicly is a typical form of racial discrimination" said Choi Hyun-mo, director of the Korea Migrant Workers’ Human Rights Center.
Meanwhile, Miari brothel owners have also resolved to clean up their act to improve their tarnished image and attract more customers, through regular cleaning up of the district and hosting bazaars for the needy.