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07-31-22 22:13 #22230
Posts: 1081Rosarito Beach
Just a heads up to those that might get tired of Tijuana and want to do something different. Happened to be in Rosarito Saturday and was nicely surprised on how busy it was. Lots of people having fun and enjoying the great weather, food and drinks. Noticed a new strip club as you walk down the street towards Papas and Beer but didn't go inside. Papas and Beer has some really good performers on the upcoming weekends. So if your younger and got some game I'd definitely check it out or even if your visiting from out of town it's well worth the cab fare to just get away from the Zona 24/7.
Despite the recent warnings from the government not to go it was very safe and just lots of people with families enjoying a great summer at the beach.
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07-29-22 22:39 #22229
Posts: 560Argentina
Originally Posted by ElAventurero [View Original Post]
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07-29-22 20:40 #22228
Posts: 2420Originally Posted by Rainman306 [View Original Post]
1. HK chicas tell me that either Sunday, Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday are their days off but they got to pick.
2. Many of the better looking street girls went to work inside HK, especially the ones that used to work outside of HK in the alley. Some go back to work in the streets on their days off from HK.
3. Most of the meseros are scammers. Even the boss of the meseros is a thief. I speculate that he was forcing meseros to send him kickbacks for favorable shifts thereby compelling the meseros to pass on the scam to customers who are too much of pussies to defend themselves.
4. Yes, but HK fill their early week schedule with really ugly girls who don't really work weekends. Why would they do that? I suspect that they are paid differently. Hence they tend to stand around and don't give a shit instead of going after guys like the chicas that work the weekends.
5. HK is pricing itself out and the fucking stupid rules is making it not fun. I was just there for about 4 hours. I did not see a single make out session by mongers. No kissing? WTF?
6. Sinaloa chicas are hot. But HK chicas routinely lie about where they are from to deter stalkers. So it is nearly impossible to know where the chicas are actually from until you follow them home. Then the cops get involve and your photo is passed on to the web. But that is another issue.
7. I think I am getting used to the zona norte, because I really hardly see a stunner any more. Part of the problem is that chicas tend to do their makeup the same way. I think there are about 4 cookie cutter look for chicas to fall into if we mongers sit down and create a profile for HK chicas.
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07-29-22 20:14 #22227
Posts: 13Thailnd
Originally Posted by SeaBeeJoe [View Original Post]
DGL.
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07-29-22 20:08 #22226
Posts: 13Cuba
Originally Posted by DannyDavis [View Original Post]
DGL.
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07-29-22 19:33 #22225
Posts: 444Sex workers are not as bad as people make out. They trying to get money and mongers are the revenue source. Once one gets past that and sees it as a business then it is just a matter of getting value for your dollar.
My biggest problem with sex workers is their time management. Lot of them do lot have very good consideration of others in general. They may have some sex skills down pat but asking them for help trying to plan a trip can be like extracting teeth.
Actually I think most of my stress from Mexican sex workers comes when I try to make plans outside of the club.
The club buiz I got a PhD in.
Originally Posted by TjBrazil [View Original Post]
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07-29-22 19:28 #22224
Posts: 444Not sure. Have not checked the ISG area for there yet. There is one cutie from there who messages me a lot. There is another couple who have social interactions but not regularly. Hot looking girls. I have more luck on IG from Cuba girls than anywhere. There are South American IG possibilities but a monger only has so much time on his hands.
If Mexico and my upgrade to GFE had not booked me into 2023 I may consider it.
Originally Posted by TjBrazil [View Original Post]
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07-29-22 06:45 #22223
Posts: 644Thailand
Originally Posted by DGoodLife [View Original Post]
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07-29-22 05:07 #22222
Posts: 246Tijuana Trip Recap
Got back from Tijuana. Have more detailed reports in each respective section. Some general conclusions I have made are:
1. Monday's are a really off day compared to the rest of the week.
2. Street girl selection has gotten to be really bad.
3. Many maseros are still really annoying & some even scammers.
4. HK at night is still really busy even early in the week.
5. Tijuana isn't that great anymore and I'd like to find a new spot.
6. The best looking girls are from Sinaloa.
7. HK will have the stunners, but it seems only 1 of the other big 3 will have a good lineup on any given night.
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07-28-22 22:56 #22221
Posts: 41Low Cost Sessions
Originally Posted by Artisttyp [View Original Post]
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07-28-22 22:41 #22220
Posts: 3852Originally Posted by BrotherMouzone [View Original Post]
I used to get a kick out of these low prices. It made my sessions more worth it to me considering the cost / benefit ratio but yeah after a while you start looking at yourself in the mirror and ummmmm.
I believe in a square deal on both sides of the coin.
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07-28-22 22:33 #22219
Posts: 592Originally Posted by Artisttyp [View Original Post]
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07-28-22 19:57 #22218
Posts: 6523Mexicans want Gringos to go home
Stupid trash Gringos drive up prices in everything from apartments to putas, and treat locals like shit. Mexicans are running out of tolerance, patience, hospitality.
The retarded fat pig in HK, with stolen banks' money, should be deported first.
https://www.latimes.com/world-nation...hem-to-go-home
Californians and other Americans are flooding Mexico City. Some locals want them to go home.
Mexico CITY — Leer en español.
Fernando Bustos Gorozpe was sitting with friends in a cafe here when he realized that — once again — they were outnumbered.
"We're the only brown people," said Bustos, a 38-year-old writer and university professor. "We're the only people speaking Spanish except the waiters."
Mexico has long been the top foreign travel destination for Americans, its bountiful beaches and picturesque pueblos luring tens of millions of USA Visitors annually. But in recent years, a growing number of tourists and remote workers — hailing from Brooklyn, and. Why. , Silicon Valley and points in between — have flooded the nation's capital and left a scent of new-wave imperialism.
The influx, which has accelerated since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and is likely to continue as inflation rises, is transforming some of the city's most treasured neighborhoods into expat enclaves.
People sit at Quentin Cafe, a coffee shop popular with Americans and remote-workers.
Americans have long been able to stay in Mexico up to six months without a visa. One said Mexico City "reminds me of being in a more friendly, more clean at times, Brooklyn. "(Celia Talbot Tobin / For The Times).
In leafy, walkable quarters such as Roma, Condesa, Centro and Juarez, rents are soaring as Americans and other foreigners snap up houses and landlords trade long-term renters for travelers willing to pay more on Airbnb. Taquerias, corner stores and fondas — small, family-run lunch spots — are being replaced by Pilates studios, co-working spaces and sleek cafes advertising oat-milk lattes and avocado toast.
And English — well, it's everywhere: ringing out at supermarkets, natural wine bars and fitness classes in the park.
At Lardo, a Mediterranean restaurant where, on any given night, three-quarters of the tables are filled with foreigners, a Mexican man in a well-cut suit recently took a seat at the bar, gazed at the English-language menu before him and sighed as he handed it back: "A menu in Spanish, please. ".
Some chilangos, as locals are known, are fed up.
Recently, expletive-laced posters appeared around town.
"New to the city? Working remotely?" they read in English. "You're a f—ing plague and the locals f—ing hate you. Leave."
That sentiment echoed the hundreds of responses that poured in after a young American posted this seemingly innocuous tweet: "Do yourself a favor and remote work in Mexico City — it is truly magical."
"Please don't," read one of the kinder replies. "This city is becoming more and more expensive every day in part because of people like you, and you don't even realize or care about it."
Hugo Van der Merwe, 31 — a video game designer who grew up in Florida and Namibia and has spent the last several months working remotely from Mexico City, Montreal and Bogota, Colombia — said he understands why locals are vexed by the growing population of "digital nomads."
Tourists gather before departing on a bike tour of popular taco spots.
Tourists gather July 6 for a bike tour of taco spots in Mexico City. (Celia Talbot Tobin / For The Times).
"There's a distinction between people who want to learn about the place they are in and those who just like it because it's cheap," he said. "I've met a number of people who don't really care that they're in Mexico, they just care that it's cheap."
Clear financial incentives are drawing Americans to Mexico City — where the average local salary is $450 a month.
For the cost of a $2,000 one-bedroom in Koreatown, an Angeleno can rent a penthouse here.
Despite growing tensions, Mexico City is not Paris, where an American stumbling over French in a boulangerie will get a dose of hostility along with her croissants. It's not Berlin or Barcelona, where locals in recent years have mounted major protests over excessive tourism and the gobbling up of urban properties by global investment firms.
Tourists enjoying Santa Luzia sight view in Lisbon. April 25th. Lisbon, Portugal. Jose Sarmento Matos for the La Times.
Welcome to Portugal, the new expat haven. Californians, please go home.
The vast majority of people in this crowded, colorful metropolis are unwaveringly kind and patient with international visitors, who in the first four months of this year spent $851 million on hotels alone, according to tourism records.
But there is friction beneath the surface, as more locals consider what gentrification means for the city's economics, culture and even race relations.
Over the weekend, a tenant advocacy group hosted a walking tour of "places we have lost to gentrification, touristification and forced displacement. "
"Our homes," the event flier read, "now house digital nomads."
The dynamic playing out here is, in many ways, an old-world proble.
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07-28-22 04:03 #22217
Posts: 6523Hot Asians So Cal
Check this out.
https://mimiescort.simdif.com/
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07-27-22 15:54 #22216
Posts: 1459Originally Posted by Artisttyp [View Original Post]