Clubs above NOVA near Taoyuan Train Station
The place(s) above Nova across the street from Taoyuan station all seem like high end nightclubs. I have been to the lobby of every single one. I was trying to take the elevator to the 2nd floor of Nova and apparently, once the clubs see someone taking the lift, they press the call button for the lift so it stops on their floor. I spotted a couple of girls during an apparent shift change and they are H-A-W-T. Yes, that hot. Thus, I'm sure its more than I want to spend on this type of activity. Anyone with deep pockets try out one of these places before?
Taiwan's Yakuza and the sex trade
A follow-up to some of my earlier comments.
I suspect a lot of us are not aware of how the local mob ropes girls into this business. Here in Taiwan debts are still passed on from generation to generation - by statute. For example if your father runs up a debt and then dies, the debt legally falls to his wife, then his children, then his brothers, sisters nieces, nephews, whoever else is next in line. (This is my understanding - if someone has something FACTUAL to add, please do.)
This is how the mob ropes girls into the sex trade, and milks their earnings. Mob runs gambling rackets - we all know how much Chinese love to gamble. Chicken fighting, dog fighting, numbers, sports betting ... you can find it. The mob lets gamblers run up huge debts because they intend to eventually put the debt on the family - collecting from solvent relatives, and putting the girls to work.
I almost never go to KTVs, but the last time I went I met a ~19 year old girl. She told me she was working off a debt run up by her father. She doesn't do FS takeout, but was ready to discuss all other arrangements. She told me she has a boyfriend that wants to marry her, but they are both broke and cannot afford to be independent. In a nutshell, she was looking for a sugar-daddy that would leave her hymen intact. Those gates will fall, I am certain.
You see here clearly how it works. The girl isn't forced per-say, but she is basically pushed onto the path by a business enterprise that operates outside the law. More accurately, a business enterprise that writes law! The mob has (or had?) active members elected to the national legislature here. Oftentimes these are the guys you see punching women legislators in film clips of Taiwan's congress.
This just goes to underscore my suggestion that it is better to procure from truly independent freelancers. A great market for this is the population of Philipino/Tha/Indonesian/Vietnamese maids, elder care, nannies, and factory workers. It is a lot more work, but GFE is much better, and is generally much, much cheaper in dollars and cents.