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Gimcheon
Hey guys,
I know your normally reporting happy endings or ++'s (Friends term for ladies of the night's).
Anyways, I am currently in Gimcheon due to a mate getting married and I cannot read or speak Korean for the life of me but I am looking for.
A strip club, I want to host him a small bachelors party and I sorta need a location of one to do so.
Help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
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Suwon
Need some help please.
Not knowing local language and being a foreigner is big drawback, whereas the availability looks nice.
Strolled in the areas around the station and got ignored by the most and was only approached by middle men.
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Sex in the Provinces
Go to the railroad in the evening. Anytime of year. Walk around it and through the alleys near by. Look for older women hanging around without any apparent purpose. They are pimpettes. They may not approach you so you approach them. Just say "ogoshi?" (For girl in Korean) They may disdain you. Don't get angry; they may change their mind in a month or two. Anyway in the meantime find another. There is usually more than one. If you find one that wants to deal with you, use the cell keypad to finalize a price. Maybe you shouldn't haggle the first time. If it is a larger town, walk around outside the big 5 star hotel looking for the same older women just standing around in the alleys for no reason. Same deal. As a matter of fact you can do this same thing at Seoul station and at the Hilton nearby.
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[QUOTE=Pompetus;1997214]*** Just say "ogoshi?" (For girl in Korean) .[/QUOTE]Ajusshi (= term of respect when addressing an older male in Korea, similar to Uncle).
With all due respect, I think you may mean to say "Agassa" (= young lady). Second "s" is pronounced like an "h". (Or, alternatively spelled "Agasya" in the name of the Korean-owned nightclub in Angeles City).
"Ogoshi" is actually the name of one of the major judo throws (a hip throw, not one of my favorites) which I assiduously practiced so many years ago in Japan.
Your advice about railroad station environs and tourist hotels is well taken as a general rule, and not just in Korea. For example, I have used a similar technique last year during a brief visit to Shanghai and suburbs. However, as a safety precaution, it may be prudent to avoid dark alleys.
I have found it also helps to emanate a certain "vibe" (similar to sexual sonar pinging). Sexually aware women will pick up on your vibe. As an obviously well-versed monger yourself, you will undoubtedly know what I mean.
Cheers!
OM.
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I lived in Korea for over a year.
Young woman is pronounced ah ga she.
Old guy is pronounced aht ta she
[QUOTE=Omega3;2008550]Ajusshi (= term of respect when addressing an older male in Korea, similar to Uncle).
With all due respect, I think you may mean to say "Agassa" (= young lady). Second "s" is pronounced like an "h". (Or, alternatively spelled "Agasya" in the name of the Korean-owned nightclub in Angeles City).
"Ogoshi" is actually the name of one of the major judo throws (a hip throw, not one of my favorites) which I assiduously practiced so many years ago in Japan.
Your advice about railroad station environs and tourist hotels is well taken as a general rule, and not just in Korea. For example, I have used a similar technique last year during a brief visit to Shanghai and suburbs. However, as a safety precaution, it may be prudent to avoid dark alleys.
I have found it also helps to emanate a certain "vibe" (similar to sexual sonar pinging). Sexually aware women will pick up on your vibe. As an obviously well-versed monger yourself, you will undoubtedly know what I mean.
Cheers!
OM.[/QUOTE].
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[QUOTE=DCups;2008617]I lived in Korea for over a year.
Young woman is pronounced ah ga she.
Old guy is pronounced aht ta she.[/QUOTE]DC,
You are partially correct.
"Agassi" = young lady, is pronounced "ah gah she", as you say. (Think Agashya Club in Angeles City).
"Ajusshi" = older gentleman, is actually pronounced "ah juh (or jeh) she". "Aht ta she" or "adashi" " is actually an incorrect or Americanized (mis) pronunciation of ajusshi.
Of course, there are frequent spelling variants when words are transliterated from Hangul into English.
First arrived in Osan AB in the late 60's, when what is now Songtan Shi (Songtan City) was still just Songtan Eup (Songtan Town). "Osan" is the name of a town, which can be literally translated into "Bird Mountain" and is actually a few miles north of Osan AB, which is south of Seoul and Suwon.
Osan AB is the home of 51st Fighter Wing (used to be 51st AB Wing), part of Fifth US Air Force.
When I first arrived, the red clay streets in Songtan Eup had not yet been paved, and after a rain, you could easily tell who had been outside the base, by the red clay on their shoes before cleaning up. Troops referred to Songtan Eup as Chicol Ville, or simply "The Ville".
There were dozens of Korean nightclubs outside of Osan AB, each with a bevy of lovely and available young Korean lasses. Some of the nightclub names that come to mind are Romance Club, OB Hall, Stereo Club, Aloha Club, Mayflower Club, and, exclusively for black American troops, Papa Joe's (which reputedly had the wildest Korean women). A popular Korean love song around that time was the heart-rendering "Saranghae Danshineun" (= I love you).
Americans under SOFA ("Status of Forces Agreement") could not be touched by Korean officials. USA Greenbacks were not allowed to be held or used on the economy. Instead, MPC (specially printed Military Payment Certificates, or scrip) was used. There was a midnight curfew. Unless on official business, like the USAF SP Town Patrol, one could not lawfully be outside between midnight and 4 am. Slicky boys were legion, stealing whatever they could get their hands on. The Base Commissary was notorious for burning down once a year, just before inventory time.
Korean tailors would make cheap custom clothing fast. But, you had to careful about the quality and quantity of thread. Many a nicely tailored jacket or pair of trousers would quickly rip apart because of insufficient or poor quality thread. Popular were satiny jackets, with the embroidered message "100 Missions in Chicol Ville". I traveled to Osan AB and The Ville many times over those years and decades, and personally had many, many hundreds of missions in The Ville, with many fond memories.
When a "longer term" relationship (longer than overnight) was established between a Korean girl and an American man, they would call each other "Yobo" (= sweetheart or darling, a term of endearment). Sometimes, Korean women would call out to you "Yobo" and when you turned around and made eye contact, they would smile cheekily and add "Say-o". "Yoboseyo" = Hello.
Personally saw evidence of the Korean "economic miracle", as illustrated by the following small example. In the early years, when exiting the main pedestrian gate at Osan AB, would be confronted by hoards of raggedy waifs (think 7-11 area today at Angeles City) who would clutch at you and shout "Don kajiwa" (= "Give me money", which was just a few won). If you put on a ferocious scowl and replied, "Shiggeuroweo", roughly pronounced sh-grow-oh (= noisy! Or be quiet), then their eyes would grow big and they would back away. Decades later, the shoe was on the other foot. Young American troops could no longer easily afford to go for a night out "on the economy", because everything had become too expensive.
Korean women no longer worked in the bars outside Osan AB, being replaced (for a while) by Filipinas and even Russians, until that too became a "scandal. " Osan AB became an accompanied tour, with authorized family housing. Outraged American wives there on site also helped to put the final nails in the coffin for the wild good old days.
"But where are the snows of yesteryear"?
Gone forever, my friend.
OM.
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Had my first prostitute in Songtan / Osan 1981. Did not know the post 1982 history. Thanks.
[QUOTE=Omega3;2008683]
Songtan...
dozens of Korean nightclubs "Yobo" ,"Yoboseyo"
Korean women no longer worked in the bars outside Osan AB, being replaced (for a while) by Filipinas and even Russians, until that too became a "scandal. " Osan AB became an accompanied tour, with authorized family housing. Outraged American wives there on site also helped to put the final nails in the coffin for the wild good old days.
"But where are the yobos of yesteryear"?
Gone forever, my friend.
OM.[/QUOTE].
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[QUOTE=DCups;2008751]Had my first prostitute in Songtan / Osan 1981. Did not know the post 1982 history. Thanks..[/QUOTE]DC,
My own personal experiences in Osan / Songtan date back to late 60's. Know some American males, still alive, whose experiences in Korea date back to early 60's. They have some really wild stories to tell. Ditto Japan in 50's (older friends, that is, not I). We are all slowly dying out. Dinosaurs. Brings to mind Rutger Hauer's dying soliloquy in "Blade Runner".
Cheers!
OM.
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Ogoshi
I lived and worked on the economy for 4 years in Korea (Inchon, Jochiwon, and Seoul). No SOFA protection. Korean bosses. Pounded the pavement to find jobs. Kim chi and barley tea everyday. O-go-shi' where the O's are pronounced like the O in Tom. That's the Korean word for girl or young unmarried woman.
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Lotte Mart
Anybody know of any good massage spots around the Lotte Mart arean in Gunsan? Went to Hue Therapy but it ended up being a regular massage, no 'extra love' offered.
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Jeju in July
I will be in Jeju the First week of July.
Can anyone help with girls sauna which provides full service?
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Bump
[QUOTE=CooldBronv;2011236]Anybody know of any good massage spots around the Lotte Mart arean in Gunsan? Went to Hue Therapy but it ended up being a regular massage, no 'extra love' offered.[/QUOTE]Bump. Looking like this might be a lost cause.
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Massage Place
[QUOTE=CooldBronv;2014062]Bump. Looking like this might be a lost cause.[/QUOTE]CB,
Just go to a barber shop massage place. If you see something that is 24 hours, you'll get some release. If you can't read Korean, just look for the numbers 24.
I sometimes try different ones and it's like an adventure, you never know what will happen. Mostly just a HJ, but sometimes you get more.
Good luck,
LM,
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The Good old days
[QUOTE=Omega3;2008762]DC,
My own personal experiences in Osan / Songtan date back to late 60's. Know some American males, still alive, whose experiences in Korea date back to early 60's. They have some really wild stories to tell. Ditto Japan in 50's (older friends, that is, not I). We are all slowly dying out. Dinosaurs. Brings to mind Rutger Hauer's dying soliloquy in "Blade Runner".
Cheers!
OM.[/QUOTE]I haven't been on the forum in quite some time ever, but I was in Korea twice, '84-'87 and '90-'93, Osan AB both times. It was quite a good time indeed. Haven't been back since, but I've heard it's all different now.
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Have been told by a friend that ROK is still a bachelor's paradise with the right mind-set, but just have to spend more time and work harder at getting women. No more like just closing your eyes and shooting fish in a barrel of lovely fresh Korean lasses as in the old days. He does quite well now "teaching English" to young women.
Korean women are hot! Maybe it's the kimchi?
OM.