• Talkin Turkey is viewable by all for a few weeks whilst we SEO the threads. You will not be able to comment unless you become a Talkin Turkey member xxx

Disappointing Industry

peartywerty

Diamond Member
You can watch a sexy Russian girl give a golden shower for $2 per minute. What a time to be alive!

:)
I went through a cam phase about 10 years ago. Had a lot of custom content made, Skype sessions and some kinky stuff. I used to go searching for the least popular cam model in the poorest countries, offer them a substantial amount (for them) and ask them to do quite unusual things. LOL
 

lonelyman

Gold Member
I wouldn't be holding my breath there ;)
In 1992 nobody believed the price of a house in Vic Park would drop to $80k either. Remember when Covid was at its peak, prices were dropped to $300 at Langtrees. Workers had a choice of opting in or out and a few opted in.
 

baal6007

Foundation Member
A few did opt in but most didn't and two years later they're charging 500+ extras. It's not 1992 anymore as much as I wish it was.
 

lonelyman

Gold Member
Well, the RBA has said things are going to get worse before they get better. So have Central Banks in other countries.
 

lonelyman

Gold Member
In the West last week. Nick Bruining is quite a sound researcher.

Nick Bruining: ‘Buy the dip’ should no longer be your go-to investment strategy as inflation resets thinking​

Headshot of Nick Bruining
Nick BruiningThe West Australian
Mon, 19 September 2022 2:00AM
Comments
Nick Bruining

Complacency set in amid an era of low interest rates. We forget that, eventually, the economic fundamental chickens come home to roost and those who ignore them are doomed to become a Sunday roast chook. Credit: GMVozd/Getty Images

For some, it’s finally starting to dawn that the investment strategy catch-cry of the past 10 years may no longer stack up.
“Buy the dip” has, in the main, worked well since the Global Financial Crisis.
This strategy saw investors pile into growth assets like shares and property when markets pulled back, confident that in the blink of an eye the market would rapidly recover and move onwards and upwards to new all-time highs.
For the past decade or so, buy the dip has worked. But it could be that we’ve become so complacent with low interest rates and all that entails, that we’ve lost sight of what might happen when the cheap money disappears.
We forget that, eventually, the economic fundamental chickens come home to roost and those who ignore those fundamentals are doomed to become a Sunday roast chook.
It’s now starting to look like any hope of a gentle massaged correction to the scourge of worldwide inflation is doomed.
https://thewest.com.au/business/you...-super-fund-heres-what-to-consider--c-8233843
https://thewest.com.au/business/you...-a-few-more-super-risks-while-young-c-8233611
The phrase “soft landing” has been bouncing around for months, promoted by central bankers who, incidentally, completely missed the early warning signs of an inflation break out this time last year. These are the same guys who were telling us that interest rates wouldn’t rise until 2024.
Riiiight.
Before last week’s US Inflation numbers came in, there was hope that the Federal Reserve would ease off on future rate rises. Markets were hoping that on the back of declining inflationary pressure, this Thursday morning our time we might see an interest rate rise of just 0.5 per cent — or even 0.25 per cent.
Forget that.
The Fed hopes and needs to bring inflation back to about 2 per cent. Last week’s number saw US inflation come in at four times that target at 8.3 per cent.
Central banks like the Fed and the Reserve Bank of Australia lift interest rates to kill off the inflation dragon. The theory works like this — to kill off the insatiable demand that’s driving up prices, take away people’s surplus income by forcing up their loan repayments.
https://thewest.com.au/business/you...muddle-last-big-move-into-aged-care-c-8246581
Thanks to the disastrous inflation numbers revealed last Wednesday, markets have pretty much locked in a rate rise of 0.75 per cent, and there’s even some experts suggesting that the next US rate rise could be a whole one per cent, or even more.
And here’s the real problem. Central banks will keep lifting those interest rates until inflation is tamed.
What markets seem to ignore is that eventually the decline in demand must translate into a decline in revenue for companies that rely on that demand.


We forget that, eventually, the economic fundamental chickens come home to roost and those who ignore those fundamentals are doomed to become a Sunday roast chook.
Keep the car another year or two, make do with your current smartphone, go with a $15 two-litre cask of wine instead of the $25 bottle and buy home brand toilet paper instead of the expensive stuff.
Eventually, those consumer decisions must affect company profits and forecasts. When it does, that could translate into a fall in stocks and other asset prices that might best be described as “spectacular”.
And some of the respected old-time market watchers are worried.
With the US S&P500 index already down by 18 per cent since its December 2021 highs to a figure of about 4000, you would hope that it couldn’t go much lower.
Best sit-down. Some of the old timers reckon it could easily get down to about 3300. That means a further fall of about 18 per cent from here.
A similar fall here would put the Australian all ordinaries index at around 5800. On Friday, it closed at 6983.3.

Let’s hope the old buggers are wrong.
 

HookPsy

Gold Member
With the borders opening up again, shouldn't we see an influx of asian girls coming back to australia to work again? Or are working visas on hold or something?
 

Stevez

Silver Member
In the West last week. Nick Bruining is quite a sound researcher.

Nick Bruining: ‘Buy the dip’ should no longer be your go-to investment strategy as inflation resets thinking​

Headshot of Nick Bruining
Nick BruiningThe West Australian
Mon, 19 September 2022 2:00AM
Comments
Nick Bruining

Complacency set in amid an era of low interest rates. We forget that, eventually, the economic fundamental chickens come home to roost and those who ignore them are doomed to become a Sunday roast chook. Credit: GMVozd/Getty Images

For some, it’s finally starting to dawn that the investment strategy catch-cry of the past 10 years may no longer stack up.
“Buy the dip” has, in the main, worked well since the Global Financial Crisis.
This strategy saw investors pile into growth assets like shares and property when markets pulled back, confident that in the blink of an eye the market would rapidly recover and move onwards and upwards to new all-time highs.
For the past decade or so, buy the dip has worked. But it could be that we’ve become so complacent with low interest rates and all that entails, that we’ve lost sight of what might happen when the cheap money disappears.
We forget that, eventually, the economic fundamental chickens come home to roost and those who ignore those fundamentals are doomed to become a Sunday roast chook.
It’s now starting to look like any hope of a gentle massaged correction to the scourge of worldwide inflation is doomed.
https://thewest.com.au/business/you...-super-fund-heres-what-to-consider--c-8233843
https://thewest.com.au/business/you...-a-few-more-super-risks-while-young-c-8233611
The phrase “soft landing” has been bouncing around for months, promoted by central bankers who, incidentally, completely missed the early warning signs of an inflation break out this time last year. These are the same guys who were telling us that interest rates wouldn’t rise until 2024.
Riiiight.
Before last week’s US Inflation numbers came in, there was hope that the Federal Reserve would ease off on future rate rises. Markets were hoping that on the back of declining inflationary pressure, this Thursday morning our time we might see an interest rate rise of just 0.5 per cent — or even 0.25 per cent.
Forget that.
The Fed hopes and needs to bring inflation back to about 2 per cent. Last week’s number saw US inflation come in at four times that target at 8.3 per cent.
Central banks like the Fed and the Reserve Bank of Australia lift interest rates to kill off the inflation dragon. The theory works like this — to kill off the insatiable demand that’s driving up prices, take away people’s surplus income by forcing up their loan repayments.
https://thewest.com.au/business/you...muddle-last-big-move-into-aged-care-c-8246581
Thanks to the disastrous inflation numbers revealed last Wednesday, markets have pretty much locked in a rate rise of 0.75 per cent, and there’s even some experts suggesting that the next US rate rise could be a whole one per cent, or even more.
And here’s the real problem. Central banks will keep lifting those interest rates until inflation is tamed.
What markets seem to ignore is that eventually the decline in demand must translate into a decline in revenue for companies that rely on that demand.

Keep the car another year or two, make do with your current smartphone, go with a $15 two-litre cask of wine instead of the $25 bottle and buy home brand toilet paper instead of the expensive stuff.
Eventually, those consumer decisions must affect company profits and forecasts. When it does, that could translate into a fall in stocks and other asset prices that might best be described as “spectacular”.
And some of the respected old-time market watchers are worried.
With the US S&P500 index already down by 18 per cent since its December 2021 highs to a figure of about 4000, you would hope that it couldn’t go much lower.
Best sit-down. Some of the old timers reckon it could easily get down to about 3300. That means a further fall of about 18 per cent from here.
A similar fall here would put the Australian all ordinaries index at around 5800. On Friday, it closed at 6983.3.

Let’s hope the old buggers are wrong.
I’m glad I fixed my mortgage @ 2.5% a year ago, three more years left at that rate. I better start saving more so I have a decent amount in offset account once fixed rate expires
 

Wooper

Legend Member
Really isn’t anywhere that’s a guaranteed good time, all these price increases should mean the service you get is better but unfortunately as these prices go up the quality is going down which is leading to nowhere being a safe bet even all the legit brothels and AMP that had a good rep but now they’re all more misses than hits
 

Anna

Legend Member
Have you ever been to Langtrees VIP? If not, you guys need to come in once.


You are sure to get a lifetime experience that you will cherish all the while.
Mrs. Langtrees had her dream to create an adult directory where all adult entertainers can advertise and VIP Perth has its roster there as well.

Click the link and scroll down. Check your left hand side



You can click on the live chat button to book a lady or directly walk in to the lounge
 

HookPsy

Gold Member
Do they do pensioners discount? 😜 Say the Lady is 600 per hour ,will she drop it down to 250-300? 😉. Still it's great to have supply. But to most common workers 600 or say 1200 a week is way over the living expense budget. I can bet you if those WL dropped to 200-250/hr, there'll be a line all the way down the street. 🤣
 

Anna

Legend Member
Do they do pensioners discount? 😜 Say the Lady is 600 per hour ,will she drop it down to 250-300? 😉. Still it's great to have supply. But to most common workers 600 or say 1200 a week is way over the living expense budget. I can bet you if those WL dropped to 200-250/hr, there'll be a line all the way down the street. 🤣
If you are willing to spend $300 have a 30-minute session and the next time you come in you will for sure keep extending. Our ladies are too hot to handle.
 

HookPsy

Gold Member
If you are willing to spend $300 have a 30-minute session and the next time you come in you will for sure keep extending. Our ladies are too hot to handle.
Still that's not on Pensioners discount. 🤣 Time to shower in between, they'll be lucky to have 15mins play time. LoL. If the ladies are wet when the clock starts a half an hour FS intercourse might be possible. 😜. But this is the real world. And women take ages to warm up. But i guess there are alot of premature ejaculators these days too(serious lack of sex) so 5 mins will be just enough to finish. 😉 🤣

Easiest $300 earned in 5 minutes. 🤣 :cool:
 
Last edited:

Anna

Legend Member
Still that's not on Pensioners discount. 🤣 Time to shower in between, they'll be lucky to have 15mins play time. LoL. If the ladies are wet when the clock starts a half an hour FS intercourse might be possible. 😜. But this is the real world. And women take ages to warm up. But i guess there are alot of premature ejaculators these days too(serious lack of sex) so 5 mins will be just enough to finish. 😉 🤣

Easiest $300 earned in 5 minutes. 🤣 :cool:
Women body are oceans of mystery and you need to know tickling it right way to arouse her
 

HookPsy

Gold Member
Women body are oceans of mystery and you need to know tickling it right way to arouse her
For sure i agree with you there, during not office hours. But when there's a clock ticking. There better be a on button for "instant wet & super horny" Mode. 🤣 😜 LoL.
 

Romano

Sensi4skin
Bronze Member
I'm not sure what everyone else's experience is but I've been punting a while now and it seems in the last 12 months the quality of the industry has really hit an all time low if you ask me. I've been to lots of different joints and it seems that there's no enthusiasm or effort put in anymore. The amount of times where you almost have to give these girls a handbook on what to do and how to do it is beyond me. Just little things like payment and breaking the vibe (if there is one), can't you wait till after before we make payment?? Then everything after that is so clinical and they think by yanking on your member it's going to get hard coz that's such a turn on. I've gotten to a point these days where the chances of a good punt are getting lower and lower. What is everyone else's thoughts?
Maybe because you have been punting a while you have lost your enthusiasm for the the punt, given the experience depends on your excitement. However I agree with you, it can be very clinical especially if the girl insists on breaking your balls.
 

sunyun

Legend Member
Mode price on Ivy Societe appears to be around $600 !

This thread was about WLs pricing themselves out of most punters' reach.
 

mrys

Member Moderator
Staff member
Talking Turkey Moderator
There's no question that prices have increased dramatically over the last 2 years. As has been discussed in various posts on this thread there are multiple probable causes. I'm beginning to think current pricing is the new normal we will have to adapt to moving forward. It's entirely possible we were spoilt with low prices for a long time, blissfully unaware of the toll low prices created for many. The 'new normal' is perhaps a more accurate reflection of the worth of their services. They, like us have to deal with rising rents and costs of living etc. Perth is not a cheap place to live in any respect! The challenge for many WL's now is not just to up the fee but to also up the experience. Yes value for money was easier to find when an AMP was $150 PH, at $300 PH the experience now needs be twice as good.......which clearly it isn't.......yet.
 

Wooper

Legend Member
There's no question that prices have increased dramatically over the last 2 years. As has been discussed in various posts on this thread there are multiple probable causes. I'm beginning to think current pricing is the new normal we will have to adapt to moving forward. It's entirely possible we were spoilt with low prices for a long time, blissfully unaware of the toll low prices created for many. The 'new normal' is perhaps a more accurate reflection of the worth of their services. They, like us have to deal with rising rents and costs of living etc. Perth is not a cheap place to live in any respect! The challenge for many WL's now is not just to up the fee but to also up the experience. Yes value for money was easier to find when an AMP was $150 PH, at $300 PH the experience now needs be twice as good.......which clearly it isn't.......yet.
The services were never considered “cheap” and no1 was spoilt as many have always been hit and misses but these prices are now hitting double or more than they use to and the quality is dropping and yes cost of living is going up and peoples wages are staying the same so the fact there’s far more misses than hits these days is far more taxing on peoples wallets
 
P

Pjohnson

The services were never considered “cheap” and no1 was spoilt as many have always been hit and misses but these prices are now hitting double or more than they use to and the quality is dropping and yes cost of living is going up and peoples wages are staying the same so the fact there’s far more misses than hits these days is far more taxing on peoples wallets
Definitely not a linear relationship between cost and service. However, with higher prices there should be as a minimum responsibility to provide clean rooms, fresh towels , respond to messages on time, not make us wait for bookings, too many girls happy to take the extra money without getting the basics right
 

Bigmick

Legend Member
I'm not sure what everyone else's experience is but I've been punting a while now and it seems in the last 12 months the quality of the industry has really hit an all time low if you ask me. I've been to lots of different joints and it seems that there's no enthusiasm or effort put in anymore. The amount of times where you almost have to give these girls a handbook on what to do and how to do it is beyond me. Just little things like payment and breaking the vibe (if there is one), can't you wait till after before we make payment?? Then everything after that is so clinical and they think by yanking on your member it's going to get hard coz that's such a turn on. I've gotten to a point these days where the chances of a good punt are getting lower and lower. What is everyone else's thoughts?
After a while I developed a few rules for myself to try and end the disappointment.
One is never go to an AMP or a bait and switch Chinese house.
Got myself a small list of ladies that I like and which works for me.
Only try new ones when fully recommended on sites like TS.
 

lonelyman

Gold Member
Article in tomorrow's West Australian

Household wealth in largest tumble since 1980s as new inflation measure shows huge jump in fruit, veg prices​

Adrian LoweThe West Australian
Thu, 29 September 2022 10:42AM
 

ManonaMission

Gold Member
Have you seen the prices over East?
I'm so confused as we have FIFO & seem to be more cashed up so why the prices are significantly higher bewilds me.
 

mrys

Member Moderator
Staff member
Talking Turkey Moderator
Just a reality check. I know all of us on this forum are intelligent, wise and discerning so this is not a comment that's directed at us. I'm sure we understand a working AMP gets a max of 50% from a booking. Many, depending on their circumstances and vulnerability get less. I know all of us shower, look good, smell great and behave like gentlemen.....horny gentlemen but gentlemen none the less, but many others do not. Keep the numbers in perspective. It would be a tough gig being a WL when you have clients you don't like. In real life when a new client makes contact with me I quickly make a decision if I want to work with them, and probably 80% I say thanks but no thanks. AMP's don't have that choice for the most part.
 
Top