A bargirl is a woman who is paid to entertain patrons in a bar or nightclub. Variants on the term include "B-girl" and "juicy girl". Many bargirls work as a bar hostess, engaging individual customers in conversation. They may also provide them with sexual entertainment such as a lap dance, or offer to sell them sexual services. Some bargirls work as a bar dancer providing more public entertainment, often in the form of an erotic dance, go-go dance or striptease. The exact nature of the entertainment varies widely from place to place, depending on the venue.
Bargirls work in various types of bars throughout the world, including and regular bars in the U.S., hostess bars in East Asia, and "beer bars" in Southeast Asia, dance bars in India, and boliches in Argentina.
A bar fine is a payment made by a customer to the operators of a bar or nightclub in East and South East Asia that allows a bar girl to leave work early, usually in order to accompany a customer outside for sexual services.
Alcohol has been used as a currency for transactional sex in South Africa, and Uganda.
John M. Chernoff's 2003 book "Hustling Is Not Stealing: Stories of an African Bar Girl" recorded the experiences of a bar girl in West Africa in the 1970s. It was awarded the 2004 Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing.
Research was carried out in the 1990s into sex work carried out by bar girls in Malawi, where the terms bar girl and prostitute were synonymous. Bar girls were officially employed to serve drinks and clean the bar, but the wages paid for their bar work were low, often lower than the statutory minimum wage, and these were sometimes not paid at all. To supplement their income, most bar girls engaged in commercial sex with the co-operation of the bar owners, who regarded this as an additional means of attracting customers. The bars usually provided the bar girls with rent-free single-room accommodation, which served as a venue for sexual encounters with clients. The bar patrons were typically men unaccompanied by wives or girlfriends. They were mostly in salaried employment, for example as international . Although prostitution in Malawi is illegal, police action was mostly taken against street prostitutes rather than bar girls, as the latter were not considered to be soliciting. Most bar girls, frequently in desperate need for money, engaged in survival sex out of economic necessity. This was a major reason for their persisting in sex work. Screening carried out at the time indicated that about 80 per cent of bargirls carried the HIV virus.
In Japan an "entertainers visa" was introduced in 1981 allowing migrant Filipina women to work in Japanese nightclubs. The work included dancing in strip shows, socialising with male guests, and in some cases prostitution.
A "bar fine" is a payment made by a customer to the operators of a bar that allows a dancer, hostess, or some other employee of that bar to leave work early, usually in order to accompany the customer outside the bar. The bar fine is usually kept by the bar in lieu of lost income, but in some larger bar chains the bargirl may receive a portion of the bar fine, with much of the remainder being used to pay for STD and HIV testing for the bargirls. The portion of the bar fine paid to the bargirl is often around half, though this may be less if the bar supports its bargirls by providing them with food and accommodation. Although not universal, bar fines are frequently associated with venues offering prostitution to foreigners.
The majority of the women who work in Thailand's go-go bars and beer bars (outdoor ) are . They mostly come from the poorest areas of the country, Northern Thailand and Northeast Thailand. Bar work allows them to earn many times what they could earn farming. Many work as bargirls for a few years to help their families, allowing them to pay off their debts and improve their living conditions. Some beer bars employ bargirls on a salaried basis while others employ them on a freelance basis, with there are some beer bars that do both. Some salaried bargirls also work as bar waitresses. There is significant variation in working conditions among establishments in Thailand's red-light district in Pattaya. Some bars employ relatively well-paid women who live outside the bar, while others employ lower-paid women who live at the bar.
B-girl activity has declined in the U.S. but it still occurs. Because prostitution is illegal in most parts of the U.S. and is restricted to licensed brothels in those parts of Nevada where it is legal, B-girls who act as prostitutes are breaking the law. The practice of accepting drinks for pay is specifically outlawed in many localities. Bars have been raided and closed down for "B-girl activity". In one 1962 case, nightclub owners suspected of having ties to a Chicago Organized crime were brought before the Senate Rackets Committee. The Boston Globe reported that "one of the rackets, according to testimony, is the operation of cheap nightclubs which use B-girls to solicit watered-down drinks at high prices from customers, or even engage in prostitution with them." It was once common for modestly dressed B-girls to pose as secretaries who had stopped at the bar for a drink on their way home from work. The male customer, under the impression that he had found a "date" for the evening, would buy her one expensive drink after another, only to be afterwards.
A 1984 report by the US Internal Revenue Service described bar girls soliciting for prostitution in bars, hotels and restaurants. The report said that they earned more for sex work than streetwalkers and typically offered more varied services. Bar girls sometimes paid commission to the establishment where they worked. In some cases they used hotel rooms for sex, typically provided by the hotel management or by a client. The report suggested that police attempts to suppress the activity by arresting bar girls had rarely been successful.
In 2014, city officials in Kenner, Louisiana (a suburb of New Orleans), where the practice is illegal, replaced the word "B-girl" with "B-drinker" in their liquor laws to avoid gender discrimination.
Bar girls in strip clubs in the United States often entertain on stage as "", attracting male customers through the use of nudity and suggestive postures. They are not required to have professional training or experience as dancers.
Vietnam
"B-girl activity" in the United States
In popular culture
See also
Notes
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