Culture StripTok: Where the Workers are V.I.P.s - Welcome to StripTok

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StripTok: Where the Workers are V.I.P.s​

Strippers share the hazards and joys of their work on social media.

By Madeleine Connors
July 29, 2021, 3:00 a.m. ET
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Teauryajya DuBenion, 29, started her stripping career in Los Angeles with the encouragement of some friends. “In Los Angeles, everyone is a stripper. Your local nurse is a stripper, teacher is a stripper, babysitter is a stripper, your dog walker is a stripper,” she said. “I was tired of skipping meals.”

Now, over two years later and 400,000 followers later, Ms. DuBenion, who goes by @PicassoBae, thinks of herself as TikTok’s stripper girlfriend. “You can just run to me in the dressing room whenever you’re having a rough night and just vent,” she said. “I’m like your co-worker or work wife.”

Ms. DuBenion is part of a growing community ofstrippers on TikTok who post under the hashtag #Striptok. Instead of gathering around a water cooler, they have built an online network to exchange professional advice, safety tips and good old-fashioned strip club gossip.

Ms. DuBenion recently made a viral TikTok advising dancers on how to strip while menstruating. She offers punchy yet practical insights, like “double up on panties.”

The video had almost half a million views, and the comment section was a chorus of women doling out feminine hygiene tips. “The comment section was flooded with women giving additional advice on what worked for them whether they strip or not,” Ms. DuBenion said. “It was awesome.”

She believes that many of her female followers who watch her TikTok do not aspire to be strippers, but instead are simply women inspired by her charisma and poise. “I’ve had people message to tell me that they have this newfound confidence whether they want to strip, or in their current job, or life goals they set from themselves,” she said. “All because of the way that I speak about my own life experiences through stripping.”

Another popular StripTok user is Sky Hopscotch, 27, as she is known on social media, who on a chilly night in her home in Des Moines not long ago, flippantly tossed supplies onto a black shimmering bag and read a checklist: lingerie, makeup, baby wipes, perfume and Tylenol. In a bored, deadpan voice, she delivered each line off-camera: “Who are we kidding? The men you’re dancing on are going to sweat all over you too.”

She uploaded this tutorial with a caption: “Is your life falling apart? Can’t pay your rent? What you should bring on your first night as an exotic dancer.” The next morning, the video racked up two million views, and her account ballooned to 30,000 followers. “It was then that I started posting exclusively StripTok content,” she said.

On the platform, she has unearthed an audience eager to inherit her wisdom as a stripper: the good, the bad, the banality of men’s attention. “I discovered there was an entire community of strippers on TikTok,” she said. “A lot of women were sharing their experience as strippers: Some were educating, others were glorifying the industry. I figured, why not share my experience?”

In this enclave of the app, women congregate to document dispatches of their lives as strippers. They show off bruises from twerking, recite locker-room melodramas, boast bill counting and lament sexual harassment. In many ways, StripTok has allowed strippers to reclaim agency in their work, partly because they give advice and encouragement to one another in an industry rife with disappointment.

When she began her career 10 years ago, Sky Hopscotch was what is commonly referred to in the stripping community as a “baby stripper.”

Inexperienced strippers are even more vulnerable to harassment and exploitation at the whims of bosses and customers.
“Strip club clients would single me out and request lap dances from me because they knew I was unexperienced,” she said. “They could be more handsy, cheat me out of money or try to get me to leave the club with them.”
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Many strippers on TikTok are using their platforms with the goal of helping younger dancers avoid troubling experiences. They hope that their advice will be one step in strip clubs becoming safer and more amicable workplaces for women. “It’s vital that veteran dancers share their secrets, like hiring a bouncer to go with you to bachelor parties, so new girls in the industry don’t have to get hurt,” Sky Hopscotch said.

Under the constraint of catering to male fantasy and competitiveness, strip clubs often become an oppressive environment to strippers. The toll on mental health can be considerable. “I struggled deeply with depression, drug and alcohol addiction, eating disorders — all manners of things,” Sky Hopscotch said. “If I wasn’t pretty, if I wasn’t thin, then I would not be able to pay my bills.”

If the strip club is dominated by the male gaze, then StripTok offers viewers something else: a place where strippers are free to present as themselves. Many videos on StripTok feature strippers in states of casualness — without makeup, stretching in locker rooms, idle at home in sweatpants. Others are in oversize T-shirts counseling strippers on how to write off hair extensions as a tax deduction.

Katt, 24, a stripper living in Los Angeles, who asked to be identified only by her first name, found refuge in StripTok after feeling disillusioned by her job. She worries that the strip club teases out “the most toxic parts of myself that wants to be man pleasing.”

When she became active in the StripTok community, she began playfully experimenting with her own gender representation. “You see me in short hair, long hair, different wigs. Different looks of makeup. No makeup,” Katt said. “I feel like people are always there, hyping me up and relating to my experience without making it about what I look like. That’s really validating to me.”

Katt is Asian American and said she is overly familiar with objectification, both on and off the clock. “That’s something I’ve experienced my whole life, by every kind of man,” she said. “You see yourself in the media as the hot Asian girl or the nerdy Asian girl.”

Through her online platform, she recounts her experience of being bisexual and Asian in the stripping community, often spurring hundreds of positive comments and a network of support for other strippers from diverse backgrounds.

Katt, who sometimes raps along to music in her TikToks, hopes that by showing the quotidian lives of strippers, she will help humanize the profession. “You clock in for work at 7 p.m. These girls are just eating a Caesar salad, playing on their phones and talking to each other about their man troubles,” she said, joking.
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The interest with the interior lives of strippers on TikTok is not without precedent. “It’s because of me,” said A’Ziah King, known as Zola, in a message over Instagram. “I birthed an era and made a lane for sex workers to be vocal about their experiences and I am happy that door is now open.”

In 2015, Ms. King posted a long thread — 148 tweets — about a debauched weekend she spent stripping. Her posts were filled with enthralling details of betrayal, attempted murder, sex trafficking and friendship lost. The story trended worldwide within hours and was recently adapted into a film, “Zola,” directed by Janicza Bravo.

“I think it’s crucial for the community to share all angles and experiences within sex work, and only a sex worker can do so,” Ms. King said. “It’s important we share these experiences because it creates a safe space and sense of community.”

Despite being a reprieve from strip club bureaucracy, TikTok, like other social media sites, often censors strippers and sex workers. TikTok’s guidelines state that it “does not allow nudity, pornography or sexually explicit content.” Yet, strippers say that informational TikToks about sexual health, safety tips and general tutorials are targeted too. Ms. DuBenion had her account banned entirely and recently created a second account. StripTok posts often disappear, accounts are shadow banned, and content is removed without explanations.

This can affects livelihoods, as some strippers rely on TikTok’s Creator Fund as a second source of income during periods of financial drought at the club. Sky Hopscotch said her account is frequently deleted after educational posts about supporting sex workers. During this time, her secondary income plummets.

“I was making anywhere from $40 to $60 a day from the Creator Fund and then, the last three weeks, I’ve been making 96 cents a day maybe,” she said. “We have to be very careful about what we say and do on TikTok out of fear that we’ll be deplatformed.”
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Many strippers are using their platforms to raise awareness about FOSTA-SESTA, two bills passed in 2018, broadly aimed at curbing sex trafficking online. Many sex workers feel marginalized by the bills. “This has hurt a lot of us in the community even though the intended goal was to stop sex trafficking — statistics say that it hasn’t done that at all,” Sky Hopscotch said. “It has further deplatformed people like myself.”

Through advocacy, StripTok hopes to gain momentum in raising awareness about the harmfulness of anti-sex-work legislation.

“One of the legacies of FOSTA-SESTA had been making it much more dangerous for people who engage in sex work to do so in a way that’s safer and healthier,” said Emma Llansó, the director of the Free Expression Project at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a nonprofit in Washington, D.C., dedicated to advocating individuals’ rights in technology policymaking. “There have been a lot of crackdowns on sites where people can share information about health and wellness: all different sorts of information that sex workers were really using to keep themselves safe and to be informed and to help each other.”

This censorship has spawned a mutated, hidden language on TikTok to discuss sex work. To adapt to TikTok’s policies, strippers refer to their work as “accounting” or “skripping” to camouflage themselves. “Anytime I refer to stripper, I’ll say ‘skrippa,’” Ms. DuBenion said.

“Sometimes, if I write it out, I use dollar signs and an exclamation point for the I. There are things you have to finagle to make it work.”
Despite the late nights and confining heels, she still loves being a stripper. She is saving the money she earns from stripping to fund a group home for people with Down syndrome, which her sister has.

“It wasn’t until recently that I started receiving donations from family, friends and even supporters across my social media platform,” Ms. DuBenion said. “I even saved all the money I made from the TikTok Creator fund to go toward a down payment on the house. I would never have thought that stripping, two and a half years ago, would have such a positive impact on my life and the lives around me.”

Ms. DuBenion recounted times when men have come into her strip club and handed her $100 bills because they’re moved by her acts of charity online. She hopes that this experience will encourage other strippers to tell their stories: express their own vulnerabilities and discontents.

“I just want everybody to see that I am a real-life person and that I do have purpose in this world,” she said. “I’m doing it for a good cause and I’m relatable. I don’t know — I’m not an object.”
 
Another personal crusade to validate "sex work" in the eyes of the general public; made even worse how its stuff like these that encourage young women to pursue this kind of crap at an onset.

Like polishing a turd or putting lipstick on a pig--stripping may look like an easy way to make money, but easy come easy go so they say. In time, these people will realize why society has stigmatized sex work rightfully for thousands of years as unforeseen consequences come up further down the road.

Until then, good on the Chinese in deplatforming these degenerates. Their influence is a poison swooning young adults that this is a life worth living.
 
Katt is Asian American and said she is overly familiar with objectification, both on and off the clock. “That’s something I’ve experienced my whole life, by every kind of man,” she said. “You see yourself in the media as the hot Asian girl or the nerdy Asian girl.”
Imagine being such a shit for brains that you're a stripper that whines about being 'objectified.' Thats literally your job. Having that kind of attitude is exactly the kind of thing that leads to incidents that end with winding up dead. If anything she is only confirming the kind of stupidity that strippers are famous for that leads to such a high rate of assaults and murders

Under the constraint of catering to male fantasy and competitiveness, strip clubs often become an oppressive environment to strippers.
Constraint? You mean....literally doing your job?

Katt, 24, a stripper living in Los Angeles, who asked to be identified only by her first name, found refuge in StripTok after feeling disillusioned by her job. She worries that the strip club teases out “the most toxic parts of myself that wants to be man pleasing.”
So its 'toxic' to literally do your job now

Despite being a reprieve from strip club bureaucracy, TikTok, like other social media sites, often censors strippers and sex workers. TikTok’s guidelines state that it “does not allow nudity, pornography or sexually explicit content.” Yet, strippers say that informational TikToks about sexual health, safety tips and general tutorials are targeted too. Ms. DuBenion had her account banned entirely and recently created a second account. StripTok posts often disappear, accounts are shadow banned, and content is removed without explanations.
Those 'safety tips' and 'general tutorials' involve promoting how to do said acts, which are illegal in most places and thus the acts themselves. Stupid like a bag of rocks that one

“It’s vital that veteran dancers share their secrets, like hiring a bouncer to go with you to bachelor parties, so new girls in the industry don’t have to get hurt,” Sky Hopscotch said.
If you need to hire a bouncer to go with you to a private party its clearly a party you shouldn't be going to in the first place. and if you think said bouncer is actually going to make you any safer you're an idiot. If someone at said party intends to do you harm they're going to be ready to deal with said bouncer. and that isn't even getting into the incidents of dumbshit bouncers getting drunk or coked out and starting shit with people at said parties and ending up getting arrested or assaulting someone and getting sued (and likely you along with them as you hired them and are responsible for their conduct there) bouncers aren't known for being the sharpest knives in the drawer

This censorship has spawned a mutated, hidden language on TikTok to discuss sex work. To adapt to TikTok’s policies, strippers refer to their work as “accounting” or “skripping” to camouflage themselves. “Anytime I refer to stripper, I’ll say ‘skrippa,’” Ms. DuBenion said.

“Sometimes, if I write it out, I use dollar signs and an exclamation point for the I. There are things you have to finagle to make it work.”
Anybody who thinks that actually works and isn't incredibly easy to catch with a simple parser - especially when you outright say you're doing it publicly to the media, is an idiot. and of course, she'll think shes a victim when the site takes the info she gave here and uses it to stop her from using this moronic 'workarounds' and likely try to start shit in another article. ignorant parasite behavior at its best

There are good reasons society doesn't give a shit what happens to these types and never has. idiots like the ones in that article only remind everybody of that
 
I just want everybody to see that I am a real-life person and that I do have purpose in this world,” she said. “I’m doing it for a good cause and I’m relatable. I don’t know — I’m not an object.”
The cope is unreal.

Ask every society across the world what they think of strippers and whores lol.
 
Nice. Maybe Greer will get TikTok
 
Sex workers don't exist, they are whores. Don't delude yourself or them by painting them as anything more than a whore.
 
Becoming a stripper and complaining about objectification makes as much sense as becoming a veterinarian and complaining about how you hate all animals.
 
sex work would never be a free and independent choice until human trafficking is eliminated, sex worker rights are treated just like regular worker rights, and they pay taxes. until then its an industry where only a small fraction are doing it because of like they totally like sex and being a sex object, and the rest are doing it out legit financial need and desperation or trafficked into it, even the whores in ancient rome paid taxes and wielded politcal power. I am tired of the out right glamorization of whoredom as empowering and totally not degrading.
 
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