1000 Words, Instagram Volume 4

1000 Words, Instagram Volume 4

1000 Words, Instagram vol. 4 by Jen Bracewell

Welcome to our fourth themed Instagram 1000 words showcase! There are many talented artists on Instagram and we wanted to tap into their creativity and showcase their work here. ‘Tis nearing Halloween and Dia De Los Muertos, so I chose “Spooky” as the theme for this showcase.

Grryo believes that mobile photographers/ artists tell stories through the photographs/ images and art that represents their families, their environment, themselves. This is important because of the level of communication that is portrayed in imaging today.
We want to support the mobile arts community by having a place for artists to share, discuss, and critique (if requested by individual). These dialogues help the individuals and the community to grow.
We look forward to you and your art. We thank you for your contribution to the mobile photography/ arts community.
I chose these images for their scary, creepy goodness.

alchemy

Image by @theljilja

First I want to thank you for featuring one of my images. I really feel honored to be a part of this family.
This image is a part of a series inspired by inner alchemy and the nigredo process. It speaks about the awareness of dark realm. Deep down in blackness there are hidden mythical monsters. We can learn from them if we shed the light on every single one of them. Repression is the heritage and we need to break that cycle!

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Image by @_joanna.h_

This image was taken was taken during one of my fairly recent nosebleeds (sorry if too much information!?!), also I now feel a little weird that I took a photo of my nosebleed but I felt like documenting it at the time. Anyway I took the photo with Hipstamatic app on my iPhone; Burke lens and Blanko bl4 film. I used Mextures app to give it a more grungy, grainy appearance. I’m currently reading Dracula by Bram Stoker and found the particular excerpt (used on my Instagram post) inspired to this photograph.

image (5)Image by Caren Drysdale (@carenzo96bnw)

As I was closing the door to our home office late one night, I noticed that the night light in the room created the “spooky” shadow of my hand as I reached for the doorknob. I thought it had potential to be an interesting photo. I shot it on my iPhone 5. It took me a few attempts to get the shadow looking the way I liked and to keep it sufficiently in focus while shooting with my left hand (I’m right-handed). I originally converted it to black and white using the Snapseed app, then used the Willow filter when I posted it to Instagram to capture the final look I was satisfied with.

One final side note to mention is that it may look like the wood on the door is inlaid, but it’s a cool cheat done by my fella, Paul. It was pencilled in, taped, then stained with a darker stain.

Made with Repix (http://repix.it)

Image by Daniela Ubide (@4thieves)

Most of my pictures, I take with my iPhone, in different locations when on holidays and most of my self portraits at my home like this one.  I use selftimer and/or a small remote ISnapxRemote, with the limitations,  I prop my camera in creative ways.  My edits are very simple always in my phone or iPad, using apps like Snapseed, Picsart, Repix, Sizeit…
I called this one Clytemnestra’s torment and I based my inspiration loosely in the classic Greek drama,  the double edge sword used as weapon of her murder revenge, I represented with this double pointed cross. The hands or lack of them are very important for my pictures, I tried to represent here with my  hands the resignation and despair at the realization of her own acts ( The murders) still keeping a sense of pride, as she never repented of it.
Thank you again for this opportunity

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Image by @columnsovsleep_

“Hyde” was part of a series I had done awhile back called “The Grotesque”. It’s an obvious take on Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde but with my own twist of having both sides dark, just one a little less than the other. Sometimes the duality isn’t as clear as I’d like it to be. This is my expression of that.

TheOutsider

Image by Jim Perdue, @jimsiphone

Who is on the outside? Who is on the inside? Who is the real outsider?

My photo submission for the #grryo_spooky challenge is titled “The Outsider”.  This is a re-edit of a photo that I did a while back.  What appears to be a person communing with an ominous specter is really my son and daughter playing in our garage.  The bulk of the editing was done in SnapSeed. The distressing was done in ScratchCam and SnapSeed. The dodging & burning and blurring effects were done using PhotoToaster.

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Image by @maritahodges

I was out taking pictures and found this beautiful abandoned farmhouse.
I edited it entirely in Snapseed, going back and forth between tune image/details and grunge until I was happy with it.

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Image by Eitan Shavit (@strongcomet)

I was living in the Countryside at the time, and everything was so mysterious and haunting. The forest, the fields, paths, trees, all so quiet, lonely and dark during winter time.
I would travel 10 minutes from my house and be completely embraced by nature, with no one around.
I love ghosts and ghost stories, and after seeing this beautiful scenery of magical flowers, I knew something must be added to complete the mystery.
There’s one ghost figure I’ve been using a lot in my gallery. She’s a mysterious girl with long black hair. You never know if she’s looking at you with her hair all over her face, or you see her from behind, and that’s creepy 🙂
Shot taken with Hipstamatic / John S / Blackeys Supergrain. Ghost (from the strange app ‘Scary Camera’) added with Superimpose.
This photo is my most popular one on IG, and one of my personal favorites 🙂
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This shot is a composite of two photos, the droplet/web being from the fantastic @pickledgoose, the girl/sunset being mine. I edited with Mextures and VSCO.  The original intent wasn’t to make something creepy, but that’s how it turned out, so I just went with it.
The Art of Alexandre by Anna

The Art of Alexandre by Anna

The Art of Alexandre by Anna Cox image1

I came across the work of Alexandre while looking through the #wearegrryo tag on IG. I am in awe of most mobile artists and Alexandre is no exception. While in school, my art focus was on the human body and my chosen format was oils. I have a deep love and appreciation for those who can create nudes without the sexual component that our society so often adds. I think it is the painterly feel to many of Alexandre’s edits that felt like a breath of fresh air. I was immediately in love with his work and couldn’t wait to share him with you here.

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A: Alexandre AC: Anna

AC: Tell us a little bit about you and perhaps touch on your creative philosophy.

A: I’m Alexandre. I’m french and I live at Marseille. I work in a leading company’s financial department.I’ve never had skills in photography, but I’ve always been fascinated by images through photography, cinema, comics… since I was a boy. And now, I’m moreover fascinated by bodies. I like creating things, it’s almost vital for me. I did drama, short films, and I still play music. But in retrospect, I’ve realised that I manage to express myself much better through Iphoneography or Mobile Art.

I’m quite interested in new technology. I bought the Iphone 3, and liked the new design as well as the practical aspect of the (ecran tactile); then, I digged out the new apps, especially those dedicated to retouch and modification.
I’m a great fan of printed shirts (super heroes, films, etc..). I collect them. But as some got unobtainable, or no longer existed, I thought It would be a great idea to make them myself. This is how I ended up retouching photos. Now, retouching and editing is the best way to explore my deep inner feelings, using it as a therapy. Those feelings can be part of me or part of other people who bring me some kind of inspiration through relationship.

AC: What is it about the human body inspires you?

A: i don’t know exactly. I just find it so beautiful, lines and curves.

AC: Would you categorize your images as nudes or as erotic?

A: What do you think?

AC: (grins) touche’ . Being naked has multiple connotations, which ones do you think your work evokes?

A: I don’t care what feeling is evoked. We are all different and see what we want to see.

AC: Could you share your favorite image with us?

A: I’m touched by various kind of atmosphere. It’s hard to choose, but I’d select this one. It does match with what I want to give (to express pour “exprimer”) at the moment. It’s linked to the pose, the movement, a mixture of dream and reality. I tried to keep the body aspect as close as reality. I love the effects. The difficulty was to find the right balance to get the right final touch between dream and reality. And the vintage touch obtained by scratches and tonality.

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We are connected?

AC: Share with us how you get out of a creative slump.

A: Very good question! I must admit, these phases are difficult to deal with. The brain needs some rest. But I always try to get inspired by anything, at any time. When I fail, I try to change direction, exploring different things. This is how I may find some unexpected sources of inspiration. If not, I would just leave it, and come back later with a fresh view.

AC: Would you mind to share a few influences?

A: Many people do nice edits, but it tends to be the same, you will find the same kind of atmosphere. I do respect their work, though. I know I’m mostly inspired by the same subject that is the body, but I always try to treat it in a different way.

The people I’m impressed by are people who can change direction, challenge themselves, who manage to do the simplest as well as the more complex things :

– Alice LaComte (friend German Artist)

– Helmut Newton

– M83 (It’s a band)

– @alabamawonder (Marta is a Spanish friend from Instagram).

AC: Have there been any pivotal moments in your journey?

A: Oui, les rencontres.

Un jour une amie m’a dit “…les rencontres te porteront… ». Elle avait raison comme d’habitude.

Alexandre thank you so much for your time and energy for this interview! I look forward to seeing more of your work.

Me & You, 52: The Art of the Diptych

Me & You, 52: The Art of the Diptych

I discovered the account Me & You, 52 on Instagram a couple of years ago and was drawn to it for two reasons- one was the weekly themes that gave me something to think about creatively.  The other was the purposeful pairing of two pictures, created by two different photographers, into one diptych. It was a concept I hadn’t run across before.  I ended up chatting with Anika Toro, one of the co-founders about it- here is her story:

J: Tell me a bit about how the idea of Me & You, 52 was conceived?

AT: Me & You, 52 was started in 2011. Christy and I were on the Blogosphere a lot.  I had hosted a link-up on mine for mobile photography. We had both just gotten an iPhone and I think it changed the way we both looked at taking photos.  Christy contributed her shots every week to the link-up and we began a virtual friendship.  When we both started blogging less, I asked Christy if she wanted to collaborate in some fashion.  We both loved mobile imagery and so we went from there.  She had followed a side-by-side Polaroid project called the Polaroid Girls; I contributed to the defunct diptych project called The Miss Match Project – we both had a love for diptychs!  We wanted the project to span one year, 52 weeks, and to be prompted by something new each week..  So we decided that we could shoot for two rounds of the alphabet – we would follow the letters of the alphabet to guide each week’s word, each week’s inspiration.  When we got to the end of the round we realized that the creative push from the project was sometimes the driving force to keep us producing.  It challenged us to come up with ideas we wouldn’t have thought of if it weren’t for the project. So we went for another year!

images by Elke and Corinna Hofer, contributors

“H is for Horizon” by @deuxpieces

J: When did the project grow from just the two of you to include others?

AT: In early 2013 we both thought it would be even more fun to include other people’s perspectives.  More people were using their phones to create art and experiment.  It seemed like a good time to involve more people.  The more the merrier!  I have always loved collaborating and so think that I enjoy the project when it feels like more people are contributing their viewpoints.  We all see things in our own unique ways but sometimes we happen to think of the exact same thing, sometimes we imagine the lighting the same way, sometimes we happen to use the same apps, and sometimes we come up with something nobody else thought of. Then, when images are connected into a diptych, a story, they become something even more… They become half of the story -The Me to the You, the You to the Me.  For me, one of the best things about this project is the serendipity.  The connections made between our unplanned images start to get this groove where it’s not just a narrative that takes shape but our horizon lines match up, shadows blend perfectly into another’s image, the story on one side completes the end of a story we each didn’t know the ending to.  More artists means more interpretations, perspectives, inspiration, and more possibilities for impromptu story telling.

J: The serendipitous pairing is definitely one of my favorite parts of the account.  We end up seeing the visions of three artists in the end- the two created by the individuals, and the third created by you, who has paired them together. Can you pick a few of your all-time favorites and tell a little bit about them?

AT: Wow, well thanks so much.  Funny, but I feel like the diptych is second to the idea of mobile-only imagery.  I honestly haven’t really thought of it that way…until right now.  I think of the storytelling angle, yes.  But I guess I feel like I am facilitating a presentation for each image so that it can shine even brighter on its own while working in tandem to strengthen its neighbor’s image.  Even though a collaboration of sorts, I think of this project as an individual challenge; one created by the participating artists.  We each contribute our images without knowing what the other will be creating.  Even I try to stay ahead of the group so that I am not swayed to create something to match with another member’s image.  We all to come from the same place of not knowing, of using just our own experience to create from.  That way when images are put together it seems even more magical how they match up.  It’s like the personal inspiration comes first, the connections come second.   That said, I have always really loved the story telling of two images.
I do have a couple of favorites. The first pairings that come to mind are from the beginnings of the project when it was still just me and Christy.  Most of the earlier diptychs were less narrative and more graphic in nature.  For example, with “E is for Eyes”.  Our styles are quite different but seem to go together well in this duo.  We were both inspired by that week’s theme.  I feel like this diptych really showcases what we were trying to do when we started the project.

unknown

“E is for Eyes” by Anika and Christy 

With more voices come more possibilities for narratives.  I just posted a diptych with an image from Claire and an Instant Lab image from Chris.  It’s beautiful. They both were on the same page as far as the idea and even the coloring!  I was blown away when I got the second image of this pairing…it was too perfect.  This one for me, now, feels like what the project has become.

G is for Guide

“G is for Guide” by Chris and Claire

It’s nice to see how this project, this collaboration of sorts, is evolving.  I think that’s why I am drawn to a current pairing with Christy.  It’s interesting for me to look back and compare it to our earlier connections.  This was from a few weeks back and is “D is for Double”.

D is for Double

“D is for Double” by Christy and Anika 

J: Can you tell me a little more about Instant Lab and the Deuxpieces account?

AT: Gladly. During the last round {Round 5} I learned about the Impossible Project’s Instant Lab.  It was like a little fairy produced this magical camera – one that combined the spontaneity of Instant photography with a mobile device!  It seemed like the perfect thing to add to Me & You.  This all began with a love for mobile art; why not showcase it in another form?   I decided to seek out some Lab users who may like to join the project.  I tried to find artists that were passionate about instant photography, had experience using the Instant Lab, and that had a strong unique style.  {I think it may have also been an excuse for me to justify the purchase of more film.}  You know, every one of the Instant Lab shots, so far, have lined up perfectly with its partner…it’s wild!  Here is an example, “A is for Arch”. The Instant image {on the right} is by Keith.  It is partnered with Monica’s image.  To me it’s like one image is an abstract drawing of the other.  I love this one.  The addition of the Lab has been very inspiring.

A is for Arch

“A is for Arch” by Monica  and Keith

Also, new for round six is Deuxpieces.  Deuxpieces is an ongoing diptych project between Elke and Corinna.  I had known both Elke and Corinna from those way-back blogging days and have admired their photography and stories ever since.  We had discussed, a round or two back, how we might be able to work together and so for Round 6 we figured out a way.  The difference in their creations is that they make purposeful connections.  One of them will play off the other’s image and work from there.  Sometimes their diptych is connected by color or design, sometimes it’s planned conceptually, and other times one half of the diptych is half of the other’s half.  It’s a great project!  M&Y has always been about connecting the unplanned but the addition of Deuxpieces adds the intentional.  It’s interesting to compare the processes and see what two people working together come up with for the same exact inspiration that individuals create for (for example, “H is for Horizon”, shown at the top of the article).

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If you’d like to get involved, feel free to follow the Me & You, 52 account on Instagram and add to the #meandyou52 tag. You can also visit the blog site online, or if you are interested in being a part of the future of the project, you can contact Anika at anikatoro@gmail.com.

Second Week of October

Second Week of October

Kisatchie

Second Week of October by Joel Aversing

The crisp air, falling leaves, bonfires and football games, a few things that come to mind when you think of early October, but that’s not why the second week of October is my favorite time of year. It’s hunting season, but more importantly it’s a time when all the men in the family get together and forget to act like gentlemen and go camping. Manners go out the window, as we drink beer and whisky around the poker table and curse at the refs when they make a bad call against LSU.

Now I only go hunting once a year, so I can’t tell you I go for the sport, or just to shoot off some rifles and shotguns, that’s a small part of it. Yes all this is primitive and it feels good, but to me what’s more primitive is the gathering of a family or “tribe”. Enjoying each other’s company while I cook breakfast on a makeshift stove while having a MORNING beer, and listening to my brother in-law telling me “you’re burning the bacon, that shit is burnt”, these are good times.

Makin Bacon

There was a time when my son would come out camping and all he wanted to do was see what he could burn in the campfire. He was such a good fire poker. Now he’s toting an old crack barrel shotgun that’s actually four times older than he is and the pellet gun now gets left in the closet.

The young nephews have grown, have beards, and kids of their own. Pop still says “meet back at 9:30 unless you’re having fun, I got nowhere to be”, and the men secretly still try to out-cook one another. My son still likes to tag along with his Grandpa but is willing to explore the Kisatchie wilderness on his own.

Campfire

If I’ve learned anything in the last fifteen years hunting with the family it’s that change is constant but a family’s bond is forever, and to bring plenty of toilet paper because you will be sh*tting in the woods.

Paladin

The Uncensored Stripper

The Uncensored Stripper

The Uncensored Stripper by Rebecca Cornwell

I first came across @TheUncensoredStripper in my @SundayBluesEdit tag.  This Sunday community has been my Instagram home for almost 3 years.  I’ve met incredible people, heard amazing stories and viewed tens of thousands of breathtaking and sometimes gut-wrenching photos. I’d started to feel, in the glut of images I see everyday, that there wasn’t going to be anything new, and maybe there isn’t, but every once in a while something knocks you off your feet and out of your comfort zone. @TheUncensoredStripper snagged me with her moody, beautiful, insightful, surprising, sometimes seedy and always eye-opening images. Not long after studying her photos, like any artist might- we’re always interested in “how it’s done”, I started to read.

With each consecutive image and its accompanying text, she drew me closer. Like with any great writing, I couldn’t stop reading. She pulled me along with every image, giving me the honest, brutal, heartbreaking and sometimes hilarious details of her life. I don’t think of myself as prudish or even very shockable. I didn’t know if my fascination with @TheUncensoredStripper had to do with an element of voyeurism into a world I really knew nothing about, or if it was sensational or even taboo at times. After continuing to read and study her images, I decided @TheUncensoredStripper is just a brilliant storyteller. Pair that with her compelling photography and she’s given you something you wont be able to tear yourself away from. She will have you returning to her blog and her profile over and over to find out what happens next.

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TUCS: I was born in San Francisco and raised in a loosely based hippie commune by vegetarian drug dealers. Yearning to live my life on my own terms, I moved out when I was sixteen and worked as many as three jobs at a time to make ends meet. I started stripping two years before I earned my BA in Social Science and have been a stripper and prostitute for over twenty years. The sex industry is demanding, both mentally and physically, as strippers are often treated like living blow-up-dolls while simultaneously acting as therapists. Strip clubs are a circus, brothel and wellness center wrapped into one. The sub-culture requires thick skin and an open mind in order to succeed, as well as avoid going insane. My longevity in the field is a reflection of my chameleon-like nature and my innate skill in the art of giving (and faking) affection.

In conjunction, thanks to my in part to my unconventional upbringing, my tolerance for dysfunction is set impossibly high, rendering me well equipped for the industry. I have lived my life as an open book, having the opportunity to dispel a few myths and misconceptions along the way. My memoir, Anything but a Wasted Life, aims to capture and reveal my unorthodox life. I have always loved photography, and about a year before I started writing Anything But a Wasted Life, I took pictures of one of my co-workers for her modeling portfolio with my point and shoot digital camera. I loved it, and she said that I had talent and a good eye. I continued to shoot. One of the perks of being a stripper is that I am surrounded by gorgeous, uninhibited women who want/need sexy pictures of themselves. I had my first solo art show in 2007. I started shooting with self-manipulated medium format film camera’s later that year. I am self-taught in both arenas.

I have journalled in a stream of consciousness style off and on my whole life. When I shared bits and pieces of my life with people (I have always lived my life as an open book), a common reaction was: you should write a book. I had never considered myself a writer, nor was I trained in the field, so I would laugh and write it off as something people like to say. But I kept it in the back of my mind as a possibility for later. Then, in the mid 2000’s business at the club took a dive, and I had long pockets of down time. I brought a composition pad one evening, and it poured out of me. I was hooked. My manager wasn’t quite as thrilled, but he loves me so he let it slide. The entire memoir was written first-hand and then later put into the computer. It was written mostly at the club as well as in local watering holes around Los Angeles. I knew that if I ever did write a memoir, it wasn’t going to be in the traditional autobiographical style; I was born on this date and raised here. I am not famous in any capacity, so who cares about me? It’s how I see life and human behavior that I think people relate to and are entertained by. It also happens that I have crammed a lot of off-the-wall shit into my forty-four years, and people are curious about the sex industry.

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I believe that watching women dance nude on stage for over twenty years has given me a unique perspective of the female form, as well as close proximity to harnessing sensuality in a visual format. And of course, the use of angles and light. I wrote Anything But a Wasted Life as a candid, unapologetic, 115,000-word memoir. I have experienced the pitfalls of being naked in front of strangers and the absurdities that arise when you fake intimacy for a living. As the title suggests, it is also about rarely said “no” to life I recount falling in love with a girl in high school, patrolling at night with a couple of cops while high on acid, living in a luxurious, converted missile silo from the Cold War. It’s always my intention to show the reader the secret world of stripping and prostitution through an often drunk, occasionally sarcastic, and frequently funny magnifying glass. Until recently, I had kept my writing and my photography separate.

Last year I had the idea to open an Instagram account to post excerpts from my memoir. I matched these excerpts with images from my past, then started posting some of my fine art photography photos. Currently, I am putting together my third solo art show where images will be keenly interlinked with my memoir. Unlike my previous art shows, this one will be keenly interlinked to my memoir. Anything But a Wasted Life is a tell-all about myself, no one else. All of the names of people famous or otherwise, referenced in the memoir, have been changed.

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These images: The three black and whites are self-portraits. It’s damned near impossible to shoot myself with my medium format plastic cameras, so these were done with my 5D, and then a mix of filter fun via various apps. I like cutting women’s heads off in my photography, this is the same with myself. The shot with the records was taken about a month ago with my point and shoot 35mm. One of my images I sell the most is of a woman’s legs, retro lamp, record player and vinyl records that I took in 2010. I put this shoot together so I could add to that genre to sell. I took the Holga shot of the Capital Records building back in 2008 when I was still living in Hollywood. That building has been captured in so many ways, I was wondering if I could get it from my own perspective with my manipulated camera.

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The last image is actually the girl I had my very first photo shoot with (this was taken a couple years later). She freaked out when she saw my Instagram account and asked me to take down some of her pictures. She did not want to be associated with stripping in any way (no one knows she used to dance). I removed a couple shots where you could semi see her face, but I have signed model releases, and no one will ever know who she is, so I kept this one up, which I love so much.

 

Excerpt from Anything but a Wasted Life:

It’s your typical night in the dressing room. Girls drinking, girls talking shit, one girl inserting a tampon. Another is on her cell phone. Two are speaking too loudly, and four are heavily spraying themselves with sickeningly sweet body spray. And me, leaning over the counter applying my ho-bag makeup. Two plastic bottles sit next to my Mac brushes, one with vitaminwater, the other, apple vodka in a vitaminwater bottle. I swig one, then the other. Total shit. I hate vodka, but it leaves my breath smelling less like a barroom floor. And it’s cheap.    I apply shiny powder to my cheeks and over the thin lines around my eyes, to mask my experience. I’m a forty-three-year-old stripper. I’ve been dancing since college, more than twenty years ago. One of my roommates worked at The Lusty Lady in San Francisco, a female-owned and operated peep show, and another acquaintance of mine worked at Mitchell Brothers O’Farrell Theatre, the city’s premier strip club. Having witnessed their lifestyle of glam and financial freedom, I decided to give stripping a go. I was tired of being broke, working three jobs and having very little energy or time for homework. I was pre-law. My goal was to re-design the prison system. Suffice to say, law school never happened. Within a year, I was making more money than judges in San Francisco, my hometown. The prisoners would have to wait. I’d never had that much money before. I was raised by a single parent and have been on my own since I was sixteen. Most girls (myself included) start dancing with the intention of doing it less than two years (in the beginning I thought I would dance through law school and then quit). Nearly all stay two to seven years. Only a few of us stay this long.    Stripping was incredible when I started. It was special and still somewhat underground, a unique adventure for the wealthy. Times have changed. I make an eighth of what I used to, and there’s practically a strip club on every corner.    I suppose I’m a bit spoiled. Wake up when I want, work when I want, get paid in cash. It’s not a bad life. And I’m good at what I do. Sometimes I think it’s a curse to be skilled at making men feel good. Funny thing is, most of them want to make me feel good. That’s the secret.