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Conferences > Northern California > General > Topic #43925
Reading Topic #43925

spysea spysea rating
Charter Member
402 posts, 2 feedbacks, 3 points
07-May-10, 02:11 PM (PST)
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"Anyone going?"
 
CAPE TOWN, South Africa -- The taxi drivers hustling around the bars on Long Street in Cape Town say they are ready for all the soccer fans that will flood the city in June for the World Cup. So are hotels, restaurants, breweries and, inevitably, prostitutes.

Arguably, the soccer World Cup is to the sex industry what the holiday season is to candy shops, a temporary surge of excited people feeling collectively festive, willing to pay for a bit of extra indulgence.

South Africa's Drug Central Authority estimates 40,000 sex workers will trickle in for the event from as far as Russia, the Congo and Nigeria to cater to the wide taste spectrum of some 400,000, mostly male, visitors and their apres-soccer needs.

Henry Africa, 49, drives a taxi in Cape Town and, aside from the usual airport pickups and winery tours, he also operates the "Bright Red Tour," which he expects to be a hit among soccer fans. For the equivalent of 500 dollars, he'll shuttle customers from strip bar to strip bar all night and even bring them over to a safe-sex practicing prostitute, a relevant selling point in a country where one in five adults are estimated to be HIV positive.

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tangoman tangoman rating
Member since 19-Jan-05
3778 posts, 38 feedbacks, 75 points
07-May-10, 06:15 PM (PST)
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1. "RE: Henry Africa"
In response to message #0
 
   July 2008, Norman Hobday alias Henry Africa, who put liquor and ferns under one roof in San Francisco to revolutionize the saloon business, is selling his Van Ness bar. He is retiring from the San Francisco scene with $2 million and the feeling that he can take it easy for the rest of his life. When Africa's staked its claim to the corner of Polk and Broadway - before moving to Van Ness and Vallejo - it began a new era in American drinking etiquette. "I took the opium-den atmosphere out of the saloons," he said, by bringing in "antique lamps and Grandma's living-room furniture. It was like writing a best-seller."


He ends up driving a cab in South Africa? Whould've guessed

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