I want to first say that I heard the stories from numerous people. The stories of how clients booking a provider in Las Vegas can go from bad to worse in an instant, but when it very much happens to someone you know, it hits a little different. What’s crazy enough, the friend this happened to brushed it off, as he visits Las Vegas frequently, and he explained to me how regularly this happens there.
It’s not a story we haven’t heard before. Providers using the internet to fool or deceive clients into booking them. I don’t know if you can call it a scam, but some people would for sure. Again, this is so normalized in Las Vegas I think calling it a scam wouldn’t be the correct word.
The story is simple. My friend arrives in Las Vegas with the intention of booking someone when he gets there. Now, you can call him a professional client, as booking any provider isn’t new to him. This man has providers texting him and FaceTiming to meet, so booking a provider directly off of TrystLink is something he could do in his sleep. He books this provider—a very beautiful woman that none of us would think for a second would do anything shady—but appearances are deceiving. The exact provider arrives at his room and makes herself comfortable. After a little time, she explains the rate he was paying to see her was just that—to see her. To do anything more, he was going to have to pay more on top of that.
I would have been left speechless here myself. If something like this were to happen to me, I would probably just bite the bullet and continue the booking, but probably wouldn’t have been able to fully enjoy myself. This is just me.
Anyway, this man just got off a plane and was tired. Plus, he knows how normal this is in Las Vegas, so it wasn’t a giant surprise. The booking continued and he gave the provider the rest of the rate. Sadly for him, the provider wasn’t great to be with. There were a number of problems when with her I can’t say, as I was trusted with the information, but she was bad. Like, her original walk-through-the-door rate was even too much—which is really saying something.
The entire time we were speaking, I was amazed that my friend didn’t care so much about the extra fee than his shitty time with the provider. It really is so normal that providers charge clients extra as soon as they get through the door threshold. I want to say I get it, as charging someone to walk through a door isn’t something I believe you can get arrested for. This might just be providers taking extra precaution when booking with clients with LE out there. I can’t fault them for that if that is the case. It just makes things that much more difficult for actual clients looking to book.
From the second providers walk through that door, anything can happen. Literally anything can happen. You’re two people—maybe more—in a room together, anything can be going on. But look at it more financially—the provider can tell you any number and that’s what it is. You can ask her to leave, but she already has that fee for walking through the door. At this point, she loses out on more money, but you also lose out on paying that initial fee. There really is no upside to this nickel-and-dime shit that Las Vegas is becoming known for.
Whether you see this as a scam or not is really depending on how you look at it. For something to be this normal I don't know if you can say it's a scam. If anything it can be looked at as being cautious when in Sin City.
It’s not a story we haven’t heard before. Providers using the internet to fool or deceive clients into booking them. I don’t know if you can call it a scam, but some people would for sure. Again, this is so normalized in Las Vegas I think calling it a scam wouldn’t be the correct word.
The story is simple. My friend arrives in Las Vegas with the intention of booking someone when he gets there. Now, you can call him a professional client, as booking any provider isn’t new to him. This man has providers texting him and FaceTiming to meet, so booking a provider directly off of TrystLink is something he could do in his sleep. He books this provider—a very beautiful woman that none of us would think for a second would do anything shady—but appearances are deceiving. The exact provider arrives at his room and makes herself comfortable. After a little time, she explains the rate he was paying to see her was just that—to see her. To do anything more, he was going to have to pay more on top of that.I would have been left speechless here myself. If something like this were to happen to me, I would probably just bite the bullet and continue the booking, but probably wouldn’t have been able to fully enjoy myself. This is just me.
Anyway, this man just got off a plane and was tired. Plus, he knows how normal this is in Las Vegas, so it wasn’t a giant surprise. The booking continued and he gave the provider the rest of the rate. Sadly for him, the provider wasn’t great to be with. There were a number of problems when with her I can’t say, as I was trusted with the information, but she was bad. Like, her original walk-through-the-door rate was even too much—which is really saying something.
The entire time we were speaking, I was amazed that my friend didn’t care so much about the extra fee than his shitty time with the provider. It really is so normal that providers charge clients extra as soon as they get through the door threshold. I want to say I get it, as charging someone to walk through a door isn’t something I believe you can get arrested for. This might just be providers taking extra precaution when booking with clients with LE out there. I can’t fault them for that if that is the case. It just makes things that much more difficult for actual clients looking to book.
From the second providers walk through that door, anything can happen. Literally anything can happen. You’re two people—maybe more—in a room together, anything can be going on. But look at it more financially—the provider can tell you any number and that’s what it is. You can ask her to leave, but she already has that fee for walking through the door. At this point, she loses out on more money, but you also lose out on paying that initial fee. There really is no upside to this nickel-and-dime shit that Las Vegas is becoming known for.
Whether you see this as a scam or not is really depending on how you look at it. For something to be this normal I don't know if you can say it's a scam. If anything it can be looked at as being cautious when in Sin City.
