San Jose Adult Entertainment: San Leandro’s anti-crime plan’s impact recognized

and gang fights. She helped the owner of the complex implement the program and got the property cleaned up and its troublemakers evicted, which resulted in a drop in criminal activity there.
The first phase of the program consists of a course for apartment employees in which Kovach and volunteer attorney Jane Creason present information on crime prevention.
The second phase includes an inspection of the property, and provides suggestions, such as better lighting and the removal of graffiti, broken-down cars or abandoned mattresses.
In the third phase, Kovach and Creason conduct a “safety social,” at which general crime prevention principles are discussed with tenants. Residents are asked to sign a lease addendum acknowledging that they can be evicted if they or their guests become involved in illegal activity, such as drug dealing, violence, prostitution or gang-related acts.

See the full article from “San Mateo County Times”

San Jose Strip Clubs: Project Runway podcast ep.4: Will whore-it up for Campbell’s Soup?

Luckily, this challenge was just heart-wrenching enough to get in three cries within the first eight minutes, which might be a record, I am not sure because I am not a total Runway scholar…yet. Anywho, the workroom was mostly filled with bitchy designers whining about how the models were, ya know, normal sized and not suffering from anorexia* and stuff. It’s as if they have NEVER seen a woman above a size two. Geez!! We also got our first big-time healthy dose of shite-talking from the confessionals as Emilio ripped apart, like everyone and also gave us the quote of the week in reference to Mila’s dress: “cheap flag at the Thanksgiving day parade.” Amen, Emilio, you tell it like it is aaaaaand I like it. Sidenote: Does anyone miss Ping? Cuz I don’t.
After the jump, check out the winner, who got auf’ed, the cry count and the podcast where we chat about soup, chin piercings, designing for strippers and more.

See the full article from “Creative Loafing Tampa (blog)”

San Jose Escorts: Many support unrestricted pot dispensaries

About 50 percent of those who took the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Pulse survey between Jan. 26 and Feb. 2 backed that position, while 23 percent said they should all be shut down. Nineteen percent said they should only be allowed at a few locations.
California in 1996 became the first state to legalize medical marijuana use, but it is illegal under federal law. Despite that, the U.S. attorney general last year said that federal agents wouldn’t pursue those following the state’s pot laws.
Reader Don Laskin said, “Drugs, gambling and prostitution should all be legal. Their being illegal costs billions that could be put to better use fighting real crime (murder, robbery, etc.) and is the height of hypocrisy (enough money in the bank and a person can do all those things without fear).”

See the full article from “San Jose Business Journal”

San Jose Strip Clubs: "iPad"? Really, Steve? Here We Go Again

Suggestion #2: iDrone. Everyone’s got an iPod, right? And real diehards have an iPhone. And in addition to that, maybe some have a MacBook or a MacBook Pro. Hell, the homiest of the Mac homies probably has an old iBook or PowerBook collecting dust in a cabinet somewhere. These are the ones that live and die by the Gospel of Jobs. This is your target. They don’t technically need this newfangled piece of glass. Between their stripper gigs and selling counterfeit pharmaceuticals on the street to kindergarteners, they don’t even have any extra cash anywhere. At all. And yet, it’s so sexy. It makes their loins quiver. Steve, they probably excused themselves from their computers during your keynote to clean themselves up! What are they going to do with it? Hell if they know! What would Steve Jobs do? He’d buy it, that’s what. So will they.

See the full article from “Houston Press (blog)”

San Jose Strip Clubs: Charlie’s isn’t my kind of place

A short time later, I was talking to one of my sister’s friend as the DJ played a song that the waitresses were required to dance on the table near the center of the bar with a stripper’s pole in the middle of it. One of the two of us, don’t remember which one it was, said we wanted to tip the dancers. The other one of us said we had been wondering the same thing and quickly agreed it was something we should do.

As I continued to wait for my ride home, I met a girl outside the bar who had gotten in trouble earlier in the night for attempting to dance on the table. Her reasoning for dancing was, “Stripper pole equals dancing” and wondered why a bar would have a stripper pole if they didn’t want girls dancing on it.

See the full article from “Mountain Home News (blog)”

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