• This topic is empty.
Viewing 15 posts - 46 through 60 (of 11,205 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #86477 Reply
    RI
    Guest

    Wow, stunning site. Thnx …
    link

    #86577 Reply
    GJ
    Guest

    I like this site – its so usefull and helpfull.

    link

    #86617 Reply
    TL
    Guest

    Thanks for the purpose of delivering these
    sort of well put together posting.

    link

    #86641 Reply
    ZO
    Guest

    Sustain the helpful work and delivering in the crowd!

    link

    #86765 Reply
    DI
    Guest

    Keep up the awesome job !! Lovin’ it!
    link

    #86776 Reply
    JE
    Guest

    Much thanks! It is definitely an good internet site.

    link

    #86923 Reply
    YG
    Guest

    Wow, stunning portal. Thnx …
    link

    #87516 Reply
    VX
    Guest

    You’ve gotten the best online websites.
    link

    #87555 Reply
    MS
    Guest

    buy viagra online

    #88934 Reply
    JH
    Guest

    A Sydney-based sex worker shared his verdict on the TV series , saying
    that the Stan hit is ‘very accurate’.

    Samuel Hunter is often put up in five star hotels
    by his wealthy clients, just like the character Julian Kaye, played by
    Jon Berenthal, is in the raunchy thriller. 

    The male escort, who is in his early forties, was even taken on 10-day trip to Phuket recently
    to accompany a woman on an exotic getaway.

    Sydney-based sex worker Sam Hunter (pictured) shared his verdict on the TV series American Gigolo, saying that the
    Stan hit is ‘very accurate’ 

    Jon Berenthal (pictured) plays male escort Julian Kaye in the hit Stan series

    He also spends many of his days drinking cocktails with his well-paying clients.

    Speaking exclusively to Daily Mail Australia, Sam said his lifestyle is ‘exactly as you’d expect it to be,
    and exactly the opposite’.

    The escort, who only has female clients, has been a full-time sex worker for two years.

    RELATED ARTICLES

    Previous

    1

    Next

    Richard Gere turns 73! Pretty Woman star cuts a youthful and…

    Jon Bernthal shows off sculpted shirtless bod as he plays…

    He’s chest great! Soaking up the sun on a luxury yacht,…

    Jon Bernthal turns up the charm as a male escort
    dogged by…

    Share this article

    Share

    55 shares

    While admitting that he’s held hundreds of different jobs, including working for a sex shop and
    writing blogs for a brothel, his interest in gigolo work peaked when he started working for a
    charity called Touching Base, which put disabled
    people in touch with sex workers.

    While he’s never seen the 1980 film American Gigolo, Samuel
    notes the Richard Gere classic is ‘on his to-watch list’.

    The escort, who only has female clients, has been a full time sex worker for two years

    The remake seems to be a sequel of sorts to the original movie, which
    starred a young Richard Gere as an escort called Julian Kaye who was framed for murdering a woman.

    In the new show, the dashing Julian – now played by Jon, 45 – emerges from jail after being
    exonerated for the killing and goes right back
    to work.

    ‘It’s interesting that Richard Gere broke out in American Gigolo and then went on to play the other side in Pretty Woman,’ Samuel adds.

    Then and now: The show (right) seems a sequel of sorts to the original
    movie, which starred a young Richard Gere (left) as an escort called
    Julian Kaye framed for murdering a woman

    While in the film and TV adaptations, the gigolos deal with some
    unsavoury clients,  Sam has found that women seeking his services have never caused him
    trouble.

    ‘They usually get in touch from my website, and they’ll read every part of my website,’ he explained. 

    ‘I can check their socials and their WhatsApp easily to make sure
    they are who they say they are,’ he added.

    Sam also revealed that due to being a male sex worker, his lifestyle is ‘very
    different’ to the women in his industry.  

    About a quarter of Samuel’s clients are married, and it’s these
    ones that tend to book him for two hours – at a rate of
    $600

    ‘The biggest difference is women can see multiple clients a day,
    but I limit it to just one.

    ‘But women tend to get booked for shorter amounts of time,
    whereas most of my bookings are for a few hours or overnight.’

    hbl.gcc.edu)

    #89450 Reply
    ZP
    Guest

    The Number 1 Site for ROMA Slot. Promotions, Formula’s and Tips on how
    to play better. Sign up now!
    เกมสล็อต roma

    #92421 Reply
    JO
    Guest

    Sudanese journalists celebrate the election of Abdelmoneim Abu Idris
    as the head of the country’s first independent press syndicate in 33 years

    For the first time in more than three decades, Sudanese journalists have formed an independent
    union to shore up hard-won press freedoms that have been imperilled since
    last year’s military coup.

    The journalists’ syndicate held elections on Saturday,
    the first since ousted president Omar al-Bashir dissolved independent unions after rising to power in 1989.

    “It’s a big step towards building the civilian democratic state that Sudanese people aspire to,” said Mohamed Abdelaziz,
    a member of the newly formed union.

    Saturday’s ballot named as head of the syndicate Abdelmoneim Abu Idris Ali, a correspondent for
    Agence France-Presse in Khartoum.

    Reporters Without Borders, which ranked Sudan 151 out
    of 180 countries in its 2022 World Press Freedom Index, welcomed
    the “positive step”.

    Pro-democracy groups in Sudan have also hailed the move.

    “Press freedom was muzzled under Bashir,” said Hend Helmy, an assistant professor at the University of Khartoum’s media department.

    “It will be a big challenge for the new syndicate as there is an entire generation of journalists who were brought up during this period.”

    Faisal Salih, chairman of the Elections Committee, announced the results of the syndicate’s election, their first after
    a decades-long ban on independent unions

    Press freedom was severely curtailed under Bashir, who was ousted in April 2019 on the
    back of mass protests.

    Under his three-decade rule, authorities regularly targeted journalists and confiscated
    entire print-runs of newspapers for publishing articles deemed critical of Bashir’s policies.

    His 2019 fall ushered in new press freedoms that saw television stations in the country
    cover mass protests calling for civilian rule.

    Media outlets ran articles with the protest slogans of “Freedom, Peace and Justice”.

    – ‘Persecution of journalists’ –

    A fragile transition was agreed in August 2019, heralding a
    break from decades of media censorship, repression and abuses under Bashir.

    Under the transition, attacks targeting journalists largely diminished.

    Critics appeared on television and ran op-eds lambasting the government’s performance.

    “The persecution of journalists and media outlets critical of Sudan’s former regime officially ended with the installation of a civilian-led government,” Reporters Without Borders (RSF) said in a 2020 report.

    Press freedoms were severely curtailed under Bashir, who was ousted in April 2019 on the back of mass protests

    But Sudan’s transition was upended in an October military coup led by army chief
    Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, sparking near-weekly mass protests calling for
    civilian rule and a violent crackdown that has killed at least 116 people to date.

    Dozens of journalists have been arrested or targeted since
    the coup, amid fears that the hard-won freedoms following
    Bashir’s ouster would be rolled back.

    In the immediate aftermath of the coup, authorities suspended radio
    stations and disrupted internet services nationwide.

    According to Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor, a Geneva-based non-governmental organistion,
    Sudanese authorities carried out 55 attacks
    against journalists and media outlets between October 2021 and March 2022.

    “These attacks included arbitrary detention, harassment, the storming and closing of media offices, and physical and psychological assaults,” it said in a statement.

    In a December report submitted to the Security Council, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres urged Sudanese authorities to “respect freedom of speech and of the press”.

    The newly formed syndicate has also been targeted.

    A journalists’ union established under Bashir’s rule slammed
    the newly formed syndicate as “illegal” and “politicised”.

    Abdelaziz says the elected syndicate was formed under international
    regulations that were ratified by Sudan in March 2021, during the
    transition.

    “The attacks are expected from groups that had interests under decades of the former regime,” said Abdelaziz.

    “They feel very threatened by the new formation.

    “But this syndicate will continue to represent journalists and
    their aspirations.”

    Helmy agreed. “The union was founded on democracy,” she said. “This will not be taken away from the people.”

    Escort Lokoja Nigeria

    #92663 Reply
    XO
    Guest

    At least 125 people died at a football stadium
    in Indonesia when fans invaded the pitch and police responded with tear gas

    Indonesian police came under mounting criticism Sunday
    after 125 people died in a stampede at a football stadium where officers fired teargas on angry fans invading the
    pitch.

    The tragedy on Saturday night in the city of Malang, which also left 323
    injured according to police, was one of the world’s deadliest sporting stadium
    disasters.

    Arema FC supporters at the Kanjuruhan stadium stormed the pitch after their team lost 3-2 to the visiting team and bitter rivals, Persebaya Surabaya.

    Police, who described the unrest as riots, said they tried to
    force fans to return to the stands and fired tear gas after two officers were killed.

    Many of the victims were trampled or choked to death, according to police.

    Arema football coach Javier Roca on Sunday said that
    fans had even “died in the arms of players,” after some of the team stayed on the pitch
    when the game ended.

    People were crushed and suffocated when they ran to one exit, according
    to police

    “Returning from the press conference, I saw the tragedy,” he said, adding that “The boys passed by with victims in their arms.”

    “I think the police overstepped their mark, even though I wasn’t out there and didn’t experience the outcome,”
    the Chilean coach told Spanish broadcaster Cadena
    Ser.

    Survivors described panicking spectators in a packed crowd as tear gas rained down on them.

    “Officers fired tear gas, and automatically people were rushing to come out, pushing each other and it caused many victims,” 43-year-old spectator Doni,
    who declined to give his last name, told AFP.

    “Nothing was happening, there was no riot. I don’t know what the issue was, they suddenly fired tear gas. That’s what shocked me. Didn’t they think about kids, women?”

    People carried injured spectators through the chaos and survivors
    lugged lifeless bodies out of the stadium.

    “It was so terrifying, so shocking,” 22-year-old
    survivor Sam Gilang, who lost three friends in the crush, told AFP.

    A boy (C) is carried as members of the Indonesian army secure the
    pitch after the match.

    More than 300 people were injured

    “People were pushing each other and… many were trampled on their way to the exit gate. My eyes were burning because of the tear gas. I fortunately managed to climb up the fence and survived,” he said.

    At least 125 people died, East Java deputy governor Emil Dardak told broadcaster Metro TV on Sunday evening, significantly lowering officials’
    earlier death toll of 174 because of double counting.

    “Some names were recorded twice because they had been referred to another hospital and were written down again,” he said,
    citing data collected by local police from 10 hospitals.

    President Joko Widodo ordered an investigation into the tragedy, a safety review into all
    football matches and directed the country’s football association to suspend all matches until “security improvements” were completed.

    A hospital director told local TV that one of the victims was five years old.

    Indonesia: fatal stadium stampede

    Video footage circulating on social media showed people shouting obscenities at police, who were holding riot shields and wielding batons.

    Images taken from inside the stadium during the stampede
    additionally showed police firing huge amounts of tear gas and people clambering over fences.

    Amnesty International called for an investigation into why
    tear gas was deployed in a confined space, saying it should only be
    used “when other methods have failed”.

    – Enduring violence –

    Torched vehicles, including a police truck, littered the streets outside the stadium
    on Sunday morning.

    The stadium holds 42,000 people and authorities said it was a sell-out.

    Police said 3,000 people stormed the pitch.

    Fan violence is an enduring problem in Indonesia, where
    deep rivalries have previously turned into deadly confrontations.

    Arema FC and Persebaya Surabaya are longtime rivals.

    Persebaya Surabaya fans were not allowed to buy tickets for the
    game due to fears of violence.

    However Indonesia’s coordinating minister for political, legal and security
    affairs, Mahfud MD, said organisers ignored a recommendation to print fewer tickets
    and hold the match in the afternoon instead of the evening.

    Relatives of victims wait outside a hospital in Malang, East Java

    On Sunday, Arema fans threw flower petals at the club’s lion mascot
    monument outside the stadium in tribute to the victims.

    And in Jakarta as many as 300 football fans gathered for a candlelit vigil outside the Gelora Bung Karno stadium.

    – Football world mourns –

    The football world mourned the disaster with Gianni Infantino, president of world football governing body FIFA,
    calling the stampede “a tragedy beyond comprehension”.

    Manchester United and Barcelona posted tributes online while
    Spanish football clubs were to observe a minute’s silence.

    The Asian Football Confederation, as well
    as the German football association and Italy’s Serie A, all expressed their regret.

    The Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI) was in touch with FIFA about the stampede
    and hoped to avoid sanctions, PSSI secretary general Yunus Yussi told
    a press conference.

    FIFA’s safety guidelines prohibit the carrying of crowd control gas by police or stewards at pitchside.

    Other stadium disasters include a 1989 crush at Britain’s Hillsborough Stadium, which led to the deaths of 97 Liverpool fans, and the 2012 Port Said stadium tragedy in Egypt where 74 people
    died in clashes.

    In 1964, 320 people were killed and more than 1,000 injured during a stampede at a Peru-Argentina Olympic qualifier at Lima’s National Stadium.

    Boussé Burkina Faso (ezp-prod1.hul.harvard.edu)

    #93634 Reply
    LJ
    Guest

    Molly jane cumshot compilation. Cute japanese model on pantyhose fhotoshoot fashion vibe.
    Ella hughes bounces on a huge dick.
    https://monstervid.xyz/video/127971/emily-pink-stacy-bloom/ Esperanza gomez dance and blowjob.
    Shawna lenee vs mandingo interracial porn.
    Penthousegold kira noir. Elsa jean ana foxxx and anne amari
    lesbian.
    College teens emma hix sofi ryan study lesbian scissoring.
    Penny pax adriana chechik. Blonde in pantyhose is caressed by her boyfriend.

    #93742 Reply
    SV
    Guest

    Keep up the spectacular work !! Lovin’ it!
    https://www.kronikatygodnia.pl

Viewing 15 posts - 46 through 60 (of 11,205 total)
Reply To: Reply #570033 in 그렇군요.
Your information: