Agency New York Escorts

Find beautiful and experienced New York Agency escorts. These gorgeous available escorts in United States are waiting your call. Don't waste your time, book your adult entertainment now and enjoy yourself.

Park Lane Escorts

Agencies In New York

New York Area Description

Escorts in New York, United States - Select An Escort

On Select An Escort, we list hundreds of experienced New York escorts of all types, sizes, ethnicities, sexualities, services and personalities. It can be a minefield looking for the partner to suit you. We aim to make it easy for you to select a compatible companion. Using the menu immediately above the first New York lady listed, you can refine your search. You can select the employment status of the courtesan. Is she self-employed, or is she represented by a third party, an agency? You may want to change the search area or look for a specific type of call girls. You could be looking by age, colour, height or one of many other physical attributes of the ladies on display. You can search for busty escorts, or you can look for a service which might be provided.

Once you have narrowed down the search of likely New York escorts, you can now begin to look at their individual escort profiles. Each profile will contain the New York models description, rates, services and contact details. From the profiles, you can swipe through your shortlist of companions looking for the one you would want to spend time and money with.

The types of New York escorts to search for

New York BBW - These are the larger woman, generally with a dress size of 16 and larger

New York Mature - An older escort. Mature means different ages to different clients. I presume the older the client is, the older the lady is to be mature.

New York Ebony - A black lady.

New York Models - A model refers to a girl who has a model figure, complexion and hair. She will be slim tall and beautiful. She will generally command a high fee.

New York Teen - A younger escort who is 18 to 21 years old

New York Service Providers in the news

AOC talks sex work decriminalization and Queens DA race at Elmhurst market - July 30th 2019

“I think it’s something that I think should happen, but we have to be very careful about it,” she said about decriminalizing sex work. “So I think that it actually is a conversation that we need to have.”

In Queens D.A. Race, Criminal Justice Reform Is The Real Winner - July 30th 2019

Tiffany Cabán narrowly missed being elected to Melinda Katz. Tiffany has not given up the fight and is in court trying to restore 100 ballots which inappropriately discarded. This would overturn Melinda's  60 vote lead. Tiffany was seeking to decriminalise sexual service providers. Although she failed to be elected, it seems Melinda will take on some of Tiffany's campaign points, though stopping at complete decriminalisation of sex work.

June 28th A progressive push to turn teen girls into… hookers

Now that decriminalising sex work has been proposed for Queens, all the antis are coming out in their droves with scare stories stating that sex work is being promoted by those who are looking to support human rights. Decriminalisation empowers sex workers to work safely. Where sex work is decriminalised, health issues dramatically improve.

Read this sorry opinion piece from Andrea Peyser of the New York Post

June 27th We're About to See What Happens When Prosecutors Don't Target New York Service Providers

Cabán has said that a memo instructing district attorneys not to prosecute sex workers or their customers will come from her desk on “day one.” Decrim NY plans to continue developing policy with Cabán, and has discussed ways that local groups can help field reports about harassment, assault, and exploitation from sex workers—people who have historically been hesitant to come forward for fear of prosecution. “Right now people don’t report things to the police because when they do they get arrested, or police laugh at them or misgender them,” Luo said.

Read more about decriminalising sex work in New York in Vice

June 14th Sex Work Could Soon Be Allowed In A Huge Part Of New York City

The buying and selling of sexual services could soon be allowed in New York City. A candidate for district attorney in New York City, a favourite of progressives after getting AOC's endorsement, plans to make Queens the first city area in the country to allow sex work. Tiffany Caban standing as a Democrat hopes to put her plane in place and decriminalise sex work. American Escorts, indeed escorts over the whole planet have been struggling to make sex work decriminalised. This would mark one of the biggest victories in the movement for a safer life. Sex trafficking, sexual coercion, and sexual assault would still be prosecuted, Cabán said, adding, “but we are not there to police bodies and take away folks’ autonomy.”

Read more in Buzz Feed News

March 12th 2019 Sex workers storm New York protest against decriminalisation of prostitution

Two sex workers stormed a demonstration by women opposed to a bill that would decriminalise sex work in New York. The bill is scheduled to be introduced in the New York Senate this session and would remove all criminal penalties for the consensual sale of sex between adults. The demo was disrupted by two escorts who carried placards saying Listen to Sex Workers and Consensual sex workers against trafficking.

Read more at the independent

February 26th 2019 New Yorkers push to decriminalize Sex Work

Rejecting longstanding criminal justice frameworks, which insist that sex workers are always both criminal and victim, full decriminalization would recognize that sex work is work — and not the business of the police and courts. For many, sex work may not be good work, or always free of exploitation, and it may be resorted to as a means of survival. But the very same is true of many jobs in which workers are nonetheless deemed worthy of rights and legal protections as workers. 

The launch also celebrated the coming introduction in the New York State House and Senate of what DecrimNY described as “the most comprehensive state-level decriminalization bill in the country.”

Read More from the Intercept

 

 

New York Sex Work News

Navigating the Shift From Social Stars to Exclusive Content Creators

2023-12-19 elrond

Navigating the Shift From Social Stars to Exclusive Content Creators

It's no secret that the digital age has revolutionised how we consume entertainment. In recent years, we've witnessed a fascinating phenomenon: those catchy dance routines and viral clips on TikTok are becoming the gateway for creators to a more personal and lucrative venture. Indeed, TikTok creators turned OnlyFans stars are redefining fame, offering an exclusive glimpse into their lives to fans willing to pay for the privilege. This shift allows creators to form a more intimate bond with their audience and provides a platform that caters to more niche content.

Understanding the drive behind exclusive digital content

The allure of subscription platforms can't be overstated. Fans are drawn to the promise of content they can't find anywhere else, coupled with the possibility of interacting directly with creators. It's a unique combination that mainstream social media can't replicate: the satisfaction of supporting a favourite creator while gaining access to their most exclusive work. Whether it's specific kinks, aesthetics, or simply a personality they've grown to love on TikTok, subscribers enjoy tailored content that resonates with their personal tastes.

Ensuring a safe space in the online adult world

Diving into online adult entertainment as a creator or consumer comes with its privacy concerns. Therefore, navigating this space with discretion is paramount. Creators often adopt pseudonyms and employ strict privacy settings to separate their online personas from their personal lives. Fans, too, are urged to respect these boundaries for a culture of mutual respect. Conversely, creators need to be transparent about the content they provide, ensuring fans know what they're subscribing to, thus balancing explicit content gracefully with artistic freedom.

The global reach of digital content creators

The internet knows no borders, and content creators are tapping into international audiences with broader appetites and varied interests. This open market doesn't just expose fans to different cultures but also lets creators express their uniqueness without geographical constraints. Overcoming language barriers with subtitles or multi-language content broadens the appeal and allows trends from one region to influence or become popular in another, creating a truly global exchange of digital entertainment.

Monetising the personal touch in digital entertainment

As creators transition to platforms that allow for subscription-based content, understanding the financial perks becomes critical. There's a variety of revenue streams to explore, from pay-per-view messages to tipping, ensuring creators are compensated for their efforts. These platforms support creators not just artistically but financially, taking a cut while providing a service that's invaluable in the digital economy. Subscribers, on the other hand, are often happy to pay for this content, as it gives them a sense of investment in the creator's success, fostering a community unlike any other.

In her column, Pamela Paul critiques the growing usage of the term "sex worker," contending that it serves to euphemize and trivialize the complex and often exploitative reality of prostitution. Paul argues that this terminology masks the economic pressures, family disruptions, and distressing circumstances that drive individuals, particularly women, into the trade. She asserts that adopting the term "sex work" shifts the focus away from the exploitative nature of the transaction, enabling sex buyers to rationalize their actions. Paul also highlights the disturbing use of the term "child sex worker" and points to the disheartening reality that many individuals enter prostitution involuntarily or at a young age, frequently as survivors of abuse and with subsequent mental health challenges.

While Paul's perspective underscores the need to address the multifaceted complexities of prostitution, her critique may overly simplify the nuances of the discourse surrounding sex work. The term "sex worker" has been advocated by certain activist circles and organizations as a way to destigmatize and acknowledge the agency of individuals engaged in this profession. By dismissing the term altogether, Paul might overlook the voices of sex workers who embrace it to advocate for their rights, safety, and decriminalization. The debate over language choice in this context reflects a broader tension between acknowledging the broader socio-economic factors influencing entry into sex work and the recognition of individual agency. Therefore, a more balanced approach is necessary to fully comprehend the implications of adopting or rejecting this terminology within the larger discourse on sex work.

It seems that, like with lipstick sales and luxury hair treatments, the success of strip clubs is another marker of an economic downturn.

Recessions have historically been marked by a decrease in consumer spending, and this recession is no exception. As one Twitter user noted, her earnings have halved and the clubs are almost empty. Another commented, Strippers have been telling y’all the recession is coming baby. We are feeling it in the clubs everywhere. You know it’s bad if girls from Miami are coming to New York to work.”

When times are tough, folks just chill at home more; they ain’t gonna spend and hit the clubs. They’re hooking up online instead, said Markus Frind, the big boss of the dating site Plenty of Fish, during the 2009 money meltdown.

Some market research peeps called IBISWorld say that US strip clubs are making way less dough these days. They reckon their profit dropped by more than 12 per cent to $1.4bn in 2018, which is down from $1.6bn in 2012. That’s rough!  We got 30% more sex workers calling us last year who need help to start working. The prostitutes who call us are freaking out and scared. Women are begging us to hook them up with food vouchers for food banks. One person hadn’t eaten right for three days," she says. Others have called with housing issues, like getting kicked out or having their landlords be jerks to them," says Niki. “They’re trying to figure out how they’re gonna survive the next week.”

In the current sociopolitical context of New York, where activities such as cannabis consumption and sports wagering have been legalized, some legislators are advocating for the decriminalization of sex work in New York State.

Despite the impossibility of eradicating it completely, prostitution remains illegal in New York.

However, for sex workers and their supporters in the legislature, it is time to reevaluate the criminalization of sex work which has burdened the criminal justice system with what many regard as a harmless offense.

The bill aims to eliminate all the criminalized aspects of sex workers performing their occupation," said advocate SX Noir. “And what this will do is enable sex workers to have better access to housing, to medical resources and ultimately to living their lives.”

However, decriminalization is distinct from legalizing prostitution, which has been implemented in other countries and in the state of Nevada.

In those cases, a regulatory framework was established to protect workers by licensing sex workers and providing services such as testing for sexually transmitted infections.

“That lack of attendant regulatory oversight creating essentially an open market, or a free market for the type of conduct described in the bill, could present challenges,” said Alex Wilson, associate counsel for the New York State Sheriff’s Association.

And while prosecutors have refrained from pursuing cases against sex workers, police still respond to complaints in certain neighborhoods.

Assemblymember Jessica González-Rojas, a Queens Democrat, is the sponsor of the bill.

“There are often raids on massage parlors. And places like my community, in Jackson Heights, I have Roosevelt Avenue and you often see the police still in the community targeting our sex workers,” Queens Democrat González-Rojas says. “It’s something which mostly affects undocumented people. In my community, it’s a lot of undocumented transgender women.”

Advocates for sex workers say decriminalization will improve safety. Especially for those subject to abuse or assault.

“You have barriers to legal and criminal resources. So if something were happen to you — let’s say you are a sex worker and you got assaulted — you can’t go to the police and report that. You can’t go and have legal recourse because as of right now prostitution is illegal in New York City,” SX Noir says.

The video, which stars Itkis and porn performer Nicole Sage, is called "Bucket List Bonanza" and could have tanked his campaign as, historically, congressional candidates have teams that work around the clock to prevent such tapes from being made public; but in this case, the unconventional effort is well-received as a prime example of a politician putting actions above rhetoric.

Kate Iselin, a contributor for the New York Post shared her requirements for future partners: they must be accepting of her vegan lifestyle, they have to love animals and lastly, “they must have visited a sex worker in the past.”

A twenty-four-year-old sex worker from New York is looking for money to fund a film project, The cost of making the film is high, and the fees from her clients go some way in covering the pre-production costs. So far, her regular clients have not invested in the film project. She has, however, secured financial support from producer Dan Lalor, who is not among her clientele but agreed to kick in half of the $34,000 pre-production budget.

Lady has written and will direct the 90-minute feature film, “Sam’s World,” and stars as the title character — a sex worker whose relationship is strained by her career as well as a potential pregnancy. The film is not pornographic

My ICON (Blondie, Debbie Harry) from my teenage years was interviewed by Esquire Magazine. She was asked, If you were coming across the river to Manhattan as a twenty-year-old today, what would you be aiming for?

Her reply:

I think that probably now I would go into the sex industry.

I don’t know, but that’s a clandestine area, and I was always interested in the clandestine. That’s what attracted me to the music world. And I don’t know where you can find that so much these days.

A Queens escort drugged her clients to rob them. Four of these clients died as a result. Judge Brian Cogan sentenced her to 30 years of jail time. Angelina Barini has requested that she be sent to a low security prison in Minnesota, so that she can train dogs as part of her therapy.

The New York state legislature is debating between two bills that decriminalize sex work. The bills agree on the need to decriminalize sex workers but offer very different approaches for doing so.

  • The Stop Violence in the Sex Trades Act seeks to fully legalize the sex trade.
  • The Sex Trade Survivors Justice and Equality Act, which is adapted from the Nordic model, would decriminalize sex workers while keeping in place laws penalizing pimps and clients.

Advocacy for full decriminalization has conjoined itself with vast, increasing leftwing support for police abolition. Leftwing and sex workers’ groups have embraced the abortion rights slogan “My body, my choice,” readapting it to sex workers’ freedom to do whatever they choose with their bodies. Under the slogan “Sex work is work,” the DSA considers full decriminalization as “a central fight for the labor movement and for socialist feminism”.

There are persuasive advantages to full decriminalization. Sex workers would be able to unionize. Third-party workers, like those operating phone lines or client screeners, could work without fear of being prosecuted as pimps, creating a safer workplace. An increased demand of buyers, once decriminalized, would give sex workers more bargaining power. A 2007 study in New Zealand has shown that after full decriminalization, almost 65% of sex workers found it easier to refuse clients, and 57% reported improved police attitudes towards sex workers.

At least that is the case in the USA, In the UK, sex workers rights are gradually being eroded. Yet more cities are implementing a policy of zero strip clubs. Clients are still criminilisied in Northern Ireland, putting many escorts at risk. Scotland is looking at implementing a Scottish model. Despit the evidence, and the public consultation ther are intent on removing advertising sites for escorts, and criminilising the clients.

According to Amnesty International, the Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women, the World Health Organization, and many other human rights groups, the decriminalization of consensual adult sex work has proven to reduce trafficking and increase public health and safety.

 

 

There is a growing movement in the United States of America to legalise or decriminilise sex work. In Manhattan selling sex (escorting) is a little easier. In April the DA decided not to prosecute those selling sex. They still prosecuted those who bought sex. (The Nordic model).  There are similar moves throughout in some other boroughs of New York and Baltimore. A handful of states have introduced bills to partially or fully legalise prostitution.

New York escorts and clients may be able to look forward to a birighter future. New York Governor Kathy Hochul is looking at proposals to legalise wex work. New York Escorts and Providers will be able to full sexual services to their clients (johns) with out fear of prosecution.  Unfortunatley there are different views on how this can be acheived.

The total decriminilisation of sex work is one way, and is prefered by sex workers.  The other is the Nordic model which will stop escorts being prosecuted, while the clients are still prosecuted.

Sex work (escorting) covers many dimensions. Most escorts used sex work to earn money. They may not enjoy the work, but it is a way of earning money with a limited number of hours. It can be a means to an end.

There are some escorts who do enjoy their work, and Liara Roux is one such worker.  Liara of New York, sometimes feels guilty about here work, she finds it enjoyanle and spiratual. This New York provider likens herself to a first class pampered pet.

Take read of this review of her book, Whore of New York.

Picture courtsey of Repeater Books.

Gov. Kathy Hochul did not endorse the decriminalization of sex work this week – but she is already taking a very different approach to the issue compared to past governors.

I'm discussing it with many advocates and people who have strong opinions on this.

The new governor has activists more optimistic than ever about passing legislation that would reduce criminal penalties for people who make money through prostitution.

Ahead of a confirmed release on The Criterion Collection this July, the new restoration of Lizzie Borden’s acclaimed 1987 Sundance winner Working Girls will get a theatrical run courtesy of Janus Films. Inspired by the experiences of sex workers Borden met while making her landmark docu-style film Born in Flames, Working Girls takes place over a day in a Manhattan brothel as we witness the ins and outs of the profession. In advance of the restoration’s theatrical run starting on June 18, a new trailer has now arrived.

On Wednesday, Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance, Jr. announced that his office would no longer be prosecuting prostitution and unlicensed massage arrests, and that it would be dropping 914 cases dating all the way back to the 1970s. The office also moved to dismiss more than 5,000 loitering for the purpose of prostitution cases, which stem from the highly controversial “walking while trans” statute, which was repealed last February.

Yet the statement fell short in one crucial regard: though it stated it would no longer be prosecuting those arrested on prostitution charges, the text of the bill specifies that it “does not preclude us from bringing other charges that may stem from a prostitution-related arrest,” and the New York Times notes the office “will continue to prosecute other crimes related to prostitution, including patronizing sex workers and sex trafficking.” In other words, those who buy sex, or are accused of facilitating sex trafficking, will not be exempt from this policy change, explains Maya Morena, a sex worker rights activist based in New York. “They will still be criminalizing our customers and third party, which often means anyone we pay, including our landlords, friends, drivers, and customers, are criminalized,” she says. 

Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz moved on Tuesday to dismiss nearly 700 cases against people charged with loitering for the purpose of prostitution.

"Instead of prosecuting these defendants, we need to provide a helping hand by connecting them with meaningful services, support options and the necessary tools that will assist them to safely exit the sex trade if that is what they choose to do," Katz said.

"It's time to decriminalize sex workers and focus our enforcement on those who exploit and profit off a broken system," said de Blasio. "We are calling on the State to end criminal penalties for sex workers and help us reach those in need without requiring involvement with the criminal justice system."

Six of the eight declared candidates told New York Focus and The Appeal: Political Report that they would stop prosecuting charges involving sex work, whether against people who are selling sex or against buyers.

The relative consensus is a measure of how quickly attitudes on sex work have shifted since even 2019, when only one out of seven candidates for Queens DA, Tiffany Cabán, supported the full decriminalization of sex work. A coalition of activists, known as Decrim NY, launched in 2019 and has strenuously championed change since then.

  ‘My parents told people I had been in a car crash’: readers’ office…   Ian McKellen got his jab – phew. Now brace for a deadly outbreak of…   AOC defends New York medic outed by tabloid for OnlyFans account: ‘Leave her alone’ © Provided by The Independent New York Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has defended a 23-year-old paramedic outed by the New York Post for supplementing her income by posting images of herself on an online content-subscription platform. “Sex work is work,” the congresswoman said in a separate post. “The federal gov has done almost nothing to help people in months. We must pass stimulus checks, [expanded unemployment insurance, small business relief], hospital funding, etc. … Keep the focus of shame there, not on marginalizing people surviving a pandemic without help.”

One of the people doing that is a 23-year-old New York City-based paramedic who also uses OnlyFans to supplement her existing income — or, she did, until this past weekend, when the New York Post doxxed her, publishing a piece that revealed her name, photos of her, social media handles, and personal information about her jobs

Let me be very clear: I did not want the NY Post to run this article, much less use my name. When [the reporter] first ‘interviewed’ me, he did not tell me what this was about until after I disclosed most of my background,” she wrote on the GoFundMe, adding: “He did not include in his article that I started crying on the phone when he finally did tell me what he was inquiring about. He did not include that he played this ‘friendly guy’ reporter who just wanted to get MY side of the story, since ya know, they were gonna run it anyway, with or without my input.”. 

NYPD officers should not arrest people who perform sex work, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Wednesday, days after the city agreed to pay $5.9 million to the family of a woman who died while jailed on Rikers Island as a result of a two-year-old prostitution charge.

He though wants to go after the exploiters and those who profit from sex workers,  It is believed he is a supporter of the Nordic model.

Lady Grew visited the museum with art made by sex workers about sex work. This is an amazing museum in New York.

In March of 2020, a glass storefront facade barely contained the curiosity outside a new art exhibit in the historic New York City neighbourhood of Greenwich Village. People passing by paused to look into the window display of the Sex Workers’ Pop-Up, where they saw a bed leaning against a pink wall, with a red sign proclaiming: “Sex work is work.” 

The Sex Workers’ Pop-Up Museum was supported by the Open Society Foundations.

Passed in 2018, FOSTA-SESTA has transformed the lives of sex workers across the country, and intensified a long-running debate over how we deal with an underground economy that runs the gamut from voluntary sex work (aka prostitution) to involuntary sex trafficking.

 

“One thing that FOSTA-SESTA did do was sort of mobilize very vocal online sex workers with large followings in a way that they maybe hadn’t been politicized before,” Blunt said. “And because it became so visible online, like — despite the ways that we’re being shadow-banned and the ways that we’re being policed, and the ways that we’re being surveilled — somehow this, like, very random set of bills that turned into a law became something where now presidential candidates are being asked about what their stance on sex work is. And I do not think that would have happened without the community organizing that happened around mobilizing against [FOSTA-SESTA.]”

Minneapolis City Council obtained a "veto-proof majority" to dismantle its city's police department and rebuild "a new system of public safety." And New York's mayor, Bill de Blasio, pledged to cut the budget of the largest police department in the US, NYPD, and reallocate the funds to social services. In Seattle, Mayor Jenny Durkan is facing growing demands to cut SPD's budget by 50 percent. And so we are entering a period in US's urban history that has all of sudden placed policing into a state of existential crisis: Do we really need it? What exactly does the police actually do with all of its time and money? Do cops make society safer? Who are the bad guys?

 

There is no need for a sex worker or a drug user to ever encounter an armed enforcer of the law. The same goes for petty criminals. Successful but underfunded programs such as Law Enforcement Assisted Diversion (LEAD), which keeps the offenders of petty crimes out of jails and the costly court system, exist and already point in a post-police enforcement direction.

The guide is quite informative and actually contains some great information. Given that it is centered around sex, however, everyone is getting a real kick out of it.

New Yorkers were particularly amused by the recommendation to have sex only with “someone you live with.”

“NYC said masturbate or fuck your roommates,” Twitter user Gabe Gonzalez wrote.

In the early morning hours of May 1, 2010, Shannan Gilbert made a panicked phone call to 911. Gilbert was working as an escort at the time, and had fled her client's home in Oak Beach, Long Island telling police that someone was "after her." Police and public officials were initially unconcerned by Gilbert's disappearance – as a sex worker they considered her a "high risk" victim, and therefore not worthy of excessive resources.

New York Magazine journalist Robert Kolker saw the attention the case was getting and began wondering what wasn't being covered. He interviewed the womens' friends and family members and created an empathetic, realistic portrait of class, poverty, and bravery that connected these women to large portrait of our society.

The book has now been made into a stunning and harrowing movie by Liz Garbus and is currently streaming on Netflix. We spoke with Kolker about the case, his book, and the film adaptation.

A popup art exhibition aimed at destigmatizing sex work opens in Manhattan on Tuesday. The art exhibition features work from 10 different countries. Over 50 per cent of the artists have participated in sex work. Some artists include Midori, Jacq The Stripper, Kisha Bari, pieces from the clothing line DASPU, founded by the late Gabriela Leite of Brazil, Pluma Sumaq, and Molly Crabapple, who has documented the sex work decriminalization movement in New York City in various drawings on DecrimNY.

Raymond Rodio III, 48, from South Beach, New York, is expected to receive more than nine years in jail after pleading guilty to multiple counts of sex trafficking, criminal sale of a controlled substance, and promoting prostitution. He was caught after a traffic stop, in which the police found a woman in the passenger seat who was suspected of being trafficked.

 

Rodio used the basement of his parents home and made contact with 22 women through social media. He offered them Crack and Heroin at no charge so they became addicted. He coerced them to work by threatening to cut off their source of drugs.

Ten years ago, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg — now a 2020 presidential candidate — personally asked for me to be removed from my job as a public-school teacher and called for the city to take legal action against me, as was documented in numerous news reports at the time.

This was the beginning and the end. Bloomberg and I never met. He never commented further on my situation. He decided my fate, and that was that.