
In the world of online prostitution, if you’re a hooker not on TheEroticReview.com, you might as well go f**k yourself. The Site, which has 500,000 to 1 million unique visitors a month, allows johns to rate their experiences with particular prostitutes from 1 to 10, write reviews for individual prostitutes and brothels, and find exactly the girl they’d like to, um, hire…As the industry moves from the street corner to the PC for generating business, The Erotic Review’s power to make or break a working girl has become absolute.
But with the Site’s owner, David Elms, on trial for being caught in a hotel room with a pile of coke, a loaded handgun and a prostitute, the future of The Erotic Review is on the line, along with the entire sex industry. “In dozens of conversations and in postings on the Internet in recent weeks, prostitutes have expressed concern that if The Erotic Review goes offline it could hurt business,” reports The New York Times. But that doesn’t mean they want Elms to keep his power. (more…)
The New York Times has finally decided to dip their toe into the ever expanding ocean of social networking with their new Facebook application, “New York Times News Quiz.”
The New York Times News Quiz asks users five quick questions each weekday on the latest news to test your knowledge of what’s happening in the world.
Once completed, the application will churn-out your “Times IQ” allowing you to compete with your friends and the Facebook community to see who’s most plugged in.
Finally, a Facebook Application built to inform & educate that is actually entertaining enough to use everyday.
Or at least thatâs what one professor in particular thinks.A recent essay in The New York Times written by Joanne Ciulla, a University of Richmond professor, discusses the modern work ethic and how college students today have a somewhat warped view of the world.
It struck me as interesting, and I must admit, it is hard not to be offended by the characteristics she describes college students of today having:
ENTITLED TO A DO-OVER
âIt has become common for students to ask to retake tests or to rewrite papers in order to get a better gradeâ¦While the apparent desire for self-improvement is admirable, usually the higher grade is what really matters. Sometimes a studentâs second try is not much better than the first, but he or she still expects a better grade for the effort. This attitude leads to the second problem.â?
So, we want to work hard to do the best we possibly can on an assignment and now professors are pissed about this? (more…)