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Burma model, Burma model photo,
Burma Models, Burma film
models, Burma beautiful models,
Asian models, Rangoon models, good
models
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Burma has a lot of beautiful and exotic
girls - models,
who try to make
a career in
modeling. Because of the mixtures from
the different
races over the centuries and in
particular during
English
colonial times
there are a lot of very good looking girls,
erotic girls and exotic model girls.
If for some reason someone needs a model
there are mainly two possibilities
to find one. Go to
Rangoon
and check the Yellow pages for a modeling
agency or maybe modeling photography agency
(they are not very organized) or have a look
in one of the
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nightclubs
where they have fashion shows
Actually there is only one serious nightclub
on this subject
and this is the night club in the basement of the
Asia Plaza Hotel, the place looks somehow
run down, don't come
before 10 pm to have a look on models and pretty
girls.
Its worth it, about 100 pretty and sexy Burma
models girls are
around.
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Beautiful, very young Burma models are also around
especially in That Kham entertainment seeking to have some fun. This place is in "ten gi ze"road in the Ambassador
building. Around "ten gi ze" road are at least a
dozen of more night clubs and discos.
One could visit the zero zone "rock
restaurant", its on the rooftop of the ambassador building, use the
elevator, if you cant find, ask.
A nice place with a barbecue, fashion show -start
around 9 pm- life music, a couple of singer
sometimes also dancing and cabaret.
Girls gone wild in Burma
Again the whole place looks not very "en
vogue" but its a nice one where the Burma's until
about 30 go.
Chinese Girls
You can
see the
video of a fashion show in the zero zone
here. We have taken the
edge off !
In the same building is the Thet Kham entertainment
- just one floor below - with a lot of exiting young
girls trying dancing the night through. But the dancing usually
ends around midnight. There is no problem to take
the ladies with you,
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the
hotels
are tuned for it, they just charge you 10 dollars
more. Just keep
everything in a respectful way like anywhere else in the world
and nobody will have any problem. There are maybe
some people who might call this a particular variant of
tourism. This people we tell before they complain,
clean in front of your own house first before you
want to blame others on anything.
A a
example, I have been
sitting many times in some restaurants just in front
of champ de elissey in Paris and was
continuously approached by nice girls who try to
make me happy via money transfer, this happen in
almost every metropolis on this planet everyone can
see it, no one cares and afterwards this people who
are afraid to say something in their own turf,
because everyone
will
tell them they are not very
clear somewhere, come to other countries and blame
them for all kind of natural things.
Actually
I must admit I don't know what's going on at alpha
centaury, maybe this clever - blame the other people
- must take a space craft and go there, may
they get happy, but leave us alone on planet earth
nobody needs you.
Models Burma ,
Models, pretty girls,
fashionable girls,
photo models, movie models, film models, beautiful
girls, exotic girls, fun girls, sexy girls, fashion models,
Burma, , models, dating Burma
girls, dating girls.
Dirty
dancing: in part two of our Take
Back the Music series, we go behind
the scenes with video girls. As pimp
culture goes mainstream, are we
getting paid or played?
They're
what male fantasies are made of: One
brown-skinned sister, wearing
painted-on jeans and four-inch
stilettos, is as tall as a runway
model but with an ample booty and
sleepy almond-shaped eyes. Another
woman is baby-doll petite with olive
skin, long bleached-blonde curls and
super-size cleavage bursting out of
the tiny piece of fabric that is her
top. A third is wearing a gold
cutout bodysuit, heels and a micromini so short that she has to
hold down its hem as she walks
across the room. These girls, along
with four other equally arresting
women, are taking a break,
lounging
in the makeshift makeup area of a
cavernous warehouse in a seed part
of Los Angeles, around the corner
from adult-video stores and stripper
joints. They've been at this video
shoot, starring rapper Fabolous,
since eight in the morning. It's now
12 hours later, and the video's
nowhere near done. The girls have
had their hair straightened and
curled, their makeup painted and
repainted, and some of them have
changed clothes three different
times to suit the taste of Lil X,
the director. The lensman behind
countless Usher, Kanye West and Sean
Paul videos, Lil X is a slight,
unassuming man in his late twenties.
To see him walk around the set
filled with dozens of male crew and
dozens more of the male hangers-on
who always show up at video shoots,
you'd never know he's in charge. But
it's his job to make this video hot,
which is to say sexy, and that's why
he keeps sending the women back to
get "sexier hair" and "sexier
makeup" and the sort of clothes that
will indicate the exact kind of
sexiness these young women are
supposed to represent. When they
finally shoot a take, it goes like
this. The music starts bumping, the
camera rolls, and the girls all
break into dance, rubbing their
hips, shaking their hair, leaning
their heads back and looking coyly
at the camera. The director asks
them to mouth the chorus and they
all purse their shiny lips together,
"Do do do do do do."
This is the
work of a video girl.
Back in the day, rappers used to
rhyme just about anything: partying,
Black pride, the Daisy Age,
hustling, pimping, the irritating
way parents just don't understand.
From the sublime to the criminal to
the mundane, it was all part of
hip-hop and everyone had a place:
gangsters, jokers, fast girls,
tomboys and African queens. The art
was as diverse as the people who
produced it. But as hip-hop enters
into its third decade, one icon has
captured the imagination of the
current crop of rappers as nothing
has before. These days the pimp
reigns supreme.
Pimp, pimping, pimp juice, pimp
paraphernalia like goblets and
canes, the pimp lifestyle, ethos and
"code of honor" have permeated
hip-hop culture and beyond. MTV airs
a weekly show called Pimp My Ride,
hosted by rapper Xzibit; Sony
Pictures produced a feature-length
animated flick, Lil' Pimp, with the
voices of Ludacris and Lil' Kim,
about a 9-year-old White boy who
takes up pimping; 50 Cent calls
himself a muthaf--in' P.I.M.P. and
shoots up the charts to number one.
And Nelly hits the shelves of
convenience stores with his energy
drink Pimp Juice.
In hip-hop, pimp is a signifier of
charisma, power and wealth. Pimp is
masculine flamboyance, tricked-out
cars, one-of-a-kind 'gators,
bejeweled goblets full of Cristal.
Pimp is domination in the bedroom,
respect on the streets, a romantic
illusion of alpha-male greatness.
Gangster, the archetype of choice a
decade ago, is played out; now it's
all about the pimp. But if rappers
are recreating themselves in the
image of a Mack, then what role are
women left to fill?
Any fan can answer that. "Mostly in
videos, the women are there to serve
the men," says Morgan Crooks, 16, a
high-school student from South
Orange, New Jersey. Morgan watches
music videos with the devotion most
record companies long for. Videos
are on while she does her homework,
talks on the phone, eats her dinner.
She watches in the morning when
she's getting dressed and at night
before she goes to bed. By her own
estimation, some weeks BET and MTV
are turned on more than 30 hours.
"Sometimes it's just on to be on,"
she says. "I don't even think of it
as watching TV really."
By logging as much time in front of
the TV as some spend in a full-time
job, Morgan has become an expert on
hip-hop videos. "You have New
York-style videos," she says, "with
the high-class, skinny girls who
look like models. They just stand
there looking good. And there's this
one 50 Cent video with women on
leashes. Then you have videos from
Down South, with half-naked rump
shakers, and others where the guys
sit in berber chairs, and the girls
show up in tight pants and bend
over, and their booties start
jiggling. A lot of videos have girls
just backing it up, like little hos."
Of course, every rapper who
envisions himself as a pimp requires
a bevy of willing females to bring
the image to life. Round-the-way
girls and African queens need not
apply. Women here have one job only:
to portray every shade and variation
of a girl enthralled, enslaved by
and beholden to a rapper--pimp. It's
the ho show.
So You Wanna Be a Video Star
Tawny, 22, has appeared in music
videos for the past five years. On
the set of the Fabolous shoot, she
has finished her close-up, and she
wants to make one thing perfectly
clear: "I am not," she says
emphatically, "a video girl." If you
ask Tawny, with her long straight
hair and gravity-defying
breasts,
exactly what she does, she'll
declare, "I'm an actress." To prove
it, she'll rattle off a list of film
credits that include John
Singleton's Baby Boy and MGM's
Beauty Shop starring Quean Latifah.
"Video," she says, "is just where I
got my start."
There are many reasons women choose
to be in videos. They want to meet a
famous rapper, have some fun, or
catch a glimpse of themselves on
television. Most of them go to open
auditions they learn about from
flyers passed out at nightclubs or
online; usually they get cast as
extras, people in a crowd scene.
Extras make very little money, often
no more than $100 for a
12-to-24-hour shoot. Sometimes
extras don't get paid at all. But
Tawny is a featured girl, handpicked
by the director to appear in
close-ups, dance with the artist, or
just stand beside him. Featured
girls get the most camera time, the
hottest clothes and the best chance
at a pictorial in an urban men's
magazine like Smooth or the hip-hop
magazine XXL, which runs a four-page
spread every month called Eye Candy,
about the latest video vixen to make
men drool. Tawny won't say how much
she's getting paid for the Fabolous
shoot, but the most sought-after
women--the ones some men in the
industry call top-shelf bitches--can
command as much as $3,000 a shoot.
Tawny has heard all the criticism
about video girls. You can't be in
this industry and not hear all the
stories about the video ho--the hoochie--everyone loves to hate. But
Tawny, for one, is really sick of
it. Sure there are women, the
groupies, who are totally
unprofessional, like the girl Tawny
saw rubbing an artist's penis right
in the middle of a take; or the girl
who disappeared into the artist's
trailer and came out looking all
disheveled. But these are the
exceptions, she insists, the women
who give everyone else a bad name.
Most dancers are just working their
hustle, trying to get to the next
level of fame. Besides, Tawny says,
there's a glaring double standard:
Artists like Janet and Beyonce are
allowed to parade in bikini tops and
booty shorts and nobody says
anything. But when aspiring
actresses like Tawny dance in a
skimpy outfit, everyone gets up in
arms. "If video girls are being
exploited, then every female artist
who is out there being sexy should
be blamed too. To me, it's all
bulls---."
Tawny knows sex sells and as a
general rule she doesn't mind
showing her body as part of her job
requirement. But, she admits,
sometimes the director goes too far.
"If it's lie by the pool in a
bikini, fine," she says. "If it's
wear a bikini and shake my ass in
front of the artist while he sits in
his car, then no. I won't do it."
Some girls are not so discerning.
It three o'clock in the morning,
BET, the premier cable channel for
airing hip-hop videos, broadcasts
BET UnCut. The program features
music videos in which many of the
girls are wearing lingerie and doing
the sorts of acrobatics usually
reserved for bachelor parties.
There's a bikini-clad woman shaking
her booty and grinning wildly while
holding one leg high in the air in
Nelly's Tip Drift. Another woman,
standing on her head, provides the
backdrop to Ludacris's rhyming, with
his head between her naked, open
thighs while she flexes her buttocks
in Pussy Poppin'. There are women on
all fours, women writhing on the
ground, women grabbing their ankles,
all poppin' to the beat. These
aren't run-of-the-mill sexy and
suggestive dancers. These women are
clearly professionals with masterful
control of the muscles of their hips
and thighs and buttocks. When they
lift one leg in the air and pop,
pop, pop their thang, it's enough to
leave an average woman speechless.
Before BET UnCut, a seminaked Black
woman lying on her back with her
legs hoisted over her shoulders was
something only paying customers in a
strip club might see. Now it's
mainstream. Teenage girls are
perfecting hypersexual stripper
moves like booty clapping, dropping
and poppin' and showing them off at
middle-school dances. "These are
dances young girls didn't used to
know about," says Pamela Weddington,
vice-president of communications at
Motivational Educational
Entertainment Productions (MEE), a
communications company that
specializes in urban markets. "Now
it's something that they aspire to.
Even if they are not staying up
until three in the morning to watch
BET UnCut, everyone can set up a
VCR."
While BET reps insist the show is
for adult viewers only, the fact is
many teenagers are indeed tuning in.
"BET Uncut? Everyone's seen it,"
says Morgan. "I remember some of the
boys in class were like, 'Did you
see the uncut Ludacris video? Or the
uncut Chingy?' This was when we were
like 14. Now it's the younger kids
who are watching it, the boys who
are 12 and 13."
While exposing young boys to images
of near-naked strippers will likely
encourage them to sexually objectify
women, for girls the effects are
more subtle. "My sense is that over
time young Black girls are beginning
to internalize what they see in the
media," says Weddington. "And we see
it in their behavior."
Weddington's company surveyed
thousands of low-income
African-American teens between the
ages of 16 and 20 in ten cities
across the country, including Los
Angeles, New Orleans, Chicago and
New York, and asked them about sex,
sexuality and the media,
particularly music videos. "The
message young women are getting is
that if they can't get something
they want through their talent or
ability, then they have something
else that they can use, and that's
their bodies," says Weddington.
"They are learning that what's
important about a woman is her body,
not her mind. So that means, 'I am a
commodity, therefore I'm going to
use that commodity to get what I
want.'" Weddington suggests that
when girls use their bodies as
barter, they are more likely to
engage in risky behavior like unsafe
sex, sex with multiple partners or
sex with men many years their
senior.
At least one study suggests
Weddington is right. In 2003, in
Alabama, 522 African-American girls
in rural and poor neighborhoods were
asked about their consumption of
hip-hop videos, then their behavior
was tracked for a year. Even after
the researchers adjusted their data
to accommodate for differences such
as family income, and whether the
teenagers were from one- or
two-parent families, results were
startling. "We divided the group
into girls who watched fewer than 21
hours a week of music videos and
girls who watched more," explains
Ralph DiClemente, Ph.D., associate
director of the Center for AIDS
Research at Emory University and one
of the lead investigators in the
study. "We found that girls who
watched more videos were 60 percent
more likely to have contracted an
STD during the year, twice as likely
to have multiple sex partners and 60
percent more likely to use alcohol
and drugs.
"It's clear that when you look at
rap music videos, you see a certain
scenario: one male artist surrounded
by scantily clad females, and their
job is to please him," adds
DiClemente. "There are many theories
that suggest that if a person looks
at a lot of videos and doesn't have
information to the contrary, she
begins to believe that this is
reality, that this is the way the
world works." According to
DiClemente, teenagers seem to be
influenced by the images in videos
because they don't have the life
experience to counter what they are
seeing. "They can't say what they're
watching isn't true because they
don't know. They're just kids."
Hip-hop's Side Hustle
For as long as teenagers have
listened to music, there have been
people angered by its content. In
1984 Tipper Gore, wife of the former
vice-president AI Gore, appalled by
lyrics she heard on a Prince album
she had purchased for her
11-year-old daughter, led a campaign
that resulted in parental-advisory
warning stickers being placed on CDs
with explicit content. More
recently, several students of Spelman college called Nelly on the
mat for his video Tip Drill. "We put
up posters calling him Misogynist of
the Month," says Moya Bailey,
president of the Feminist Majority
Leadership Alliance (FMLA), the
group that launched the campaign
last March. Bailey says that while
many of the women on campus
understood why her group was upset
by the video, there was also a
backlash. Some students felt the
FMLA's questioning of Nelly was
poorly timed: The rapper was
scheduled to appear on campus to
support a bone-marrow registration
drive when the group's posters went
up.
But the ambivalence about the
group's protest seemed to go further
than that. "Some women saw it as
Black women yelling at Black men,"
says Bailey. "A lot of women feel
that if we say Black men have
adopted these misogynistic ideas,
then we're attacking them and not
being supportive as Black women.
That makes it hard for Black women
to step up and say something."
Bailey points out that at the same
time, White women are also reluctant
to take on the cause of misogyny in
hip-hop. "White feminists don't know
how to deal with it," she observes.
"There are so many issues of race
tied into it that they just sort of
let the Black women handle it."
Lara Mahaney, director of corporate
and entertainment affairs at Parents
Television Council, says her
organization is considering forming
a coalition of interested groups,
both Black and White, to launch a
"campaign of shame and financial
consequences" such as boycotts aimed
at industries and retailers who make
and distribute offensive material.
"It's going to take a large group of
people talking about this to bring
some kind of change," says Mahaney.
"If we don't speak out, things will
only get worse."
That may already be happening. In a
trend that has gone virtually
uncommented upon by activists, some
rap stars have decided to lend their
name and talents to productions even
more explicit than their uncut
videos. Rappers are now appearing in
hard-core porn. In 2001 and 2003 the
best-selling adult videos of the
year were Snoop Dogg's Doggystyle
and Hustlaz: Diary of a Pimp,
respectively; both were hosted by
the Billboard-topping rapper. Snoop,
recently applauded for his work with
the Rowland Heights Raiders, a
junior all-American football team of
8-to-10-year-old boys, acts as tour
guide in the graphic DVDs, featuring
naked adult-film stars engaging in
among other things, anal and group
sex. According to Sean Carney, the
research director at Hustler Video,
the company that distributes Snoop's
films, Doggystyle sold 45,000 units
and Diary of a Pimp, 50,000--more
than four times what's considered a
top seller in the porn world. Snoop,
who endorses T-Mobile and AOL, and
was once asked to appear on Jim
Henson's It's a Very Merry Muppet
Christmas, has been hailed as
"totally embodying the hustler
lifestyle" by Carney. "This has been
a fantastic partnership," says
Carney enthusiastically, noting that
"Snoop has brought some hip-hop fans
to adult videos for the first time."
Over the past several years, other
top-selling rappers like 50 Cent, Lil' John and even old-schooler
Ice-T, who currently stars on NBC's
Law & Order: SVU, have hosted adult
videos. Ice-T's top-selling project,
Pimpin" 101, shows the rapper
"schooling viewers on the different
types of girls who work the
streets," says Dan Miller, features
editor for Adult Video News, a
porn-industry publication. (Last
January the magazine held its annual
AVN Awards--the porn industry's
Oscars--and 50 Cent's protege, Lloyd
Banks, won two, Best Interactive DVD
and Best Music.) Porn actresses play
the hos, and a fully clothed Ice-T
narrates the film and introduces the
sex scenes. "Making porn is a sign
you've made it," says Carney. "If
you are a hip-hop star and you come
out with your own triple-X video,
it's a sign you've arrived." And so
it continues--the exaltation of
Black women as sexual acrobats by
the very artists so many of us
support.
In some corners there are rumblings
of discontent. "My dad doesn't like
seeing half-naked girls in videos,"
says Morgan, the 16-year-old from
New Jersey. "When I was 12, he
complained because Mya was wearing a
midriff shirt and this really tiny
skirt, and she was dancing, which is
not a good mix. He was like, 'She's
already got all eyes on her; why
does she have to have only half her
clothes on?' I didn't understand it
at the time, but I do now. He
doesn't want me to be like that, so
he doesn't want me to watch that."
Many experts feel that the best way
to arm young girls against the
bombardment of images that promote
Black women as sex objects is to do
what Morgan's father did: talk with
them about what they are seeing. "We
live in a sexualized society," says Cydelle Berlin, who runs a
theater-based education program for
teenage girls out of St. Luke's
Roosevelt Hospital in Harlem. "But
you can't say to a teenager, 'Turn
off the television,' because that's
not going to work." Instead, says
Berlin, "we need to watch these
images with our children and use it
as a teachable moment. Ask what the
video is about, what is the woman
representing, how is that similar to
how girls at school act and dress?
And talk about how the video makes
you feel so you can discuss your
value system." Most of all, says
Berlin, we need to help young girls
see that there are other messages of
what it means to be a Black woman.
There is so much more Black women do
than just bounce to the beat.
But if hip-hop has demonstrated
anything about us, it's this: No
matter what Black men do, there will
always be Black women who stand by
their side. We will be their
ride-or-die bitch, the Bonnie to
their Clyde, the played to their
player. So maybe it's no surprise
that so many rappers swaggered
confidently into the realm of pimp,
expecting all the pretty girls just
to fall in line. But what happens if
we don't? In a world where women
aren't willing to accept being cast
as bitches and hos, there won't be
anything left for wannabe pimps to
do but find some other fantasy.
Jeannine Amber writes frequently for
ESSENCE.
TAKE BACK THE MUSIC WEEK: FEBRUARY
21-25
We asked for your feedback on our
Take Back the Music initiative and,
girl, did you tell us! We received
hundreds of thought-provoking
E-mails, making our campaign kickoff
the most responded-to story in our
Web site's history. But talking
among ourselves is not enough. We
have to make sure our voices are
heard by the people who can make a
change--programming executives at
cable networks, radio stations and
record companies. This week, let's
bombard the cable music networks
with calls, letters and E-mails that
tell them just how you feel about
the music they're pumping out daily.
Whether it makes you cringe or makes
you bounce, give 'em an earful. Send
your thoughts about how Black women
are portrayed to programming
executives at BET, twiewerscomments@bet.com;
MTV, mtvfeedback@mtvn.com; FUSE TV,
fuseinfo@fuse.tv. You can also call
MTV's 24-hour Viewer Services
Hotline, (212) 258-8700; BET's
Viewer Comments Line (800) 711-1630,
and FUSE TV's offices, (212)
324-3400. Or you can log on to
essence.com/takebackthemusic for a
letter you can send to all three
networks with just one click. We
have the power. Let's use it.
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Pretty Russian Girls: A Smart
Way To Build Your Online Relationship
It's an open secret that thousands of Western men search for
pretty Russian girls and Russian women online. Many of them
seek a relationship leading to marriage.
In this article, you’ll discover a smart way to build your
online relationship leading to marriage with a Russian
woman.
Usually you can't preplan marriage. In the beginning, you
aren't able to say if the given friendship leads to marriage
or not. It usually happens in the course of time.
Men and women date for many reasons, marriage is not the
only one. People may marry their dates later if they find
each other compatible.
The conventional procedure includes several steps:
~make friends with the girl;
~live together for a couple of years;
~marry.
By the way, the longer two people live together before
marriage, the less chance for the partners of ever getting
married, a study reveals.
Meanwhile, our cybertime is bringing new relationship
tendencies into life.
It's more and more acceptable to think about marriage first
and then look for a suitable person. I'll explain what I
mean.
Being hungry, you want to eat in a restaurant. To settle
your account problems, you refer to your bank. Logically, if
you make a decision to marry, you start targeting people who
want exactly the same.
Here come dating services and online singles sites. Or, as
an example, online services introducing pretty Russian
girls. You target Russian women who want to marry and it’s
up to you and her to develop a relationship or not.
The old term “mail order brides” is inaccurate nowadays.
It’s not that you approach a woman from an online catalogue
of single Russian women for the first time and make a
proposal to marry her. No way!
This is what “Russian mail order bride” seekers do. They
choose an unknown pretty girl who appeals to them from a
Russian single women catalogue, correspond with her and
learn a lot before it may ( or may not) result in marriage.
Nowadays, there are several ways to check if you are on the
right track.
Let’s assume you begin dating a pretty Russian girl online.
How can you know the woman is compatible if you have never
met her? Just judging by photo only? It’s like walking up to
a person at a party and asking them to marry you. You see,
it’s far more complicated. But you aren’t in a hurry, are
you? Please, be patient.
The wise decision is: carry out much learning, any possible
contact with the Russian woman and compromise. Write
hundreds of emails or letters… Make tens of phone calls…
Provide at least one visit to her…
You may feel after some time of correspondence that the
woman is the one. You may begin discussing marriage and
family life together as well. It's not an exaggeration.
There are couples who decide to get married during their
correspondence. The personal meeting only checks if the
people have made the correct choice.
Building an Internet relationship through phone calls and
writing letters or emails for some time is much more
exciting way to fall in love than meeting a future partner
at a party.
You feel magic of love and your feeling is much more pure
than one based on physical contact. The moment you meet,
touch and kiss is inexpressibly wonderful, precious, one to
be remembered for life. The moment capable of exciting your
senses unlike anything you've felt before….
About The Author
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Tanya Bilk, M.A., reveals the secrets to Russian women at a
free introduction service eRussianWoman. Originally from
Russia, Tanya spent a half of her life there. She strives
for Russian women's happiness.
Find your greatest relationship. Your pretty Russian girl or
the most beautiful Russian woman ever is waiting.
Join us for free at => http://e-russianwoman.com
This article is Copyright (c) by Tanya Bilk. Please do not
modify the content, leave all links active and include our
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