Yes... because having a highschooler pole dancing wouldn't be weird enough.I initially planned her to be in highschool.
“Sex work” is doing a looooot of stretching here (ha). How do you define sex work? Are cabaret dancers sex workers? This hotel setting clearly positions pole as a performance art which the girls have an amount of pride in, not a strip club thing.I really wish authors would stop this "shonen-esq" way of storytelling in scenarios where it doesn't make sense.
The rude old master who doesn't want a new pupil due to the failure of the first that also happens to be their offspring (although we haven't seen it yet im guessing has more raw talent), the rival to the protagonist who blames them for taking away their "hero", in another story fine, but this is pole dancing...Regardless of how you spin it this is sex work. If they're going to wite this story I'd prefer they came at it with a bit more nuance.
Who do you really think is going to be the main clientele? Let be real here, it's a small hotel they probably do let the locals in to drink, it would be insane not to, so it's not just guests coming to see dancers. Also the girls don't seem to be in elaborate or performative costumes the vibe is definitely sexual in nature. There's nothing inherently wrong with pole dancing I just think that considering subject matter to story should be a little more mature.“Sex work” is doing a looooot of stretching here (ha). How do you define sex work? Are cabaret dancers sex workers? This hotel setting clearly positions pole as a performance art which the girls have an amount of pride in, not a strip club thing.
The place does seem to be on the seedier side all things considered, so I agree on that front. It’s just calling it sex work feels too heavy handed to my taste. I wish there was a kinda middle of the road term for that. Like a sleazy place in the back alleys of Montmartre that reeks of cheap booze and houses less than sophisticated patrons, but still looks up to the myth of Moulin Rouge, y’knowWho do you really think is going to be the main clientele? Let be real here, it's a small hotel they probably do let the locals in to drink, it would be insane not to, so it's not just guests coming to see dancers. Also the girls don't seem to be in elaborate or performative costumes the vibe is definitely sexual in nature. There's nothing inherently wrong with pole dancing I just think that considering subject matter to story should be a little more mature.
Considering the authors other works, this has the potential to go downhill very fast...As for maturity - my hope is, the story grows into its boots as time goes on. Haven’t read the author’s other works so can’t assess general experience, but current feeling is it’s floundering a bit. Then again, we are three chapters in, might be early to say much of anything.
Lmao true. I hoped for more of a “Pole Princess” approach when opening this manga - girls doing pole for the love of the art in a controlled training environment, and organized competitions and whatnot, but current setting looks slightly worrying rnPlease dont let the underage girl work there in front of the 'clientele'
Yeah, it's a hotel at what looks to be a seaside resort town. Rather than having people watch tv or live music, the dancers are the performing art attraction. The series looks like it will handle it that way so I think the reader is just going to have to suspend their disbelief. If they start whipping their tops off or taking patrons to private rooms, then the "sex work" label would be fitting. But I doubt it's going that way from a quick look at the thumbnail raws which are up to Ch. 20.calling it sex work feels too heavy handed to my taste.