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Escorts who double their rates after a couple of years


asdsrfr
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2 hours ago, topunderachiever said:

In your niche, this infers you'll gladly insert your extremity up a hot, sexy arse but expect hella more cash to contend with a disgusting one. 

Am I reading that wrong?  😉 

Lol I definitely wish I could tack on an upcharge when someone doesn’t bother to clean properly (not talking about imperfection here but total lack of proper effort), but I don’t wanna add even a smidge of anxiety about cleanliness to the minds of the guys who are already cleanliness-obsessed cuz they’ll be 100% clean and still stressing out about it the entire session otherwise.

(My Current link:)

https://rent.men/FFHoleWhisperer

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2 hours ago, jjkrkwood said:

Its funny, now that I am in my Golden Years, I spend more time thinking about paying for "long-term" care (should it be needed), than I do about carnal entertainment.

How sad is that ?  ☹️

Nothing sad about logical and realistic thinking.  I submit that you are not nearly as alone in your thinking as you might think. 👍

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6 hours ago, jjkrkwood said:

Its funny, now that I am in my Golden Years, I spend more time thinking about paying for "long-term" care (should it be needed), than I do about carnal entertainment.

How sad is that ?  ☹️

Have you every thought of buying long-term care insurance? Of course, I just got a notice that my carrier, CalPERS, will be increasing my rates by 50% at the end of this summer! 😒

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8 minutes ago, Unicorn said:

Have you every thought of buying long-term care insurance? Of course, I just got a notice that my carrier, CalPERS, will be increasing my rates by 50% at the end of this summer! 😒

I would think if you waited until your 70's to buy long term care insurance, the rates would be astronomical.

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46 minutes ago, lonely_john said:

What is the best age to shop for this service?

I have no idea but I would suppose in your early 40’s. That would allow enough time(35 to 40 years) to pass before you might need the policy to pay out. Actuaries are used as elsewhere in the insurance business to figure out the math.

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On 6/17/2021 at 10:20 PM, asdsrfr said:

I have seen a college age guy from time to time as an escort. He is not really the kind of escort who advertises or has a lot of clients but sees people he meets off Grindr from time to time. He and I also chat from time to time outside of meeting up and in fact I helped him write his grad school essays. Recently he said he wanted to double his rate from the what I had been paying for a couple of years. He has fancy tastes in cars and expensive clothing and I suspect he has had a few people who pay a rather inflated rate for his time. Recently he has been texting me to get together(at the new rate) because he has gotten into some heavy debt and is kind of desperate.

Anyway I find the whole idea of paying someone twice the rate that you've had going on for years somewhat a turnoff. It's not like I gained a lot of weight or asked him to do anything wacko. Would you guys be turned off by this?

Good for you! Stand your ground, no offence why doesn't he just get a sugar daddy? 

 

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On 6/19/2021 at 1:55 AM, tassojunior said:

We're at a point right now where demand, choices, and pricing are all over the board because of the pandemic and lockdown. It won't settle back exactly as it was. 

Reno Gold makes $100K a month on OnlyFans and J_rod makes $20K a month on Chaterbate just leaving his cam on all day and chatting to lonely guys while he plays video games in his clothes. Neither has sex. And there are plenty of massuers online who just give amatuer non-sex massages. It's amazing there's so many guys who haven't latched onto the digital or fantasy obsessive hustles and still do "the deed". $300 is peanuts for anyone with imagination. That, roaring inflation and the enormous number of new millionaires make sex more expensive. I don't advise any of my guys to go that digital route I guess because I'm selfish. But yes, rates have gone up. A lot of ordinary clients have saved up a lot of money during the lockdown and are blowing it (!) as fast as possible now just as much of the supply has gone to digital pastures or otherwise not been on the market. It may land back like it was, or it may not. My guess is higher rates. 

Maybe you should advice your numbers 1, 2, and 3 to join onlyfans and make money having sex with each other or equally hot guys. I'm sure they'll still see you. 

People are also particularly horny after the pandemic and happy they survived and the country had a change in management... 

I remember in April and May of last year all the prophecies about prices coming down and how all who were brave to disagree were attacked... I guess those who kept their jobs and worked from home saved not going to restaurants, gas, etc. and now are back to hiring. 

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2 hours ago, lonely_john said:

What is the best age to shop for this service?

"How long-term care insurance works

To buy a long-term care insurance policy, you fill out an application and answer health questions. The insurer may ask to see medical records and interview you by phone or face to face.

You choose the amount of coverage you want. The policies usually cap the amount paid out per day and the amount paid during your lifetime.

Once you’re approved for coverage and the policy is issued, you begin paying premiums.

Under most long-term care policies, you’re eligible for benefits when you can’t do at least two out of six “activities of daily living,” called ADLs, on your own or you suffer from dementia or other cognitive impairment.

The activities of daily living are:

  • Bathing.
  • Caring for incontinence.
  • Dressing.
  • Eating.
  • Toileting (getting on or off the toilet).
  • Transferring (getting in or out of a bed or a chair).

When you need care and want to make a claim, the insurance company will review medical documents from your doctor and may send a nurse to do an evaluation. Before approving a claim, the insurer must approve your “plan of care.”

Under most policies, you’ll have to pay for long-term care services out of pocket for a certain amount of time, such as 30, 60 or 90 days, before the insurer starts reimbursing you for any care. This is called the “elimination period.”

The policy starts paying out after you’re eligible for benefits and usually after you receive paid care for that period. Most policies pay up to a daily limit for care until you reach the lifetime maximum.

Some companies offer a “shared care” option for couples when both spouses buy policies. This lets you share the total amount of coverage, so you can draw from your spouse’s pool of benefits if you reach the limit on your policy.

Cost of long-term care insurance

The rates you pay depend on a variety of things, including:

  • Your age and health: The older you are and the more health problems you have, the more you’ll pay when you buy a policy.
  • Gender: Women generally pay more than men because they live longer and have a greater chance of making long-term care insurance claims.
  • Marital status: Premiums are lower for married people than single people.
  • Insurance company: Prices for the same amount of coverage will vary among insurance companies. That’s why it’s important to compare quotes from different carriers.
  • Amount of coverage: You’ll pay more for richer coverage, such as higher limits on the daily and lifetime benefits, cost-of-living adjustments to protect against inflation, shorter elimination periods, and fewer restrictions on the types of care covered.

A single 55-year-old man in good health buying new coverage can expect to pay an average of $2,050 a year for a long-term care policy with an initial pool of benefits of $164,000, according to a 2019 price index from the American Association for Long-Term Care Insurance. Those benefits compound annually at 3% to total $386,500 at age 85. For the same policy, a single 55-year-old woman can expect to pay an average of $2,700 a year. The average combined premiums for a 55-year-old couple, each buying that amount of coverage, are $3,050 a year.

A caveat: The price could go up after you buy a policy; prices are not guaranteed to stay the same over your lifetime. Many policyholders saw spikes in their rates in the last several years after insurance companies asked state regulators for permission to hike premiums. They were able to justify rate increases because the cost of claims overall were higher than they had projected. Regulators approved the rate increases because they wanted to make sure the insurance companies would have enough money to continue paying claims."

 

In short, it is complicated to decide when to shop for this service

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On 6/20/2021 at 6:45 PM, CuriousByNature said:

Nope... couple of hours outside Toronto - nothing over $12 within 100km...lol.  I wouldn't mind paying the LA prices (even in US dollars) if it's good.  The best burger I ever had was over $30, years ago in Vancouver, with braised short rib meat and pan-seared fois-gras on top of the burger patty.... so good.

I love Vancouver.  Many amazing restaurants there - especially the ones owned by the Glowbal group.  I just hope that they are still there once PM Trudeau decides to let Americans back into Canada.  I used to go to Vancouver at least twice a year 

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7 minutes ago, Love2GetMassaged said:

I love Vancouver.  Many amazing restaurants there - especially the ones owned by the Glowbal group.  I just hope that they are still there once PM Trudeau decides to let Americans back into Canada.  I used to go to Vancouver at least twice a year 

It's a nice place, but expensive.  I prefer Ontario so I can afford more travel than compared to when I lived in Vancouver.

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36 minutes ago, asdsrfr said:

Thats what he wants. Someone to pay for his leased BMW (which I advised him against) , and nice clothes etc. 

Oh man, well good-luck to him. If I was him, I wouldn't bother getting all of those expensive things; investment is the gift that keeps on giving.

Did you eventually stop seeing him?

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2 hours ago, CuriousByNature said:

It's a nice place, but expensive.  I prefer Ontario so I can afford more travel than compared to when I lived in Vancouver.

It's not that expensive. If I were Canadian, I couldn't imagine living anywhere other than Vancouver. It's way better than any other Canadian city IMHO. I've visited every Canadian province except Newfoundland-Labrador. 

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No matter the vice, it’s a constant game of balancing the money spent on a few laughs, trinkets and souvenirs… with the reality of one’s liquidity at any given time.

Sudden jump in rates? Supply and demand. 
Quarantine created a wider market for all digital means of social contact, and motivated more service providers to become content creators. 
Hours devoted to work on camera can yield more money over the life of it’s availability than same number of hours of personal services at their prior rates. Providers appear across multiple platforms, and they have way more control in pairings, schedule, nature of action, etc where it’s a better trade off for time put in, in most every respect. 
Times, they are a-changing’

(Videos Killed the radio star, don’t forget)

 

 

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