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why do we see less and less reviews these days on daddy's review?


discreet
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I am new, so I try to use reviews to find reliable escorts but it seems like I see less reviews from recent occassions. Ideally, I want everybody to write something about theri experience, especially the bad ones, so others can avoid. Any ideas why we see less and less reviews?

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Although this is hardly scientific, I compared the months of February 2013, 2012, 2011, and 2010. The number of reviews per day is pretty constant. Most days have between five and seven reviews, with a few outliers at four and eight.

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Discreet you ask an interesting question. I first started hiring escorts about then years ago. At the beginning I was like a kid in a candy store. I traveled all over hiring escorts in New York, Tampa, Chicago, San Francisco, Vancouver, London, and all over my home base here in Southern California. I made a point of writing reviews for all the excellent escorts I hired. I was fortunate that I never had a bad experience though a number were mediocre. As the years passed I found that I was hiring fewer and fewer new guys because I had developed a cadre of regulars for whom I have already written reviews. Instead of hiring a five or six new guys a years I was hiring only one or two. Unfortunately during the last couple of years all of the new guys I have hired have been mediocre and I haven’t felt inclined to write reviews for them. Last week I got together with Joey/L.A. and had a great experience – my review of our time together is in line. Tomorrow I’m getting together with another new guy and if the experience goes as I expect I will certainly write a review. I think many of the prolific reviewers of the past have found themselves in a situation similar to mine.

 

Now as to why newer, younger client/reviewers haven’t picked up the slack I don’t have a real answer. I just might be that because of the economic down turn younger guys are having to work harder and are hiring less. Your guess is as good as mine.

 

P.S. This is the second place I have posted this same response to your question discreet

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thanks Epigonos , I didn't want to deviate the topic in the other post, so opened up a new one.

 

rvwnsd, thanks for comparing those, it's an interesting result, I've never thought you would be able to see that. I still have a feeling that we don't have enough reviews. Might be because I heavily rely on reviews...

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Sorry, banana boat got lost...

 

http://images.veer.com/IMG/PIMG/POP/POP0002190_P.JPG

 

OK, so what are those monkeys doing in my Boston Athenaeum... and do they have readers' cards ???, and I don't think that they make the dress code.

 

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://cdn.c.photoshelter.com/img-get/I000084R7weZVBHE/s/750/750/EB-107b.jpg&imgrefurl=http://stevedunwell.photoshelter.com/image/I000084R7weZVBHE&usg=__37pt4l9iB2xA0T9DU5A_DQF5SyU=&h=750&w=584&sz=146&hl=en&start=10&zoom=1&tbnid=o5fBdsPvgoQiiM:&tbnh=141&tbnw=110&ei=XW83Udb6GY3S9AT0yICYBQ&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dboston%2Bathenaeum%26hl%3Den%26gbv%3D2%26tbm%3Disch&itbs=1&sa=X&ved=0CDwQrQMwCQ

 

 

http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://cdn.c.photoshelter.com/img-get/I000084R7weZVBHE/s/750/750/EB-107b.jpg&imgrefurl=http://stevedunwell.photoshelter.com/image/I000084R7weZVBHE&usg=__37pt4l9iB2xA0T9DU5A_DQF5SyU=&h=750&w=584&sz=146&hl=en&start=10&zoom=1&tbnid=o5fBdsPvgoQiiM:&tbnh=141&tbnw=110&ei=XW83Udb6GY3S9AT0yICYBQ&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dboston%2Bathenaeum%26hl%3Den%26gbv%3D2%26tbm%3Disch&itbs=1&sa=X&ved=0CDwQrQMwCQ

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I don't have a sense that there are fewer reviews now. I care more about the quality of the reviews.

 

As one who has kept count, so to speak, I, too, have not thought "that there are fewer reviews now" as contrasted with the past. I've written

my share but find myself similar to Epigonos. I rarely see new guys now, but when I do and if we'd had an experience which I, personally,

want others to experience as well as meet the escorts-- I take it upon myself to write a detailed review.

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I can't resist any more:

 

It should be "Fewer", not "less". In german, "viel" versus "viele". how MANY versus how MUCH. Sugar: How much? Gallons of milk: Hom many?

 

As the sign says at Savenor's in Cambridge, Ma: "Eight items or fewer".

 

Details? PM me. I'm awake at 4:30 AM and even the Cat won't talk to me.

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I can't resist any more:

 

It should be "Fewer", not "less". In german, "viel" versus "viele". how MANY versus how MUCH. Sugar: How much? Gallons of milk: Hom many?

 

As the sign says at Savenor's in Cambridge, Ma: "Eight items or fewer".

 

Details? PM me. I'm awake at 4:30 AM and even the Cat won't talk to me.

 

See http://www.companyofmen.org/showthread.php?91692-Nigerian-Counterfeit-Check-Scammers-are-now-targeting-Daddy-s-Reviews/page3&highlight=fewer . And does the cat usually talk to you? :p

 

Kevin Slater

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I can't resist any more:

 

It should be "Fewer", not "less". In german, "viel" versus "viele". how MANY versus how MUCH. Sugar: How much? Gallons of milk: Hom many?

 

As the sign says at Savenor's in Cambridge, Ma: "Eight items or fewer".

 

Details? PM me. I'm awake at 4:30 AM and even the Cat won't talk to me.

One wants fewer than a specific number of a set item, fewer than 9 gallons of milk; less milk than the man in front of you. Many of us are sloppy with our use of the English language, some of us are just careless; there are those that just don't know and those that just don't care and then of course there are those that don't know AND don't care. Venn diagram anyone?
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I can't resist...

 

Nor can I.

 

...Gallons of milk: Hom many?

 

I believe the correct spelling is "How" (with the letter "w" at the end) and not "Hom" (with the letter "m" at the end).

 

He who points out the mistakes of others should make sure he does not make a mistake while doing so.

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I can't resist any more:

 

It should be "Fewer", not "less". In german, "viel" versus "viele". how MANY versus how MUCH. Sugar: How much? Gallons of milk: Hom many?

 

As the sign says at Savenor's in Cambridge, Ma: "Eight items or fewer".

 

Details? PM me. I'm awake at 4:30 AM and even the Cat won't talk to me.

The moment I saw the thread heading, I wanted to do this, but I had enough self-discipline to resist. Now the cat is out of the bag.

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He who points out the mistakes of others should make sure he does not make a mistake while doing so.

 

The actual rule is: He who points out the mistakes of others will make one of his own in the process. It's right next to Murphy's law in the rule book. :cool:

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OK, guys! Let us get back to the initial topic! -:) -:)
Usually when a thread takes this turn, the initial topic has run it course. That seems to be the case here. That is, while it may seem to be that there are fewer reviews, in fact the numbers do not bear out the statement.
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Now the cat is out of the bag.

 

Let the cat out of the bag

Meaning

 

Disclose a secret.

 

Origin

 

There are two commonly heard suggested origins of this phrase. One relates to the fraud of substituting a cat for a piglet at markets. If you let the cat out of the bag you disclosed the trick - and avoided buying a pig in a poke (bag). This form of trickery is long alluded to in the language and 'pigs in a poke' are recorded as early as 1530.

http://www.phrases.org.uk/images/cat-of-nine-tails.gifThe other theory is that the 'cat' referred to is the cat o' nine tails, which was used to flog ill-disciplined sailors. Again, this has sufficient historical record to be at least possible. The cat o' nine tails was widely used and was referred to in print many years prior to the first use of 'let the cat out of the bag'. The 'nine tails' part of the name derives from the three strands of cord that the rope lashes were made from. Each of the cords were in turn made from three strands of string. When unbraided a piece of rope separated into nine strings. The 'cat' part no doubt alluded to the scratches that the knotted ends of the lash made on the victim's back, like those from a cat's claws.

 

Of the two explanations, the 'pig in a poke' derivation is the more plausible, although I can find no direct documentary evidence to link 'letting the cat out of the bag' to the selling of livestock. Versions of the phrase exist in both Dutch - 'Een kat in de zak kopen' and in German - 'Die Katze im Sack kaufen'. These both translate loosely as 'to buy a cat in a bag', i.e. to buy false goods.

 

The cat o' nine tails story is dubious at best. It is reported that the lashes were sometimes stored in bags, but the suggested nautical punishment origin fails at the critical point, in that it doesn't match the 'disclose a secret' meaning of the phrase.

 

The first known use of the phrase in print that I have found is in a 1760 edition of The London Magazine:

 

"We could have wished that the author... had not let the cat out of the bag."

 

There are several other literary references to the phrase in the 1760s and 1770s, most of which place it in quotations marks - a sure sign of it being not commonly understood and consequently, newly coined.

 

Cats feature very often in English proverbs:

A cat may look at a king - 1546

All cats are grey in the dark - 1596

Curiosity killed the cat - 1921

There are more ways of killing a cat than choking it with cream - 1855

When the cat is away, the mice will play - 1607

 

This routine appearance of cats in the language is no doubt a consequence of them being widely kept as mousers and pets in domestic houses. As to 'who let the cats out?', we can't be certain; but it probably wasn't a sailor.

 

http://www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/let-the-cat-out-of-the-bag.html

 

bear out the statement.

 

Take your pick ... http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/bear

 

;)

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