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Royal Displeasure Over `coyote Girls'


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Posted

Royal displeasure over `Coyote Girls'

BANGKOK, Thailand - Even in a country where scantily clad dancers are something of a national icon, there is such a thing as crossing the line.

A comment by Thailand's revered royal family has set off a campaign against one particular type of dancer, known here as Coyote Girls, after the 2000 American film "Coyote Ugly," about a group of sassy 20-somethings who dance seductively on a New York City bar top.

The movie inspired mainstream Bangkok nightclubs to feature their own brand of Coyote Girls. Soon they were dancing at auto shows. Shopping malls and businesses hired them to promote new products, and their sexy dancing became a regular feature of outdoor festivals. A troupe even entertained soldiers manning their tanks in Bangkok on a September afternoon after the military staged a coup.

But Queen Sirikit intervened after a recent performance near a Buddhist temple, on one of the religion's holiest days, prompting a crackdown that has turned Coyote Girls into a subject of national debate and official disapproval.

"Coyote Girls have to be in the right place, like an animal has to be in the zoo," said Ladda Thungsupachai, director of the Culture Watch Center, a division of the Culture Ministry, which wants to restrict the dancing to nightclubs and bars.

The problem started in mid-October when a temple in the northeastern province of Nong Khai held a festival marking the end of Buddhist Lent, a three-month period when Buddhists try to refrain from indulgence. TV news reports showed footage from a nearby motorcycle shop that had hired a group of Coyote Girls to promote its wares.

The queen saw the broadcast and was not pleased. Her private secretary wrote to the Culture Ministry to convey the queen's feeling that such performances on holy days, in a majority Buddhist country, were "inappropriate."

The Culture Ministry launched a moral crusade, the latest effort to balance the country's look-the-other-way tolerance with Buddhist values of modesty and manners.

Coyote Girls are now banned from dancing in public places, particularly near Buddhist temples, and more measures are in the works.

By and large, the dancers wear enough clothing to avoid being X-rated, and Parichart Niyomthai, a 24-year-old Coyote Girl, doesn't see her job as a moral dilemma.

Slim, attractive Parichart, who also calls herself "Natalie," is a college student by day, pursuing a double major in law and English with a minor in hotel management. On evenings and weekends, she slips into stilettos, hot pants and midriff-baring tops for a few hours of dancing that brings in a hefty $2,000 a month.

"I pay my tuition, my car and my room," said Parichart, who has danced at auto shows and shopping malls to launch new products such as computer printers and coffee creamers and spends most nights dancing on the bar top at Forte, a Bangkok nightclub where most of the employees are female students.

She agrees that Coyote Girls shouldn't appear at Buddhist temples, but doesn't support the wider crackdown. "Coyote dancing is not prostitution," she said. "We don't sell ourselves. And we make a lot of money."

But Ladda fears the young women are making themselves vulnerable to sex crimes, and highlights an Education Ministry initiative to offer them more respectable jobs.

In the meantime, the government wants to ensure that children are not exposed to the racy dancing, so the ministry called a meeting of managers of major shopping malls, department stores and the organizers of big events, such as auto shows. All agreed to stop employing Coyote dancers and assure that attractive women hired for promotional purposes are "properly dressed," Ladda said.

But some says Thailand has more pressing matters for the government to address.

"Every now and then, Thai society appears to fall into a period of moral panic," columnist Veena Thoopkrajae wrote recently in The Nation, an English-language Thai newspaper. "Does society really collapse because of dancing girls?"

-AP News

JOCELYN GECKER

27 Dec 2006

Posted

By JOCELYN GECKER, Associated Press Writer

2 hours, 18 minutes ago

BANGKOK, Thailand - Even in a country where scantily clad dancers are something of a national icon, there is such a thing as crossing the line.

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A comment by Thailand's revered royal family has set off a campaign against one particular type of dancer, known here as Coyote Girls, after the 2000 American film "Coyote Ugly," about a group of sassy 20-somethings who dance seductively on a New York City bar top.

The movie inspired mainstream Bangkok nightclubs to feature their own brand of Coyote Girls. Soon they were dancing at auto shows. Shopping malls and businesses hired them to promote new products, and their sexy dancing became a regular feature of outdoor festivals. A troupe even entertained soldiers manning their tanks in Bangkok on a September afternoon after the military staged a coup.

But Queen Sirikit intervened after a recent performance near a Buddhist temple, on one of the religion's holiest days, prompting a crackdown that has turned Coyote Girls into a subject of national debate and official disapproval.

"Coyote Girls have to be in the right place, like an animal has to be in the zoo," said Ladda Thungsupachai, director of the Culture Watch Center, a division of the Culture Ministry, which wants to restrict the dancing to nightclubs and bars.

The problem started in mid-October when a temple in the northeastern province of Nong Khai held a festival marking the end of Buddhist Lent, a three-month period when Buddhists try to refrain from indulgence. TV news reports showed footage from a nearby motorcycle shop that had hired a group of Coyote Girls to promote its wares.

The queen saw the broadcast and was not pleased. Her private secretary wrote to the Culture Ministry to convey the queen's feeling that such performances on holy days, in a majority Buddhist country, were "inappropriate."

The Culture Ministry launched a moral crusade, the latest effort to balance the country's look-the-other-way tolerance with Buddhist values of modesty and manners.

Coyote Girls are now banned from dancing in public places, particularly near Buddhist temples, and more measures are in the works.

By and large, the dancers wear enough clothing to avoid being X-rated, and Parichart Niyomthai, a 24-year-old Coyote Girl, doesn't see her job as a moral dilemma.

Slim, attractive Parichart, who also calls herself "Natalie," is a college student by day, pursuing a double major in law and English with a minor in hotel management. On evenings and weekends, she slips into stilettos, hot pants and midriff-baring tops for a few hours of dancing that brings in a hefty $2,000 a month.

"I pay my tuition, my car and my room," said Parichart, who has danced at auto shows and shopping malls to launch new products such as computer printers and coffee creamers and spends most nights dancing on the bar top at Forte, a Bangkok nightclub where most of the employees are female students.

She agrees that Coyote Girls shouldn't appear at Buddhist temples, but doesn't support the wider crackdown. "Coyote dancing is not prostitution," she said. "We don't sell ourselves. And we make a lot of money."

But Ladda fears the young women are making themselves vulnerable to sex crimes, and highlights an Education Ministry initiative to offer them more respectable jobs.

In the meantime, the government wants to ensure that children are not exposed to the racy dancing, so the ministry called a meeting of managers of major shopping malls, department stores and the organizers of big events, such as auto shows. All agreed to stop employing Coyote dancers and assure that attractive women hired for promotional purposes are "properly dressed," Ladda said.

But some says Thailand has more pressing matters for the government to address.

"Every now and then, Thai society appears to fall into a period of moral panic," columnist Veena Thoopkrajae wrote recently in The Nation, an English-language Thai newspaper. "Does society really collapse because of dancing girls?"

Posted
Duplicate topics merged.

Can anyone tell me of a good place where I can watch "fair skinned" coyote girls here (don't like the dark-skinned ones)... and then "take them home"?

How much for the bar, and how much to "take them home"?

don't want those rip-off clubs where they try to sell to you by bullying or coercing customers... heard of quite a few.

Posted
Duplicate topics merged.

Can anyone tell me of a good place where I can watch "fair skinned" coyote girls here (don't like the dark-skinned ones)... and then "take them home"?

How much for the bar, and how much to "take them home"?

don't want those rip-off clubs where they try to sell to you by bullying or coercing customers... heard of quite a few.

i suggest you take those kinds of requests/comments to some other forum (barladies.com maybe?) - these kinds of requests are frowned upon here.

You've managed to pop up on my 'radar' more than once recently 'junkofdavid2' and as some people will agree, thats not a good thing.

Posted
Duplicate topics merged.

Can anyone tell me of a good place where I can watch "fair skinned" coyote girls here (don't like the dark-skinned ones)... and then "take them home"?

How much for the bar, and how much to "take them home"?

don't want those rip-off clubs where they try to sell to you by bullying or coercing customers... heard of quite a few.

i suggest you take those kinds of requests/comments to some other forum (barladies.com maybe?) - these kinds of requests are frowned upon here.

You've managed to pop up on my 'radar' more than once recently 'junkofdavid2' and as some people will agree, thats not a good thing.

oh oh some blood letting about to happen

Posted
Duplicate topics merged.

Can anyone tell me of a good place where I can watch "fair skinned" coyote girls here (don't like the dark-skinned ones)... and then "take them home"?

How much for the bar, and how much to "take them home"?

don't want those rip-off clubs where they try to sell to you by bullying or coercing customers... heard of quite a few.

i suggest you take those kinds of requests/comments to some other forum (barladies.com maybe?) - these kinds of requests are frowned upon here.

You've managed to pop up on my 'radar' more than once recently 'junkofdavid2' and as some people will agree, thats not a good thing.

oh oh some blood letting about to happen

Believe me, I'm a mod and I don't want to be on Wolfie's radar either. :o

Posted
Duplicate topics merged.

Can anyone tell me of a good place where I can watch "fair skinned" coyote girls here (don't like the dark-skinned ones)... and then "take them home"?

How much for the bar, and how much to "take them home"?

don't want those rip-off clubs where they try to sell to you by bullying or coercing customers... heard of quite a few.

i suggest you take those kinds of requests/comments to some other forum (barladies.com maybe?) - these kinds of requests are frowned upon here.

You've managed to pop up on my 'radar' more than once recently 'junkofdavid2' and as some people will agree, thats not a good thing.

sorry.. didn't know

Posted

Right royal row over 'coyote' dancers

dance_wideweb__470x305,0.jpg

'Coyote Girls' dancers perform in front of tanks in Bangkok after Thailand's recent coup ... now they are in trouble with officialdom.

Thailand's royal family has intervened in a culture war over scantily clad dancers in Bangkok.

In the spotlight are the city's Coyote Girls - named after the 2000 American film Coyote Ugly about a group of sassy 20-somethings who dance seductively on a New York City bar top.

The movie inspired mainstream Bangkok nightclubs to feature their own brand of Coyote Girls. Soon they were dancing at auto shows.

Shopping centres and businesses hired them to promote new products, and their sexy dancing became a regular feature of outdoor festivals.

A troupe even entertained soldiers manning their tanks in Bangkok on a September afternoon after the military staged a coup.

But Queen Sirikit intervened after a recent performance near a Buddhist temple on one of the religion's holiest days.

That prompted a crackdown that has turned Coyote Girls into a subject of national debate and official disapproval.

"Coyote Girls have to be in the right place, like an animal has to be in the zoo," said Ladda Thungsupachai, director of the Culture Watch Centre, a division of the Culture Ministry, which wants to restrict the dancing to nightclubs and bars.

The problem started in mid-October when a temple in the north-eastern province of Nong Khai held a festival marking the end of Buddhist Lent, a three-month period when Buddhists try to refrain from indulgence. TV news reports showed footage from a nearby motorcycle shop that had hired a group of Coyote Girls to promote its wares.

The queen saw the broadcast and was not pleased. Her private secretary wrote to the Culture Ministry to convey the queen's feeling that such performances on holy days, in a majority Buddhist country, were "inappropriate".

The Culture Ministry launched a moral crusade, the latest effort to balance the country's look-the-other-way tolerance with Buddhist values of modesty and manners.

Coyote Girls are now banned from dancing in public places, particularly near Buddhist temples, and more measures are in the works.

By and large, the dancers wear enough clothing to avoid being X-rated, and Parichart Niyomthai, a 24-year-old Coyote Girl, doesn't see her job as a moral dilemma.

Slim, attractive Parichart, who also calls herself Natalie, is a university student by day, pursuing a double major in law and English with a minor in hotel management. On evenings and weekends, she slips into stilettos, hot pants and midriff-baring tops for a few hours of dancing that brings in a hefty 70,000 baht ($A2,500) a month.

"I pay my tuition, my car and my room," said Parichart, who has danced at auto shows and shopping centres to launch new products such as computer printers and coffee creamers and spends most nights dancing on the bar top at Forte, a Bangkok nightclub where most of the employees are female students.

She agrees that Coyote Girls shouldn't appear at Buddhist temples, but doesn't support the wider crackdown. "Coyote dancing is not prostitution," she said. "We don't sell ourselves. And we make a lot of money."

But Ladda fears the young women are making themselves vulnerable to sex crimes, and highlights an Education Ministry initiative to offer them more respectable jobs.

In the meantime, the government wants to ensure that children are not exposed to the racy dancing, so the ministry called a meeting of managers of major shopping centres, department stores and the organisers of big events, such as auto shows. All agreed to stop employing Coyote dancers and assure that attractive women hired for promotional purposes are "properly dressed", Ladda said.

But some say Thailand has more pressing matters for the government to address.

"Every now and then, Thai society appears to fall into a period of moral panic," columnist Veena Thoopkrajae wrote recently in The Nation, an English-language Thai newspaper. "Does society really collapse because of dancing girls?"

Source: Sydney Morning Herald - 29 December 2006

Posted
Right royal row over 'coyote' dancers

dance_wideweb__470x305,0.jpg

'Coyote Girls' dancers perform in front of tanks in Bangkok after Thailand's recent coup ... now they are in trouble with officialdom.

I hope Forte chose a better bunch than that. Even the soldiers look dismayed.

Posted
On evenings and weekends, she slips into stilettos, hot pants and midriff-baring tops for a few hours of dancing that brings in a hefty 70,000 baht ($A2,500) a month.

I wonder if that 70,000 is for slipping out of them :o

Posted
On evenings and weekends, she slips into stilettos, hot pants and midriff-baring tops for a few hours of dancing that brings in a hefty 70,000 baht ($A2,500) a month.

I wonder if that 70,000 is for slipping out of them :o

Most Clubs will fire the girl on the spot, if she goes out with a customer even on their day off or at the very least fine them a months salary for going out with a customer.

The club including the girl makes more money in drinks if they don’t go out.

www.sunbeltasiagroup.com

Posted
Soon they were dancing at auto shows....

I think they dance especially if not exclusively for auto-shows.

one can simply go to nearest store selling magazines and pick up on random ANY auto/moto related issue and leaf them through - I bet girls-models depicted on those adds and their outfits rival those in Playboy or Penthouse magazines. and these magazines are much cheaper too!

so, never mind those cars - chicks in there worth of buying each issue for collection ! :o

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