the show's costume designers' worst nightmare. There's been some truly memorable costumes over the years, some of which went down in history for all the wrong reasons - yep, we're talking wardrobe malfunctions, a.k.a. on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Acast and all the usual podcast apps.Dancing with the Stars has endured because people apparently love to watch celebs try to dance professionally on television, but an undeniably large part of those performances are the cast's inventive (and often super revealing) outfits. Looking for your next favourite podcast? Listen to Cosmopolitan's sex and relationship podcast All The Way With. Women should really take control of who they are. She does it because she loves it and wants other females to feel that empowerment and embrace their sexuality. I have a stripper friend and she’s an ex college professor and has a PHD. There’s a misconception that most women are there because they have no choice, was that the case at all? We might think he’s cute and might flirt with him, but that’s because we want his money."ġ7. "Some people do, but we are not sex workers (not that there is anything wrong with sex work). Do some people consider stripping to be sex work? He pays the light bill and says ‘I paid the bills with ass money’." 16. He’s like, ‘honey you’ve got dollar bills stuck to your butt’. When we got back home I was about to get in the shower and my husband is bursting out laughing. "One night, I came home exhausted, changed clothes, and we went and got food. I would bring in anywhere between £300-£380 a night. "I would make more than the other girls, not because I was better than them. And don’t forget to tip the DJ because if you don’t, you’re going to wind up dancing to an 8 minute song about ham sandwiches. The club has a fee you have to pay at the end of every night. The kicker is you’re considered an independent contractor, so you’re renting your time on stage. "They don’t pay you hourly and you only work for tips. "In America, it depends what state you're in as to whether you can be fully nude." 7. But that’s how I made most of my money – by not going topless on stage and only during lap dances. I'd go topless on stage if it was a slower night and there weren’t many people in the club. So I would stay covered so guys would want to see what was beneath. I would open his legs up, put my hands down on the floor and do a handstand and up onto his lap". As soon as we got back there, I’d take them off. I would always take my shoes off, walking around in 7 and a half inch platform stilettos for eight hours was horrible. "My signature move was that I’d flip upside down. My signature move was that I’d flip upside down The club I worked at, this was an open area and behind me across the room would be another girl giving a lap dance. You give them the lap dance and no sex is involved. We’d take them to the VIP room, it was really nice and kind of dark, there were couches. "I always got my money upfront and I would do one lap dance for £20 or three lap dances for £45. ‘I like women who are more dominant,' they might say, and then you turn it on. You are their fantasy – you can normally get a feel for what they’re into as you’re talking to them. You’re flirty, it doesn’t matter if you’re married, you appear single otherwise you’re not going to get anything. "Your stripper personality is not the same as your regular personality, and you'd always have to have that turned on. I'd walk around the club, talk to a guy, flirt, initiate conversation so he'd want a private dance. They’re not cheap (around £20 per song), so you’d come down off the stage and walk around, I called it doing the rounds. How does the whole private dance / lapdance thing work?