Man Hires Prostitute Own Daughter

Man Hires Prostitute Own Daughter




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Man Hires Prostitute Own Daughter


The hooker sent to a john's room turns out to be his daughter.




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[Collected on the Internet, 1995]A man travels to St. John’s Newfoundland on business from another part of the province. He checks into the Holiday Inn and arranges with the desk clerk to have a hooker sent to his room. A few minutes later, a knock comes on his door, and he opens it to find his own daughter, who was a student at the local university. (Presumably, she found her allowance to be insufficient, probably due to the fact that her father was spending all his money on hookers.)
 
An Israeli couple are preparing to divorce after the man summoned a prostitute to his hotel room only to discover she was his daughter.
As the prostitute entered the room, the full horror for him of discovering his daughter’s occupation hit him. The father began feeling chest pains which may have been a mild heart attack.
Variations: In another version of this tale, an unsuspecting father stops by his daughter’s college unannounced. His knock is answered by her roommate, a new girl who fails to recognize him. His “I’m here to see Sherry” introduction is greeted with the news that his little girl is with another client at the moment; would he care to patronize someone else in the establishment?
Origins: A reader in West Virginia reports hearing this tale told as a true story in the 1950s. In that telling, a little girl is “tricked into a bad house by the lady who ran the place. The child is distraught at being locked in and is really happy when ‘daddy’ comes to rescue her. The tag line is either, ‘Oh, Daddy, I’m so glad to see you!’ or ‘Daddy, what are you doing here?'”
Yet the plot device of the prostitute daughter encountering her father professionally is far older. In the 1921 Luigi Pirandello play Six Characters in Search of an Author , the first client of a girl who has been persuaded to enter a life of vice to help support the family is her estranged step-father.
This tale turns on the discovery of a daughter’s descent into a life of vice. Whether the father means to be a client or is mistaken for one, the shock value of the moment is concentrated on the daughter — that daddy may be dabbling in call girls passes unremarked upon. (The element of sexual pharisaism involving a father and daughter turns up again in legends such as The Sheriff’s Daughter and Jen’s Embarrassment .)
This legend has turned up in the news as recently as October 2002, when the Israeli newspaper Ma’ariv reported that a Haifa businessman sent to a training course at the resort of Eilat summoned a call girl to his hotel room, only to find that the young lady who responded to his call was his daughter. The incident reportedly shocked the man into a possible heart attack and prompted his wife to seek a divorce.
Sightings: One of the many bizarre plot twists in TV’s Twin Peaks had Audrey Horne (Sherilyn Fenn) working undercover as a prostitute at a local casino-brothel. The owner insisted upon personally trying out each new girl, a situation that brought Audrey face to face with her father. (“The Last Evening,” original air date: 24 May 1990.) The plot of the 1996 TV film The Ultimate Lie was also based on this legend.
Brunvand, Jan Harold. Too Good To Be True .
  New York: W. W. Norton, 1999. ISBN 0-393-04734-2 (p. 122).
BBC News . “Father’s Surprise: Call-Girl Daughter.”
  11 October 2002.
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A married father of three collapsed last week when a prostitute he had hired entered his hotel room, and turned out to be his 20-year-old daughter.
As attempts were made to revive Titus Ncube in a hotel in the western city of Bulawayo, his daughter fled, the Bulawayo Chronicle said.
The distraught man said later that he had spoken to his wife and daughter and apologised to them. “I just want my family back,” he said.
He said he and his wife were undergoing difficulties in their marriage, and he believed that his daughter had turned to prostitution “because it was her way of expressing her feelings about the problems in my family.
“She has stopped that and is going back to school next year,”
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On 6 May 2017 the somewhat official-looking web site United News published an item reporting that a Texas man hired a prostitute, only to discover upon her arrival that he had accidentally hired his own wife:
In a story resembling elements of the classic 1979 ‘Piña Colada Song’, the man – who we cannot identify for privacy reasons – had been using the booking website for some months to hire prostitutes and meet them for sex at motels in neighboring areas … On the most recent occasion, which occurred last weekend, the man told his wife he was going on a fishing trip with friends, when in reality he was travelling to a motel on the outskirts of town.
Upon checking into the motel on Saturday afternoon the man used his phone to access his regular website used to book prostitutes. According to a statement he made to authorities, he saw the profile of a new 28-year old woman who caught his attention.
As with many of the photos on the site, the photo only showed the woman from her neck down, but the man is said to have liked what he saw and he sent her a message to see if she was free later that night, and what her price would be for 2 hours.
She replied back within minutes to confirm she was available, and could meet up with him at the motel that night. The pair agreed on a price of $150, bargained down from her original request of $200.
Guests at the hotel in adjoining rooms called the front desk to report a disturbance at around 8 pm after the woman arrived at the property and found that her client was none other than her husband of the last 17 years.
The item bears an uncanny resemblance to a decades-old urban legend about a man who hires a prostitute (or visits a brothel) only to learn that his daughter is employed at the establishment. Additionally, the page format is virtually identical to a recent Border Herald fake news item about a “ diarrhea incident ” at a Florida strip club:
Although United News bears no disclaimer we can find, it appears to be one of a number of regional fake news sites; its fellows include outfits like the Baltimore Gazette , the Seattle Tribune , and the Florida Sun Post . The sites, which pose as the digital counterparts for non-existent regional newspapers and primarily share shocking or salacious claims fabricated to rack up social media shares and traffic, are occasionally picked up by tabloids and other sources and then reproduced as “real” news.
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Paducah man hires his own wife as a hooker and other fake news that can ruin your day
Paducah man hires his own wife as a hooker and other fake news that can ruin your day
Jeffrey Lee Puckett
 
| Courier Journal
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A story went viral this week about a man in Paducah, Kentucky, who hired a prostitute and was shocked – shocked! – when his wife showed up at his hotel room door.
Pretty saucy, right? Cheating husband, hooker wife. It's like a Charlie Sheen movie circa 2009.
But it was fake. More than 100,000 Facebook users shared it as a real story but here's the rub: The same thing allegedly happened to men in several other states, all with exactly the same story. HMMMMMMMMM.
Also this week, some optimistic Donald Trump supporters tried to pass off a 2016 photo of a championship parade for the Cleveland Cavaliers as a shot of the crowd at a Trump rally in Phoenix. Spoiler alert: The rally crowd was much smaller.
And finally, a remarkable totality photo from the Great American Eclipse, showing sun and moon over the South Pacific Ocean and nestled on the horizon, was shared and liked by thousands. Think about that one for a second: South Pacific, America, horizon, afternoon eclipse.
Well, in a world where people actively lie for a living and accusations of fake news are flying, it's probably a good idea to not spread actual fake news – no matter how pretty the picture.
If you come across a story that seems fake, and many of them scream their intentions, there are ways to sleuth out the truth.
In the case of the American/Indonesian/sunset/eclipse, save the image and then go to Google image search . Click on the camera icon and then drag the image into a search field. Roughly 0.56 seconds later you'll have a page of refutations.
You can also use Jeffrey's Image Metadata Viewer (different Jeffrey), which allows you to upload an image or use a URL to retrieve a range of data that can easily prove or disprove a claim.
If it's a story like the one about that glorious evening in Paducah when true love was put on trial, you can check its accuracy but it may take a few more steps. 
Snopes.com is a clearinghouse for outing fake stories and it's often as easy as choosing the right search terms. For example, searching for "hooker is man's wife" reveals the exact same story but set in Texas and another version where a daughter replaces the mother (which actually did happen to Charlie Sheen*).  
FactCheck.org does the same but only for political news, which means it's always useful and lately critical. It's run by the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania.
If a viral video is on YouTube, use Amnesty International's YouTube Dataviewer , which can use a URL to trace the upload history of a video, and that will frequently reveal fraudulent sources. 
IFLSCIENCE.com has a few more extremely nerdy options, any of which are easy to use. So don't be one of those people blindly sharing stories, no matter how entertaining they might be. Instead, Google "coconut crabs" and say hello to your worst nightmare because those things are real.
Reporter Jeffrey Lee Puckett can be reached at 502-582-4160 and jpuckett@courier-journal.com.
Stunning eclipse in Indonesia pic.twitter.com/t5dbZKf73Z
#Disinfo peddler TEN_GOP tweeted a picture of a Cleveland Cavaliers parade & said it was the #PhoenixRally crowd. https://t.co/JEGHLZ64NM pic.twitter.com/RWEayL04Vs

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