到底有多少人投入其不太清楚,但是光京一地就有13,000的夜店或所是有公公主(部份有男公)的服。
也是一新?行生意予新的定,也是一新。而已受好的教育的女孩子而言,投身酒店公主的行列,不就是避了激烈而且利微薄海的海策略?撇些商院的名,能打扮得光亮,夜夜笙歌,跳舞喝酒,人生得意不也才的日子而已?有甚工作可以自己在年就著尚又奢的生活呢?
工作很?不就是情施展女性魅力,扮性感,羞,撒,甚至有些任性...或不容易,但是公室助理就比?可以有一般上班族三到四倍的收入(酒店小姐年薪可以易的到USD100,000),就算真得比困,似乎也是合理的。一OL要上部可真是困,但成一牌的公主率可是大多了!以收入、物生活的光程度、到目的受迎的程度,一牌的公主不於部。
有越越多日本年女性把酒店公主作偶像,因可以打扮漂亮、,甚至媒把酒店小姐描成在不景下,力上游的灰姑娘。而出名的酒店小姐,就仿若明星一般,甚至出教大家社交的,有日本台把些投入酒店的人描成力上游的灰姑娘,其中台相邀的桃里道:「我常收到念小的小女生的信件,她大以後想跟我一,小女生而言,酒店公主就是代公主。」
位桃里,到底是不是呢?索性Google 看看-
有37,400符合Momoka Eri的查果
有20,700符合桃里的查果
甚至 Acer Aspire One 都有 Momoka Eri Edition 呢!

日本文化研究院京1,154位女高中生的查,酒店小姐在最受迎排行榜中,排第12,比18名的公或22名的士高。
看完篇,心五味。些女孩目清楚,策略得宜,也可以逐踏。格是由供和需求定的,她然了供少,需求很的。
像桃里般的女子,在台,前年常上目的凌葳葳或是晚近的代表吧!我是不知道日本有甚名妓,不中的史看,是有不少:梁玉、小小、李、、金花、小仙、玄 ... 等等,她的故事或奇也常成或影的材。也是一?甚至是Renaissance (因有再生也有新生)?
不知道女性主者的象有何感想呢?或只是我男性沙文主作祟,我真的本主:不管是什都是用市解!有需求就有供,有交就是市,有市就用的到行管理。所道德,人本精神,值... 些都是用的物,因有值。我也名的美化,君子所,名而已。不是Hostess 是酒店小姐或公主,不就是「妓」的一?
是五或十年後的台社?亦或者是在行式呢?或因中的崛起,台的需求面小一些。或因中的持放,供面也大些.......

Young Japanese Women Vie for a Once-Scorned Job
Yuli Weeks for The New York Times
Eri Momoka is a single mother who turned her hostess career into a lucrative fashion business, where she designs and sells hostess clothing and often appears on television. More Photos >By HIROKO TABUCHI
Published: July 27, 2009
TOKYO The women who pour drinks in Japan’s sleek gentlemen’s clubs were once shunned because their duties were considered immodest: lavishing adoring (albeit nonsexual) attention on men for a hefty fee.
But with that line of work, called hostessing, among the most lucrative jobs available to women and with the country neck-deep in a recession, hostess positions are increasingly coveted, and hostesses themselves are gaining respectability and even acclaim. Japan’s worst recession since World War II is changing mores.“
More women from a diversity of backgrounds are looking for hostess work,” said Kentaro Miura, who helps manage seven clubs in Kabuki-cho, Tokyo’s glittering red-light district. “There is less resistance to becoming a hostess. In fact,
it’s seen as a glamorous job.”
But behind this trend is a less-than-glamorous reality. Employment opportunities for young women, especially those with no college education, are often limited to low-paying, dead-end jobs or temp positions.
Even before the economic downturn, almost 70 percent of women ages 20 to 24 worked jobs with few benefits and little job security, according to a government labor survey. The situation has worsened in the recession.
For that reason, a growing number of Japanese women seem to believe that
work as a hostess, which can easily pay $100,000 a year, and as much as $300,000 for the biggest stars, makes economic sense.
Even part-time hostesses and those at the low end of the pay scale earn at least $20 an hour, almost twice the rate of most temp positions.
In a 2009 survey of 1,154 high school girls, by the Culture Studies Institute in Tokyo, hostessing ranked No. 12 out of the 40 most popular professions, ahead of public servant (18) and nurse (22).“It’s only when you’re young that you can earn money just by drinking with men,” said Mari Hamada, 17.
Many of the cabaret clubs, or kyabakura, are swank establishments of dark wood and plush cushions, where waiters in bow ties and hostesses in evening gowns flit about guests sipping fantastically expensive wine.
Some hostesses work t pay their way through college or toward a vocational degree, or to save up to start their own businesses.
Hostessing does not involve prostitution, though religious and women’s groups point out that hostesses can be pressured into having sex with clients, and that hostessing can be an entry point into Japan’s sprawling underground sex industry.Hostesses say that those are rare occurrences, and that exhaustion from a life of partying is a more common hazard in their profession.
Young women are drawn nonetheless to Cinderella stories like that of Eri Momoka, a single mother who became a hostess and worked her way out of penury to start a TV career and her own line of clothing and accessories.
“I often get fan mail from young girls in elementary school who say they want to be like me,” said Ms. Momoka, 27, interviewed in her trademark seven-inch heels. “
To a little girl, a hostess is like a modern-day princess.”
Even one member of the Japanese Parliament, Kazumi Ota, was a hostess. That revelation once would have ignited a huge scandal, but it has not. She will run for re-election on the leading opposition party ticket, the Democratic Party of Japan, in the national election next month, and the ticket is expected to unseat the ruling party.
It is unclear how many hostesses work in Japan. In Tokyo alone, about 13,000 establishments offer late-night entertainment by hostesses (and some male hosts), including members-only clubs frequented by politicians and company executives, as well as cheaper cabaret clubs.Hostesses tend to drinks, offer attentive conversation and accompany men on dates off premises, but do not generally have sex for money. (Men who seek that can go to prostitutes, though prostitution is illegal.)
Hostesses are often ranked according to popularity among clients, with the No. 1 of each club assuming the status of a star.
Mineri Hayashi has made it to the top of her club, Celux, six years after coming to Tokyo from northern Japan. One recent evening, she readied herself for an elaborate birthday event her club was throwing in her honor.
Outside the club, bigger-than-life posters of Ms. Hayashi adorned the street. At the club, a dozen men put up balloons and lined up Champagne bottles.
The club’s clientele is diverse, including workaday salarymen, business owners and other men unwinding after work.
Celux hopes to make more than $60,000 on Ms. Hayashi’s birthday party, which will be attended by scores of regulars.
“Life has been fun, and I want to keep on having fun,” Ms. Hayashi said, placing a tiara in her hair. She talks of plans to retire next year and travel abroad.
Her 17-year-old sister, who also wants to be a hostess, may succeed her. Ms. Hayashi is supportive. “I just want her to be happy,” she said.
Popular culture is also fueling hostessing’s popularity. TV sitcoms are starting to depict cabaret hostesses as women building successful careers.
Hostesses are also writing best-selling books, be they on money management or the art of conversation.A magazine that features hostess fashion has become wildly popular with women outside the trade, who mimic the heavily made-up eyes and big, coiffed hair.
But Serina Hoshino, 24, another Tokyo hostess, is exhausted from the late nights and heavy drinking.
Slumped in her chair at the M.A.C. hair salon, she talked about endless after-hours dates with clients. Stumbling back home at dawn, she sleeps the rest of the day. On her days off, she hardly leaves her apartment.
Her reward is about $16,000 a month, almost 10 times the salary of most women her age.
“It’s nice to be independent, but it’s very stressful,” Ms. Hoshino said, speaking through a cloud of hair spray and cigarette smoke.
In recent months, clubs have also started to feel the squeeze of the bad economy. Hostess wages are starting to fall to as little as $16 an hour. Still, that rate remains above many daytime jobs here.
So, the young women keep coming. The Kabuki-cho district is lined with dark-suited scouts recruiting women. One club recruiter said some women turn up to interviews with their mothers in tow, which never would have happened when the job was less respectable.“Women are being laid off from daytime jobs and so look for work with us,” said Hana Nakagawa, who runs a placement agency for higher-end clubs in Tokyo.
She gets about 40 inquiries a week from women looking for hostess jobs, twice as many as before the downturn.
Atsushi Miura, an expert on the issue, says hostessing will be popular among Japanese women as long as other well-paying jobs are scarce.
“Some people still say hostesses are wasting their life away,” he said. “But rather than criticizing them, Japan should create more jobs for young women.”
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2009/07/28/business/20090728-HOSTESS_index.html
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