INTERNET dating sites - and the free nooky on offer - are slowly killing the country's
sex industry.
"Everyone
is screaming out for work," says one parlour veteran. "It is so easy
to meet for sex through internet dating sites. It doesn't matter if it's good
or bad when it's free."
And the
worrying decilne is confirmed by Prostitutes Collective national co-ordinator
Catherine Healy, who says a reduction in the use of hookers is partly blamed on
online liaisons.
"Brothel
owners are certainly feeling it," she says.
Madam Mary
doesn't mince her words.
"Why
would a man pay for sex with a working girl who is a stranger when he can hook
up for free with a stranger?
"There
is physically no more work. On a Friday night in the good old days a girl could
see eight men. Now it's three of four max - and a lot are only getting
one."
Madam Mary
is a dominatrix from Wellington's specialist bondage, discipline and
sado-masochism parlour the MM Club.
She's
worked with prostitutes for nine years and says her finger is on the industry's
pulse. But it's not beating to the same old drum.
And Healy
says Mary could be right.
"There's
a significant number of people who now meet through the internet. But it's hard
to know how much it has hit the sex industry."
Healy
admits brothel owners are feeling the squeeze and complaining about reduced
numbers, but are also blaming it on the industry going legit.
"They
think prostitution law reform brought about the demise of sex work because the
reforms took away the mystery."
She says
the number of condoms dispensed by hookers remains the same, suggesting the
industry is not so much suffering but sharing in a growing sex wave.
Madam
Mary's business has not suffered because it offers something not found on
dating sites.
"All
of our women are `specialists' and sex is their chosen field of expertise. Show
me a man who doesn't have a sexual fantasy and we will prove he's lying."