Interview: Holly Bates and House of Whoreship
By Mia Walsch. Reading time: 13 minutesHouse of Whoreship was born out of an earnest, deeply personal ambition to shift the current narratives surrounding on-screen sex worker portrayals.
Read more...Unfortunately, this user no longer exists (or may not have existed) due to the closure of Switter on the 14th of March, 2022.
Read more about the closure of SwitterLooking to book sex workers? Visit our escort directory, Tryst.link.
Otherwise, here are some blog posts from our Tryst.link blog:
House of Whoreship was born out of an earnest, deeply personal ambition to shift the current narratives surrounding on-screen sex worker portrayals.
Read more...I had always been curious about this sex work – I was lucky to, for whatever reason, keep out a lot of the negative messaging people around me growing up received about their sexuality.
Read more...The threats sex workers face are not just from clients or individuals in society; the very system we live within is at the root of much of the violence we face.
Read more...I think we live in a world that hates poor people and sensationalizes sex in a really nasty way. I feel that ideology constantly harms sex workers and excludes us from social liberation movements by objectifying our labor while rejecting our existence in the same breath.
Read more...I kind of always knew I was going to end up in the sex industry, to be honest. I became sexually active at a very young age and, despite growing up in a small, conservative New Jersey town, never seemed to possess any internalized shame around my desires.
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