Playback ’94] High School Girls Who Take Time Off from School to “Prostitute” Go Directly to Hotels When Called on
All four have parents in their 40s and both are dual-income earners. In one case, C says that she saves the money from the “Sekuri,” but in most cases, she says, “It goes to the karaoke box and shopping” (D).
The customers are mainly businessmen in their late 20s to late 30s, and they say they have never had a scary experience. Their comments suggest that the “sellers” have the upper hand, perhaps because of the current boom in high school girls.
The position is normal. I don’t like it if it takes too long, so when I say, ‘It hurts,’ or ‘I’m tired,’ they stop. But everyone finishes in about 30 minutes. I always ask them to wear a condom.
I gave her a hand job and she came. I came and she gave me 20,000 yen for it. I was lucky.
I came just by kissing her and licking her pussy, and she gave me 25,000 yen.
The magazine lamented at the end of its article about the high school girls who were doing and saying whatever they wanted, as follows.
I guess it’s not right to think that most high school girls are prostitutes, but it makes old men “distrust high school girls” again.
At that time, most of the “stand-up girls” in Tokyo were foreigners of Southeast Asian or South American descent, and they were active only late at night. They were mostly found in less popular places, such as love hotel districts. In other words, what the high school girls in this article were doing was prostitution, but it could be said that they were just riding the high school girls’ boom and not their “real job.
Furthermore, in order for their “tachimbo” business to be viable, the presence of adults who knew about it and negotiated with them on price was indispensable. This may be due in part to the fact that at the time, there was no ordinance in Tokyo regulating “prostitution” of youths under the age of 18.
The “Sekuri” (prostitution) that high school girls were engaged in was eventually converted into the more easily understood term “Aid Goyoukai” and spread further in the latter half of the 1990s.
PHOTO: Makoto Mochizuki