Dark Mode Issue 001 | Page 9

Since then, her confidence has only grown. ‘My job gives me the ability to meet people from all over the world. I am a very sociable and open person, I like talking to others, and I love being on stage and entertaining people,’ she explains. Stripping makes her feel independent, standing up to the social systems that stigmatise sex work. She refuses to describe her work as ‘empowering’, though, because any job can be seen that way, and hers should be normalised. After all, she’s only providing a service to her customers. Nevertheless, she explains that clubs still have very strict requirements when looking for strippers, with age and body type often being the biggest factors of discrimination. ‘The owners will almost always pick people who, in their opinion, will fit in the club best. They often won’t hire girls aged over 30 or those with a smaller body type. That is awful,’ Electric Girl says. In response to issues like these, feminist organisations, collectives, and sex workers’ body positivity communities have been created to educate society on sex work and push changes in working conditions. And then Covid-19 hit. Sex work in the UK: room for improvement Electric Girl is at home, eligible for the new government Self-Employed Income Support Scheme (SEISS), but not many sex workers are as lucky as she was. ‘According to the Government, I was registered as a selfemployed club dancer. I paid my taxes, and that put me in a safe position, but other people doing full–body service or escorting are in a very tricky situation because of sex work regulations in the UK’ she says. While prostitution is legal in the UK, running or managing a brothel, soliciting in public places, and curb-crawling are prohibited. That puts sex workers in a dangerous and unsafe position while at work and, in times of crisis such as this, may push them to the brink of poverty and homelessness. ‘This is why we need full decriminalisation of sex work. It would bring decisional power and would put the industry in the spotlight, without it being underground and exposing its people to dangers. Society needs to understand that sex work is work,’ says Electric Girl. The awareness of working in unlicensed places often means sex workers are scared to call the police or an ambulance in cases of harassment – the place and circumstances under which the violence took place would feel too difficult to explain. Many are ‘scared to look suspicious in the eyes of the police’, and, to avoid getting caught, they carry less condoms. It’s not only the safety of sex workers that is at risk – mental wellbeing is impacted, too. Hidden London and its customers Despite the social implications that come with being a sex worker, Electric Girl feels that the London sex scene has never been so alive. ‘There are at least 70 strip clubs in London and seven in Shoreditch alone. There are body- and sex work-positive events, workshops, podcasts, and parties all year long,’ she says, emphasizing on the collectives and unions fighting hard for the rights of her community, like the English Collective of Prostitutes and East London Strippers Collective, as well as the Annual Sexual Freedom Awards. ‘To be a stripper you don’t need to have a background in pole dancing or look a certain way. It’s just about having confidence, being a good listener and talker, building a bond and clicking with the customers,’ Electric Girl says. Intuition is a plus when it comes to understanding her customers and how to approach them. ‘I’ve met different types of people. I don’t attract or have one type of customer as I always go and talk to everyone,’ she explains, adding that tourists often feel much more relaxed and pursue their desires freely. ‘When people are in their own countries, they pretend they are at the club just for a drink, not for the tits,’ she laughs. Though she speaks lightly, the stigma stands, even within her own community. Strippers don’t always sign their names under the term ‘sex worker’ and, at the beginning of her career, neither did Electric Girl. ‘I didn’t want to be called a sex worker because I wasn’t doing full body service but after speaking to other sex workers, I realised it was about building support and awareness,’ she says, comparing it to a ‘protective umbrella’ for the community. 09