Watching & playing sports are also hobbies . They are also service based with monetary compensation. Semi-legitimate is a real distinction. Some women will stroke you off but will not fuck for money. Many clients prefer that, too. Don’t kid yourself that you can fuck every spa girl if you offer enough. You can’t. And I can most definitely negotiate pricing, but that is a separate discussion.
You're mixing different concepts here. Watching and playing sports may both be hobbies, but that doesn't mean every service involving money is a hobby. A professional athlete is not "hobbying" when they get paid to perform—just like a provider isn't engaging in a hobby when offering services in exchange for compensation.
This is business,
not recreation.
The term "semi-legitimate" is a marketing construct, not an objective reality. Whether a
provider offers one service or another is a personal choice, not a reflection of legitimacy. Some women may choose to provide only specific services, and that’s their right. But that doesn’t make one business model “more legitimate” than another—it just means
different businesses cater to different markets.
No one said you can sleep with every provider just by offering enough money. Consent is the deciding factor, not price. Some will decline regardless, and that’s entirely within their rights. But when a provider agrees to a service, she also dictates the terms of that agreement—including pricing.
As for negotiation, you may
attempt to negotiate,
but that doesn’t mean it’s standard practice or should be expected. In legitimate businesses, prices are set by the seller, not the buyer. You don’t walk into a store expecting to negotiate the price of a coffee or a pair of sneakers—why should this industry be any different?
At the end of the day, providers set the terms, not clients. If you don’t like the terms, the choice is simple:
move on.