I asked questions when I was a stripling, and it is not my business to ask questions now, but to teach people what I have discovered.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I did everything, I used to be a drag queen, I used to be a stripper.
During my Austin years, I was drawing a regular strip for the University Of Texas newspaper, going to school, delivering blood, and trying to change my approach and 'style' as much as I could, since I knew that I'd calcify as I got older.
I think all women should learn how to strip. It's a really healthy, extremely challenging thing to do.
I decided to start anew, to strip away what I had been taught.
I would have made a lousy stripper. I'm just not very comfortable exposing myself.
Yeah I'm telling real stories, but if you pick up a documentary on strippers, you're going to want to see some stripping, so we definitely got that in there.
I found I wasn't asking good enough questions because I assumed I knew something. I would box them into a corner with a badly formed question, and they didn't know how to get out of it. Now, I let them take me through it step by step, and I listen.
I have always been much better at asking questions than knowing what the answers were.
I did work in a strip club, but I didn't strip. I danced, and I became very popular.
People expect me to be with some stripper... That's just the kind of woman I work with.