Popular British tabloid The Sun reported that strippers at the exclusive Las Vegas nightclub Τhe Legend Room are getting temporary tattoos of QR codes on their bodies so customers can leave anonymous tips in digital currency. Τhe Legend Room has become the first strip club that allows patrons to pay for services with cryptocurrency.
"We came up with the idea of using bitcoin a year and a half ago. At first I wanted to introduce cryptocurrency payment in the martial arts club where I am a trainer, but then I thought that it would be a big success in a strip club. Cryptocurrency is the best means of payment in a strip club if you don't want your wife to know, or you don't want your boyfriend to know," strip club owner Nick told local media Blomgren.
Some strippers outright state that cryptocurrency suits them better than cash. Some banks may refuse to open an account for you if you work in the adult entertainment industry. There are no such problems with digital currency.
In Las Vegas, bitcoin is accepted not only in strip clubs. Casinos are also not against cryptocurrency. For example, The D casino installed bitcoin ATMs, which, according to owner Derek Stevens, are never empty. It turns out that the nature of entertainment in the city of sins requires complete anonymity and cryptocurrency is most suitable for these purposes.
According to https://www.newsbtc.com
You May Also Like
An altar to Bitcoin appeared in the Urals
Yekaterinburg can rightfully be considered a city of “bitcoin fans”. Last year, in one of the central parks, a huge ball was repainted to look like Bitcoin. Now crypto fans have erected an altar to the world’s most popular cryptocurrency on Proletarskaya Street in the very center of Yekaterinburg.
Fake videos created problems for the cryptocurrency company with the regulator
Texas Securities Commission Commissioner Travis Iles today signed an order banning cryptocurrency exchange BTCRUSH from operating in the state after it was discovered that the London-based crypto marketplace posted fake videos on its website featuring three non-existent cryptocurrency mining farms.
