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Telekura

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A telekura establishment inIkebukuro,September 2015

Telekura(テレクラ,Terekura),anabbreviationfor "telephone clubs"(テレフォン クラブ,terefon kurabu),are telephone-based dating services originating inJapan.

In the original incarnation of the telephone club, popular in the mid-1990s, a male client would pay a fee to enter a booth with a phone. The phone would then ring with calls from women or girls willing to go on a date – the implicit understanding being that this would lead to paid sex.[1]These clubs have been outlawed as fronts forprostitutionin some jurisdictions in Japan.[2]

In modern telephone clubs, members pay a fee, after which they are supplied with the mobile phone numbers of women who sign up voluntarily to the sites. The caller then may arrange a meeting with a girl. Participants in the practice ofenjo kōsaiare thought to make use of this service.[2]

A variation on the same theme is theMerukura(メルクラ),a mobile phone and personal computer based dating services originating inJapan.The term comes from the contracted form of the Japanesemail club(メール クラブ,mēru kurabu).Emails are exchanged between members through a central server, ensuring email addresses remain private. Mail clubs are used in various ways, the most common being for dating, friend searching, or to find sex partners. It is common that only the male has to pay to participate.

References

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  1. ^Lloyd, Fran (2002).Consuming bodies: sex and contemporary Japanese art.Reaktion Books. p. 76.ISBN978-1-86189-147-1.
  2. ^abChaplin, Sarah (2007).Japanese love hotels: a cultural history.Routledge contemporary Japan. Vol. 15. Routledge.ISBN978-0-415-41585-9.