Boston

I wouldn't give her JACK
PenleyDuke See my TER Reviews 742 reads
posted

You gave it your best efforts and it was a fail...you canceled in a  timely fashion...no harm,  no foul.  Relax and get a  blow job  ðŸ˜²

Posted By: jdentente
So for the men and women who read this forum, here's a question. A few weeks ago I caught notice that a retired provider was coming back to Boston, with a new name and focus. Having missed her in her earlier appearances, I contacted her and asked that she let me know when incalls would be available.  A few weeks went by, and I recieved an email designated a day and asking me to pick an appointment time and length. Did so, and went about my work.  
   
 24 hours before the appointment I get a message asking me to call her. Seems the price of hotels has jumped recently and she wouldn't have a place available, unless I was willing to spring for a room...for the weekend...which she would use for other appointments.  I hesitated at first, but called a few friends in the industry seeking a suitable room. They reported back that due to tourism, no deals were available. I then got assigned a trip out of state to close a business deal, so again 24 hours before we were scheduled to meet up, I reported to the young lady that nothing was available, and I'd message later to try to see when our calendars mesh again.  
   
 Meanwhile I received three calls and texts, asking me when I was going to reschedule my "hastily cancelled" appointment, and most recently a message with a note that if I sent her money through a paypal account she would remove the "blacklisting" she placed "out there".  
   
 So a few questions if I may:  
       When I was expecting an incall, and she called me asking me to book a hotel room for her use, who was at fault?  
       When I gave her a full 24 hour notice that I couldn't make the incall, for which she had no location, who was at fault?  
       When I didn't respond to her messages about rescheduling, am I at fault?  
       Would you send what amounts to be ransom money to clear your "blacklisting"?  
       What is "blacklisting" anyway? Whenever I've made an appointment and have a case of business interuptus, upon my next appointment, I make it a habit to provide extra roses. In this particular case, I feel I'm being extorted, and as Tom Rush would sing, I've got the urge for going...elsewhere.  

So for the men and women who read this forum, here's a question. A few weeks ago I caught notice that a retired provider was coming back to Boston, with a new name and focus. Having missed her in her earlier appearances, I contacted her and asked that she let me know when incalls would be available.  A few weeks went by, and I recieved an email designated a day and asking me to pick an appointment time and length. Did so, and went about my work.

24 hours before the appointment I get a message asking me to call her. Seems the price of hotels has jumped recently and she wouldn't have a place available, unless I was willing to spring for a room...for the weekend...which she would use for other appointments.  I hesitated at first, but called a few friends in the industry seeking a suitable room. They reported back that due to tourism, no deals were available. I then got assigned a trip out of state to close a business deal, so again 24 hours before we were scheduled to meet up, I reported to the young lady that nothing was available, and I'd message later to try to see when our calendars mesh again.

Meanwhile I received three calls and texts, asking me when I was going to reschedule my "hastily cancelled" appointment, and most recently a message with a note that if I sent her money through a paypal account she would remove the "blacklisting" she placed "out there".

So a few questions if I may:
      When I was expecting an incall, and she called me asking me to book a hotel room for her use, who was at fault?
      When I gave her a full 24 hour notice that I couldn't make the incall, for which she had no location, who was at fault?
      When I didn't respond to her messages about rescheduling, am I at fault?
      Would you send what amounts to be ransom money to clear your "blacklisting"?
      What is "blacklisting" anyway? Whenever I've made an appointment and have a case of business interuptus, upon my next appointment, I make it a habit to provide extra roses. In this particular case, I feel I'm being extorted, and as Tom Rush would sing, I've got the urge for going...elsewhere.

You gave it your best efforts and it was a fail...you canceled in a  timely fashion...no harm,  no foul.  Relax and get a  blow job  ðŸ˜²

Posted By: jdentente
So for the men and women who read this forum, here's a question. A few weeks ago I caught notice that a retired provider was coming back to Boston, with a new name and focus. Having missed her in her earlier appearances, I contacted her and asked that she let me know when incalls would be available.  A few weeks went by, and I recieved an email designated a day and asking me to pick an appointment time and length. Did so, and went about my work.  
   
 24 hours before the appointment I get a message asking me to call her. Seems the price of hotels has jumped recently and she wouldn't have a place available, unless I was willing to spring for a room...for the weekend...which she would use for other appointments.  I hesitated at first, but called a few friends in the industry seeking a suitable room. They reported back that due to tourism, no deals were available. I then got assigned a trip out of state to close a business deal, so again 24 hours before we were scheduled to meet up, I reported to the young lady that nothing was available, and I'd message later to try to see when our calendars mesh again.  
   
 Meanwhile I received three calls and texts, asking me when I was going to reschedule my "hastily cancelled" appointment, and most recently a message with a note that if I sent her money through a paypal account she would remove the "blacklisting" she placed "out there".  
   
 So a few questions if I may:  
       When I was expecting an incall, and she called me asking me to book a hotel room for her use, who was at fault?  
       When I gave her a full 24 hour notice that I couldn't make the incall, for which she had no location, who was at fault?  
       When I didn't respond to her messages about rescheduling, am I at fault?  
       Would you send what amounts to be ransom money to clear your "blacklisting"?  
       What is "blacklisting" anyway? Whenever I've made an appointment and have a case of business interuptus, upon my next appointment, I make it a habit to provide extra roses. In this particular case, I feel I'm being extorted, and as Tom Rush would sing, I've got the urge for going...elsewhere.  

Posted By: realcrimsonlass
You gave it your best efforts and it was a fail...you canceled in a  timely fashion...no harm,  no foul.  Relax and get a  blow job  ðŸ˜²  
   
Posted By: jdentente
So for the men and women who read this forum, here's a question. A few weeks ago I caught notice that a retired provider was coming back to Boston, with a new name and focus. Having missed her in her earlier appearances, I contacted her and asked that she let me know when incalls would be available.  A few weeks went by, and I recieved an email designated a day and asking me to pick an appointment time and length. Did so, and went about my work.  
     
  24 hours before the appointment I get a message asking me to call her. Seems the price of hotels has jumped recently and she wouldn't have a place available, unless I was willing to spring for a room...for the weekend...which she would use for other appointments.  I hesitated at first, but called a few friends in the industry seeking a suitable room. They reported back that due to tourism, no deals were available. I then got assigned a trip out of state to close a business deal, so again 24 hours before we were scheduled to meet up, I reported to the young lady that nothing was available, and I'd message later to try to see when our calendars mesh again.  
     
  Meanwhile I received three calls and texts, asking me when I was going to reschedule my "hastily cancelled" appointment, and most recently a message with a note that if I sent her money through a paypal account she would remove the "blacklisting" she placed "out there".  
     
  So a few questions if I may:  
        When I was expecting an incall, and she called me asking me to book a hotel room for her use, who was at fault?  
        When I gave her a full 24 hour notice that I couldn't make the incall, for which she had no location, who was at fault?  
        When I didn't respond to her messages about rescheduling, am I at fault?  
        Would you send what amounts to be ransom money to clear your "blacklisting"?  
        What is "blacklisting" anyway? Whenever I've made an appointment and have a case of business interuptus, upon my next appointment, I make it a habit to provide extra roses. In this particular case, I feel I'm being extorted, and as Tom Rush would sing, I've got the urge for going...elsewhere.  

Always lol  ðŸ’‹ðŸ’‹ðŸ’‹ðŸ’‹ðŸ’‹ðŸ’‹ðŸ’‹

who_cares546 reads

Black listing a so random,I really don't think it has the impact that most ppl think . Anyone I know that was BL has no problem getting hook ups as longs as you have other verification.  
Fuck her who cares

Why would it be Quinn? He said retired provider coming back to Boston. None of that is Quinn.

Realtiycheck476 reads

Posted By: spikedUp
 
 Why would it be Quinn? He said retired provider coming back to Boston. None of that is Quinn.
Yes I agree but then he stated the Black  list and that is Quinn SMO

QuinnAdams487 reads

In addition to what you mention above (which is all correct), I have also never changed my name.

Nothing in the description of the provider in the OP suggests I would be her.  

Regardless, thank you for pointing out that this isn't about me. :)

-- Modified on 9/28/2014 6:41:28 PM

If you wanted Incall, you should have made it clear the date was cancelled when she told you she could not find a room available.  Nothing wrong with her asking you to get a room.  Your fault for not clearly saying no.

24 hours notice should be okay for a cancellation, although this depends on other factors.

If she was still sending messages about rescheduling you should have made it clear the date was off.  Your fault for leaving her guessing.

Your story about blacklisting makes her seem evil.  Of course you should not pay, but I would want to hear the woman's version of this story before passing any judgment on her

Wow

 
I promise its not me he is talking about

Im not in Boston and would never make such silly arrangements

but..always two sides of the story

 
   
 

I would not pay her, nor worry.  

Her inability to reserve and have an in call available is not your fault. From what I read, you even tried to help find an incall location for her and nothing was available. I've been to Boston a few times and know that happens. It is ultimately up to us as providers to secure an incall, not a burdon for our guests.

 Technically, she was not equipped to handle your appointment. While a reschedule would be great, if I was a guy and had this happen to me I would move on to a more organized provider. Who's to say after you reschedule the same thing won't happen?

I hate to be canceled on, especially when in Boston because it is so darn expensive, but if I miss an appointment because my ducks are not in a row, I wouldn't expect it to be on you. I wouldn't blacklist you, and would be appreciative of your understanding the situation enough to reschedule.

ALL SAID, there are two sides to every story. But my opinion comes from the story I have read. Opinion being, don't worry about it. And if the stress becomes too much for you I will be visiting soon and I can help you take a load off ;)

Allison 48J

She wanted you to pay for a room for a whole weekend which she would use for other clients? No effing way!!! Not only is that ridiculous and rude it's also a HUGE risk for you as you have no control over what happens in that room after you blow your load and leave.

Personally I think it is profusely inappropriately for any provider to expect or request a client to pay for her room if she is advertising Incall. If she did not have a location to entertain at then obviously she could not and should not be offering incalls and booking clients under the pretense that she has a location or will follow through with an appt. That is just ridiculous.

If you were a regular and you were offering to help her secure a location then that would be much different then her requesting you to do so and putting you in an uncomfortable position or feeling obligated to comply. As one of the other responders said you shouldn't have secured anything for her for a "Whole Weekend." Now that is really asking too much because at best I could see you offering to help her for the day of your appointment but not for additional days where she would be making a 100% at your expense! SMH! She really has some gall. If I were a gentleman I would not want to be in the compromising position if she ever ran into any legal problems while occupying your room. You would have to try to explain who you were, how you knew her and probably a long, long list of additional question as well as be held accountable. After you walked out the door you would have no idea what would have gone on in a room that was registered to YOU. Not a risk worth taking for a provider you had never met. I'm sure many would concur.  

Lastly, as others have said throughout the thread responses... this is just your side of the story, but if this is in fact how the whole ordeal transpired then she is beyond out of line.

Register Now!