Oh - and to further try and counter the myth of the somewhat common $2,000 an hour call girl - I checked what is considered the top review site for escorts with over 1,000,000 reviews. Of the top 10 escorts by rating (given by guys) in the entire country - there is only one charging $2,000 an hour.
The mean price for the “best” ten escorts in the US is $860 an hour with the median being $725. One of these has a $5,000 minimum (for five hours), but you can sleep with the cream of the crop for considerably less than $2,000 an hour. One of them is “only” $400 an hour.
So if someone is paying $2,000 - they are paying the absolute max that only one of the top ten escorts in the entire country is charging.
Well I second that many girls will not know how to do BDSM (there are special places for that kind of thing though).
Other than that there are many, many girls that will give you a great time, either through expertise, attitude or both. If the large majority just ‘lays’ there, you are not looking in the right places. Maybe that’s the thing with escorts and advertising, they’ll always promise more than they deliver. In other settings it is quite astounding what kind of sex you can have; many would say far better than their real life girlfriends… but this is not a given of course, ymmv.
Again, this isn’t uncommon. We have a similar law in Ireland, which forces indoor sex workers who advertise to do so on foreign-hosted sites (which, of course, the Irish authorities are unable to regulate). I believe even parts of Australia where brothels are legal and regulated have laws against advertising them, although I’m not 100% clear on the details.
Canada’s law is pretty weird though: prostitution is legal per se, but public solicitation and working from a “bawdy house” are illegal. The latter is defined as pretty much anywhere that prostitution regularly takes place - meaning that the only way to sell sex legally is to do it on an outcall basis. Which is highly dangerous for the sex worker. This law was struck down by a federal court (violation of the sex worker’s right to security of the person) but that decision is on appeal to the Supreme Court.