Most "creepy" behavior at a strip club isn't intentional — it's just guys not knowing what to say and defaulting to whatever's loudest in their head. Knowing a few simple frameworks fixes 99% of it. Here are the rules dancers wish more customers had been taught.
Rule One: She's at Work
The single biggest reframe: this is her job. Treat her like you'd treat any service professional you respect — your favorite bartender, a great waiter, the receptionist who runs your dentist's office. Friendly, polite, no overstepping, no acting like the conversation is a date.
The Three Things That Always Work
- Compliment something specific and non-physical. The costume choice, the dance moves, the song she picked, her stage presence. "That pole work was incredible" beats anything about her body.
- Ask normal small-talk questions. "Busy night?" "How long have you been here?" "What's the music like later?" — same questions you'd ask any service worker.
- Listen to her answers. Most customers don't. Ask one follow-up question and you'll be in the top 10% of guys she talks to all night.
The Topics to Always Avoid
- Her real name. She picked the stage name for a reason.
- Where she lives. Or what neighborhood, or her commute. None of it.
- Why she "does this." She has reasons. They're not your business.
- Whether she has a boyfriend / husband / kids. Same as above.
- Whether she does anything "extra" outside the club. Reads as soliciting, gets you tossed.
- How she's "not like other strippers." Trying to flatter by insulting her coworkers makes you instantly less attractive, not more.
- Your divorce, your ex, your therapist. She's not your therapist.
The "Creepy Mode" Defaults to Avoid
- Staring without speaking. Either say hi or look elsewhere.
- Compliments that go too far too fast. "You're beautiful" is fine. "You're the most beautiful woman I've ever seen, marry me" is not.
- Trying to "save" her. No lectures, no offers to "take her out of here."
- Touching to get her attention. Words work. Hands don't.
- Pet names after 30 seconds. "Babe," "sweetie," "queen" out the gate is weird.
- Volunteering your sexual history. She didn't ask, doesn't want to know.
Three Conversation Starters That Work Every Time
"That outfit's incredible — is that a costume you put together yourself?"
"Crazy night so far?" or "First time the DJ's played anything I'd actually pick."
"Hey, want a drink?" — direct, kind, makes the conversation easy.
The Tone to Aim For
Imagine you're talking to a friend's smart, funny older sister at a party. Friendly, warm, slightly flirty if she's flirty back, completely respectful at all times, and you'd be embarrassed if your friend overheard you saying anything weird.
If She Walks Away
She has rounds to make and bills to earn. If she leaves your table after a chat, that's normal. She'll come back if you tipped well or if you're talking like a non-creep. If she doesn't come back, no drama — another dancer will be by within minutes.
The Underrated Move: Be Quiet Sometimes
Most customers fill every silence with talking. Dancers love a guy who can sit calmly, watch the show, sip his drink, and only chat when the moment's right. Confidence reads as silence, not chatter.
Related: Strip Club Etiquette 101 · Lap Dance Etiquette · First-Time Guide
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