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A hostess club is a type of night club found primarily in Japan which employs mostly female staff and caters to men seeking drinks and attentive conversation. Host clubs are a similar type of establishment where mostly male staff attend to women. They light cigarettes, provide beverages, offer flirtatious conversation, and sing karaoke. The clubs also often employ a female bartender usually well-trained in mixology , and who may also be the manager or mamasan.
Hostesses often drink with customers each night, and alcohol-related behavior problems are fairly common. Businesses may pay for tabs as company expenses with the aim of promoting trust among male co-workers or clients. Patrons are generally greeted at the door and seated as far away from other customers as possible. In some instances, a customer can choose with whom he spends time, but most often that is decided by the house. In either case, the hostess will leave after a certain amount of time or number of drinks.
Hostess clubs have a "no touching" policy, and patrons who try to initiate private or sexual conversation are removed. Normal hostess clubs also need a permit to allow dancing. Any club found violating its permitted activities can have its business license suspended. Hostessing is a popular employment option among young foreign women in Japan.
The clubs sometimes take advantage of the women's precarious legal situation. The government promised to crack down on illegal employment of foreigners in hostess bars, but an undercover operation in found that several hostess bars were willing to employ a foreign woman illegally. In December , the Kyabakura Union was formed to represent hostess bar workers. It is an alcohol-serving bar that employs female staff to serve and flirt with male customers. Although they do not charge an entry fee and often have no set prices on their menus , they usually either have an arbitrary charge or charge a set hourly fee plus a "bottle charge".
Customers purchase a bottle in their own name, and it is kept for future visits. In Hawaii, approximately half of Oahu's bars are licensed as hostess bars.