Jump to content

Gigolos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 198.30.10.254 (talk) at 15:35, 27 March 2013 (→‎Production and development). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

For the occupation of gigolo, see Male prostitution
Gigolos
Title card from original trailer
GenreReality
Directed byJohn Downer
Country of originUSA
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons3
No. of episodes23
Production
Executive producersJay Blumenfield
Tony Marsh
Tom Forman
Alex Campbell
Richard Grieco
Shane Walker
Brad Bishop
ProducersLaura Grieco
Marklen Kennedy
Production locationLas Vegas
Running time25 min.
Production companiesThe Jay & Tony Show
Relativity Media
Original release
NetworkShowtime
ReleaseApril 7, 2011

Gigolos is an American part scripted, part reality television series about the lives of five male escorts in Las Vegas. The series follows the men, all employees of the same escort agency, through their daily lives and interactions with each other. Cameras also follow the escorts on their appointments with women, including their sexual activity. The series debuted on the premium cable channel Showtime on April 7, 2011.

Gigolos has been met with critical confusion regarding the legality of the activities it portrays and amazement that women would consent to being filmed purchasing sexual services. Critics were largely negative in the beginning , although a few had offered the series guarded praise.

Showtime ordered a second season of eight episodes and it debuted October 20, 2011.[1]

Showtime renewed the series for a third season to begin filming June 2012, but announced it would be without Jimmy Clabots. Producer Richard Grieco suggested that Vin Armani's participation was also in question and that one male gigolo could be forced to go gay for pay, although neither claim turned out to be true.[2] Season three premiered August 30, 2012. Season four begin filming in Las Vegas January 16, 2013.

Cast

  • Nick Hawk - Rapper, author, Mixed Martial Arts fighter & entrepreneur
  • Brace - The eldest escort, is currently developing a product line that'll allow him to retire from the business
  • Vin Armani - Philosophy major, software engineer & ladies man has several endeavors of his own
  • Steven Gantt - a single father who escorts to support his son
  • Garren James - owner of the Cowboys4Angels escort service
  • Ash Armand - described in publicity material as a "raven-haired hunk".[3]
  • Jimmy Clabots (as Jimmy Dior) - an actor (Another Gay Sequel: Gays Gone Wild!) and personal trainer (Season 1—2)

After season one was taped, sources reported that Steven and Brace had left Cowboys4Angels.[4] Both men remained in the cast for season two.

Production and development

Speaking at the January 2011 Television Critics Association press tour, Showtime entertainment president David Nevins told critics that the sexually explicit Gigolos was part of an overall vision for the network. "We are a pay cable service and I think it's about doing things with some depth and sophistication and taking people places they couldn't go on other networks."[5]

Executive producer Richard Grieco teamed up with the show's Creator and Executive Producer, Shane Walker. The two worked together on a feature film called "Heaven Or Vegas" where Grieco played a gigolo and Walker served as the Producer. The two created the series when they saw disparity between portrayals of female and male prostitution. Grieco stated- "I was sick and tired of seeing shows that were just about women. And women pleasing men. Gigolos are part of our pop culture. The only thing that has been done about it was American Gigolo. It’s been taboo. To me it was like, why?"[6]

Garren James, owner of the Cowboys4Angels escort service, served as creative consultant for the series.[7]

Legality

Outside of legalized brothels located away from metropolitan areas, prostitution is illegal in Nevada, carrying a penalty of a $1,000 fine and up to six months in jail.[4] In the premiere episode, James explains the "legal fig leaf"[8] under which the service operates to new hire Vin: "We are a companion service and clients pay a rate per hour. First thing you're gonna do is collect the money from the client and then from there, whatever happens between you two is two consenting adults. It's illegal for you to take any money after that for any sort of sexual services or whatever." The closing credits include disclaimers: everyone shown having sex on-camera is of legal age; and "No one depicted in this program was remunerated in exchange for engaging in sexual activity."[9]

Las Vegas Police spokesperson Marcus Martin disputed the legality of the sexual activity in an interview with the Las Vegas Review-Journal. "They can play the line as loose as they want to, semantically, but they're still violating the law." Since the recorded conduct did not occur in front of an officer it does not constitute an arrestable offense, although there could be "repercussions" in the future, according to Martin.[10]

Legitimacy

Questions have been raised about the legitimacy of the series and whether the men on it are really working prostitutes. The Daily Beast located one woman who appeared on the series who stated that the show is entirely fictional and that the sex is simulated. "They found me through a website. They wanted to know what skills I had. Then they created a scenario where I would need an escort, and they hired me." She looks upon her appearance as an acting job. She does, however, believe that the men are really prostitutes. Vin Armani stated that the men really do work as gigolos but believes that none of them actually live in Las Vegas.[11]

According to James, the women who appeared in the series did not pay for their time with the escorts and in fact were compensated for their appearances. Some of the women were previous clients of his service while he recruited others. He refused to say exactly how much the women were paid other than saying it was a "small sum".[7] James stated that while the men really are gigolos, they do not escort full-time. "Most of my men have other jobs. They see clients at night and on weekends. Most go to castings as models and actors or have personal training gigs. Women tend to book longer appointments so only seeing two clients per week for four hours at a time is $2,000 per week. Lots of guys get booked at least once a month for a weekend at $5,000 as the fee. Yes, most of the men can make a very good living off just doing this alone but they have so much free time to pursue other things so they usually do."[11]

Episodes

Season 1

No. Title Original air date Synopsis
1 "Date Night" April 7, 2011 Manager Garren James hires his newest escort, Vin, and explains the business. Nick has a date with a teacher from out of town. Jimmy services a married woman for her birthday as her husband watches and offers encouragement. An older woman interviews the men to choose one to escort her to a Black and White Ball. The men bet on who she will choose and Steven wins. The boys welcome Vin to their ranks.
2 "All 4 One" April 14, 2011 Steven, needing money to send his son to summer camp, books two new clients, including a very large woman he connects with through Jimmy. The rest of the guys visit a psychic and Brace is particularly affected by her reading. Later the four decide to service a client simultaneously and turn over their combined fee to Steve. Despite instituting a "no fluids or skin touching but the client's" rule, once at the client's place Brace is unwilling to participate. Steven is grateful for their gesture.
3 "Release the Kraken!" April 21, 2011 Brace wants to transition from escort to entrepreneur with an anti-aging dietary supplement but after a meeting with a supplement company he realizes he has much more work to do. Nick meets with a new client who tries to push him past his limits. Jimmy's new client is a budding dominatrix who outfits him with a "cock cage" that he wears for several days.
4 "Three Gigolos and a Baby" April 28, 2011 A married couple hires Nick to service the wife as a trade-off for the wife's hiring a woman for her husband. She enjoys herself but her husband is uncomfortable with the situation. Jimmy cooks dinner for his girlfriend Kelly, whom he told about his escorting career after a month together. Later two of his college friends come to town for a bachelorette party. One has kids and she leaves them with Nick, Vin and Steven. Brace begs off baby-sitting by saying he has a client but in reality he treats himself to a spa day. Jimmy tells his friends that he escorts and they are both supportive.
5 "Dance Dance Gigoloution" May 5, 2011 Jimmy reports that Kelly has broken up with him, jealous of the women he services. The guys do a photo shoot to update the Cowboys4Angels website. Brace's growing guilt and unease over being a gigolo lead him to seek solace, first from a priest, then from a female former escort. Jimmy and a client have sex in a limousine. A client hires Vin to dance with her in a salsa competition and they take third place.
6 "Birthday Sex" May 12, 2011 Steven reminds the guys that they have forgotten his birthday. To make it up to him they take him to a shooting range and then to a go-kart track but he remains morose. Finally they set him up with a regular client of Jimmy's and, during their session, surprise him with a cake which he then has sex with at the client's request. Jimmy has an appointment with an executive in her office. Nick experiences some stomach problems so Brace takes him to get a colonic, which Nick does not enjoy.
7 "One Shot, One Opportunity" May 19, 2011 Nick gets a chance to perform his original rap song for a music producer. The producer is impressed and wants to work with him in Los Angeles. Brace teaches a shy housewife how to be more aggressive for her husband. Steven meets a new client whose fetish is simulating being dead during sex. Vin's client wants the "boyfriend experience".
8 "The Ties That Unbind" May 26, 2011 Vin services a wife while her husband tapes them for their private pornography collection. Later he has relationship issues with his girlfriend, Leilani, when she asks him to move with her to Arizona. Fed up with Jimmy's slovenly ways and constant didgeridoo playing, Nick orders him to move out.

Season 2

No. Title Original air date Synopsis
1 "Gigo-loan" October 20, 2011 In the Season 2 premiere, Brace is hired by an uninhibited 20-something for a wild marathon date; Vin helps ease the pain of a lonely woman; Jimmy copes with a personal crisis.
2 "Get Down on the Strip" October 27, 2011 Steven pleasures a client in public; Nick gears up for his first live rap performance; Jimmy must choose between coming through for a client or making it to his best friend's big night.
3 "The Boyfriend Experience" November 3, 2011 A woman confuses Steven's services for a real relationship; Brace faces the possibility of fatherhood; Vin considers asking his long-distance girlfriend to move in.
4 "Really Smooth Operators" November 10, 2011 Steven is reunited with his first girlfriend; the other guys explore a new "manscaping" technique; Brace grants a bucket list wish for a woman diagnosed with cancer.
5 "Poker? Heck Yeah, I'll Poker" November 17, 2011 Brace gets Botox injections before servicing a professional poker player. Vin is booked by a lesbian as a birthday present for her bisexual girlfriend and they have a threesome. Jimmy shoots a music video for Nick's song.
6 "An Ex Marks the Spot" November 24, 2011 Brace's ex-wife, her twin sister and her sister's ex-husband visit Brace, hoping he will be able to release the lingering anger from the marriage. Nick's client is a dominatrix who hires him to dominate her. Steven services the friend of a bride who refused his services at her bridal shower.
7 "Giggle-O's December 1, 2011 Vin takes on a female bodybuilder as a client, then his mother visits for his birthday. Jimmy tries his hand at stand-up comedy. Initially he falters and attracts a heckler, but he rallies and starts getting laughs.
8 "Brotherly Love" December 8, 2011 Nick's brother visits Las Vegas and declares his interest in becoming a gigolo. Vin meets fellow escort and adult film star Zeb Atlas. Later he sacrifices sex with his girlfriend to be ready to service a client. Brace's appointment takes an unexpected turn when he discovers that his client is transgender.

Season 3

No. Title Original air date Synopsis
1 "The Steven Clown Affair" August 30, 2012 Vin's session with an event promoter sees him trying out a new vibrating sex toy, which wanders off in the middle of things. Brace meets a spray tanning technician who exchanges spray tanning for sexual favors. After missing an appointment, Jimmy calls Garren to report that he is leaving the agency at his new girlfriend's request. Steven's client is a children's party planner and he indulges her clown fetish by donning whiteface and clown shoes. Garren brings in a new gigolo, Ash.
2 "Searching for a Fire Power" September 6, 2012 Ash has his first session following his relocation to Las Vegas, with Bambu, a professional fire dancer. Later she invites him to a show and suggests they perform together. Nick has a mold made of his penis to launch a line of Nick Hawk sex toys. Ash meets with Garren, who expresses concern over the fire dancing idea; Ash thinks by performing he can turn Bambu into a repeat client. Brace takes a client shopping for a vibrator and edible underwear and services her in the back of a limousine. Nick has a session with an animal lover and is unnerved by her array of exotic pets.
3 "Ride Her, Cowboy" September 13, 2012 Ash meets a client and convinces her to have sex in a public restroom. Garren sends the gigolos to a dude ranch to compete for a date with a wealthy rodeo rider, leading Brace to confront his childhood fear of horses. Nick wins the competition and the date.
4 "Grin & Bear It" September 20, 2012 Nick's horseplay aggravates an old back injury of Brace's. Brace takes his revenge by setting Nick up with a furry client. Steven helps a client assemble and test out a sex swing. Vin services a recent divorcée looking for her first sexual experience after her marriage.
5 "Courtesan Session" September 27, 2012 Vin teams with two female escorts to entertain a voyeuristic couple for their anniversary. He later meets with a group of female escorts to discuss developing a software program to increase their safety. To pay Brace back for the furry prank, Nick enlists Garren to trick Brace into believing he has a client who wants him dressed in full drag. Brace gets dressed up to meet the "client" in a bar only to be met by the other gigolos instead.
6 "Spanks a Lot" October 4, 2012 Ash takes a class in domination to learn how to handle a client who is into submission. He arranges for all of the gigolos to take some training in both the dominant and submissive roles. Brace and Nick overindulge in partying and employ a mobile detoxification service to recover. Garren sets up the stable with a woman who wants to become a regular client. Nick impresses her and wins the assignment.
7 "Black C. Down" October 11, 2012 Darkness descends on Vegas when a client refuses to hire Vin because he is not "black enough." To please the client, Garren summons a new Gigolo to Vegas, which leads to a discussion on race amongst the guys. Meanwhile, Steven goes head-to-head with his nicotine addiction when Brace bets him $1,000 that he cannot quit smoking for one week.
8 "A Decent Proposal" October 18, 2012 Steven contemplates a long term job that would take him on a European tour. Vin is tasked with pleasuring a lesbian client who hasn't been with a man in years.
9 "Lock, Stock & Two Swollen Testicles" October 25, 2012 Steven is confronted by a client's jealous boyfriend. Ash's date teaches him some spicy salsa moves. Meanwhile, Brace considers undergoing a vasectomy.
10 "Gigolos" November 1, 2012 Brace decides to get testosterone injections and Nick considers going into the adult film industry.

Critical response

Writing for The New York Times, Alesandra Stanley found Gigolos to be "[not] the most X-rated show on cable, but it may be one of the crudest reminders that there really is nothing some people won’t do to be on television". Noting the apparent greater market for gay male escorts in Las Vegas, Stanley found that "a look at women-only gigolos in Las Vegas is a little like a cooking show devoted entirely to vegan steak recipes". Amazed that women were apparently willing to consent to being filmed paying for escorts and having sex on camera, Stanley wondered whether the men and women chose to participate in the series in the hopes of finding fame beyond reality television, but concluded that they may wind up being among "the roadkill of show business".[8]

Salon's Tracy Clark-Flory wondered whether the usual blurring between fiction and reality on reality television had been blurred by Gigolos to the point of pornography.[7] Despite acknowledging how the worlds of pornography and reality television have already blended, she still found that Gigolos' "genre confusion creates a jarring dissonance" and that its combination of explicit sex scenes with the staples of reality television (e.g. confessional interview segments) "makes for a confusing mix of contradictory cultural expectations".[12]

Claire Zulkey of The A.V. Club graded the first episode a B. She found that the sex scenes have "a certain clinical feel" and that the non-sexual scenes are "odd and stiff", with the scenes in which viewers learn more about the escorts being the least interesting. Gigolos, she concludes, is the show to watch for those who want to see sex but don't want to watch an actual pornographic film.[13]

Linda Stasi found nothing redeeming about Gigolos for The New York Post. All of the gigolos are "sad, low-life exhibitionists" who are "too buff, too orange, too filthy-mouthed and just all-around too-too. They are the kind of men that make normal women reel in disgust." She is equally critical of the clients and manager James. Gigolos, she wrote, "[g]lamoriz[es] the lowest filth that society has to offer and gloss[es] over what these slobs do as something exotic."[14]

In a somewhat more positive review for Variety, Brian Lowry thought that "the series proves reasonably compelling while relying on typical tricks of the trade". Expressing the same amazement that people signed releases to appear on the series, Lowry concludes that even a cynical viewer can find something about Gigolos to admire, even if begrudgingly.[15]

See also

References

  1. ^ The Men of Sin City Are Back on Showtime(R) - Season 2 of "Gigolos" to Premiere Thursday, October 20th at 11 PM ET/PT
  2. ^ Keck, William (2012-05-07). "Keck's Exclusives: Richard Grieco Shakes Up Gigolos!". TV Guide. Retrieved May 7, 2012. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ Screens Will Sizzle with the Return of "Gigolos" on Showtime(R)
  4. ^ a b 'Gigolo' gag: Reality stars face serious legal questions
  5. ^ Sex and more sex: 'Gigolos' on Showtime in April
  6. ^ 21 Jump Street’s Richard Grieco Is Back With Gigolos and a Penchant for Painting Naked But for a Fur Coat
  7. ^ a b c Who's paying for the sex in Showtime's "Gigolos"?
  8. ^ a b Gross? Maybe. But It Got Me on TV, Right?
  9. ^ Gigolos 1.1
  10. ^ Quirky cast, jarring sex make Vegas-based 'Gigolos' entertaining
  11. ^ a b Are Gigolos Real?
  12. ^ How reality TV ruined porn
  13. ^ Gigolos debuts tonight on Showtime at 11 p.m. Eastern.
  14. ^ Raunch dressing: 'Gigolos' takes reality exposure way too far
  15. ^ Gigolos