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I am amazed at the quality of comments from our Dual Members

I had a little look and read through a couple of the blogs and associated comments.
They are informative and interesting.
The comments seem almost too articulate and similar to each other. My feeling is they were written on behalf of the members. Sorry if I’m wrong but you asked for honest feedback.
 
I love honest feedback, and I would be interested if you read any of Barbie's she talks her blogs on the phone as I have watched her edit a few words, and they are all original. An SEO company did lots of the blogs and they are spam blogs. You can tell them from the AI photos. We are currently editing these and renaming them to be more unique, as Google loves original content,
All blogs have view numbers and also how many comments. Except for forum members to get through, we only approve comments if adding to the story.
Did you see that Happypirate is still looking for three more moderators to join his team I was going to PM you when I had the time, as I enjoy & respect your feedback
 
I’ve had a look through and honestly while the content is good and worth reading the user interface and format is not the best. A bit difficult to find and could use improvement somehow.

The reviews are a good feature however it seems to me that a lot of the girls are leaving reviews for each other which has little value imo.

What’s positive is that you’re trying g to improve the digital environment and make things more interesting. I really like that.
 
I’ve had a look through and honestly while the content is good and worth reading the user interface and format is not the best. A bit difficult to find and could use improvement somehow.

The reviews are a good feature however it seems to me that a lot of the girls are leaving reviews for each other which has little value imo.

What’s positive is that you’re trying g to improve the digital environment and make things more interesting. I really like that.
I disagree with you about a girl reviewing another girl. If she has been intimate in the bedroom with that girl her review is a good as yours.The girls started reviewing each other and also other places they had worked since last March. Last year was our best year ever and the multiple booking increased ten fold because the clients that liked those adventures could see they were written honestly.
Girls do not like doing double bookings with girls that don't know and the comradeship on the Langtrees floor is the best it has ever been, purely because they are allowed to review each other.
I often review a sex worker that I have helped to set up her profile and her approach to her clientelle is exactly the same as she performs in the bedroom.
As to the formay I want a newspaper on line. not all landscape and tidy, is life all landscape? Where else can you comment on a BLOG and comment on a comment. We will have to restrict comments to 50-100 and after the Talkin Turkey members get thru I will not accept comments that don;t add to the story.
Isnt google all about uniqueness and can you get anything better than 50 people making a unique comment.
 
Since you asked for honesty....

I think the blog content feels like it's optimized for SEO and sales rather than an informative, provocative, and insightful reading session. They're also not prominently featured on the site, so I don't think they'll receive much organic traffic. I added comments to some blogs because it was a requirement to become a dual member, but as they stand today, I don't think I would go back to that section of the site again. There are so many interesting, unexplored topics in the field of sex and sex-work so it feels like a missed opportunity.

To improve them, I'd recommend the following:

  1. Get rid of the SEO company blogs with the AI slop pictures. It degrades the reader's perception of quality. I would delete them immediately if I ran the site. Quality over quantity is better if you want to attract return readers.
  2. Include a prominent link at the top of the page rather than limiting it to the footer navigation.
  3. Include a more robust byline for authors. For example, on this blog, I can see that it was written by Charlee Diamond, but I can't click through to see if she's written more blogs. I can see her booking link, but if I liked her articles, there's no way for me to see more if I like her writing.
  4. Solicit topic submissions from the members and allow a few more perspectives to come through. I'm guessing that your audience is primarily male. It might be a good idea to include more male perspectives on your blog. You probably don't want it to become a sausage fest either but right now it seems heavily weighted towards viewpoints from sex workers.
  5. Publish clear and unambiguous editorial guidelines and stick to them. If the purpose of the blog is to sell Langtrees bookings, then that's fine, but it should be clearly stated. If, on the other hand, it's for general education about sexuality, or sex work, etc., then that should also be clearly stated. For example, would you publish a blog that spoke about behavioral addictions to booking sex workers and using porn? It's fine if the answer is no, but the reasons should be clear and unambiguous. If someone were to submit a blog article for consideration for publication, they should have a clear idea beforehand if it's likely to be rejected or heavily edited based on these guidelines.
Creating a successful blog is very hard in 2025. Most online attention goes to short-form social media posts these days and websites are old-school. The only platforms that have launched recently and become successful are Substack and Medium. I'd have a look at them and try to figure out what makes them tick and why readers keep returning to them. Copy success.

Good luck! I hope this feedback is constructive and helpful.
 
Since you asked for honesty....

I think the blog content feels like it's optimized for SEO and sales rather than an informative, provocative, and insightful reading session. They're also not prominently featured on the site, so I don't think they'll receive much organic traffic. I added comments to some blogs because it was a requirement to become a dual member, but as they stand today, I don't think I would go back to that section of the site again. There are so many interesting, unexplored topics in the field of sex and sex-work so it feels like a missed opportunity.

To improve them, I'd recommend the following:

  1. Get rid of the SEO company blogs with the AI slop pictures. It degrades the reader's perception of quality. I would delete them immediately if I ran the site. Quality over quantity is better if you want to attract return readers.
  2. Include a prominent link at the top of the page rather than limiting it to the footer navigation.
  3. Include a more robust byline for authors. For example, on this blog, I can see that it was written by Charlee Diamond, but I can't click through to see if she's written more blogs. I can see her booking link, but if I liked her articles, there's no way for me to see more if I like her writing.
  4. Solicit topic submissions from the members and allow a few more perspectives to come through. I'm guessing that your audience is primarily male. It might be a good idea to include more male perspectives on your blog. You probably don't want it to become a sausage fest either but right now it seems heavily weighted towards viewpoints from sex workers.
  5. Publish clear and unambiguous editorial guidelines and stick to them. If the purpose of the blog is to sell Langtrees bookings, then that's fine, but it should be clearly stated. If, on the other hand, it's for general education about sexuality, or sex work, etc., then that should also be clearly stated. For example, would you publish a blog that spoke about behavioral addictions to booking sex workers and using porn? It's fine if the answer is no, but the reasons should be clear and unambiguous. If someone were to submit a blog article for consideration for publication, they should have a clear idea beforehand if it's likely to be rejected or heavily edited based on these guidelines.
Creating a successful blog is very hard in 2025. Most online attention goes to short-form social media posts these days and websites are old-school. The only platforms that have launched recently and become successful are Substack and Medium. I'd have a look at them and try to figure out what makes them tick and why readers keep returning to them. Copy success.

Good luck! I hope this feedback is constructive and helpful.
1000% this.
 
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