This is where the due diligence part comes in.
If a guy was expecting a vagina, and was shocked with a penis at the last minute right before having sex then he probably did not preform as thorough of due diligence as he should have.
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Sex is easy. It's a penis going into a vagina.
Oh, really?
In your recent tales of gay romance...do any of your poorly written and conceived swains have a vagina?
No, they don't: they substitute their mouth or anus.
Please make a note of it.
But then again you do have a vagina, so why not put it to good use?
What is holding you back from experiencing connubial bliss?
As a great cripple once said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cS17za6pVk
Restaurants, bars consider turning off music as licensing fees skyrocket
Ever since operetta composer Victor Herbert sued Shanley’s restaurant in New York in 1917 to force it to pay for playing his song on a player-piano, songwriters and music publishers have depended on Performing Rights Organizations to make sure they get compensated.
For much of the last century, three organizations dominated the industry, a relatively staid and unglamorous corner of the music scene that remained largely unchanged throughout the eras of radio, records and CDs. But the rise of streaming has led to a surge in revenue and spawned a handful of new organizations looking to cash in.
Now there are at least half a dozen PROs in the United States, representing songwriters and publishers, each demanding that bars, restaurants, hotels and other venues pay a fee or risk being sued.
Businesses say the rising licensing costs have become overwhelming, and some question whether it’s even worth playing music at all.
That's an interesting concept, and as long as they didn't mind the ads, then perhaps the ads being played would satisfy the royalties requirement.
But - perhaps not - consider Streaming - paying just for the subscription alone - isn't enough. (Or not paying, and running a version with ads.) When I pay for Spotify or whatever I stipulate that I am paying for use of it for my own private enjoyment, not to play in a commercial context like in a bar or restaurant I own. Same would apply to running free Spotify (with ads) playing it in a commercial context even with the ads would not be allowed.
You also have to look at who is getting paid from the terrestrial (AM/FM) radio stations. Radio stations that play music do pay royalties to the songwriters and publishers, but not to the artists themselves. I believe internet radio like Spotify does also pay the artists, but still apparently that is not enough to allow its being played free in a commercial context.
The more you look into this, the more it becomes clear that everyone has his hand out when it comes to playing music, and unless everyone is getting paid, playing that music is disallowed in a commercial context.
Think about Disneyland or Disneyworld, as you walk through it, most of what you hear are instrumental Disney songs, which solves the royalty issue because they own the rights to all that music. Anything non-Disney being played, they have to license and pay for.