Could strippers exotic dance class be the next TaeBo?
Associated Press MALVERN, Pa. — Overweight, lonely and still healing from a serious auto accident, the only thing bleaker than Stephanie Aaronson’s self-image was her social life. She found her solace in a community center flier and a revealing class: ”Exotic Dance 101.” A few nights later, the 35-year-old King of Prussia woman was seated in a dance studio as ”Bad to the Bone” blared from stereo speakers and a slender blonde slithered out of her tank top and sank to the floor as she began a slow crawl toward Aaronson a nd several classmates. ”I was freaking out,” Aaronson recalled. ”All I kept asking myself was, ‘What am I here to learn? Oh, my God. Oh, my God.”’ At a community center in Malvern where kids learn to tie-dye and couples learn to cook, women can take a walk on the wild side and learn ”the art of communication with your body and spirit … sensual movement in a way that only you can express it.” In other words, welcome to the world of G-strings, pole-dancing and