
Introducing the bars at Time Out Market Osaka
If you're an Osaka resident or regular, chances are you've heard of Time Out Market Osaka at this point. After all, it's just the city's hottest food and cultural market, where you can eat the best of the Kansai region all under one roof.
The chefs manning the 17 restaurants at the Market condense Osaka's rich food scene into a tightly curated selection of unforgettable dishes, many of them available only here. And there's plenty to look forward to for the thirsty, too, with the kitchens complemented by two superb bars.
Serving up around a dozen different beers, wine by the glass and select Kansai sake, the Market's bartenders also invite you to pick from a plentiful line-up of Japanese whisky.
As for mixed drinks, don't miss the selection of Osaka-themed cocktails. Among our favourites is the Naniwa Stream (¥1,300), a vodka-based concoction flavoured with enticing peach nectar and finished with a matcha salt rim. The refreshingly crisp mixture's turquoise hue evokes the waterways that crisscross the city.
As you explore the variety of food on offer at the Market, take the opportunity to pair your favourite finds with choice libations from the bars. The innovative Mexican cuisine from Saboten Taqueria deserves some tequila on the side, while a spicy gin makes the perfect partner to a serving of beef katsu curry from Watanabe Curry or a juicy wagyu katsu sando from Nikutoieba Matsuda.
Not in the mood for booze? Opt for a carefully crafted mocktail instead: the bartenders can whip up classics like virgin mojitos (¥880) as well as signature offerings like the Yuzu Ginger Smash (¥880). For a leftfield option, try the rich Blueberry Amazake Smoothie (¥1,200).
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Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
My daughter died on her 25th birthday cruise – her pals made baffling choice with body and we still want answers
WALKING on board the ship with her boyfriend and friends, Ashley Barnett couldn't wait to celebrate her 25th birthday on a three-day cruise through the crystal-clear waters of the Pacific ocean. Less than 24 hours, however, the aspiring actress would be found dead in her cabin - and her tragic death still remains shrouded in mystery. 8 Within less than 24 hours of being on the vessel, Ashley was found dead Credit: Getty 8 An aspiring actress, Ashley was working on American TV 8 Ashley's mum spoke exclusively to The Sun about her daughter's tragic death 8 The Paradise cruise ship set sail from Long Beach, California Credit: Alamy With the 20th anniversary of Ashley's death next October, her heartbroken mum, Jamie, revealed to The Sun that she's still searching for answers on what happened to her beloved daughter. "It was a long, perilous journey, which had no real answers in the end,' she said. "I'll never get all the answers. That's one of the most heartbreaking aspects of all… losing someone like that on a cruise ship. "It's just all different when it happens at sea - and people don't realise that at all." After boarding Carnival Cruise Line's Paradise in Long Beach, California on 14 October, 2005, Ashley's boyfriend said they hit up the casino and a concert before returning to their cabin for the night. But following an alleged disagreement, her boyfriend went back out - leaving her alone in the room. He said he returned in the early hours after continuing his night out onboard, falling asleep next to Ashley, before waking up hours later to join pals upstairs. Ashley remained in bed, her boyfriend believing she was still fast asleep from celebrations the night before. After partying some more, he returned to the cabin once again - except this time he tried to wake her up. When he was unable to rouse her, he went running into the hallway screaming that his girlfriend wasn't breathing, with another passenger scrambling to call 911 after hearing his cries. While a nurse began to perform CPR, the ship's doctor arrived - but efforts to resuscitate her were unsuccessful. There were allegedly few defibrillators on the ship and no opioid-overdose inhibitors to aid medical staff. Ashley was pronounced dead soon after. Holidaymaker, 60, killed in 'fight' on luxury cruise ship hours after leaving UK as man, 57, arrested over 'murder' Following Ashley's shocking death, the boat docked in Ensenada on the Pacific coast of Mexico. Here, authorities boarded the ship to determine if there were any suspicious circumstances, while the FBI back in the US were notified. With Ashley's body handed over to a Mexican morgue, instead of staying with her, the young woman's boyfriend along with the rest of the group stayed on the party ship and, shockingly, returned to California. 8 Ashley Barnett tragically died on board a cruise after suffering a drug overdose Credit: Getty 8 Ashley boarded the cruise with her boyfriend and friends to celebrate her 25th birthday Credit: Getty 8 For decades Ashley's mother Jamie Barnett has been working to change the way deaths on cruises are treated Two decades later, Jamie is still outraged by the decision. "They just left her body there," she said. "Not the boyfriend, not one of those other folks, not a representative from the cruise line." Jamie said she didn't even hear from Ashley's boyfriend - the last person to see her alive - until a full day after her daughter's tragic passing. He claimed he had no idea what had happened to her - but revealed that some of his medications was missing. It was later concluded that Ashley had died from a methadone drug overdose - something that shocked her grieving family and friends who insist she was extremely anti-drugs. Methadone is what's dubbed a "legal high" drug, traditionally used to help addicts stop taking heroin - despite both being Class A. Jamie says Ashley was "autopsied and, before she could come back to the United States, her body had to be embalmed". This meant that by the time her body was returned to her family, "any forensic pathologist had very little to go on to figure out what happened" - shrouding even more mystery over Ashley's death. With Jamie still desperate for answers, the family hired a private pathologist to carry out a forensic autopsy. They found exactly what Jamie thought - healthy organs in a healthy body, with some evidence of alcohol consumption. No signs of trauma were discovered either. Still bewildered by her shocking passing - and the cause behind it - the family then requested a test of Ashley's hair follicles. The test confirmed that there were zero signs of habitual drug use. Therefore the question remained: why was Ashley found dead having overdosed on methadone? Ashley's passing - and the reason behind it - has tormented her family for 20 years. They are yet to receive real answers. Despite the nightmare Jamie has endured over the last two decades, her trauma ignited a need to help others who have endured similar nightmares. It's just all different when it happens at sea, and people don't realise that at all. Jamie Barnett Jamie has been pivotal in developing stricter laws surrounding crimes and deaths on cruises in her role as president of lobbying group International Cruise Victims. The grieving mum believes cruise-goers are often "lulled into a false sense of security". She explained to The Sun: "Don't get on a ship and think nothing could happen to you. "It's like a small city where anything can happen. "You can't let your guard down. You have to still be mindful and keep your eyes open." Jamie also described how difficult it is for authorities to investigate crimes that happen at sea and collect key evidence. This means many cases on board ships remain unsolved - leaving grieving families with unanswered questions about their loved ones. Jamie, who campaigns through International Cruise Victims, said: "We're there to help folks who have found themselves victims of either some kind of crime at sea or some kind of negligence or traumatic event at sea. "When that happens to people, because of laws being so wishy-washy, if they even exist on the high seas, they don't know where to turn to or what to do. "And most of us who are leading this organisation remember that vividly and how that feels. "We do everything we can to take somebody's hand and walk them through all of these things should they find themselves a victim in any way." The chancing of dying on a cruise ship were recorded as being roughly 1 in 6.25 million in 2019, according to Forbes - suggesting it as being one of the safest ways to travel for holidaymakers. But the statistic misses out crimes committed on ships, or missing persons. Jamie claims that some cruises only put out a "soundbite" on missing persons on board the ships, along with what could have happened to them. She said families are often told their loved one was "depressed" or "this person had a fight with their partner". Jamie explained: "So right away you're thinking it was intentional, when it's very important for us hearing those reports to stay neutral, to wait. "How do you know? What leads you to say that?" Advocates have claimed that cruise lines have a "spotty" record of crime reporting, which makes actual statistics hard to determine. But through her work at International Cruise Victims, Jamie looks to hold cruise lines more accountable for what goes on on their ships, while also protecting future cruise-goers on their holidays. Jamie added: "The cruise industry loves to say 'passenger safety is our number one priority'. "We're over here saying - put your money where your mouth is."


The Herald Scotland
8 hours ago
- The Herald Scotland
When time finally ran out for the Glasgow Apollo, forty years ago
The venue's peak came during the Seventies and for those of us who were there then, it, and the countless gigs we saw there, remain among the defining images of that decade. Alongside, perhaps, the Old Grey Whistle Test, John Peel's cult radio shows, and enthusiastic reading of the music weeklies – Sounds, NME, Melody Maker for news of the latest vinyl and tour dates. Not to mention, of course, the music of the time, whether it was punk and new wave, the Eagles, the Rolling Stones (below), prog, glam, reggae, heavy metal or soul. The Apollo memories are quite imperishable. The Rolling Stones were one of the biggest acts at the Apollo Many of the bands that played the venue are, like the Apollo itself, no more, having broken up for one reason or another: 'musical differences', frustration over a lack of success, a desire to follow individual dreams. But a gratifying number of groups are still thriving today: Neil Young, the Stones, the Cure, Status Quo, Rod Stewart, Iron Maiden, Deep Purple, Robert Plant, the Rezillos, Robin Trower, AC/DC, Rod Stewart, Alice Cooper, Eric Clapton, Hawkwind, Jethro Tull, Jackson Browne, Van Morrison. Santana, too. Led by Carlos Santana, who turns 78 next month, they entertained the OVO Hydro just a few nights ago, nearly half a century after their last appearance in Renfield Street. And then there's Paul Weller, of course; it was his old band, The Style Council, who brought the curtain down on the Apollo on Sunday, June 16, 1985. Time has been busy catching up with other Apollo acts. Black Sabbath, who played Green's Playhouse, the Apollo's forerunner, as long ago as 1970, are bowing out with a huge farewell gig at Birmingham's Villa Park on July 5. That same night, a few miles away elsewhere in the city, Jeff Lynne's ELO will play the first of five last-ever concerts – two in Birmingham, two in Manchester, and one in London's Hyde Park. Elkie Brooks, who experienced the Apollo on a handful of occasions in the latter years of its existence, is on a Long Farewell Tour. In August, The Who will embark on their North America Farewell Tour. To look through the comprehensive gig listings curated by the people behind the excellent Glasgow Apollo website is to be reminded the astonishing wealth of gigs that took place there, across so many genres. Read more: The names of some of the acts – Renaissance, Rare Bird, drummer Ginger Baker's group Baker-Gurvitz Army, the all-female US rockers Fanny, Gentle Giant, Kokomo, Glencoe, Golden ('Radar Love') Earring, the Groundhogs, Traffic, Japan's Sadistic Mika Group – are familiar to fans of a certain vintage today. Less familiar, possibly, are Tea, who supported Baker Gurvitz Army in 1975; Dave and the Mistakes, who opened for Elvis Costello and the Attractions in 1981; and Sandii & the Sunsetz, another Japanese group, who were the support act for (of course) Japan in 1982. It's interesting to look back at the music weeklies and see what they made of certain concerts. Here's a small but vibrant selection: * 'Heat, dust, smoke, lasers and Genesis combined to turn the Glasgow Apollo into a replica of Dante's Inferno when the band descended on the city on Friday night' – Melody Maker, July 1976. * 'Rory G[allagher] made it however, and played an undeniably proficient over two-hour set to the most rapturous reception I've seen in ages. The audience was crazy, drunken, happy, and collectively about as intelligent as the average tree-stump: in short, all the jolly working-class virtues that made me leave Glasgow in the first place' – Sounds, April 1978. * 'Fred Turner [of Bachman Turner Overdrive] is a real sweathog of a bass player. Whether he's hungrily engulfing chip sandwiches in a Glasgow hotel under the lights of a documentary film crew, or bouncing all over the Apollo stage until the lighting towers begin to develop major instabilities, you gotta admit the dude is, like, heavy, man. He ought to do a seesaw act with Leslie West' – NME, May 1975. Lynyrd Skynyrd were a hugely popular attraction at the venue (Image: Unknown) * 'As a unit [Lynyrd Skynyrd, above] peaked with 'Tuesday's Gone', which took on a church atmosphere – in Glasgow the audience even started the Terrace Sway.... In Glasgow, the entire audience sang 'Free Bird' in its entirety. That's freaky (good-freaky), 3,000 people singing homage to a guitarist [Duane Allman] they've never seen' – Sounds, February 1976. * 'Backstage at the Apollo the theatre photographer is taking a group shot of the Rolling Stones receiving their trophies earned by selling out the three shows there. 'More ANIMATION pleeeze,' Jagger shouts good naturedly to the nervous photographer. 'When the Faces played here they could only afford one trophy', Woody [Ron Wood] informs the gathering, 'so we gave it to Tetsu [Yamauchi] to make him feel wanted'. Tonight each band member gets their own special souvenir. Just another memory. Keith gives his to Marlon [his son]' – Sounds, April 1976. * 'For Scotland, the Pretender changed tactics. Wearing a tartan wool scarf, he concentrated on rock 'n' roll. It was such good rock that it made me think maybe the Eagles aren't the best American rock 'n' roll band. Maybe the best American rock 'n' roll band is Jackson Browne ... Browne's initial self-centred introspection gently fades away. The Glasgow Apollo was cold, and Jackson Browne wanted to warm the place up with some powerfully generated rock. I almost thought he'd do 'Whole Lotta Shakin'' – Sounds, December 1976. The Apollo was noted, then, for many things: for its unassailable place on the Scottish gig circuit, for the rampant fervour with which many groups were greeted, for the less-than-salubrious nature of its backstage facilities. It all added up to a brilliant, authentic venue. The Apollo was living on borrowed time 40 years ago, however. The outcry that had greeted an earlier closure date, in 1978, when the venue's operators were granted a licence to turn it into a bingo hall, was decidedly more muted in the run-up to the Style Council farewell in 1985. As to why, David Belcher, the Herald's music writer, had this to say: 'The answer on everyone's lips is the Scottish Exhibition Centre, which has been bruited as having the ability to stage five to 10 10,000-seater per year along with up to 40 annual 2,000-seater shows'. Belcher also noted that the Apollo was damp and crumbling and that its fabric had deteriorated alarmingly over the last five years – not surprisingly, perhaps, given that the place had opened, as Green's Playhouse, back in 1927. The Apollo's time was up, then. But who could possibly have guessed in 1985 that its absence would be mourned, four decades later?


Scottish Sun
9 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
I was lured to infamous Bunny Ranch brothel by Love Island style show…vile star Hof choked girls & forced us into sex
Young girls flocked to become sex workers after watching the sexy models having 'fun' in the glossy TV show SECRET TORMENT I was lured to infamous Bunny Ranch brothel by Love Island style show…vile star Hof choked girls & forced us into sex WITH their model looks and stunning figures the young women giggling around the swimming pool and partying with champagne looked like they were having the time of their lives. But this reality TV hit was no Love Island. Advertisement 26 Dennis Hof pictured with three of his employees Credit: getty 26 The girls at the Moonlite Bunny Ranch looked like they were having fun and hanging out Credit: getty 26 Air Force Amy was one of the stand out stars in the show Credit: Splash 26 Cathouse acted as a 'recruitment' poster for young wannabes Credit: Rex Features The gloss and glamour of Cathouse, which aired from 2005 to 2014, hid a dark reality and the pink-painted paradise in the sunshine was actually a legalised brothel in Nevada called The Bunny Club Ranch. For girls like Dolly Hart, who grew up watching Cathouse, the intoxicating picture seved as a recruitment ad. 'Around the time that I caught a glimpse of the show, I was probably 11, 12,' she says. 'The girls looked like they were having fun. "There was a camaraderie amongst them. It seemed like you could make friends there. I was thinking, when I grow up I'm going to go there.' Advertisement In the six-part documentary, Secrets of Bunny Ranch, former employees reveal the truth behind glossy image promoted by publicity hungry owner, Dennis Hof in the show, claiming bullying, humiliation and sexual assault were the norm and that they felt trapped. 'I saw the velvet couch, the pink Bunny House on TV and thought it was so cute,' says Dolly. 'I was having trouble making friends as a first generation little Mexican girl, getting bullied and being labelled the ugly duckling. 'I didn't come from a privileged background and I saw these girls making money on the show and thought, 'Let's go for it.' Advertisement "The Cathouse made it seem like it was the Playboy mansion with bunny playmates playfully jumping on each other and tickle fighting. But it was nothing like that. 'Dennis is an intimidating predator who knew who he could coerce and manipulate. The last time he propositioned me for sex was at his birthday party. I created the notorious 'OnlyFans Playboy mansion' - I've made £39 MILLION in 2 years, it's better than being a waitress 26 Hof claimed he treated the girls fairly and was no 'pimp' Credit: Getty - Contributor 26 The brothel was based in Lyon County, one of the few counties in the USA which permits legalized prostitution Credit: getty Advertisement "He expected me to have a threesome with him and this other girl. I asked if I would be paid and he said no, it's my birthday. I refused.' Hof, born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1946, made good money selling time-shares before turning that business knowledge to buying and transforming The Bunny Ranch, taking prostitution out of the shadows and into the mainstream with his flair for publicity. TV and radio interviews led to the reality series Cathouse where everything at the brothel appeared to be professional and fun with the women treated fairly and respectfully by Hof, who the girls called 'Daddy.' 'I'm a businessman who supplies a place and an opportunity for ladies to work and we share the proceeds,' Hof liked to claim. 'The last thing I am is a pimp.' Advertisement Easy prey 26 Shelly Dushell, started working at the Bunny Ranch aged 30 after her house was destroyed by a tornado Credit: Crime+Investigation 26 Every Thursday evening prostitutes had an opportunity to buy new 'work clothes' from a salesman (Shelly pictured) Credit: getty 26 Shelly takes a cigarette break between clients Credit: Getty Shelly Dushell, who began working there at the age of 30 after her house was destroyed by a tornado and she had divorced her husband, has a very different view. Advertisement 'I saw the ugly side of Dennis but the world on Cathouse only saw the fun side of him because they didn't know the real Dennis. He was all about being violent.' After hearing Hof and one of his favourite girls at the ranch – known as Air Force Amy – talking about the brothel on TV, Shelly decided to apply. 'I sent an email with a picture of myself to the ranch and Dennis Hof himself called me back within two hours and said, 'I want you out here.' "I flew out and he picked me up at the airport and he told me that HBO was doing a show and he wanted me to be part of it. Advertisement 'He walked me in and there were cameramen filming there. Dennis took me out to the bungalow behind the building and wanted sex. He didn't want to wear a condom. I was absolutely horrified. Shelly Dushell "That was my first day at the ranch. I was afraid to tell Dennis no. No one cares if a prostitute gets raped. 'Dennis preyed upon the women that were the most easily victimised. I was afraid to not go along with what he wanted. "It was hard for me to resist Dennis in the first couple of years that I was there. Advertisement 'He liked that power and control over the girls and he was very violent when he had sex. He liked to slap and choke. It was hard to get him to stop.' Former Bunny Ranch cashier, Shonda, says: 'Dennis had a very active sex life with the working girls. "There were girls who would offer themselves to him and there were girls who didn't want to sleep with him but felt they had to. "He had a great presence on TV but behind closed doors, Dennis was a rattlesnake.' Advertisement 'Recruitment' ad for young girls 26 Air Force Amy looks through a box of tricks Credit: Getty 26 Air Force Amy, who features in the documentary, was a Cathouse star Credit: bridget bennett 26 Dolly Hart, revealed she grew up watching Cathouse wishing to go there Credit: Crime+Investigation 26 Ex-workers revealed Cathouse was a set up Credit: Crime+Investigation Advertisement A regular feature of the show saw the women happily running into the parlour whenever the bell rang, signifying a customer had arrived. There they would line up while he chose who he wanted. But their smiles hid their humiliation. This 'unscripted' TV series was very much not that. 'It wasn't a documentary. We were told what to do,' says Shelly, who claims she was paid $300 dollars for onscreen sex scenes and nothin for non sex scenes. 'The Cathouse show was set up. In the first scene I did they wanted the women to sit down with a bunch of clients, teaching them about good sex. Advertisement "But one of the men was not a client. I recognised him as Jesse Fillmer, a driver and bartender at the Ranch.' Jesse confirms: 'Everyone in the scene who was supposed to be a customer were actually friends of Dennis or people who worked at the Ranch. "The Cathouse was just basically a promotional video for the Bunny Ranch.' Shelly regrets being part of the fake image that encouraged young girls to be a part of the sex industry. Advertisement 'HBO definitely wanted it to look like it was a fun place to be and so I can see where it can be tempting for a young girl to watch the Cathouse show and think it would be something fun,' she says. 'But they don't understand the reality of it. They aren't seeing what it is really like behind closed doors with Dennis. 'I didn't know that young girls would come to work there who would never have thought of working there if they had not seen the show. "So, looking back, I should never have agreed to do it. It's just horrifying to think that girls so young would want to do that.' Advertisement Deep regrets 26 Dennis Hof, 72, owner of the Moonlite Bunny Ranch, died at one of his brothels after a birthday party in 2018 Credit: Getty Images 26 Moonlite Bunny Ranch featured in HBO reality TV show Cathouse: The Series between 2005 and 2007 Credit:26 Alice Little revealed she would sneak downstairs to watch Cathouse when her parents went to bed Tom Hurwitz, Cathouse cinematographer, also came to regret his involvement. Advertisement 'Over the weeks that I worked there I realised that HBO never really wanted to dip further than just below the first public relations level. "Dennis groping people was a daily occurrence, and they pretended to like it,' he says. 'After the first season of Cathouse had been on the air, young women wanted to live in the glamorous image of it. "And so the show began to attract younger women to the Bunny Ranch. Advertisement "It became clear to me that we were part of the recruiting system and I did not feel good about it.' Another of these starry-eyed 'wannabes' was Alice Little. 26 Tom Hurwitz, Cathouse cinematographer, came to regret his involvement 26 Secrets of the Bunny Ranch, can be seen on Crime+Investigation on Wednesday, 25 June Credit: Crime+Investigation Advertisement 'Seeing something that was on late at night that my parents didn't really want me to watch… as a kid that only makes you more intrigued,' she recalls. 'They would go to bed and I would sneak out of my room, go downstairs and watch with the volume turned down low. "I thought it was the coolest thing, being paid to be gorgeous. It sounded amazing. So I decided I was going to go the Bunny Ranch.' As Cathouse became a huge hit, Hof was raking the money in and bought up a string of brothels nearby, transforming them into the model of the Bunny Ranch. Advertisement But he was eager to tell interviewers that he offered women the chance to earn a good living themselves. 'This is an opportunity for you either to make a lot of money in four or five years, invest it properly and never work another day in your life or to make a good amount of money in a short period of time every month so you can be with your kids and work on your writing or acting career or your studies,' he said. The brothel had a 50-50 split of profits with the women but they would had little left after being forced to pay for their accommodation along with laundry bills, clothes, make-up, condoms, lube and other subsidiaries. If they went days without being chosen by a client, their debts grew so many were constantly trying to pay off their tabs, effectively keeping them trapped there, as they couldn't walk away. Advertisement Wheel of doom 26 It was difficult for ex workers to rebuild their lives without 'extensive medical, psychological and psychiatric assistance' 26 Taina Bien-Aime´ said: 'Cathouse was glamorising the sex trade and pimps' Credit: getty 26 Ex-workers revealed no one became millionaires from the show Taina Bien-Aime was a former HBO Business Affairs Director before becoming an anti-sex trafficking activist. Advertisement 'Cathouse was glamorising the sex trade and pimps,' she says. 'It was not looking at the suffering of the women who are in these brothels. "On screen there is free-flowing alcohol, they are having fun, everybody's laughing, there's a pool. It's a beautiful marketing ploy to recruit young vulnerable women to try it out. 'It's a myth that they can become millionaires. And the moment they leave prostitution they are in abject poverty and it's very difficult for them to rebuild their lives without extensive medical, psychological and psychiatric assistance.' Rape claims 26 Jennifer O'Kane accused Hof of rape Advertisement 26 Rebekah Charleston, who worked at the Bunny Ranch, tried to stay away from Hof 26 Vince Neil, singer, assaulted Andrea Terry, a working girl at the Ranch Credit: wireImage Bekah Charleston, who worked at the Bunny Ranch, adds: 'There are many girls there who are falling into debt. And that's a position you don't want ever to be in at the brothel. "Because that means that whenever a customer finally does pick them, they have to do whatever he wants. No matter if they want to or not. Advertisement 'Dennis himself was notorious for 'partying', which meant having sex with whoever he wanted and not giving them any money. Whenever he was around in the parlour I would try to stay away from him.' Bekah was there when Vince Neil, lead singer of the heavy metal band, Motley Crue, came to visit Dennis in 2003. He was more angry than I had ever seen someone Andrea Terry Andrea Terry, a working girl at the Ranch, later filed a police report after an encounter with him. In the report she says, 'He tried to get me to touch his penis. I reminded him we had to pay before any sexual acts could take place. Advertisement "With such a rage in his eyes he grabbed me by the throat and pushed me against the window frame, holding me there, yelling at me, then yanked me down towards the bed. He was more angry than I had ever seen someone.' Bekah was upset by Hof's reaction to the violence. 26 Each prostitute from out of state works and sleeps in one of the brothel's 30 rooms during the entire duration of her stay Credit: Getty Images 26 Hof was accused of being violent with the girls Credit: Getty Images Advertisement 'Instead of Dennis Hof kicking Vince Neil out for assaulting one of his employees, he took him to the bar, bought him a drink and then paid for him to party with some other girl. I mean, they don't protect you. "In the end, the police actually charged Vince Neil and he pleaded no contest but if Dennis Hof had had his way, no one would have ever known.' Hof died in 2018 of a heart attack. Before his death several women who had worked at the Bunny Ranch accused him of rape, including Theresa Lowe and Jennifer O'Kane. He denied their allegations and never faced any charges, with authorities citing a lack of evidence. Advertisement Vince Neil, The Bunny Ranch and HBO did not respond to the producer's request for comment. Secrets of the Bunny Ranch, can be seen on Crime+Investigation on Wednesday, 25 June