Although exotic dance is far from the only form of sex work on sale, examining the changes in such performances informs how we tend to see other professionals, such as models working in the pornography industry or in fashion and quid-pro-quo prostitutes. It's not clear if today's stripping, as a performance, is the result of earlier so-called "hooch coochi" dancers or a natural progression of Go-Go dancing, which emanated from the rock clubs of the 1960s and changed incrementally into contemporary adult dance. Meanwhile, a timeline provided in When Sex is Work: Hookers, Models, and Strippers in Popular Culture clearly suggests that the invention, proliferation, and eventual distribution of economical computing power on a mass scale destroyed the exotic and taboo nature of sexual matter. In addition, such emerging technology has provided the means for sex professionals to wrest control of the means of production from a pre-existing power elite, which was often defined by exploitative behavior, and reposition it into the hands of mass consumers and providers.