Looks like someone's appropriated the Nicole Moore business model.

OMAHA, Neb. --from www.ketv.com - People who need help keeping their homes clean can pay $300 to have a nude woman do the house work, KETV-TV in Omaha reported.

Flyers for Kia Carroll's Odd’z and En’z Janitorial Service say the business charges $85 for fully-clothed cleaning and $300 for nude, full-service cleaning.

One of Carroll’s ads showed up in Annette Ellis’ mailbox.

“I read it over again and againm and then I shared it with my husband. I said, 'This ain’t nothing but legalized prostitution,'” Ellis said.

“You know, some wife is going to come home from work one day and see a cleaning service there and it ain’t going to be nice,” said Ellis.

Carroll said that, in today’s economy, she’s just trying to set her business apart. She realizes it sounds like she’s offering more than dusting and vacuuming.

“It would sound like that, like I’m soliciting prostitution, but I’m not,” she said.

Carroll said it’s a combination cleaning, entertainment and party service. Some of her employees are dancers, and if they choose to engage in sex with their clients, that’s their business.

“We are strongly set on that we are not soliciting sex, and we are strictly here to clean. If you want something other, you’re going to have to take that up with that person there, but I don’t condone that at all,” Carroll said.

So is the business legal? Omaha City Prosecutor Marty Conboy said it depends. He said if a business has a pretense for prostitution, then it may be in violation of Nebraska law. He also said nude performances for pay are also illegal under the state’s obscenity statute.

Carol said if her nude cleaning service is operating outside the law, she will change her business strategy. For now, however, she said she’s just trying to make a living.