Who is the cleaner plug, from front or rear? Yes, time to stop chasing your tail and check compression first. Go with a new set of plugs. Probably the back one is fouling.
Now for the yes or no's:
1. Bike starts right up and idles right off.
a. Yes means I cleaned it so well, I can rev it from idle and revs up to redline.
b. No means it makes the same hesitation trying to get to redline.
c. Could you repeat the question.
2. I kind of crank it a lot before it fires.
a. Yes, it does take awhile to start it.
b. No, See number 1.
c. Carb is still dirty at one of 3 circuits.
3. These are the same plugs that came with the bike.
a. Yes. I changed everything else but these.
b. No. These have 100 miles on them.
c. Why I don't believe that for a second.
4. The clean plug is from the front.
a. Yes. Front plug. It's dry so no oil problem.
b. No. It's the rear plug.
c. Yes, I'm going to change plugs after the compression test.
5. Will you buy 3 plugs?
a. Yes. I want to eliminate a fuel or ignition problem.
b. No. I'll just swap plugs and keep riding it.
c. So you'll burn the carbon off the hez plug by cleaning it and in a few 30 or so miles I hammer it and see if the hez burned the carbon off the nose or on my way for a set of plugs on the cleaning ride.
d. Did you say one higher heat range, 'we have a problem Huston'; carbon fouling that one cylinder?
Only your compression knows for sure.