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Porno

edited March 2012
It's the biggest thing on the internets. Also dumb, secret, and everywhere. Bad? Maybe. Or not really. But whatcha gonna do about it anyways?

A thread spliced in parallel from the Fancy Lady zone because people of every fancy might have something to say.
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  • I think the ladies and the gents were already up in each others' threads, but it never hurts to start fresh.

  • edited March 2012
    Some big stuff happened to the P. in the 80's when a large number of gender/sex/queer activists started claiming erotic play space in the porno commons. I'm thinking of the work of people like Susie Bright and On Our Backs magazine in the Bay area. They pioneered and popularized new, diverse sexy opportunities (especially for ladies) in ways that often built from male sex counter-cultures, both queer and straight, but also veering off to pursuing their own pleasure pathways.

    Ladies-only stripclubs (lady dancers for lady patrons) were promoted. Sextoy stores for women came out into the daylight. Sex workers organized to protect their own collective health and safety. [WikiP on "Sex-Positive Feminism"]

    Of course, this was also the era of the AIDS holocaust and the reality of the equation SILENCE = DEATH.

    I guess I'm trying to say that while the 60/70's were a time of sexual openness, discovery and utopian practice (perhaps following from the relatively wide distribution of birth control options for to women, as well as the general liberating ethos swelling during the nation's greatest period of prosperity --- teenagers, with CARS!), the 80's were a time of dystopian sexual militancy.

    In 60's porn, the gentile male swinger lifestyle was normalized, suburbanized and given high production values by the likes of Hugh Hefner, resulting in the first x-rated blockbusters. By the 80's, sex and gender activists were claiming public space and attacking social theories that classified broad swaths of joyful human behavior as deviant and anti-social.

    [Insert Richard Hell and The Voidoids: New Pleasure]

    I'm not going to claim that the young models that populate contemporary internet porn have benefited from any of this legacy (not that I really know one way or the other), but I do believe that in the 1980 and 90's the community of sex workers and porn producers became much more diverse and feminized. There were many female workers (like Seka, etc.) that became producers for a wider range of styles and tastes.

    I'm just kind of speculating here, but my impression is that since the mid-90's, as with so many other commodities, the internet, digital production and digital distribution have overwhelmed the dominance and techniques of the previous generation of entrepreneurs.

    Now, I guess, we are in the land of instant cheap dominant-id (ie, male) pleasing voyeurism everywhere. There are many liberated, self-actualized sex and porn workers working in ideological bulkheads established during the identity wars of the 80's and 90's, but that does not describe what fills up bazillions of video files that you'll find when you search on a few dirty words in Google.

    What does this new world mean for web-native generations? Is it just a virtual Amsterdam, ie no big deal? Or is this an era of unprecedented sexual terror, confusion, and damage?


  • Yes Flossy, I agree. Mixing it up, visiting the other's space, is totally cool and awesome!

    I just didn't want to unpack all this noise there. Out of respect, you know?
  • I think you can find whatever kind you like, even those older videos.
  • I said my piece in the lady thread
    but also agree with a lot of RJ's historical analysis
    mostly just makes me tired these days
    also I don't want to shave my butthole, what on earth?
  • first you shave it, then you bleach it!
    (???)

    also I am interested in Cindy Gallup's project
    http://makelovenotporn.com/

    I'm not against porn, I realize that most dudes (and many ladies) indulge in some fashion, but I do have some reservations about its' ubiquity and the porn aesthetic seeping into general culture. Like the current social norm of public hair being "gross", and the rise of labiaplasty (!).

    Academically speaking, pornography is really interesting as an adopter/driver of new technologies.
  • Yes exactly, that's what I was saying over in the lady thread
    like if you read the hairpin comments, everybody under 30 thinks shaving/bleaching/worrying about the way their labia look (???) is totally normal. and all the old people like me are like "little sisters, WHAT?" In my day you had to go hunt down somebody's weird VHS porno and watch it over and over again. Not so pervasive and ubiquitous. Also WTF is up with the new porn aesthetic? Everybody's so smooth, those things don't even look like hoo-has anymore! AM I A HIPPIE???
  • edited March 2012
    WE ARE OLD AND ALSO HIPPIES!

    And that's fine. I get really bummed though at the thought of ladies snipping things that are TOTALLY NORMAL because they do not match the idealized(also TOTALLY PHOTOSHOPPED if we're talking still images) vulva of porn ladies. Comment sections about pubic hair are also really funny when the young ladies are all "this has NOTHING to do with societal norms, I just think hair is gross/unhygenic" etc etc. If it was 1910 we'd think that NOT douching with Lysol is totally gross.

    I like to ask my gyno about what trends she sees in shaving, fear of lady bits, etc. She reports a serious rise in labiaplasty requests, which depresses her. Also asked if some Portland ladies shave their bits but not their legs? YUP!

    LOVE U PORTLAND!

    (she also says pubic hair is there for a reason, keeps infection down AND better friction-wise for sexing)

    To reiterate, though, I am not against porn. But porn is not real life, it is FANTASY.



  • the "unhygenic" comments always kill me. What do they mean??

    They know they are feminists so their sub-brains have to find other reasons for crazy body-hating grooming regiments. LOVE the shaving of bits but not of legs!!!! Like a literal physical demonstration of the Two Cultures being drawn from.

  • edited March 2012
    I don't get it, the shaving and stuff. (OK, the biggest, oldest hippie around.)

    My theory is that a lot of cosmetics (including for the stuff down there) is not really in the service of the partner's desire, but in the service of insecurity about the partner's imagined desire.

    I can't believe menfolk really care about how stuff is decorated. By the time one is acquainted with those details, one is already well on the way to working with what is available.

    Are there people who shut down because haircare doesn't meet their standards? I can't imagine.

    Maybe these cosmetic gestures are more like a kind of symbolic courtesy. They don't really mean anything in themselves, they just represent 'caring'. I'm thinking of the gift card industry and gift shops full of teddy bears. Fifteen dollars for a teddy bear in a bucket of flowers doesn't really do anything useful for anybody except to say, "I was thinking about you, so I spent some money to make this moment special."

    We say, "Thanks." Not because we desire or have any use for a stupid teddy bear, or pony, or rainbow alligator face, on our desk, but because we appreciate the evidence of our partner's concern for us.

    Got to keep those butthole bleaching mills churning!
  • I think it just comes down to standing up for who you are, being strong in your convictions, and finding a partner who respects that. Are you really going to want to be in a relationship with someone who forces you to bleach your butthole? Any guy worth a damn is going to actually listen to the lady he is with. Yes, porn does have an effect on our culture, but so does KFC's "double down" meat-bread sandwich, and how many of us here have eaten one of those?
  • Like DrJ says, it seems so unlikely that a dude would bail because of hair down there. I can imagine a situation where a guy goes on to trash talk a girl to his bros for having hair, BUT THAT GUY IS A DOUCHE!
  • Well I know that dudes regularly write/call in to Dan Savage being like "How do I tell my girlfriend that her pubic hair is disgusting????? WHY DOESN'T SHE SHAVE IT LIKE A NORMAL PERSON"

    So yeah, I think this something affecting dudes too, not just ladies.



  • Wow. Such a hippie. I'm gonna go roll a J and play my banjo in the park.
  • Whaaat? I read Dan Savage every week and I don't see much of that. But still, it comes back to communication. Dude needs to ask a girl why she doesn't shave and then she needs to let him know where she stands. Then he can be a baby or he can deal with reality.
  • I've also heard dating horror stories where a guy will see a girl has pubic hair is all grossed out. Really insensitive and douchy behavior, and I can't believe people actually say stuff like, "oh you have too much pubic hair," but it happens!

    But yeah, I think pubic hair can be used as a jerk filter. Oh, you're grossed out by my totally natural body? GOODBYE.
  • Something to consider: I've seen many ladies making disparaging comments about guys with beards. Some like it, some don't. It doesn't affect my choice to have a beard, and I'm with someone who likes it.
  • edited March 2012
    Beards are out in the open. They're way less personal. You don't only show your beard to people in intimate and vulnerable moments. But yeah, I agree that people's dumb opinions about pubic hair shouldn't affect your choice to have it.
  • edited March 2012
    Obviously! This is missing the point. Nobody on this board is saying anything like "I'd sure love to keep my pubic hair, but boys won't like me if I don't."

    We are pointing out new big generational trends in grooming that in my opinion can be 100% tied to the widespread ubiquity of a New Porn aesthetic. And that this new generation DOES think this way (boys liking me = must shave pubic region). And how that's intense.

    I'm sure you dudes would never be so flip as to think vast across-the-board beauty myths are solvable by just shrugging and saying "who would care what someone else thought of them? that's stupid." Which is what it seems like you are saying right now.

  • Maybe the idea of trimming/shaving etc. isn't bad as much as it's just a new trend. iPorn allows more people to see it and that becomes the new accepted norm. In that way, how is it different than short hair, trimming beards, clothing style changes, etc. JFK killed hats using television, and porn killed un-trimmed nether regions. I agree with YT, but it doesn't seem that intense. It actually seems pretty normal (maybe).
  • Yeah, I think that's true.
  • yeah, probably true.

    I was only presenting a counter-example to an earlier-raised-point wherein someone seemed to be saying they didn't think porn had widespread implications for how people viewed one another/behaved/thought things were sexy.
  • People will do what they want with their pubes; no matter who tells them differently. Other "decorations" disturb me much more than bare skin. Is vajazzaling (sp?) still a thing? Is there some new pubic decorating fad?
  • I do think it has implications. I just don't know what the alternative would be.
  • Should pubes be covered in Sex Ed? Maybe? Just letting kids know it's not "gross" or "dirty" to have pubes. I do see the problem where a young person might not even know it's an option to not shave... but then again, maybe I'm not giving them enough credit and there are girl convos at the high school where some of the girls are like "Fuck that, I don't shave. It's OK."
  • edited March 2012
    This debate is missing the forest for the thatch... to me, free will looks like this:

    image

    The idea that porn doesn't influence us as individuals is bogus.
  • What's your thought?
  • edited March 2012
    I acknowledge that I do stand far-out on lot of values. I know my bell-curve isn't middle.

    If anything, I think easy access has normalized porn to the point where its power is forgotten. It isn't forbidden... I prefer the satisfaction of forbidden things.

    Splitting hairs
    There's too many kinds of porn and too many kinds of viewers to make generalizations. Except the one generalization I can make, is that visual stuff is incredibly powerful.

    Like for example... the point of shaved genitals is not that hair is "gross." It's that you can't see the genitals when hair is covering it. And we have this camera. And it wants to see everything. It's because of the camera.
  • Also... maybe you are all defending porn b/c of Rick Santorum (whose name means only one thing to me)
  • Confusingly I find gay porn way more morally justifiable than the other kind.
  • edited March 2012
    I have been thinking about this too... ha ha, if you saw my tumblr favorites you could call me a complete hypocrite, because it has a lot of pictures that are porn-inspired if not classic porn product (and my tastes veer to the gay)

    Bbbut

    1 thing is we are talking about an m/f power thing.
    And same-sex stuff plays with the power thing as a matter of course.
  • edited March 2012
    I have a whole tumblr that is all based on the thesis that men are just as likely sex objects as women. I have had it for about three years and at first I just thought about my perspective as a woman: knowing first-hand the way I see men. I thought I was going to have my work cut out for me to show that guys are beautiful, vulnerable objects. Funny thing, most of my followers and rebloggers are guys, who obviously "get it."

    Ha ha, I really am an elitist.
  • If I may digress from the pubes discussion, I have to say that there is nothing less sexy than people who are not really enjoying themselves in the porno film. By which I mean "none of the guys, ever, and pretty close to all of the ladies." I get tired of the idea that ladies don't like porn because we are delicate flowers who can't possibly get down with anything "dirty." But I wish more people would admit that most standard porn does not portray women who seem to be genuinely having a good time or having any agency or reciprocation at all. Secondarily, isn't it way hotter to see people's faces and entire bodies - again, if they are actually, genuinely having a good time - instead of just endless closeups of various orifices? I would like to think that most reasonable people would have this reaction, not just women. Why would dudes think it's hot to see a lady going through the motions? But depressingly, most of what's out there makes me think that the dude viewers must not really care about whether the ladyfolks are getting theirs, or else porn would be made really differently.
  • another way to make the same point is why would anyone consume anything but the homemade variety?
  • edited March 2012
    LT is on the mark about the camera. Ladies in the P. (and I think gents? I'll have to do some research later) groom their stuff for the camera. With P. popping up on every screen from time to time these days, those groomed parts have become legible as a norm. Folks conform to the norm. That sounds right to me. It isn't whether it makes 'sense' or whether males want it. It's just what everybody sees, so that's what they do.




    vvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvv

    This was interesting. Thanks Ed.

    >>>also I am interested in Cindy Gallup's project
    http://makelovenotporn.com/

    It's true there are many contemporary straight-porn cliches ( facial conclusions, eg) that are totally about what the camera wants and what the voyeur can work with and have maybe nothing to do with the pleasures of the participants or the practices of "real" people. And just like with the hair trimming, this is no doubt changing the expectations and practices of "real" people.

    And yeah, it is messed up if these industrial conventions get in the way of people creating their own best pleasures.

    I believe you when you say it is happening.


    I'm going to go think some more.

    For the record, I don't think I'm defending porn or my relation to it. Did you think I was LT?

    I think you are correct that it is kind of hard to make generalizations. That was part of what motivated me to try to sketch a 50-year overview.

    I've read some books and hung out with students of sexuality, but I've never taken a feminisms class. The first wave is like the suffragettes, right? And second wave is Gloria Steinem and Andrea Dworkin, anti-objectification, equality, sisterhood and separatism, Womyn, right? And so third wave is about the contradictions of desire, liberation and power, anti-essentialism, the mutable ground of gender and other categories, right? And I think that's the territory of the 'sex-positive' feminists I was talking about. They were like: we can porn the shit out of shit if we want to. This is our time, our game, our pleasure, and if it works for us it works, whatever the f*k it looks like.

    ------------------


    For years my online porn/smut was here. A real catchall going since the earliest days of the internet. Lots of totally messed up stuff. All kinds. All text. No pictures. It's like a massive toxic dump of the collective unconscious. (For the record: Probably 3% suits my vanilla tastes. Just sayin'.)

    --------------------

    I don't think I'm defending porn. It seems too big to me to even think about whether it should come or go.

    I'm thinking the erotic can attach to almost anything. Erotic logic is indivisible from every pleasure in life.

    Anything can be porn if you look at it through the lens that way.
  • Well, you can find more emotionally real stuff and also plenty of amateur porn on the Internet as well. Watch what you want to watch, let other people watch what they want to watch. If a guy isn't satisfying the lady in his life, he's not going to have a very good relationship, so I'd say that's instant karma.
  • Just saying, trying to figure out how other people's sex brains work is probably a fruitless task.
  • edited March 2012
    apropos of nothing, i think that dworkin deserves to be taken a zillion times more seriously than she usually is.
  • Re: Home-made variety. Couldn't you say the same thing about music..... or any cultural product?
  • edited March 2012
    Which Dworkin texts turn you on, @Kdawg?
  • So hard right now
  • edited March 2012
    JK, 100% soft.
  • Brook's Brothers: un-rated.
  • Brooks Brothers porn would be two people sitting across the hotel lobby from each reading different financial papers and then they look up at the same time, catch each other's eye, and go back to reading the paper. Hot stuff.
  • So agree with LT and freddy
    So agree with Dworkin needing to be taken a zillion times more seriously. I recently re-read her essay on Nicole Brown Simpson and felt that old-school feeling of my mind just being SLAYED. I just sat there, like, Uuuughhhhhhhhh. Talk about speaking fucking truth to power.

    Honestly just go get any book of her essays and prepare to have a big hole blown in your reality

    She's caricatured, but it's because there's so much power in her.

    Even the second wave porn trials, with MacKinnon and Dworkin and the lady from Deep Throat, they were caricatured....everyone talks about how you know the feminists were on the "wrong side" of that issue because the religious right was also on that side. But you can support the right causes for the wrong reasons, I think we would all agree. The feminists' fundamental statement in that trial was "if porn is free speech, WHOSE SPEECH IS IT?" and that question was never answered and has still not been answered. To read Linda Lovelace's supreme court testimony, about being forced at gunpoint to let a Great Dane fuck her so that generations of frat boys could enjoy watching it, and then to know that it made no difference, and to know that legions of male legislators, thinkers, and people, just disregard it as not even being allowed to be part of the discussion--like oh, that was just ONE WOMAN'S experience, and oh, but most porn isn't made at gunpoint, and oh etc. etc. Totally unable to engage with the idea that countless theaters full of men, watching a woman get raped by a dog and GETTING PLEASURE OUT OF THAT VIEWING, says something fucking EPIC about our culture.

    Like yeah, I don't know about legislating pornography, obviously the implications of that are dark, etc. etc. first amendment censorship etc. But this to me also seems like somewhat of a canard--like by just saying "it's free speech" we can wash our hands of having to engage in the much grittier discussion of what such things say about us, our society, the power dynamics we all exist completely within, and how we relate to one another as human beings. That conversation is too difficult, so we just comfort ourselves with platitudes about choice and free speech and "whatever floats your boat" and "well there's nothing to be done about it, boys will be boys" or whatever.

    I prefer erotic fiction.

  • Well I do not condone dog rape at gunpoint.

    Erotic fiction almost seems worse because people write shit with minors involved (Harry Potter &c).
  • Head's up, we just reached the "I do not condone dog rape at gunpoint" milestone of this porn discussion.
  • edited March 2012
    What I find totally stupefying about contemporary internet porn is the lost business opportunity of female-friendly pornography. Oprah sez that 1 in 3 watchers of porn are women but I doubt one flick in a thousand was made with female viewers in mind.

    Where are the big, modern female-friendly porn purveyors? Everyone always brings up Candide Royalle but her production company wasn't able to stay afloat even through the video craze of the 90s.

    Why have so few companies made a biiiillion dollars making mainstream porn for women's enjoyment?
  • really good question, and I don't know! I almost can't even imagine what "woman-friendly" porn would look like...and not just because "woman" isn't monolithic and we all probably like different stuff. I'm more amazed by how uniform the porn that I've been exposed to is, in the sense freddy's talking about. How can so much of it show people blatantly, obviously not enjoying themselves? That is more stupefying to me than anything, really. Like why would ANYONE prefer that kind of porn, as opposed to porn made by people who are enjoying themselves? What is compelling about watching sexual acts stripped of all pleasure? I'm sure there is stuff written about porn having become its own justification, like just pushing the body modification and craziness of activities farther and farther is now the sole point, rather than actually being erotic. Is porn the ultimate contemporary art form

    erotic fiction is awesome, you have to use your IMAGINATION
  • edited March 2012
    if you want people to enjoy themselves you probably have to be paying better wages and treating people better and having health care for employees and if you do all that, then you probably aren't making porn.

    also, the internet makes all media free.
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