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Eric Spitznagel didn't always write porn. (And doesn't, it should be noted, anymore.) In fact, for most of his adult life (we can't answer for his teen years... God only knows what he was doing then) he's been a writer of humor, which would seem, on the surface, like the exact opposite of being a porn writer. Prior to moving to L.A., he spent ten years teaching comedy writing at the famed Second City in Chicago (which means he probably knows way more famous people than you or I do) and is currently a contributing editor at The Believer (which means he gets to interview people like Beck and Paul Giamatti on a regular basis). But, let's not forget, the guy did once write porn. He did -- he'll have you know -- write the sequel to Butt Crazy! And that's really what we're here to talk about.
As a woman, I have to ask a follow up here. I notice that in answering this question, as well as in discussing the porn actors in the book, you focus almost exclusively on the women in porn. For instance, I have to wonder if anyone would ever say of a male porn actor, He equated sex with his own sense of self-worth, and thats a dangerous thing. Or find it odd that the male porn actor was disappointed theyd cut his scene. Or even think to say of a man, Its not just a job for him; its a lifestyle choice. So, first of all, did you find the men to be sexual extremists as well Is there such a thing as a male nympho Or are all males assumed to be nymphos I guess I just find it a bit dangerous to assume that men are never victimized and woman always are, when it comes to sex, be it in porn or otherwise.
Those are all excellent questions, and I wish I had a thoughtful, intelligent response for you. But to be honest, it never really occurred to me to think about how the men in porn might be victimized. Maybe it's just a knee-jerk reaction from my liberal arts education. You get accustomed to talking about porn in terms of how women are objectified and degraded, and the men are just an afterthought at best. But I suppose you're right, it is something that effects both genders. Of course, the women do get the worst of it. It's just a sad reality of our culture that sexuality is usually equated with something negative when it comes to women. A women who devotes her life to sex is called a whore while a man, more often than not, is a stud. It's okay for a man to be overtly sexual because we expect it of them. We have a difficult time thinking of men in any sexual situation -- porn or otherwise -- as victims. It seems healthy even when it's not. But the moment a woman starts being too sexually aggressive, there must be something wrong with her. She's a victim or a prostitute or some combination of the two. That's completely unfair, I know, but it's how our moral compass is wired. And I guess I just fell into that trap. But at the same time, I'm sure that if I tried to write about how the experience of male and female porn stars were similar, I would've been crucified. I've even had a few readers accost me for suggesting that porn might objectify men as much as it does women. In the book, I quoted another porn writer who told me, \"Look at the average porno and you'll always see the woman's face. But the guy is only shown from the waist down. He's just a cock and balls, an anonymous torso with moving parts. Now you tell me, who's the one being portrayed as an object\" I don't know if I agree with that, but it is an interesting point. Porn is just about the mechanics of sex, and neither the man nor the woman is seen as anything more than genitals with legs. But you're on dangerous ground if you try to make people question whether porn degrades both sexes equally. Our society wants to believe that women are the only casualty in porn, and a humor writer certainly isn't going to be the one to change their mind.
Well, I think people want to sleep with virgins for the same reasons they want to be the first person to set foot on Mars. It's all about the conquest, isn't it And I'm not sure you're being a hundred percent truthful in your answer but I appreciate the effort nonetheless. But back to your book. Do you have any juicy industry gossip for us Did you ever work with or meet the reining star of porn, Jenna Jameson Does writing porn get you laid
It's a universal concern: the ease with which our children encounter adult material on the Internet. Even with the use of strong filters, the junk seeps into our lives. It is often because the porn vendors use aggressive marketing techniques, linking their sites to normal search terms and causing us to accidentally arrive at their site. Also, it's a normal developmental curiosity for our teens to \"check out\" nude celebrity photos or videos and other forms of porn.
Gaia Online, recently awarded an award from CNET's Webware for Best Social site, is also the online teen destination site where a Wisconsin teen met an adult woman looking for a real world tryst. We parents will need to add this site to our watchlist for our kids, just as we monitor the use of other social networking sites.
Whether we admit it or not, one of the most common activities people are doing online is viewing pornography. And even if this isn't the case in your home, your children will learn about porn from their peers, from online advertisements, from mistakes in typing web addresses or search terms or out of normal curiosity about their own sexual feelings. I highly recommend you talk to your children about online porn and your expectations/rules for your kids in regard to it. It's out there and no amount of hiding will change that.
You can sense the buzz the news producers at the Today Show, CNN's Nancy Grace and the others must have felt when they first got the emailed report: \"We have a video of Florida cheerleaders beating a fellow teenager for 30 minutes and there's a tie-in to YouTube and MySpace.\" They must have tripped over their Ferragamo laces getting the news vans rolling to Lakeland, Florida to interview these young lovelies, their parents and the local sheriff. Sex, violence and the Internet We'll all get Emmys!
Users of peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing services such as LimeWire are often very naive about how much someone else can access on their computer. If you are sharing your family PC where you do your taxes and other private and important financial work with a teen who might be getting music and video via P2P, please sit down and evaluate how it was set up. You need to make sure that nothing else can be accessed other than the target folder where your own music and video is stored.
This shift in the dominant image of manhood is most evident in the evolution of the so-called \"Family Man.\" The benevolent patriarch of the '50s has been replaced by an adult teenager who spends his time sneaking off to hang out with the boys, eyeing the hot chick over his wife's shoulder, or buying cool new toys. Like a fourteen-year-old, this guy can't be trusted with the simplest of domestic tasks, be it cooking dinner for the kids or shopping for groceries.
At least part of this image is rooted in a real cultural trend, according to State University of New York at Stony Brook sociology professor Michael Kimmel. His upcoming book, Guyland, argues that men \"are resisting becoming men longer and longer,\" doing their best to postpone all the decisions that mark the passage into adulthood -- getting a job, moving out of their parents' home, getting married and having kids -- in order to enjoy the lad lifestyle of \"online porn, drinking, and poker.\" This trend has its big-screen avatar in the hero of the film Failure to Launch, which stars Matthew McConaughey as a thirty-something slacker whose desperate parents \"hire the gorgeous and talented girl of his dreams to get him to move out of the house.\"
Contrary to popular understanding -- fueled by conservatives who are fond of caricaturing liberals as well-coiffed and manicured wimps -- Simpson does not define the metrosexual as particularly feminine or even gay, but as \"a collector of fantasies about the male sold to him by the media.\" Thus, George W. Bush strutting around on an aircraft carrier is every bit as metrosexual as a teen idol like Orlando Bloom. In a media universe ruled by marketing gods, \"the traditional forms and sufferings of stoic, self-denying, self-sacrificing old-fashioned masculinity are merely cutesy, quaint props for the new, aestheticised, moisturized self-regarding variety.\" In the new millenium, it's more important to look like a hero than act like one -- as John Kerry could well testify.
This isn't good news for either men or women. By defining domestic chores literally as \"homework,\" the teen slacker version of masculinity offers no respite for working women struggling to balance their lives. And if adult responsibilities are defined as emasculating, then it's no wonder that popular culture now defines \"commitment\" solely as a woman's goal. 59ce067264