Things To Come

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Porn Will Be Pervasive - And The New Porn Will Be... Religion?




(AP) This photo, provided by the Naked Broadcasting Network Inc., shows Holly Eglinton, 31, of Vancouver, B.C., interviewing a pedestrian in Times Square in New York in May 2007 during a 'talent search' contest for the Internet's 'Naked News.' Eglinton was the eventual winner out the three finalists. A self-proclaimed 'poser,' Eglinton sees the chance to take her clothes off online as fun, empowering and a little rebellious -- though others wonder if the trend toward exhibitionism has gone too far.
(AP Photo/Naked Broadcasting Network Inc., HO) **NO SALES




Web, Reality TV Help Make Porn Pervasive

Jun 3, 5:12 PM (ET)

By MARTHA IRVINE,
AP National Writer
Sun Jun 3, 5:12 PM ET

CHICAGO (AP) - Porn used to be relegated to a video hidden in the bottom drawer, or a magazine under the mattress. Today, it's part of everyday life.

Hugh Hefner's girlfriends have become TV's "girls next door." Porn stars have MySpace pages and do voiceovers for video games. And while "porn on demand" is standard for hotel TVs and upgraded cable packages, it's even easier to find it with a few clicks on the computer.

In April, more than a third of the U.S. Internet audience visited sites that fit into the online "adult" category, according to comScore Media Metrix.

So the message is clear: In today's world, sex doesn't just sell. The pervasiveness of porn has made sexiness - from subtle to raunchy - a much-sought-after attribute online, at school and even at work.

(...)


(For more - ask Martha!
She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org and via http://myspace.com/irvineap)


That is all interesting (as profitable too - for the NBN and their, ah, "associates", of course!) but while we see that sort of stuff becomes "a joyous part of everyday life" - religion is the thing that is shunned and hidden in bottom drawers. If not outright relegated to the attic or basement! (And I may or may not be talking just about old King James Bible editions that no one peruses anymore...)

While nudity and, worse still, debauchery are evenly spread throughout the media (no pun intended) - we have to mumble if we talk about GOD! As Kanye West sang so well in "Jesus Walks" - if we talk about GOD, our records won't get played! Meanwhile, in the neighborhood of the Vatican itself, Italian spouses are flaunting what they've got on national television weeknights, on very odd REALITY TV shows during prime time too - this while their hubbies sit at home, either happy to share their wives' bedroom treasures with a nationwide if not European-wide audience *or* busy with other sexual partners; glancing at the wife every other minute, on the tube...!

I tell you, if Sodom & Gomorrah had had access to this sort of technology, their habits would have been rampant and rife all over the world much sooner than it was, folks! But promiscuity is making up for lost time NOW...!

Nudism is quite innocent and nudity on screen used to be tastefully done - but now, little is left to the imagination. Male frontal nudity is mercifully the last barrier - methinks! Everything else is almost a go AND a given now, on cable! Including, sometimes, male frontal nudity! Depends if it's HBO or not... Off-the-beatne path sexuality and behaviour is glamorized on such shows as "Kink" and any number of other reality TV shows... NBN makes nudity so naturel...! Well, it is, of course - we've ALL imagined Diane Sawyer butt-naked at one time or another - but maybe the issues and plain SHOCKING news being delivered to us should be done so with OTHER THINGS IN MIND... hmm? When we hear about deaths in senseless wars, we shouldn't be contemplating the texture of the anchorwoman's bosom, seeming as it is to be so very much within our grasp...!

At least we can rest assured that NBN will never outscoop CNN...

If it ever does - then the world has REALLY gone down the tubes!

Meanwhile though, it is GOD Who Has Become Taboo!
Any mention will cost you, ratings-wise...
There are some shows aimed specifically for that niche - but, quite frankly, they are not impressive! They seem to do more harm than good too - Holly Hunter's "Redemption" is anything but, for glaring and downright sordid example. And there are plenty more out there. For a show that went on the main premise that THERE IS AN AFTERLIFE, "Six Feet Under" sure loses its focus real quick... HBO'S (again HBO...!) "Carnivale" establishing as the main crooked character the PREACHER has really done wonders for stirring FAITH... At least they don't badmouth GOD Himself like the lamentable "Preacher" series published by AOL/Time-Warner's DC - but most rednecks do NOT differenciate between GOD, RELIGION and the many flawed pastor-types who are in it just for a quick buck and because it is THEIR ONLY WAY to "be in show-business" too...

But that may be another story - for another blog to come!

2 Comments:

  • Hmm...

    Martha won't mind...


    Following, is the ENTIRETY of her article on NBN etc...


    Enjoy - just for and as reference source though!


    ;)

    By Blogger Luminous (\ô/) Luciano™, at 7:57:00 PM  

  • Web, reality TV help make porn pervasive

    By MARTHA IRVINE,
    AP National Writer
    Sun Jun 3, 5:12 PM ET



    CHICAGO - Porn used to be relegated to a video hidden in the bottom drawer, or a magazine under the mattress. Today, it's part of everyday life.

    Hugh Hefner's girlfriends have become TV's "girls next door." Porn stars have MySpace pages and do voiceovers for video games. And while "porn on demand" is standard for hotel TVs and upgraded cable packages, it's even easier to find it with a few clicks on the computer.

    In April, more than a third of the U.S. Internet audience visited sites that fit into the online "adult" category, according to comScore Media Metrix.

    So the message is clear: In today's world, sex doesn't just sell. The pervasiveness of porn has made sexiness — from subtle to raunchy — a much-sought-after attribute online, at school and even at work.

    Many agree that the trend has had a particularly strong influence on young women — in some cases, taking shape as an unapologetic embracing of sexuality and exhibitionism.

    "I am one of those girls," says Holly Eglinton, a 31-year-old Canadian who recently won a talent search competition to appear as an unclothed newscaster on the Internet's "Naked News." She auditioned after meeting a producer for the show on a social networking site where she's posted provocative photos of herself — an increasingly common practice.

    For Eglinton, taking off her clothes for an Internet audience was freeing, fun and a little rebellious.

    "It's something that sort of suits my personality," she says. "I'm kind of an extrovert and a bit of a camera hog, a poser."

    It's a prevalent sentiment in our look-at-me culture. But many wonder if it really is empowering, especially for younger women and girls who try to emulate what's already on the Web.

    Too often, educators and health professionals say, the results are cases of "Girls Gone Wild" — gone wild.

    Michael Simon, a therapist and high school counselor in the San Francisco Bay area, has seen an increasing number of girls and young women in his private practice after episodes in which they undressed or masturbated in front of a Web cam for people they met online.

    "Instead of pornography or performative sexuality being one choice among many ways of being sexual, it's essentially become the standard of sexiness," says Simon. "It's also the standard by which a man or woman is a prude, depending on how much they embrace that kind of sexuality."

    Yvonne K. Fulbright, a sexologist and author who co-hosts the "Sex Files" program on Sirius satellite radio, also has seen the shift in attitude.

    She's posted messages on Craigslist looking for people who want to comment on various topics for the show — and, instead, often receives responses from young women who send descriptions of their breast and waist sizes.

    "They're under the impression that they can be the next big thing," Fulbright says. "Unfortunately, for a lot of females that means taking off your clothes and being sexual.

    "It's a really warped sense of what it means to be sexy."

    Indeed, there was a time when dancing for the masses in barely there outfits was the realm of music video stars and strippers. Then the Internet and reality TV came along, providing new platforms for young women to flaunt it for a shot at fame.

    In one hit prime-time series, for instance, eager young contestants perform soft-core porn dance routines in hopes of becoming the next member of The Pussycat Dolls singing group.

    The fascination with being "hot" also has made its way into the workplace, where confidence is often conveyed in the way one looks and dresses.

    "I would say that, in the world of Washington, D.C., power brokers, it's important to be sexy, but in a more sophisticated, muted way," says Charles Small, a 25-year-old young professional who works in the nation's capital. That's in contrast, he says, to cities such as Los Angeles and Miami, "where overt sexiness is more the status quo."

    Some employers — taken aback by the trend — have responded by setting tougher dress codes. Many school administrators have done the same.

    "As a high school teacher, I see 14-year-old girls dressing in a way that makes me shake my head. Where do they get that?" asks Dennis Brown, an educator and parent in Huntley, Ill., outside Chicago.

    Recently, he says his own 5-year-old daughter proclaimed, "Daddy, I look fat."

    "And I thought, 'Oh my gosh, here we go,'" he says. "Now I have to start deconstructing that mind-set."

    It's a big topic of discussion among researchers. A 2007 report from the American Psychological Association compiled the findings of myriad studies, showing that the sexualization of young women and girls, in particular, can hurt them in many ways. Problems can include anything from low-self esteem and eating disorders to depression and anxiety.

    Simon, the California therapist, has seen those symptoms in several of his young female patients.

    While boys tend to seek out porn for their own sexual pleasure, he sees a sexual disconnect with girls who exhibit provocative behavior they're not ready for — from undressing online to performing oral sex on boys.

    "It doesn't have anything to do with their sexual pleasure," says Simon. "It has to do with pleasing somebody else — the grasping for attention.

    "As a parent, it makes me want to cry."

    And while they tell him they feel empowered, too often, he says they end up getting pegged as "sluts."

    Julie Albright, a sociologist at the University of Southern California, has noted that dynamic in her research. She's working on a book about "players," men who juggle more than one sex partner and earn a title of esteem for behavior that much of society still frowns upon for women.

    "If you 'act like a man,' in that sense, you're trying to grab hold of that same kind of power, that same kind of lifestyle — and claim male privilege," Albright says.

    "The problem is, you're still female and it's still a man's world."

    Anna Stanley, a 25-year-old in Madison, Wis., knows all about that double standard. She also wonders if she and her peers place too much importance on the power of sexiness.

    "It seems like it stems out of the 'Girl Power' thing of the '90s gone awry — men objectify us, so let's objectify ourselves and get something out of it. It's not really progress," she says. "But it's something I have mixed feelings about — because sometimes I do it, too.

    "Sometimes you do dress up to get noticed and attention, and you do feel more confident when you do that."

    She wishes there was more focus on helping women develop a healthy sense of their own sexuality.

    Missy Suicide — founder of the "Suicide Girls" pinup Web site — couldn't agree more.

    "I think that women shouldn't be afraid of their sexuality. It's a part of who we are. You shouldn't be embarrassed and ashamed of your body and yourself," says the 29-year-old entrepreneur, who lives in Los Angeles. But, she says, it shouldn't be the sole focus.

    She and the women on her site are known for challenging the stereotypes of beauty, with their tattoos and piercings and varying body types.

    "I get messages from girls all the time saying they never felt beautiful before because they never saw girls like themselves in magazines or on TV. Then they saw a girl like them on 'Suicide Girls,'" she says of the site, an online community that attracts a worldwide audience of both admirers and women who want to become nude pinups.

    Victoria Sinclair, the lead anchor on "Naked News," also sees herself as a role model. She left a job in the corporate world to join the show as lead anchor in 1999 — and never looked back.

    "Sometimes, there are moments when I think, 'Oh my goodness what am I doing?'" says Sinclair, who recently turned 40. "But I'm really OK with it."

    She says it works for her because she has control over what she does on the show and has been allowed to age gracefully, without plastic surgery.

    Still, many skeptics remain.

    "To be sure, it can make you feel powerful to know that you are arousing strong feelings in other people, that you have their attention and admiration," says Eileen Zurbriggen, a psychologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who helped compile the APA report.

    "This is the same sense of power experienced by charismatic rock stars and politicians. But politicians also wield other kinds of power. They can make actual changes to the legal, economic, and geopolitical landscapes — changes that have far-ranging impacts.

    "Women," she says, "might be better off developing other sources of power."

    ___

    On the Net:

    APA report: http://www.apa.org/pi/wpo/sexualization.html

    Fulbright's site: http://www.yvonnekfulbright.com

    ___

    Martha Irvine is a national writer specializing in coverage of people in their 20s and younger. She can be reached at mirvine(at)ap.org and via http://myspace.com/irvineap

    * Email Story
    * IM Story
    * Printable View

    RECOMMEND THIS STORY

    Average (178 votes)
    3.8 stars
    » Recommended Stories


    +++

    By Blogger Luminous (\ô/) Luciano™, at 7:58:00 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home


 



Gotta ask yourself the question...




Visitor Map
Create your own visitor map!