Archive for November, 2008

30
Nov
08

phone sex workers: revealed. (edit: link to more photos added)

from the new york post…

From a few mumbled words, a phone sex operator must weave a bespoke and finely detailed fantasy encounter,” writes New York photographer Phillip Toledano in the introduction to his new collection of portraits, “Phonesex” (Twin Palms). “It requires a vivid imagination, acting ability, and above all, a deep understanding of the human appetite.”

Fascinated by the sordid activities that are “hidden in plain sight,” Toledano photographed more than a dozen (unnamed) operators and had them explain their unique profession. He walked away impressed by the “artificial passion play” of “skilled verbal fantasists.”

ps
“I never thought I would work in the phone sex industry. All those years doing customer service, my customers would comment on my sexy voice. I thought I was being professional, not sexy. This work is customer service. It’s just your customers leave with more than a smile.”
Continue reading ‘phone sex workers: revealed. (edit: link to more photos added)’

30
Nov
08

Gynecologist to present talk on women’s sex drives

Kate Nolan – Nov. 30, 2008 12:00 AM
The Arizona Republic

SCOTTSDALE – Dr. Andrew Carter once gave a talk to a group of young mothers.

After the Scottsdale gynecologist had used up his hour on “new mommy” topics, such as birth control and planning your next pregnancy, he asked the moms what they wanted him to talk about.

They were unanimous: their sex drives.

Carter is finally giving that talk Dec. 11 at Scottsdale Healthcare Shea.

“Is Libido Getting You Down?” will address causes of low sex drive in women and allow them to talk about sex as something other than the “elephant in the room,” Carter said.

“This is the time to be open. I hope they will bring their own questions,” he said.

Carter treats straight and gay women and finds that their sexual issues are not very different.

He prods patients to talk about their sexual problems, something he learned in medical school at the University of Minnesota, which has a program in sexuality.

“As a doctor, if I don’t ask them about sex, maybe nobody will,” Carter said.

Despite the sexualized content of modern life, Carter thinks most women don’t have a peer group with whom they can talk about sex.

“For some, this may be the first time they’ll talk about sexual problems,” Carter said.

The program will cover treatments for low libido available through specialists, such as testosterone replacement and estrogen therapy.

Carter plans to share what he has learned from patients. Talking to a 40-year-old who likes her sex life can be instructive.

“What does she have that we can bottle up?” he asked.

He has noticed one thing. Women who make time for sex and stick to the schedule seem happiest with their sex lives.

Of course, if questions arise concerning his libido, the women may hear a familiar story.

“Do I have hot monkey sex? No, I have two small children,” said Carter, whose wife is a pediatrician at Phoenix Children’s Hospital. “I use the Ray Romano line: Whenever I have sex, I know it’s quarterly income-tax time again.”

30
Nov
08

$pread magazine

A new magazine by and for sex workers of all genders, sexualities, and backgrounds, and their allies across the globe.

$pread magazine

26
Nov
08

recommended: site

awesome website. and it’s porn so yeah: not safe for work.

Supercult

26
Nov
08

John Updike wins special Bad Sex in fiction prize

By JILL LAWLESS, Associated Press Writer Jill Lawless, Associated Press Writer – Tue Nov 25, 3:18 pm ET

LONDON – It’s not quite the Nobel Prize, but John Updike has a new literary accolade: laureate of bad sex.

Updike, who has a long and graphic history of detailing coupling on the page, won a lifetime achievement award Tuesday from judges of Britain’s Bad Sex in Fiction Prize, which celebrates crude, tasteless or ridiculous sexual passages in modern literature.

The judges, editors of Literary Review magazine, said Updike had been shortlisted for the prize four times in its 16-year history. “Good sex or bad sex, he has kept us entertained for many years,” they said in a statement.

The magazine said it was attempting to contact Updike to tell him the good news.

The 76-year-old American novelist was a finalist for this year’s Bad Sex prize for his description of an explosive oral encounter in his latest book, “The Widows of Eastwick,” but lost out to British writer Rachel Johnson.

Johnson won for a passage in her satirical novel “Shire Hell” that describes a woman in the midst of a “mounting, Wagnerian crescendo” wondering whether “the Spodders are, as requested, attending the meeting about slug clearance.” Cats and moths also make metaphorical appearances.

“All the passages this year are equally awful, but Rachel Johnson’s struck us because of the mixture of cliche and euphemism,” said the magazine’s deputy editor, Tom Fleming. “There were a couple of really bad animal metaphors in there.”

Johnson was due to receive the prize — which comes with a bottle of champagne and a plaster foot — from actor Dominic West, star of “The Wire,” at a ceremony in London. Fleming said the foot is intended as “an abstract representation of sex.”

Johnson beat a shortlist of writers including Isabel Fonseca, mega-selling Brazilian writer Paulo Coelho and Tony Blair’s former spin doctor, Alastair Campbell.

She accepted the prize in good humor, saying, “I always wanted to win a literary award,” and noting that previous winners include such literary heavyweights as Sebastian Faulks, Tom Wolfe and the late Norman Mailer.

Mailer posthumously won last year’s award for an overly vivid description of Adolf Hitler’s conception in his novel “The Castle in the Forest.”

25
Nov
08

Study Explores How Sex Toys Can Help Cancer Survivors

via the good vibrations blog…through AVN

Study Explores How Sex Toys Can Help Cancer Survivors – Wendy Rossner

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – A study by Indiana University researchers determined that young breast cancer survivors tend to suffer from intimacy and relationship issues-and, of interest to retailers, they frequently seek sexual health products to ease their post-treatment symptoms.

A significant number of women surveyed reported a range of ailments including vaginal dryness and genital pain, while others experienced difficulties with arousal, desire, and orgasm.

Debby Herbenick, the lead researcher on the project, notes, “Although previous work has documented the sexual difficulties faced by young breast cancer survivors, strikingly little work has addressed strategies women might take to address these sexual problems.”

When survivors discussed strategies for tackling these cancer-related issues, most revealed they were interested in using personal lubricants and massage oils. Half displayed interest in vibrators and dildos, while more than 33 percent of respondents had considered sex games.

Because there are more than 2 million women who’ve successfully battled breast cancer living in the U.S. today, it’s important for retailers to understand the special needs of this segment-and to spot opportunities that allow survivors to find the products that can assist their recovery.

Respondents were particularly interested in purchasing novelties at in-home parties or their regular breast cancer support group meetings, but fewer felt comfortable with seeking out an adult store or website. The Indiana University researchers suggested that nurses, doctors, and therapists consider referring patients to woman-friendly venues to purchase sex toys.

“Many women expressed interest in these products, which makes sense given that so many had experienced genital pain, vaginal dryness, low desire or lack of orgasm,” says Herbenick. “Documenting the sexual problems experienced by survivors is important, but we also need to understand the broad and diverse ways that women want to address these sexual problems so that they can experience their intimate lives in ways that feel comfortable and pleasurable and that enhance their relationships.”

25
Nov
08

Peer-led sex education

A trial of peer-led sex education in schools in England has found that it is not more effective at reducing teenage abortions than the sex education classes given by teachers. However, the study, published in the open access journal PLoS Medicine, does show that a peer-led approach to sex education is preferred by pupils and suggests it should still be considered as part of a broad strategy to reduce teenage pregnancy.

The United Kingdom has one of the highest teenage pregnancy rates in Western Europe—leading to a government target to halve pregnancies amongst 18-year olds by 2010. Judith Stephenson and colleagues from University College London conducted the RIPPLE (Randomized Intervention of Pupil-led Sex Education) trial to investigate whether the teaching of sexual health information by people of a similar age was effective in terms of reducing teenage abortion, pregnancy, and improving sexual health amongst teenagers.

Twenty-seven schools and about 9,000 pupils aged 13 or 14 participated in the trial, with each school randomly assigned to either peer-led or teacher-led sex education sessions. The interim results, which were published in The Lancet in 2004, found that at age 16 years, girls who received the peer-led sessions reported fewer unintended pregnancies, although the results were only marginally significant in comparison to the teacher-led sessions. The long-term results, published in this week’s PLoS Medicine, are based upon medical records of pregnancies and abortions rather than self-reports (which are often unreliable). At age 20 years, there was no difference between the peer-led and teacher-led groups in terms of the number of girls who had had abortions (one in twenty in both cases). There were also no differences between the peer-led and teacher-led groups for male or female participants in other aspects of sexua l health, including the numbers diagnosed with sexually transmitted diseases.

The study did find that there were fewer girls who took part in the peer-led sessions who became pregnant, although this difference was too small to be significant. Given that pupils much preferred the peer-led sessions, an extended program is needed to establish whether they can have a more marked effect on teenage pregnancy rates. And although the authors say the results should “temper high-expectations about the long-term impact of peer-led approaches”, they also argue that “taken as a whole, the results support consideration of [peer-led sessions] as part of a much broader strategy to reduce teenage pregnancy.”

In a related perspective, David Ross of the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine—uninvolved with the research—discusses the trial. He argues that it is important to “continue to develop and rigorously evaluate new approaches to reduce the adoption of sexual risk behaviours by young people” in the UK and, more importantly, in countries with higher incidence of HIV, and high maternal and infant mortality rates.

from physorg.com

24
Nov
08

“come on, it’s the sex challenge!”

First, let me just say there are so many entertaining things about this article. Like use of the term “sexperiment,” the pacing in front of a large bed with the bible, and the advice for single people in this time of more sex: “I don’t know, try eating chocolate cake.”

GRAPEVINE, Texas: And on the seventh day, there was no rest for married couples. A week after the Rev. Ed Young challenged husbands and wives among his flock of 20,000 to strengthen their unions through Seven Days of Sex, his advice was — keep it going.

Mr. Young, an author, a television host and the pastor of the evangelical Fellowship Church, issued his call for a week of “congregational copulation” among married couples on Nov. 16, while pacing in front of a large bed. Sometimes he reclined on the paisley coverlet while flipping through a Bible, emphasizing his point that it is time for the church to put God back in the bed.

“Today we’re beginning this sexperiment, seven days of sex,” he said, with his characteristic mix of humor, showmanship and Scripture. “How to move from whining about the economy to whoopee!”

On Sunday parishioners at the Grapevine branch watched a prerecorded sermon from Mr. Young and his wife, Lisa, on jumbo screens over a candlelit stage. “I know there’s been a lot of love going around this week, among the married couples,” one of the church musicians said, strumming on a guitar before a crowd of about 3,000.

Mrs. Young, dressed in knee-high black boots and jeans, said that after a week of having sex every day, or close to it, “some of us are smiling.” For others grappling with infidelities, addictions to pornography or other bitter hurts, “there’s been some pain; hopefully there’s been some forgiveness, too.”

Mr. Young advised the couples to “keep on doing what you’ve been doing this week. We should try to double up the amount of intimacy we have in marriage. And when I say intimacy, I don’t mean holding hands in the park or a back rub.”

Mr. Young, known simply as Ed to his parishioners, and his wife, both 47, have been married for 26 years and have four children, including twins. They have firsthand experience with some of the barriers to an intimate sex life in marriage, including careers, exhaustion, outside commitments, and “kids,” a word that Mr. Young told church members stands for “keeping intimacy at a distance successfully.”

But if you make the time to have sex, it will bring you closer to your spouse and to God, he has said. You will perform better at work, leave a loving legacy for your children to follow and may even prevent an extramarital affair.

“If you’ve said, ‘I do,’ do it,” he said. As for single people, “I don’t know, try eating chocolate cake,” he said.

The sex-starved marriage has been the topic of at least two recent books, “365 Nights” and “Just Do It.” But Mr. Young’s call from the pulpit gave the discussion an added charge.

It should not, in his view. This is not a gimmick or a publicity stunt, Mr. Young says. Just look at the sensuousness of the Song of Solomon, or Genesis: “two shall become one flesh,” or Corinthians: “do not deprive each other of sexual relations.”

“For some reason the church has not talked about it, but we need to,” he said, speaking by telephone Friday night on his way to South Africa for a mission trip. There is no shame in marital sex, he added, “God thought it up, it was his idea.”

Those who attend Fellowship’s location here or one of several satellite churches in the Dallas area and one in Miami are used to Mr. Young’s provocative style. (The real “f word” in the marital boudoir, he says, is “forgiveness.”) But the sex challenge was a bit much for some of his church members, who sat with arms crossed in uncomfortable silence, he recalls, while many in the audience gave him an enthusiastic applause.

One parishioner, Rob Hulsey, 25, said his Baptist relatives raised their eyebrows about it, but he summed up the reaction of many husbands at Fellowship Church when he first heard about the sex challenge — “Yay!”

A week later, he and his wife, who are expecting a baby and have two older children, could not stop holding hands during the sermon. His wife, Madeline Hulsey, 32, said she was just as thrilled to spend a week focusing on her husband. Usually, “we start to kiss, and it’s knock knock knock, Mom!” she said.

Others found that, like smiling when you are not particularly happy, having sex when they did not feel like it improved their mood. Just eight months into their marriage, Amy and Cody Waddell had not been very amorous since Cody admitted he had had an affair.

“Intimacy has been a struggle for us, working through all that,” Ms. Waddell said. “This week really brought us back together, physically and emotionally.”

It is not always easy to devote time for your spouse, Pastor Young admitted. Just three days into the sex challenge he said he was so tired after getting up before dawn to talk about the importance of having more sex in marriage that he crashed on the bed around 8 p.m. on Tuesday night.

Mrs. Young tried to shake him awake, telling her husband, “Come on, it’s the sex challenge.” But Mr. Young murmured, “Let’s just double up tomorrow,” and went back to sleep. More Articles in US » A version of this article appeared in print on November 24, 2008, on page A13 of the New York edition.

21
Nov
08

Australian Adult Industry Flirts With Politics

Australian Adult Industry Flirts With Politics: New Sex Party to Fight Plan for Web Filter
By TANALEE SMITH Associated Press Writer
SYDNEY, Australia November 20, 2008 (AP)

The name may seem like a joke, but the Australian Sex Party is serious — serious about sex, according to their slogan.

The country’s newest political party is also serious about a number of other issues: quashing a government proposal for a national Internet filter that would block 10,000 Web sites; instituting a new national sex education curriculum; and pushing for the legalization of gay marriage.

The party — launched Thursday at Sexpo, an annual sex exhibition in Melbourne — has already gathered the required 500 members and plans to register with the electoral commission next week.

“We’re concerned about the Australian government becoming a nanny state, and about this conservative creep in politics,” party convener and Eros head Fiona Patten told The Associated Press by phone.

Patten called the federal government’s proposal for an Internet filter “the last straw.”

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy told Parliament earlier this month that his mandatory Internet filter would block 10,000 Web sites on a government blacklist of “unwanted content,” including sites showing child pornography, excessive violence, drug use or instructions in criminal or terrorist acts.

But Patten said the filter targets a far wider range of sites.

“If they were aiming to block child pornography, no problem,” she said. “But they’ve identified any adult site, things like playboy.com, a site that shows material that you can buy in a news agency or rent or buy in an adult video shop. It was an incredible shift back 30 years.”

The Australian Christian Lobby has already condemned the Sex Party.

“Pornography and prostitution do enormous damage to women and children, and the idea of mainstream political parties giving this trade seats in our nation’s parliaments … would offend the sensibilities of most Australians who believe women should be respected,” the lobby’s Managing Director Jim Wallace said in a statement.

The party, whose slogan is “We’re serious about sex,” plans to run candidates in Senate and state upper house elections.

20
Nov
08

sex books

Sex: How to Do Everything
by: Em and Lo

Editorial Reviews From Publishers Weekly This latest, full-color installment from former Nerve.com sex advisers Em & Lo (The Big Bang) bemoans sterile sex manuals that take all the fun and mystery out of sex. Their latest and most comprehensive guide tackles every variety of sexual congress and the minutiae of seduction, fantasy, filming erotic videos and capped with the obligatory public-service sexual health section. The text is concise and clear, replete with (fairly familiar) puns (there’s the rub, the ties that bind)—but the real draw isn’t the information, all of which is available elsewhere in more detail—it’s the pictures. The images shot by the influential British fashion and portrait photographer Rankin feature a range of aesthetically pleasing yet satisfyingly real-looking and ethnically diverse—although exclusively heterosexual—couples that are soft-core, but still racy enough to inspire naughty ideas, one of the authors’ stated aims. (May)

you can buy it here

The Guide to Getting It On! (The Universe’s Coolest and Most Informative Book About Sex)

by Paul Joannides

Review
AWESOME BOINKING BIBLE! — John Rubio/GALAZY MAGAZINE

HOT DIRTY BOOK! — Rolling Stone Magazine’s Annual What’s Hot Issue, September 2000

If only the Gideons were putting free copies of this book in every nightstand drawer of every motel room in the world! — Stacy Hellen/CLEAN SHEETS

If there’s a more entertaining and honest guide to man’s favorite topic, we haven’t seen it. — Playboy Magazine, February 2001

This looks like one of the best sexual how-to and advice books I’ve seen… — Jane’s Net Sex Guide –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

you can buy it here