Archive for December, 2008

31
Dec
08

Virginity Pledges Don’t Stop Teen Sex

But Those Who Make Pledges Are Less Likely To Use Condoms Or Other Birth Control When They Do Have Sex

(WebMD) Teenagers who take virginity pledges are no less sexually active than other teens, according to a new study.

But the results, published in the journal Pediatrics, suggest that these virginity pledgers are less likely to protect themselves against pregnancy or disease when they do have sex.

Researchers say the findings suggest that virginity pledges may not significantly affect teenagers’ sexual behavior. Instead, they may decrease the likelihood of teenagers taking precautions, such as using a condom or using birth control when they do have sex.

Researchers say the federal government spends about $200 million annually on abstinence promotion programs, which include virginity pledges. Two previous studies have suggested that virginity pledges can delay sex, but researchers say those studies did not account for pre-existing differences between pledgers and non-pledgers.

In this study, researchers compared the sexual behavior of 289 teenagers who reported taking a virginity pledge in a 1996 national survey to 645 non-pledgers who were matched on more than 100 factors, such as religious beliefs and attitudes toward sex and birth control.

The results showed that five years after taking the virginity pledge:

82 percent of pledgers denied ever having taken the pledge.

Pledgers and matched non-pledgers did not differ in rates of premarital sex, sexually transmitted disease, or oral or anal sex behaviors.

Pledgers had, on average, 0.1 fewer sexual partners in the past year but did not differ from non-pledgers in the number of lifetime sexual partners and the age of first sex.

The biggest difference between the two groups came in the area of condom and birth control use. The study showed that fewer pledgers used birth control or condoms in the past year or any form of birth control the last time they had sex.

Researcher Janet Elise Rosenbaum, Ph.D., of Harvard University, says the findings suggest that health care providers should provide birth control information to all teenagers, especially virginity pledgers.

26
Dec
08

CHAMPION: Love Hurts

By: Kuono • Dec 17th, 2008 • Category: Features, Porn Star XXXposure, via goodvibrations.com

An interview with Syd Blakovich, star of Pink & White Production’s explicit love story CHAMPION

champion

Good Vibrations just picked up the highly anticipated film CHAMPION from award-winning director Shine Louise Houston. You can read cast and crew bios, see more images (NSFW) and find out more about the film on its website Champion-Movie.com, and order it at Good Vibrations!

The film’s lead, Syd Blakovich, is a local talent making big waves in the industry. We’re lucky to have gotten a moment of the busy star’s time to have this interview and get a glimpse into the world of queer porn and competitive female fighting.

GV: CHAMPION is a feature film with about a female amateur MMA fighter. For folks who aren’t familiar with MMA (Mixed Martial Arts), what is it exactly you do in the ring? And how do you train?

Syd: Mixed Martial Arts is also popularly referred to as “Cage Fighting” or “UFC Style Fighting.” It used to be pretty much anything goes, where the fighters would start standing and can use striking (punching, kicking, elbows, knees) as well as ground fighting (wrestling, jiu jitsu, and submission wrestling which includes joint locks and manipulations and chokes). Over the years rules have been added (no head butts, groin strikes, eye gouging and small joint locks including fingers and toes). I train in Muay Thai Boxing and Brazilian Jiu Jitsu as well as some wrestling. MMA can be fought in a cage or a ring. In the US it is more or less done in a cage, in my international fights I have fought in rings. Cages cost a hell of a lot more money, and in the movie we do it in a ring, which Shine hand-built in one night. She is super crafty.

GV: In the film, your character Jessie Eaton is faced with a lot of homophobia that she has to overcome. As a fighter in real life, is this similar to your experience? Do you have any antidotes for MMA fighters?

Syd: Oh man, you really forget what the world can be like when you live in a bubble like San Francisco. MMA has allowed me to travel domestically and internationally and it is crazy how just getting out of the city will really open your eyes to a very different culture. MMA is a hyper form of this performative neo-masculinity within the US and I find it absolutely fascinating.

I think due to the fact it involves two people of similar presented genders making physical and intimate contact, exchanging body fluid (blood and sweat), and is this public exhibition of this act there is this response to it… homophobia is such common place in the world of MMA and in my opinion a response to all these things in light that culturally we are using this form of entertainment to shape the American perceptions of the masculine identity.

I think that Americans find homosexuality a direct threat to their gender identity constructs because it so heavily relies on binaries, which it uses a lot of heteronormative standards to edify. There isn’t much room for variance in this type of construct. So short answer is yes, there is a lot of homophobia in MMA, but the great irony is that there is just as much sexism and female MMA fighters are virtually invisible anyways and a queer female MMA fighter, well you might as well be talking to people about flying unicorns.
Continue reading ‘CHAMPION: Love Hurts’

22
Dec
08

Sex no longer a taboo subject at nursing homes

By MARGARET STAFFORD, Associated Press Writer Margaret Stafford, Associated Press Writer – Mon Dec 22, 5:26 am ET

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – When Kansas State University sent researchers into nursing homes to find out how the topic of sex was being addressed, they initially found silence.

“Nobody was talking about it; it was a really hush-hush subject,” said Gayle Doll, director of the university’s Center on Aging. “I guess it’s hard enough for people to think about their parents having sex, let alone their grandparents.”

In response, the researchers have produced seminars and training aids to encourage nursing home caregivers to discuss and accommodate sexual desires.

The effort brings Kansas into a national discussion that advocates say will only grow as baby boomers age and take their beliefs about sexual freedom and civil rights into the nation’s nursing homes.

One of the first Kansas seminars was held at Schowalter Villa in Hesston, where many staff first reacted with, “We’re going to talk about WHAT?” said Lillian Claassen, vice president of health services at the villa.

Claassen said residents’ sexuality had always been a difficult subject for nursing homes and the Kansas State training affirmed her earlier efforts to address the topic.

“It wasn’t like we hadn’t cared for these needs in the past, but it was liberating to some folks to have an open discussion with university researchers,” Claassen said. “It empowered people to think about how they could help folks.”

Doll said the training focuses on explaining what sexuality means for older adults, identifying barriers to fulfilling the sexual needs, finding strategies to help residents and how to discern appropriate from inappropriate sexual behaviors.

Solutions can be as simple as providing “do not disturb” signs or making sure staffers don’t barge into residents’ rooms without knocking. Claassen said her nursing home provides a discreet room for residents and has staff work through possible scenarios they may encounter.

Sometimes, it’s as simple as arranging a bed for someone who needs physical therapy in a way that also allows that patient to be with his or her companion, she said.

“My greatest interest is to promote dignity in a situation that can be very challenging,” Claassen said. “We all need touch, kindness and companionship. We try to enable that in this setting, which can be very public but where there is still a need for privacy.”

Sexuality doesn’t always mean intercourse. Many lonely or depressed residents are simply looking for ways to relieve loneliness and depression, Doll said.

For example, she told of one resident who had asked for pornography but dropped the request when the staff started spending more time with him.

“The staff can help with the loneliness and need for connection that residents often have,” Doll said. “Some sexual expressions that might be seen as inappropriate will go away when they simply get the attention they deserve.”

When the need does include sexual activity, the issue becomes more difficult if one of the residents is suffering from dementia, advocates say. That can manifest itself in a resident making passes at a staff member.

Claassen said her staff is trained to respond politely and to understand that the impaired resident may be mistaking the staff member for a spouse or reacting as he or she has in the past, which is often more vivid than the present for those suffering from dementia.

If a resident with dementia becomes involved with another resident, the issue becomes determining if the sexual activity is consensual, said Robin Dessel, a national expert on dementia who is the director of memory care at Hebrew Home in Riverdale, N.Y.

Dessel said people with dementia, even those who can no longer speak, have wants and desires and the ability to express them. It takes a trained and educated staff to recognize if a sexual overture or relationship involves abuse or is borne of real need, she said.

Dessel said she has seen a growing awareness that the aging do not forfeit their rights as they become infirm, and that includes the right to express sexuality. She expects that trend to increase as baby boomers, with more liberal attitudes toward sex than their parents, continue to age.

“No matter what we see, even if someone needs total care or is incontinent, they still feel,” Dessel said. “If there’s a bonding with someone else, I think it’s a time of celebration at that point that there’s something left, something good and pleasurable for that person.”

To meet that challenge, clinicians and providers need some standardized parameters to use to assess patients’ consent, Dessel said.

The Kansas State researchers say federal guidelines should be developed to help nursing homes deal with sexuality in a positive way.

“Nursing homes are the second most regulated industry in the country, behind nuclear power plants,” Doll said. “But none of those regulations address sexuality. So, consequently, no one knows how to handle it.”

18
Dec
08

Revising ‘Sex’ for the 21st Century

By SARAH LYALL
(nytimes)

WITH its forthright prose, little-before-discussed-in-the-suburbs erotic advice and amusing pictures of an ardent naked person known popularly as the Hairy Man, “The Joy of Sex” was a revolution in its time. Published in 1972, when sex was still supposed to take place in the dark and under the sheets, the book thrust itself into public consciousness with all the subtlety of a gigolo at a convention of bishops. It was also stunningly popular, a well-thumbed fixture of bedside tables across America that spent 343 weeks on the New York Times best-seller list.

The book has undergone various tweaks and expansions over the years, and six years ago the Hairy Man and his somewhat less hairy female partner were relegated to wherever old hippies go to retire. But now comes a completely revised version of the book, written, for the first time, for women as much as for men. It tackles an array of modern topics unheard of in the 1970s, like Internet pornography, AIDS and Viagra, and features photographs (and drawings, when things get too graphic) of a suitably buff 21st-century couple.

But still. In a society where, if anything, people talk and think far too much about sex already, what is the point of reading anything else about it? Is there really anything new to say?

Continue reading ‘Revising ‘Sex’ for the 21st Century’

18
Dec
08

Sex Workers Criticize Law Enforcement

By Theola Labbé-DeBose
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, December 18, 2008; Page B03

Dozens of sex workers marched through the streets of downtown Washington yesterday, demanding better treatment from law enforcement officials of prostitutes who become crime victims.

Clutching red umbrellas and carrying signs that read, “Sex Work Is Real Work” and “Stop Shaming Us to Death,” the men and women came from San Francisco, New York and other cities across the country to publicize a rarely discussed issue that they say is not taken seriously.

The rally and march was organized by the Sex Workers Outreach Project, a San Francisco-based nonprofit, and coincided with today’s fifth anniversary of the sentencing of Gary Leon Ridgway, a Seattle man known as the “Green River Killer” who was convicted of murdering 48 prostitutes in 21 years. The lowly status of prostitutes in society, rally participants said yesterday, explains why the crimes went unsolved for so long.

“I’m just so tired of hearing, ‘If I choose to do X, then I put myself on the line,’ ” said Charmus, 34, a transgender woman who gave only her first name. She lives in Maryland and said she has worked as a prostitute. “Transgender women, prostitutes, you have a right to fight for due process,” she said to the crowd assembled at a downtown park.

As professional workers filed out of buildings in suits and ties on their way to business lunches, the rally crowd marched from Franklin Square at 14th and I streets NW to the Justice Department in the 900 block of Pennsylvania Avenue NW. Along the way, the marchers encountered some bemused looks at signs reading, “Be Nice to Sex Workers.”

A 33-year-old man from New York City who gave his name as Wally said he works as an escort in Manhattan. He has been fortunate not to be a crime victim, he said, but he made the trip to show solidarity.

“I do this to survive,” he said.

Once the protesters reached the Justice Department, they stood on the sidewalk and told their stories under the watchful eyes of federal police officers. Leila, a 24-year-old woman from San Francisco, shared an experience that she said showed the importance of sex workers banding together.

Leila said a client wanted to pay her at the end of their date and even provided his passport as collateral. She was skeptical, but agreed. Then the client said he needed to take money out of the bank, and she went with him. But at the teller, the client asked for his passport back for identification. When Leila handed it back, the man ran.

Leila told the protesters that she chased the man and even caught up with him. He punched her in the face. But when she complained to police, she said, they threatened to arrest her for working as a prostitute.

Since the date was arranged online, Leila said, she went to her computer and noticed warnings about the client posted by other women. The women shared information about him, and eventually they found his workplace and told his boss that the man had been meeting prostitutes during the workday and assaulting them. He was fired, Leila said.

“Alone, we’re just prostitutes on the corner and no one respects us,” she said. “Together we are a political movement, and we can change things.”

17
Dec
08

International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers

news:

Sex Workers Urge Obama Administration to Help Stop Violence

Sex workers will submit a letter and demands to President-elect Obama and select cabinet-appointees Wednesday December 17, 2008 to mark the 6th Annual International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers. This year mourners will gather in Franklin Square Park for a rally and march to the Department of Justice where a vigil will be held to honor sex workers who’ve been murdered or assaulted. Sex workers are demanding that this administration enact policy changes that would prevent violence and improve public health.

“Sex workers are the experts at identifying harm in the sex industry and developing solutions,” said Tara Sawyer, Board Chair of the Sex Workers Outreach Project (SWOP-USA), a national peer-led network of sex workers who initiated this day in 2003 when Gary Leon Ridgway aka the Green River Killer was convicted for murdering 48 prostitutes over a 21-year period near Seattle, WA. Sawyer went on to say, “For most sex workers, their criminal status keeps them from working in safer conditions and seeking out assistance from law enforcement if assaulted or robbed.”

“Sex workers experience a disproportionate level of preventable violence in our country,” said Kelli Dorsey, Director of Different Avenues, a DC –based organization co-sponsoring this event, “People of color and transgender people are overwhelmingly targeted. This discrimination is too often ignored by society.”

Cyndee Clay of HIPS (Helping Individual Prostitutes Survive), also DC-based, said her organization is participating in this event “Not only to commemorate and honor those who have been victims of shame and stigma, but also to demand that the voices of those who experience violence within the sex industry are visible.”

Interviews are available with sex workers attending the vigil in DC as well as nationwide by using the contact info above. Email to request media kit. See website for listing of vigils around the world. Media and the public are welcome at the DC rally and vigil:

December 17, 2008 12pm-3pm
Franklin Square (14 ST NW & Eye ST NW) near McPherson Square Station and procession to Department of Justice at 950 Pennsylvania Avenue

more news from today… Continue reading ‘International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers’

15
Dec
08

Candlelight vigil to honor slain sex workers on Wednesday

TEYA VITU
Tucson Citizen

A candlelight vigil to honor slain sex workers will take place at 6 p.m., Wednesday at El Tiradito Shrine at Main Avenue and Cushing Street south of the Tucson Convention Center.

Origami cranes with the names of 100 sex workers killed across the country in recent years will be hung at the shrine and each name will be read out. The list includes nine slain Arizona women since 2003, including one killed in Tucson this year who was not identified as a prostitute, said Juliana Piccillo, founder of the Tucson chapter of the Sex Workers Outreach Project.

Tucson joins similar vigils that day in San Francisco, Washington, D.C., three in Canada, two in England and one in India, all falling under the umbrella of the sixth annual International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers.

“It’s a really moving event,” Piccillo said. “We’re trying to remember these are people – daughters, sisters, wives, grandchildren. We want to honor them as human beings. We’d like to restore some dignity and humanity to the women who were so dehumanized by violence.”

SWOP is collaborating with Wingspan’s Anti-Violence Project, the University of Arizona’s Women’s Resource Center and the Southern Arizona Center Against Sexual Assault. The event includes music, poetry reading and hot chocolate.

“The need for events like the International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers has to do with destigmatizing a human rights issue,” said Allison Dumka, intern coordinator at the UA Women’s Resource Center. “We support the safety and dignity as well as protection of women in all lines of work.”

Thirty-one of the 48 prostitutes that Green River Killer Gary Ridgway in Seattle was convicted of slaying in the 1980s were teenagers. Piccillo said that’s a common trend for slain sex workers.

“People forget this is a child, a teen; many did prostitution for a month or two or six weeks,” said Piccillo, herself a former sex worker and also a former adjunct UA faculty member.

The annual Dec. 17 vigil for slain sex workers was launched in San Francisco in 2003 by Annie Sprinkle, a 1970s and 1980s porn star who got her first introduction to pornography at the Rialto Theatre while living in Tucson in 1973. The Green Valley Killer’s conviction inspired Sprinkle to start the day to end violence against sex workers.

Sprinkle is part of Sex Workers Outreach Project USA, based in San Francisco, which also was established in 2003. SWOP works to educate policy-makers and the public on the institutional harms committed against sex workers and advocates for alternatives, according to the Web site.

Tucson SWOP was the first chapter to spin off and now SWOP has 10 chapters across the country.

“Tucson has become this mecca for sex workers because we were doing the Sex Workers Arts Festival,” Piccillo said.

Piccillo started the Sex Workers Arts Festival in Tucson in 2001 with subsequent festivals in 2002, 2003 and 2004. The festival then went into hiatus but Piccillo plans to bring it back in September 2009.

The festival featured dozes of workshops and symposiums about prostitution and film showings scattered around downtown and even at UA, which triggered swirls of controversy. The festival garnered national media attention.

Piccillo said she has witnessed much change since her 2001 festival in the mainstream attention to prostitution as well as the willingness of sex workers to be public activists. She said her first festival featured no active sex workers, the last one had eight and she expects as many as 25 to take part in workshops next year.

“Now we’re seeing all these young girls,” Piccillo said. “They are so political and so active and they want to change the world.

“The industry is alive and well in Tucson. Tucson was a very small market for the sex industry for a long time. We still don’t have a lot, 30 or 40, in Tucson, but girls are coming in from California and Texas.”

13
Dec
08

anthology update

Hey everyone:

Quick update on progress of The Living Room Handjob anthology:

- First, I want to say thank you thank you thank you to those who have submitted work so far. Amazing.

- That being said, please keep ‘em coming! The deadline is December 31st, so you still have time.

- Various people have asked me what the dimensions of the book will be, so that they can alter their submissions/artwork accordingly. I’m still doing my homework on this, but I’m probably going to go with a square format, 7.5″ x 7.5″. I’m leaning to landscape. We shall see, as the homework/research continues.

Short and sweet. That’s it for now. Please keep the great work coming.

12
Dec
08

Africa: Tell US More – Children Call for Sex Education

(from allafrica.com)

Dakar — Children in sub-Saharan Africa want to know more about sex and how to protect themselves from HIV, but taboos surrounding children’s sexuality can mean life-saving information is kept from them, according to an international NGO.

Children in the region say they need access to sex education that is comprehensive, practical, and free from moral judgment, according to the report Tell Me More! by Save the Children Sweden (SC-S). The NGO researched children’s views on sexuality, sex education, HIV prevention approaches and sexual identity in nine sub-Saharan African countries.

Adults think we’re too young to know anything about sexuality. They don’t explain things clearly. They don’t want to give the information to children,” Carine Hlomador, a 15-year-old AIDS activist from Togo, told IRIN during the International Conference on AIDS and STIs in Africa (ICASA) in the Senegalese capital Dakar.

With nearly 1,800 new infections every day among children under 15 worldwide, some through sexual activity, sex education for children is vital to prevent the spread of HIV, Save the Children says in its report, released on 1 December.

Right to information

The 2001 UN Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS states that young people aged 15-24 should have access to information and services to protect themselves from HIV infection, and aimed to reach 90 percent of youths by 2005.

But three years past that target only 40 per cent of young men and 36 percent of young women worldwide are armed with accurate knowledge on HIV prevention, according to a 2008 UN report.

Under-15s are not targeted at all, despite more than 10 percent of interviewees between 15 and 19 claiming to have had sex under the age of 15, according to Amé David, SC-S programme manager in Dakar.

“Children under 15 have been largely ignored in HIV/AIDS prevention education programmes, because talking about children’s sexuality is taboo,” David said.

Taboos around children’s sexuality also mean that little is known about children aged 7 to 14, according to Save the Children. “There is clearly a need – if not a moral obligation – for studies [on these age groups],” the report concludes, adding that children are being exposed to HIV from a young age, becoming sexually active early and developing their own strategies to protect themselves.

Studies show that children with access to accurate information tend to delay having sex for the first time. “It is the children who don’t have the information who try to discover what it is all about,” SC-S’s David said.

David is convinced that suppressing children’s sexuality can only make things worse: “If we say nothing is happening at adolescence, we are deluding ourselves. If we look the other way and put our head in the sand, children will look for information in the media which is not always a good source.”

Bayala Rodrigue, 16, of Côte d’Ivoire, told IRIN adults would be wrong to avoid the subject. “In Africa, adults say there is an age after which you can teach sexuality to children. But there is no age limit. You think you know your child, but in reality you don’t. On the street you don’t know what he or she is learning.”

Why the taboo

The silence surrounding children’s sexuality in some sub-Saharan countries comes partly from adults’ unease with the subject, says Anta Fall Diagne, programme officer for reproductive health at the Population Council, an international NGO working on reproductive health in Senegal.

“It is adults, policymakers and ministers who are afraid of [talking about it]. The youth themselves are open about their problems.”

Religion also plays a significant role, she said. People are reluctant to talk to children about sexuality in societies where sex outside of marriage is frowned upon.

But Fall said: “One thing is sure – many of them [youths] have a sex life. Another thing is sure – they have problems with their sex lives. Thirdly, they do not have the right information to deal with these problems.”

Better sex education in schools

Children surveyed by SC-S who do receive sex education in schools said that it is often negative, contradictory and too focused on biology. Instead children want knowledge that is relevant to their situation and the skills to negotiate prevention methods in a relationship.

“You’ve told me to protect myself,” Rodrigue of Côte d’Ivoire said. “OK, I know that you put the condom on the penis. But there are other things to negotiate. We need more realistic information.”

The report also found that teachers are often unprepared to openly discuss issues of sexuality with children and frequently take a moralistic and negative stance.

“Teachers don’t seem to want to open the debate to allow children to express themselves, talk about what’s happening to them and find solutions for their problems,” Souadou Ndoye, a 17 year-old Senegalese student, told IRIN.

12
Dec
08

Safe Sex

Time magazine
By M.J. STEPHEY M.j. Stephey – Fri Dec 12, 4:20 am ET

It’s been exactly 15 years since the FDA first approved “female condoms,” but it still hasn’t found its niche, except perhaps in the sex trade. In fact, while engineers at Apple have already released the next iteration of the 18-month-old iPhone, there hasn’t even been a second-generation product of the lady-centric contraceptive.

But a Seattle-based non-profit group called PATH is hoping to change that. Its redesigned product, which boasts softer polyurethane and adhesive foam, is being examined today by the FDA and, if approved, could be available for sale in the U.S. sometime next year. As a “Class 3 Medical Device,” female condoms are held to the same rigorous FDA standards as pacemakers, heart valves and silicone breast implants, with clinical trials costing as much as $6 million. Male condoms, which are Class 2 devices, are much cheaper to produce and need only pass breakage tests.

Complaints about female condoms are not so different from those about the male version: slippery, noisy, awkward, uncomfortable. As Mitchell Warren, executive director of the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition, told the New York Times last year when explaining the device’s failure to catch on, “The yuck factor was a problem.” Then there’s the stigma associated with buying condoms, a topic even the Golden Girls once addressed.

Of course, the history of protected sex, in the broadest sense, used to be a whole lot yuckier. Take the practice of women in ancient Egypt, who resorted to using crocodile dung as a spermicide. Modern research has shown that crocodile dung actually created optimum conditions for sperm because of its alkalinity, but the sheer grossness of the practice might have worked if only to completely ruin the mood.

In the 1540s, an Italian doctor named Gabriele Fallopius – the same man who discovered and subsequently named the fallopian tubes of the female anatomy – wrote about syphilis, advocating the use of layered linen during intercourse for more “adventurous” (read: promiscuous) men. Legendary lover Casanova wrote about his pitfalls with medieval condoms made of dried sheep gut, referring to them as “dead skins” in his memoir. Even so, condoms made of animal intestine – known as “French letters” in England and la capote anglaise (English riding coats) in France – remained popular for centuries, though always expensive and never easy to obtain, meaning the device was often re-used.

In 1844, Charles Goodyear patented the process of vulcanizing rubber, inadvertently ushering in an entirely new era in contraception – condoms as thick as bicycle tires and still considered re-usable. But getting one’s hands on this new-fangled “technology” became a whole lot harder in 1873, when Congress passed the Comstock Law, prohibiting the transportation of obscene material like prophylactics and pornography.

The 1930s saw the invention of latex as well as the invention of the first-ever female condom in the U.S., the “Gee Bee Ring.” In 1965, the Supreme Court ruled that married couples had the constitutionally protected right to contraception; in 1972 that same right was extended to unmarried couples. (Ireland prohibited condom sales until 1978, the Catholic Church still condemns them).

Condom use waned in the 1960s after the introduction of the birth control pill and remained stagnant until the arrival of the AIDS virus in the 1980s, when sales exploded, jumping 33% in the U.S. in 1987. Today, some 6 billion condoms are sold worldwide each year, though sales have plateaued in the past decades – policy experts blame “prevention fatigue” while condom-makers (the ones targeting men anyways) have responded by becoming increasingly creative, or perhaps ridiculous. What began as a simple choice between lubricated, ribbed or custom-fit now includes flavored, novelty (Star Wars prophylactic anyone?) and glow-in-the-dark. One can even purchase condom accessories like the $28 Condo-M, a plastic and aluminum bedside container. (Think Pez dispenser for grown-ups). Even the presidential campaign spawned Barack Obama and John McCain-themed condoms with corresponding slogans (“Who says experience is necessary?” for the former, “Old, but not expired” for the latter).

The origin of the word “condom” is unknown, though the story of a certain Dr. Condom in 19th century England remains one of the more persistent myths. The term at least trumps “intravaginal pouch,” a phrase suggested in lieu of “female condom” by an FDA panel tasked in the early 1990s with reviewing an early prototype of the women’s contraceptive.