As with most of her roles, Jaime Murray's character in Defiance is very open with her sexuality and it's obviously there to attract a male audience, but the character uses it for manipulation as a means to power.
Killjoys also has some fairly hot-and-heavy scenes, with the female colony doctor very obviously using one of the male protagonists to "scratch an itch". Same lead is also later hooked up with the main female protagonist, but again the long-term ramifications of that are left unexplored (in terms of their relationship) compared to how it affects the guy's younger brother, who considers the girl a surrogate "big sister" (he's been working with her a lot longer) and thus finds the whole idea squicky.
The woman in charge of the local brothel was originally portrayed in an empowering, non-shaming, sex-positive way, but then they tacked a rape backstory onto her out of nowhere and fell back on the cliche of prostitutes being victims.
But the reality is that women who become strippers, porn actresses, or prostitutes are not happy girls. They have some sexual abuse in the childhood—as does their clients—which gives rise to trust issues, dsma
Adult entertainers were found to have higher self-esteem, a better quality of life and body image, and to be more positive, with greater levels of spirituality. They also had higher levels of sexual satisfaction and, perhaps unsurprisingly, many more partners than other women.
The American researchers, who report their findings in the Journal of Sex Research, said they found no evidence to support the "damaged goods hypothesis" that actresses involved in the porn industry come from desperate backgrounds and are less psychologically healthy compared with typical women.
Most notably, the porn actresses were no more likely to report having been sexually abused as children than national averages or than a sample of demographically matched women Griffith and his colleagues recruited at a university and at an airport.
Most prostitutes are addicted to drugs or were abused as children.
This was once the case, as a host of research on prostitution long ago confirmed. But the population of women choosing sex work has changed dramatically over the past decade. High-end prostitutes of the sort Eliot Spitzer frequented account for a greater share of the sex business than they once did. And as Barnard College's Elizabeth Bernstein has shown, sex workers today tend to make a conscious decision to enter the trade -- not as a reaction to suffering but to earn some quick cash. Among these women, Bernstein's research suggests, prostitution is viewed as a part-time job, one that grants autonomy and flexibility.
These women have little in common with the shrinking number of sex workers who still work on the streets. In a 2001 study of British prostitutes, Stephanie Church of Glasgow University found that those working outdoors "were younger, involved in prostitution at an earlier age, reported more illegal drug use, and experienced significantly more violence from their clients than those working indoors."
the difference between pandering to sophomoric, voyeuristic titillation and telling stories that employ healthy, adult sexual interaction. Those are two entirely different things
But people will always have differences of opinion on what constitutes titillation vs. valid artistic merit. On each pole things seem fairly obvious to the average person but it gets fuzzy in the middle. And since entertainment exists within a marketplace, and everyone knows sex sells, it's hard to prove that a particular decision wasn't made merely to appeal to the prurient. Even if that's not the case, a piece of work originally intended not to be cheap titillation might still wind up becoming popular due to those who are attracted to it simply because it has sexual content in it.
Who is more empowered: Bo, or Anna Silk?
I'm buying whatever service it's streaming on if I don't already own it. Like, for years...If they ever turn Serpeiri's Druuna into a show....
I don't really see that as being the case with Lost Girl. There was a lot more to Bo than her just having sex all the time.There's a distinction I'm trying to make here that's about apparent intent.
Say there is a character who has a character trait, and that trait leads them to have lots of sex. If the trait is the cause of the sex, it's fine. If the sex is the cause of the trait, that's when I see a problem.
If the intent is the create a great character, and that great character you created would naturally choose to have lots of sex, it doesn't feel like manipulation. If the intent is to showcase lots of sex, and thus you create a character who would choose to have lots of sex, that's when it feels like my base desires are being exploited, and that takes me out of the fantasy more than anything else.
Lost Girl feels like they designed the entire premise with the goal of making the characters have constant sex and sexual titillation.
Whereas a show like Game of Thrones it hasn't really felt that way. Ramsay isn't a sadistic asshole because they wanted him to rape Sansa, he raped Sansa because he was a sadistic asshole.
If the intent is the create a great character, and that great character you created would naturally choose to have lots of sex, it doesn't feel like manipulation. If the intent is to showcase lots of sex, and thus you create a character who would choose to have lots of sex, that's when it feels like my base desires are being exploited, and that takes me out of the fantasy more than anything else.
Lost Girl feels like they designed the entire premise with the goal of making the characters have constant sex and sexual titillation.
Whereas a show like Game of Thrones it hasn't really felt that way. Ramsay isn't a sadistic asshole because they wanted him to rape Sansa, he raped Sansa because he was a sadistic asshole.
Some of the rape scenes were added by the show's writers and weren't in the books at all, which argues against them being necessary to the story.
But there's the thing -- by calling them "base desires," you're preemptively defining them as invalid
Everyone has a bias, and we should try to keep in mind that our own biases are not automatically the ones that the universe must conform to.
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