by ROGER BARNETT
I wish someone had sat down with me when I was in my early teens and had a frank chat about pornography and sex. In the absence of genuine information about sex, pornography became a de-facto educational tool, and I assumed what it portrayed was accurate. Needless to say, like many teens, this set me up to get about a hundred things wrong in bed in the future
I’m not anti-porn. Indeed, if we’re talking about sex between consenting adults, I’m decidedly liberal. But porn has its dangers and needs to be framed in some kind of context and coupled with real information. Otherwise, like me, our youth are in for an unpleasant series of surprises when they attempt to copy what they see in porn with their own partners; the real world is far more complicated—and interesting—than much of what’s on our screens.
Before I divulge my sometimes embarrassingly earned lessons, I need to tackle a pervasive myth: That porn is fundamentally disrespectful toward women, and to enjoy porn is to be a misogynist. I used to assume this was true, and trying to reconcile my love of women with my enjoyment of porn was a challenge. Eventually I was relieved to discover that despite the presence of porn in my life, I didn’t hate women or want to treat my female partners badly. If the misogyny myth wasn’t true for me, then maybe it simply wasn’t true.
The alleged link between porn and a hatred of women has never been demonstrated by research. Personally, I believe that if one already hates women (or men), one will find porn that expresses that hatred in a sexualized way. However, if in life you approach people with respect, then you will find that nasty porn is just not to your liking. We live in liberal times, and you have access to an incredible array of stimulus; keep searching until you find something ethical.
So here is what I wish someone had told me:
1. No two people are the same, and no two people like the same things in bed. Further, what a person likes will change depending on who they’re with, and even at different times with the same partner. In mainstream porn, certain themes emerge, and it’s easy to assume that those recurrent patterns can be transposed onto all partners. It is better to start sex from a perspective of curiosity and a willingness to experiment (and watch the feedback), rather than with an arsenal of moves up your sleeve that might have worked for somebody else.
2. The sex and sexual techniques that are portrayed in pornography are selected based on what will look dynamic on screen, rather than what is enjoyable or what the actors themselves might actually like. This means that big, dramatic, and often hard-core sex scenes take up most of the time in porn, and the less grandiose and subtler things get left out simply because they’re not as cinematic. There’s a place for big, fast, athletic sex, but there’s also a place for slow, intimate acts done with the right attitude. As with all sex, the best way to navigate is to simply run some experiments, and ask for feedback.
3. A lot of heterosexual porn is somewhat stereotyped in terms of gender roles; he will generally be the pursuer, the active one, the one on top, while she will be pursued, more passive, and often be on the bottom. Sticking rigidly to these roles doesn’t work for most people. You’re short-changing yourself if you never switch things around and play with the dynamics, even if only for five minutes here and there, to see what you like.
4. All bodies are beautiful. Pornography (and the fashion and advertising industries, generally), caters almost exclusively to people of a certain shape, and we are led to believe that only these people are sexy. The truth is that what a person is like in bed depends on their relationship to you, and their relationship to their own body. The way they look gives you no information about either of these things—although the way they look at you will give you some hints.
5. Pubic hair is beautiful. Some people get rid of it, others don’t; both have their advantages. Learn to have fun either way, and love your own body either way. Being comfortable in your own body, however it looks, is perhaps the greatest gift you can offer to yourself and those you choose to share your body with.
6. Saying “no” is as much a part of sex as saying “yes.” It’s easy to assume, from watching porn, that a good lover will already know a hundred and one tricks to get any partner off. In reality, sex is a constant and creative series of experiments, some of which work, many of which don’t. There are no standards that work with all people, every time. Asking your partner to do something differently is a sure path to improving sex for the both of you, especially if it’s phrased as a positive request—“can you please try it more like this…?”—rather than simply “that’s not working for me.” Also, it should go without saying that if you don’t want something, you are always and unquestionably entitled to say a nice, clear “no”—both men and women suffer pressure to skip this important step.
7. Something that almost never comes across in pornography is the love—or at least the sense of intimacy—that exists between most partners. It doesn’t make for easy screenplay, and most porn actors don’t have such feelings for one another. However, in your life, these are the things that will change sex from being a basic physical act, to a deeply moving and gratifying spiritual experience that brings you closer to yourself and your partner (if you want it to).
(This point shouldn’t be read as a vote against casual sex with a relative stranger, if that’s what you’re into).
8. In the context of a relationship, sex starts hours, days, weeks before penetration—if penetration happens at all. When creating pornography, directors aren’t aiming to put together hours of tantalizing dialogue and witty flirting, or even the unlimited varieties of foreplay that most folks enjoy; they’re pitching to an audience that they believe just wants to see explicit sex and lots of it, and so this is what is often produced. However, in real life, putting that much focus on just the hard-core parts of sex makes for some of the least enjoyable sex you could hope for. The way you and your partner treat each other throughout the day, and the way sex begins, makes a big difference to your enjoyment of sex.
9. The more you watch one particular kind of porn, or one particular body type, the more your brain will wire itself to associate that type of activity or person with sex. This has implications for your love life; be careful you don’t accidentally program yourself for a narrow band of enjoyment, as you might overlook a whole variety of other pleasures.
10. Porn works pretty well if you just want some relief. But again, you’re inadvertently programming yourself for quick, shallow orgasms if this is the extent of how you use it. Why not go the other way? Set aside a couple of hours, rack up a suite of your favorite porn, and see how long you can hold out for. Soon you’ll be having orgasms you didn’t know were possible, and it will radically improve your love life, not detract from it.
Good sex is your right and within your reach—treat it like any other skill that might benefit from some focus now and then. Pornography is not always useful as an educational resource, but nor is it pure evil. Let your own feedback and the feedback from your partner be your ultimate guide.
This article was originally published here and has been republished with permission.
Roger Barnett is a community development facilitator with an interest in psychology. He is as passionate about men’s rights as he is about women’s rights, and believes that ultimately we need to focus on what we have in common, rather than what we have in difference. His Facebook page, Equality for Women and Men, can be found here.
Do you think porn has negative impacts on teenagers? Now that porn is more easily accessible, will that change teenagers’ view of what sex is really like?




Comments
58 Comments so far
There is no intimacy when it comes to pornography. Number 6 really freaked me out the most. there should be boundaries when it comes to a romantic relationship, porn does not teach that. Porn teaches men that it is okay to rape, abuse and hurt women. This article was just one huge promotion of rape culture.
loading...
How do you reconcile claiming that using porn doesn’t go hand-in-hand with a hatred for women, and pointing out that porn erases women’s “No” when it comes to sex? This is extremely dangerous business – the people in porn are real, the vast majority of the time they are not enjoying the sex that they’re having, they’re coerced to have sex by finances and by the authority of pimps and directors, they’re captured on film so that their sexual activity can be used repeatedly without ever having the opportunity to say “Yes” to any instance of a person using it, the sex that occurs in porn is calibrated to men’s preferences including men’s desire to use and hurt women, and the sex also teaches that “No” has no place in sex, nor does actual pleasure or intimacy have any place in sex, nor does each person’s right to WANT sex before they have it. This all involves actual rape of the performers, it encourages men’s rape of women to viewers, and it encourages men to use women and to inflict pain or displeasure onto them. If you love, like or are even neutral toward women, then you must NOT use porn.
loading...
The problem is that kids are watching porn from a very young age and think that it is a normal depiction of sex. I have met many young girls and guys between 17 and 20-something who think that anal sex and ejaculating on a girls face is completely normal first date territory!
What’s worse is that the girls think that they’re supposed to be swinging from the chandeliers and screaming with joy the whole time! I had an 18 year old girl claiming that she loves being jack-hammered, sorry but no female seriously enjoys that!!
There is something really wrong with young people learning about sex through watching porn!
loading...
That’s so sad.
I wonder how they will feel when they have kids and their teenagers were to go out on a date then 1 hour in have anal sex? I bet when they become parents it would be an entirely different story. It kind of scares me what will be regarded as their ‘first love’ won’t even be true, they’ll probably see it as their first sexual experience.
It makes me glad I wasn’t watching porn at an early age, I was still a virgin in my teenage years and I’m 21. It makes me glad unlike some people in my generation I never participated in any of that. Because really in the long run girls are likely to look back on those moments with regret. A guy friend of mine who’s 18 told me that a girl who was a virgin was gang banged in a van by 4 guys who all had anal sex with them. He said that she consented and enjoyed it. I was completely shocked. He didn’t participate by the way or has done anything similar. Maybe they do enjoy it but none of these guys are there for the after affects and how that sort of intense sex is actually abuse or can be interpreted as that later on.
loading...
The problem with porn for me is that so much (most?) mainstream porn depicts sex in such a degrading way towards women. i.e. I am all for erotica, or even explicit sex, but alot of porn leaves me feeling pretty ‘dirty’ emotionally because it seems to be much more about domination of women than about sex.
loading...
So, just like 50 Shades then?
loading...
Have you read 50 shades and seen much porn? In a lot of porn they’re roughly grabbing the girls face, spitting on her, slapping her, calling her a whore. The whole thing is about how she’s a whore to be f***ed – a piece of meat.
In 50 shades, it’s all about control rather than degradation and violence. He tells her a million times that he adores her, that she’s in control and can stop him at any time, and he goes slowly like he’s worshipping her body.
I actually hated the relationship in 50 Shades, but I think it’s a lazy and false comparison, sorry.
loading...
Sorry, I think your statement regading the nature of porn is lazy and false. Only a tiny proportion involves the sort of degredation you speak of.
loading...
Wow, this guy reaches for the stars, heaps steaming piles of bull, one on top of the other.
1) if you want to know about the people that use a particular product, look at the advertising. “Teen Destruction” is advertised on a large number of porn sites: Pornhub, Perfectgirls, Xvideos, and Tube8, just to name a few. Don’t take my word for that, do a search yourself on “Teen Destruction”.
2) Women and girls in porn are sometimes trafficked. That is, they are subjected to force, fraud or coercion as a way of making them perform.
3) There is a whole genre of porn that teaches where to go for prostitution, which increases demand for human trafficking.
4) Porn is always about objectification of someone, usually in humiliating ways.
5) Women exiting forced prostitution say that porn was blueprint for their torture at the hands of Johns.
All of these things point to overwhelming case that porn is about accepting misogyny. The author is BLIND to this, but that is hardly surprising, as for so long porn has been billed as freedom of speech. Porn is the marketing of violence against women. There is no way around that.
loading...
I feel as though this piece is really contradictory in a way that ultimately comes down to it’s lack of recognition that misogynistic attitudes and sexism is much more subtle than, say, someone declaring “I hate women. Yep. I hate them all. That’s pretty much it.”
Sexism is much more pervasive than that- creating a culture where gender roles are pretty much enforced and viewed as ‘sexy’ – that’s sexist; creating unrealistic beauty standards for women (the point about pubic hair, for example)- that’s also sexist and misogynistic, creating an environment where women have little say over what their partner does to them- I could go on. I feel as though I could call out all of those points as being actually a critique of sexism and misogynistic attitudes but I feel as though the author doesn’t recognise that- as long as no one is out right declaring that they hate women- it’s fine!
I actually don’t INHERENTLY have a problem with porn. What I have a problem with is 99% of pornographic material available and as a result, the porn industry. I absolutely think it COULD be fine to enjoy porn but I think that this article has broken down an entire culture really simplistically to the point where it becomes contradictory.
Lots of people enjoy porn but saying that mainstream porn doesn’t hate women or isn’t misogynistic is a fairly outlandish claim in my book.
loading...
I’m a woman and I enjoy porn. I also enjoy much of what happens in porn in real life. (facials, group sex, choking, slapping) However these are things I explore in a loving and trusting relationship and contrary to popular belief, i dont harbour any ‘daddy issues’ It pisses me off that because I watch and enjoy porn im considered anti-feminist.
loading...
I agree. I don’t necessarily wish to try everything portrayed, but I have no issue with acts between consenting adults.
loading...
Carrie, that’s great, but you’re in the minority.
Most women don’t like facials, group sex, choking or slapping. I know that I don’t like any of them.
I’ve noticed you’ve gone and contradicted most of the folks on this post who’ve put forward thoughtful and important comments. I’m glad you had your say above, but please let others have theirs.
I’m so glad I turned 18 just before internet porn became prevalent, and I didn’t have to endure it twisting my young mind into knots – ’cause I know it would have. It’s very confusing to see men treat women the way they do in porn, and to know that most of the guys in your social circle watch and enjoy porn.
I think Roger’s article was great, and so true. But I agree with those below with regards to mainstream, easily accessible porn not being misogynistic. It is, which also makes it extremely dangerous.
loading...
Porn is hateful misogyny memorialized in images. Why is male wanking off to eroticized torture even remotely acceptable? REAL women were humiliated and tortured to make porn, why are their human rights less important than male desire?
loading...
Are these women being forced to have sex on camera???? For the most part, NO. Get over it.
loading...
Carrie, women in the porn industry are typically women who don’t feel the have a lot of other options. Many of them self-medicate with illegal drugs or alcohol to numb the pain that goes along with the abuse they experience daily. Some of them have been sexually abused and have zero self esteem.
Others think they are signing up for one thing and then find that they are required to do scenes or sexual acts that they do not want to do, but told if they want to be paid, or if they want to work again, they better do it.
You can watch this video taken from a porn set where it is clear the actress has been coerced and she is not a voluntary participant.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q3nj40l93PM
Plus, the thing about porn stars- THEY ARE ACTORS. They are paid to look like they are enjoying it.
loading...
…and sweat shops, diamond mines, oil rigs, coal mines etc.
Point being that there are are myriad of shitty jobs that nobody wants to do and they somehow get done. Why does this profession warrant any different speculation other than it contains women doing things that they may or may not entirely enjoy.
How about gay for pay?
loading...
Because it’s the shitty job that perpetuates damaging sex roles, misongyny and normalises sexual violence against women. Did you miss the whole point of the article?
Those other jobs might be shitty, but the people who work there do so for entirely different reasons, and with entirely different effect (on them and on the wider society).
loading...
Sorry Alice, but those jobs also perpetuate the belief that men should shut it and be the utilitarian tools women use them for.
Since when is a man and a women having sex misogynistic just because it’s filmed. All this nonsense about porn being violent is rubbish by people who haven’t watched every porn movie there is. It’s blatant cognitive dissonance and gender studies colored glasses imposed ideology that can not be backed up by evidence, and there’s plenty of it, being that porn is ubiquitous enough.
I don’t agree with most of the article, but boy have I researched my position before I commented. So no, no point missed.
loading...
Hey Anna, thats all a bit 1980′s. A lot of the traditional porn industry has gone broke because there are now many normal? couples doing stuff themselves and posting it on the Internet. For free usually. Anything from home videoing, webcams, sexting pics etc. There are many VERY large (millions of pics) and FREE websites out there now with this sort of porn. It is such a problem, some of the remainder of the industry now make imitation “amateur” porn.
loading...
How is that a bit 1980s given the health stats were pulled from last decade and clearly there is still a porn industry. Just look at the back pages of people/picture and any number of soft porn magazines.
loading...
Carrie, I’m glad to see you are admitting that sometimes these women ARE being forced. Opening your eyes to the reality of human trafficking is a good first step. I encourage you to find out more and then to decide to fight this evil.
loading...
“Are these women being forced to have sex on camera???? *For the most part*, NO.” [emphasis mine]
Heart just sank again. Rape is okay, so long as it only happens to SOME women. Right?
loading...
Love this article, love it, im printing and saving fir my son, thank you
loading...
I think you might be better off printing the majority of comments for your son. I am.
loading...
i think porn has so much to answer for in terms of the way SOME men treat women and what they expect…. how many women can say they love it when a man ejaculates on their face?? In more sexual situations then i care to remember i have been tagged the “weird one” for not wanting to have anal sex or be humiliated by having a man ejaculate or urinate on me. In what world is this normal?
loading...
Just cause you dislike these things doesn’t mean we all do.
loading...
She never said all women dislike it.
loading...
I agree with this comment so much.
I think they have higher standards for sex, basically any man born after the mid-eighties. I said to one guy that I felt like it was degrading when he came on my face and then he just laughed and said “well you could say it’s all degrading then!”. I was so disgusted. That’s how you think of women and sex? Horrible. Sure, some women might like being ejaculated on but hey I can’t name any. Women should be able to freely have their own sexual preferences without being judged. Is that too much to ask for?
I feel pornography is designed to show men what they can do and women to just have every orifice of their’s used. Just a series of holes in which dignity passes through. It absolutely shouldn’t be taken literally and sure it has a place but as Roger said you shouldn’t apply it rigidly to life. I’m sure those men who have judged you for not wanting to have anal sex have taken porn literally and have been unaware of it. Which is sad really. But clearly guys like that aren’t worth your time and probably have never had true relationships- more like a series of casual sexual relationships, led girls on and let’s not forget drunken one night stands.
loading...
well, sorry to be so blunt, but what do blokes get on their faces after going down on their ladies? I mean come on, seriously, I think everyone can appreciate that porn is acted fantasy, for which some people might like doing some of the things in a loving sharing relationships, while for others, it stays fantasy fodder. Just like 50 shades of Grey. Seriously, why was 50 shades promoted as being so healthy and wonderful on this very site, yet just because men like their porn more visual, it is evil.
loading...
Less of a mess than guys ejaculating on girls that for sure.
Once I ejaculated (yes it does happen) but I’d say it’s less than when guys do it. I think it’s a totally different situation anyway, women certainly aren’t instructing men to get down on their knees so they can shoot on them.
loading...
Perhaps it’s the men you are with that are making you feel degraded? I am rather prudish but have allowed two partners to ejaculate on me, simply because they asked and I felt comfortable enough to consent, and there certainly has never been any instruction of ‘get down on your knees’ so they could ‘shoot it at me’. It has never made me question their opinion of me, or make me doubt my self worth. Simply an act that I know made them feel satisfied, and in turn, satisfied me for giving them that. Note, these are separate occasions, not two men at once – I did say I am prudish!
Crm, I suggest you reevaluate the partners you choose if you are being are uncomfortable by their requests. You will find plenty out there that don’t want to ‘shoot it’ at you.
loading...
Well it was, that was only one guy and I’ve never had a situation like that again. Once you realise to move on, you do a helleva lot better.
I was just saying ‘women aren’t telling men to’ because that role reversal simply doesn’t happen and they don’t usually have that ‘power’ over men to ejaculate. And that entire facial thing is all about power and is one of the key acts that’s a big hint a guy has been influenced by porn.
loading...
You don’t have to defend yourself. The previous commenter was trying to claim that if somebody else ever did something unpleasant or degrading to you, then you must have been responsible in some way or another for them doing that.
You’re NOT responsible for the actions of other people, especially when those people have power over you.
loading...
“Simply an act that I know made them feel satisfied, and in turn, satisfied me for giving them that.”
My heart just sank. Women deserve better for our lives and for ourselves.
loading...
This beautifully written piece from Roger Barnett is proof that porn doesn’t have to have a negative effect on people. I think it’s one of the most insightful pieces I’ve read about sex and I’m happy that porn played a role in inspiring him to share his views.
loading...
Roger, you’re half way there. Porn is a terrible instructor for how real women want to have sex, youre right about that. But you’re deluding yourself if you think for a second it’s not degrading to women. It just is and honestly I’d like to see you try and successfully argue it isn’t. Because you couldn’t. Well done so far though.
loading...
“The alleged link between porn and a hatred of women has never been demonstrated by research. Personally, I believe that if one already hates women (or men), one will find porn that expresses that hatred in a sexualized way. However, if in life you approach people with respect, then you will find that nasty porn is just not to your liking.”
Completely disagree with you here. The majority of mainstream porn features misogynistic themes and female subjugation. ATM, bukkake, gagging etc are all completely normalised (in the comments below someone mentions the study where over 80% of surveyed porn scenes contained acts of aggression against women). I have read that the average female porn performer lasts 3 months in the industry due to the physical damage inflicted on her body.
Combine this with the fact that the typical age for kids to start viewing porn is around 11, we are not getting people who already hate women looking for sexualised hatred – we are seeing young people learning about sex in a way which is intrinsically linked with violence against women.
Sorry I don’t have ‘research’ for you but anecdotally I have been told a number of times that doctors in Australia are seeing a shocking increase of teenage girls presenting to emergency rooms and clinics with anal fissure and bowel prolapse. Or if you want evidence we could always just look at the study which demonstrated that men couldn’t tell the difference between comments from soft porn mags and comments made by convicted rapists?
The idea that porn is damaging to women is not just a ‘myth’. It may not have been your experience, but it is the experience of a great deal of women (and men), and there’s a lot more research on the subject than you seem to be allowing for.
loading...
Porn is the industrialised abuse of women and is destroying women’s (and men’s) rights to enjoy sex on their own terms. There is plenty of research into the damage it is doing – and just ask around any woman or teenage girl and you’ll see the impact right there
http://www.vawnet.org/sexual-violence/print-document.php?doc_id=418&find_type=web_desc_AR
http://www.thepinkcross.org/page/porn-quotes
loading...
I think porn can very much be healthy part of an adult’s sex life, but growing up, if porn is the ONLY sex a kid has access to, it can absolutely distort reality, and that’s where the danger is.
loading...
“Pornography is not ‘just sex’, it is a particular construction of sex which involves the commercial sexual exploitation of women for the purpose of men’s sexual pleasure. Pornography harms both the women who are directly abused in the making of it, and also women as a group more generally. It promotes a model of sexuality which is incompatible with women’s equality. “[P]ornography plays an important part in contributing to sexual violence against women and to sex discrimination and sex inequality” – Catherine Itzin Pornography: Women violence and civil liberties. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992 (p. 1).”
http://catwa.org.au/?q=pornography
loading...
um, around 30% of porn watchers are women, and the female actors in porn are paid heaps more than the men. How does that equate to the ‘explotation of women for the pleasure of men’ exactly?
loading...
While the porn industry would have us believe that porn is for everyone (thus increasing their revenue) you can’t deny that heterosexual porn caters to men and their fantasies.
Yes, porn actresses are often paid more than the actors- but if you are trying to argue that a career in pornography is somehow empowering to women then I have to disagree. The industry has NO health and safety or workplace codes in place to protect them and is still fighting the new law saying men in porn should use condoms.
I’ll agree that some women do profit from porn. That doesn’t make it any less exploitative- it just means some women profit from a system that harms women.
loading...
and how is the unprotected sex bit more exploitative to the female actors than the males, I am intrigued?
loading...
Because women get pregnant and men don’t.
loading...
I think porn actresses are on top of that whole contraception caper.
loading...
Heterosexual women are more likely to get HIV from a man than the other way around.
John Holmes was a famous porn star of the 70s who died from AIDS. How many of his co stars caught HIV from him that we didn’t hear of?
loading...
It’s interesting that there seem to be a lot of men talking about the limits of porn now. Not for feminist reasons, I just think men are getting bored with it.
loading...
My friend just got out of a relationship with a young guy (24) who had some really messed up views about sexual relationships. I strongly believe it is due to the fact that we were perhaps the first generation for which porn (film) was easily accessible online, and I think it made up the majority of sex education for a lot of young boys.
Imagine their surprise when they move on to sexual encounters in the real world and find that they are nothing like the ‘movies’….
loading...
Life post porn watching = so much better. And so much more time! Goodness how many hours did I waste as a teenager and in my early 20s. I never felt good afterwards anyway.
loading...
Also, I must add the typical sex acts in mainstream pornography are inherently violent and degrading- pounding anal sex, choking, ejaculation on face, multiple penetrations and ass to mouth (which I won’t explain here.) All you need to do is look up a porn channel to read the movie titles and descriptions to see the appeal is in humiliating women and doing as much damage as possible to their bodies.
loading...
Absolutely…I have watched porn & sure it can get me and my husband off but when I saw someone being penetrated front & behind at the same time and there was a zoom in on her asshole (falling apart I must add) I felt sick…really…I felt that i was contributing to a something completely wrong. It really turned my stomach. Do you think these women do this because they really WANT to??? Give me a f*#king break..
loading...
What a briliant article. It is frank, honest, realistic and does a great job of showing both sides of the ‘anti-porn’ debate (which so many authors/advocates have FAILED to do).
Make this compulsory reading for all teens!
loading...
Hi Roger, thanks for sharing your take on pornography. I absolutely agree it is setting up young people for some terrible sex.
I have to disagree with the notion that porn is not fundamentally disrespectful to women, or misogynistic. Mainstream porn is ALL about male domination and female subordination. Sure, there are niche genres too, but mainstream porn, that people are watching, is violent and abusive.
You have suggested there is no real research on pornography and its harms to women- perhaps you are unfamiliar with the study by Ana Bridges on Aggression in Best Selling pornographic dvds? The study examined the top 50 most popular dvd rentals (meaning what people will get out of the video store, not what they may be privately searching for on the net). The study found that 88% of scenes contained physical aggression, and of these, 94% were male violence against females.
loading...
I know that when I watch TV that the show I am watching is not an accurate depiction of real life. It’s basic human intellective reasoning and is the distinguishing characteristic between sentient intelligence and AI.
loading...
I agree FHB, we dont hear dismay about 50 Shades of Grey, that all women are going to expect their men to treat them that way. Fantasy is just that, FANTASY.
loading...
Except, when you watch TV you are (probably) not experiencing repeated positive reinforcement of the story and its messages through sexual arousal and orgasm…
loading...
Me man, me no understand bigger picture.
loading...