Showing posts with label WOMEN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WOMEN. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2008

Mad Men Misunderstood


What is with the New York Times Magazine? First they publish a 7,000-word essay without a drop of cultural analysis in it as a cover story. Then they deliver an equally lengthy look at "Mad Men" that entirely misses the point of its subject. I guess that's what happens when you send a woman to do a man's job--or send a woman who doesn't get men to write about what men want. In theory, the piece offers up a look behind the scenes at the TV story of ad men in the early '60s from one of the guys behind "The Sopranos." But writer Alex Witchel, whose husband Frank Rich wrote an equally vapid, keep-the-story-at-arm's-length-at-all-times piece on the adult film industry years ago, just doesn't get it. "Mad Men" is man porn--the pornography of manhood--and not in the pejorative sense. At its heart, "Mad Men" works not because it's about the culture of ad execs in the sixties; it works because it's a fantasy about the time before feminism, when men were men, period. "Mad Men" works for the same set of reasons that "The Sopranos" worked--by painting gender roles in black and white--and the result of transgressing into this bawdy, martini-ed, lying, cheating, dirty, loving life is pleasure. I don't know what's up with the so-called gender wars these days, but whatever's going on, it's a mess. The New Jezebels act like the girl in "The Exorcist," their heads forever spinning because they can't make up their minds if they want to spend all their time trashing men, whining about how oppressed they are by magazines, or blogging about how many times they got fucked last night--so they end up doing all three at the same time. That'd leave men kind of... confused, wouldn't it? No wonder the international mobile porn business is fast becoming a $20 billion a year business; men have to have something to look at that's not so fucking complicated. The shortcomings of "Mad Men" are few and far between, but what it lacks it lacks because it isn't hard enough, likely because it's on AMC, not HBO. Either way, men will take their pleasures where they find them. Anything's better than listening to the endless stream of static coming from the mouths of 21st century women who can't decide if they're feminists or freaks.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

I'm Just Sayin'


When HarperCollins CEO Jane Friedman was given the boot a few weeks ago, sex writers across America rejoiced. Once upon a time, a handful of mainstream book publishers were friendlier than others to publishing books on the still-salacious-to-book-editors subject of sex, and HarperCollins was among them. But it was women like Friedman who made it hard for women writing books about sex to get published by mainstream publishers.

While Friedman's archenemy Judith Regan was no princess, at least she had the balls to publish daring books about sex, even if they weren't all very good. Friedman, on the other hand, remained the Erica Jong of publishing. Unable to get over whatever fantasy of power she believed she had at the dawn of the feminist revolution all those decades ago, in today's climate of sex-sex-sex, Friedman was nothing but a bore, a literary erection killer, everything Regan wasn't.

Friedman's booting was followed by her being replaced by a younger male. A somewhat similar switch was seen at Random House a month previous, where 58-year-old Peter Olsen was replaced by 39-year-old Markus Dohle. Of course, as Aaliyah once sang, age ain't nothin' but a number, but in these heady days of the rampant pornification of our culture, when "sex sells" has become our national mantra, book publishing has remained the ugly girl in the corner of the library who just won't put out. Hopefully, new blood will bring the dying world of publishing back to life, and smart, savvy books about sex by women who know what of they speak will be given the editorial nod by those less threatened by postfeminist chicks.

Monday, June 16, 2008

I Can Take Your Man, I Don't Have To Sex 'Em


This is, like, the greatest remix ever.

"Misdemeanor on the floor, pretty boy here I come
Pumps in the bunk, make you wanna hurt something
I can take your man, I don't have to sex 'em
Hang him out the window, call me Michael Jackson (hehehe)
I'm a pain in your rectum, I am that bitch y'all slept on
Heavy hitter, rhyme spitter, call me *re-run*
*Hey, hey, hey, I'm what's happening*
Hypnotic in my drink, that's right
Shake your ass till it stink, that's right
Mr. Mo's on the beat, that's right
Put it down for the streets, that's right
Whooo..."

Friday, June 13, 2008

7 Million Girls Love 7 Million Songs 7 Million Times More Than You Do


The other day, Warren Ellis tagged me in this 7 Songs meme that's taking the world by storm, and some women you'd probably like to have sex with if they let you (they won't) have offered up their 7 Songs since.

Debauchette: "They say you should never talk about religion, politics, or music with someone you plan to sleep with, presumably because a mismatch in these subject areas can really kill attraction."

Panther in Pumps: "If I close my eyes, sometimes I forget I'm even there, and I remember back when I just rode horses, and that's all I wanted to do."

The Stripper Hates You: "A song about masturbating in your car. We’ve all done it, um, right?"

Beautiful, Depraved: "This song was playing while I was wandering in the London Coco de Mer."

Pretty Dumb Things: "I love him so much I could burst open like a dehiscent fruit."

Thursday, May 29, 2008

My "Sex and the City" Story for Salon Is Online


My "Sex and the City" story, "Those Dirty Girls," for Salon is now online. I've got more to say about the piece, but it's late, and I'm tired. I'll write more on this, and what it was like to talk to Susie Bright, who was a big influence on me when I was coming of age in the Bay Area, on Friday.

"To make her point, Bright references a recent New Yorker essay, 'The Fall of Conservatism' by George Packer, in which Pat Buchanan paraphrased social theorist Eric Hoffer: 'Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket.' Comments Bright: '"Sex and the City"' is the racket part of what once was recognizable as the sexual self-emancipation of the feminist movement.' For her, the commodification of the 21st century female sexual revolution hits too close to home."

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Letters from Working Girls: I Decided That This Was a Weird Moral Decision to Make Anyway


I've posted a new working girl letter: "I Decided That This Was a Weird Moral Decision to Make Anyway."

"The only difficult thing for me is to be nice to people who are genuinely stupid, through no fault of their own, just a lack of brain cells, and to be forthcoming to guys in general."

This one came from England.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Email of the Day

(via)
I've just finished reading your post about the "end of Porn Valley." I'm not too sure what Porn Valley is all about, nor is it wholly significant in the context of this e-mail.

What matters is that you've presented me with something valuable. Please excuse me for taking your time with this, but its significance to me stirs an urge to let you know that you've opened my eyes to something crucial, whether or not you determine it so or give it any time at all is your prerogative.

I am a 6'2" male, middle-class, two-parent family, well-educated, religious, yadda yadda. I have found regular solace in private intimacy for the last 11 years. I also come from a culture of guilt. These two elements make for some rough riding. I am now married to a woman that couldn't make me happier, yet something in my psyche occasionally detaches from that existence and pulls me into a different place, home to unwarranted desires, detached lust, etc. There has always been something that scratches at the walls of my secret: a voice, many voices; voices that belong to faces and lives. Voices that are daughters, sisters, humans with nominal struggles and wretched tribulations. Yet in order to avoid viewing myself with a sharp focus of hypocrisy, I have stopped my ears to these voices, occasionally questioning their existence when the glamor fades.

That voice broke through in your post. In describing the human condition of a woman on the receiving end of myriad strange and deplorable emotions, you've turned "them" human. You've given life to pornstars who for so long have provided me with (for all practical purposes) inanimate assertions of self-worth and power. In all honesty, I came to your blog looking for intriguing links while my wife sleeps. I can't do now what I had intended to do. It would be naive to imagine that I never will pick up where I've left off, but tonight I can hope, and sleep easy, picturing myself justified in criticizing society for its ill-treatment of women. I only hope that you are able to shed more light and life on people who exist in a reality that I wouldn't wish on anyone, since you are able to write in such a moving, insightful, and convincing way.

Anon.

Thursday, January 03, 2008

Me, Myself, and Whores


Yesterday, I mentioned something that I'm working on, a project that I referred to as The Project, a project, I suggested, that had to do with prostitutes. What is The Project? For now, the project will remain vague, as projects have a tendency to change. One thing I didn't like about the Reverse Cowgirl--the blog, that is--last year was that there were a great many things I didn't blog about. This year, I'm trying to be more upfront. So, while I'm remaining ambiguous here, I'm also trying to be more clear here. Is it working? Who knows. My virtual underwear is transparent--metaphorically, that is. In any case, I have a point. What was it? Ah, yes. I've been writing about sex for about a decade now. Actually, 2008 will be my eleventh year. Much of that time I've spent talking to and writing about and thinking about and more to the point identifying with the men I've met in the otherworld of sex that remains for the most part unseen in 21th century America. (And, no, I'm not talking about "Cathouse" or some heavily edited crap like that; I'm talking about the real world where sex workers live and breathe and the rest of America has to pay to visit.) These days, I'm looking at the women. Anybody who knows me knows this is no easy task. I made it clear in "My, My American Bukkake Too" that I'm more inclined to identify with the men in that world. I mean, wouldn't you? Would you rather be the guy with his dick in his hand or the girl on her knees with her eyes closed? That's a rhetorical question, as far as I'm concerned. I guess it's easier to look at the Other than into the Mirror, no? Either way, and apropros of nothing, I'm interested in hearing about any of my male readers' experiences with prostitutes. To be clear, I'm not interested in some jerk-off story. I'm interested in hearing from you if you're interested in sending me an email about if you've ever been with a prostitute and why? And, most significantly, what was your experience of the girl? I'm also interested in hearing from sex workers or former sex workers. What does America not understand about what you do? In both cases, your responses will be anonymous. Please let me know if I can post your email to this blog. Email me by clicking on the CONTACT ME line to your left and up.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Girl in Porn


This is a living room just like any other.
Peculiarized just like any other.
With a framed print of Redon flowers
and a plastic red pepper wall clock.

Last night she ate at Norms (egg sandwich,
Pepsi, clam chowder), drew daisies
and rats on the placemat while Llovio
ate pancakes next to her in the booth,

his face making the word scrofula
with each bite. She watched the pies
in rotation, happy to be real and present
on Pico Boulevard. Her socks have

ribs down the folds, a rough white cotton
against her ankles. The discount silk flowers
say this is happening somewhere (for real:
the imaginary hum of a refrigerator, slipping

socks on the couch.) Demi-mondes scallop
her bulges. Sweet Teen Fucked. Blond Girl
Nailed. She had ordered a meal last night,
combed her hair in the ladies’ room.

--Athena Nilssen (via)

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Your Underwear Is the New Black


Designers who hope to titillate may take their cues from that professional provocateur Marc Jacobs, who engineered waywardness into his designs by incorporating brassieres and panties into their construction. It was a stunt to be sure, the models' look of studied disarray suggesting the outward expression of a crack-addled mind. But merchants viewed the R-rated display as a welcome corrective to a somewhat uptight fall season.

"The looks we saw for fall were very put-together and polished, with not a hair or thread out of place," said Michael Fink, a fashion director of Saks Fifth Avenue. “Maybe it was time for a little vulgarity to creep back into fashion."

Ms. Solomon viewed the trend as more mysterious than vulgar. “When you're not baring your breast outright, that to me is more romantic than it is overtly sexy,” she said. Indeed, some would insist it is curiously stripped of eroticism. -- NY Times

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

She Is a Girl

She is a girl. Prior to her birth, her grandmother, in hopes of a boy, knits clothes for her, only in blue. On the day of her delivery, her parents are relieved; a boy, they feel, without saying, could prove more than they can handle. The girl is so pretty, riding along the sidewalk in an old fashioned pram the mother has found at a garage sale. People stop them, complimenting the mother on the girl’s fine features and graceful comportment, despite the blue outfits she wears, day in and day out. She has pink cheeks, soft skin, and a winningly toothless smile. She lets her mother cut her soft curls in the backyard without event. She is the apple of her father’s eye, her round face unfurling in a wide smile, as he gestures with his finger under the curve of her neat chin. She is adored. She is beloved. She is a girl. In her way, she understands how it is.

In the single digits of her life, the girl stretches. Her limbs elongate. Her head expands. She bats her eyelashes, attends ballet classes, and wears her hair in braids. All the while, she observes how the world responds to her grins, poses, demands. In her, a great deal of information is being absorbed; the means by which it will be analyzed are not yet present. She attends all-girl birthday parties. She accessorizes with pink trinkets. She cries. She notes the existence of boys, and, in concert with her female peer group, douses herself with the contents of an invisible spray can containing an agent that repels boys and whatever it is boys have that could be contagious. On the playground, she is good at dodge ball, but she does not particularly like being on the receiving end of a hit. At her best, she is running, racing the rest of the class to the far wall, most often beating them, which makes her happy. In her room at home, she has stuffed animals and posters of cats. As the years pass, the girl senses that something is coming, but she has no idea what it is.

In her teenage years, she explodes. Her shape mutates, her figure bulges, her mind transforms. If she is a world, it is chaos. There is anarchy on her front and a bloody mutiny in her underwear. She stands, stoic, on the deck of herself, steeling herself in the lashing wind and tearing rain of hormones. She looks for help, but the only thing she sees is a crew of boys and girls drowning in similar seas. In the past, at each twist and turn of her life, she has reached for the hand of her mother or her father, but this struggle, she believes, she must keep to herself. Besides, things have changed. Now, she knows her father is unhappy, and her mother is unhappier. Previously, they were doting. At this point, they prefer to retreat into the kitchen or the study, leaving her to fend for herself in the wreckage of their future. She has needs. To cope, she develops an intimate relationship with a stuffed sheep big enough to mount.

Midway through her teens, she realizes all bets are off. She has no debt, as what was given to her was given freely. Therefore, she reasons, she has no guilt. Left to her own devices, she must take over her own creation. She will be inventive, she vows, if nothing else. The stuffed animals exit. The cat posters are garbage. She finds their substitutes in too much makeup and the plaintive wailings of Prince. Inside, she is terrible; outside, she is fabulous. This, she thinks, is a great improvement. She smokes Newports for reasons she will not be able to explain later, drinks enigmatic mixtures of alcohol from her girlfriends’ Mason jars, and vomits freely into her neighbors’ trimmed bushes. She runs away, returning three days later, breathless, exhilarated, and renewed, to find her parents haven’t noticed. She dresses provocatively, goes to frat parties and makes out with boys far older than her, and falls down to hit her head hard against the sidewalk. In a class called Social Living, she is given an assignment to write a note to who she will be ten years from today. She tells herself, in a girly scrawl, “Don’t forget, you had a great time, the best time ever.”

She discovers sex. She has had previous encounters with it—the porno magazines in the drawer of the house where she babysat, the graphic stories that slutty girls recount in her presence, the X-rated video somebody has starring John Holmes as the man who would leave his indelible mark upon her. She is scared. By the force of her will, she has freed herself into a kind of limbo, yet she knows not what to do with herself now that she’s there. She opens her legs. She closes her legs. Some guy at a party says that her knee pointing at a boy across the room indicates she wants to have sex with him. While this is possible, so is anything. She goes with the boy to a small house behind the main house that belongs to his out-of-town parents. She lies on the bed. She stares at the ceiling. The boy devirginizes her. It hurts. It’s fine. It’s whatever. His brother tries to watch them through the window, so the boy gets up, and, with his BB gun, threatens to shoot his brother. The next morning, she leaves before the boy awakens, walking all the way back to her parents’ house. Later, she finds, there are flowers on her doorstep. Her mother spots them, and coos over them, causing the girl to snatch up the bouquet in embarrassment.

At twenty, in college, she acquires her first boyfriend. He is enormous. He is on the rugby team, so they spend most dates in his dormitory dining hall where he eats and eats. They don’t talk much, and when they do, they speak of nothing. It is while living in her all-girl dormitory that she discovers there is something terribly wrong with her. Generally, of course, she can pass. There is no problem when she walks, naked and wet, between the other girls in the shower room. It is what lies underneath her skin that is the problem. She is not a lesbian. Nor does she want to be a boy. But her personality, it seems, is not that of a girl. Without a pattern, she has cut the cloth of her femininity in the form a Patchwork Girl, creating a cobbled-together female, a Frankenstein of womanhood. Her roommates have carefree ponytails, perfect ankles, fun-loving dimples. She dreams of sorority girls’ heads on stakes in a girl-wide apocalypse. Thankfully, she forgets about all that when the massive weight of her boyfriend bears down upon her.

In her mid-twenties, she graduates college, finds an apartment, gets a job. She is normal, or so she thinks. The intensity of what has come before fades. She finds this comforting, as if her identity is something from which she can escape. To help facilitate this forgetting, she gets laid a lot. There isn’t much else to do that interests her. She goes home with guys she meets at nightclubs, then doesn’t return their calls. She purchases copious amounts of mindfuckingly complicated lingerie. She is a bitch and says so. She thinks this is funny. Still, she is a girl, but when she speaks the word “girl,” her upper lip curls away from it, as if her mouth is disgusted by the sound. She does not know that she does this. Most of the time, she thinks she is bored, but, really, she is angry at her life, at her parents, at herself. For there is not enough--of the world, of someone for her in it, of herself in it. She walks down the street, and people get out of her way. She thinks this is totally hilarious. It is only when she is home at night, in bed by herself, that she weeps.

On her thirtieth birthday, she stands at a crossroads. On her left, she sees a car. On her right, she sees another car. In her mind’s eye, the two cars are headed for one another. At this moment, she feels something. When she gets home, she checks her telephone messages. Her mother has called. The girl finds herself poised on a stage, the phone at her ear, smiling brightly as the curtain pulls back to reveal her. “Hello?” she says, in a little-girl voice. “Your father is dead,” her mother says. The curtain falls. This is “The End.” Everything blurs. Time smudges. She watches as his body is lowered into the ground, considers jumping on the casket, taking the ride with him, but doesn’t. For the first time in her life, she understands that she is, in fact, alive.

Afterwards, her mother is broken. The girl drifts along in her wake. She attempts to care for her mother, showers her with affection, drowns her with love. It is like trying to get a bulb to bloom off-season. With the disappearance of her father, her mother has vanished. There was, she suspects, not much of her mother there to begin with. Finally, she admits, there is nothing to be done. Carefully, she plants her mother in a clay pot, tucks her under the sink, and says a small prayer that she might someday flower. She is, for all intents and purposes, an orphan. She does the dishes, occasionally banging her head into the cupboard over the sink so she knows she is there. She sleeps in the closet. She forgets her makeup. Inside herself, she free-falls.

She meets a man. He seems nice. He takes her out on dates. He asks her about herself. His grip is tight. His face is stiff. All he says is true. “Yes,” she says, and throws everything she knows out the window. In the bed they share, the man fucks her, chokes her, slaps her. In light of what she feels about herself, this is appropriate. She appreciates what he does, reminding her, as he drills himself into her, that she no longer wants to exist. He bestows strange affections upon her. She is, at times, a princess among his tchotchkes. Then, he hardens. He silences. She becomes familiar with the back of his head. One weekend, they take a trip to the desert. He turns into a blank slate, like the landscape. In their hotel room, he uses his tongue to tear her limb from limb. They travel home; she, splayed like a bug on his windshield as he tries to run the wipers over her. She knows she has to leave. She lets him do it. She is left broken and limp, staring at her hands in her lap. The lines on them are everywhere. She could, she imagines, follow these tributaries in her palms. What a gift, she prays to God. There is not much here to salvage, but there is something.

She puts herself on an airplane. She hates flying, but, this time, is relieved. Where she is going will not be here, and that will be better. The plane takes off, tilting its nose into the air, and she lets go. She closes her eyes and imagines her luggage delivering itself out of the belly of the plane like a whale having a baby in the water, her suitcases landing in the regions sliding away beneath her—Arizona, New Mexico, Texas. She hopes some lady will find her things and wear them the way they were supposed to be worn. The outfits she has donned thus far have been ill-fitting, mismatched. Out of the window, she sees her life in cloud formations. Her mother. Her dearly departed daddy. All the men she’s fucked. They float by in white puffs, shifting into the horizon she is eclipsing behind her. She is going 500 miles per hour. She can’t go fast enough.

She lands in a new city. She makes a new home, using only the ingredients given to her when she was floating in a pink sac. It takes a long time, but there comes a point at which she feels things are sliding into place: her bones, her organs, her nervous system, her skin. Here she turns from something broken into something fitting. On a road trip with a new girlfriend, they drive upstate, cutting through the towering trees on both sides. In conversations, they keep men at a distance. At dusk, the girl sees a sign by the side of the road signaling what lies ahead. Ascension. She doesn’t want to stop until she reaches it. They sleep in the car and she dreams she is sitting at her family’s breakfast table across from her reproductive organs. Her uterus nods politely. Her fallopian tubes flutter excitedly. Her vaginal canal lies under the table. It is waiting.

In the middle of nowhere, at thirty-five, she sits at a bar. The bartender is no boy. She knows nothing, except that she is in no girl. He grins at her. The tectonic plates of her ribs lying protectively over her heart can hardly contain whatever it is thumping inside her. She opens her mouth, and her insides spill onto the bar in front of him. He wipes everything off with a rag, and, for this, she is grateful. As a tip, she leaves her telephone number. She leaves, knowing that, for all the rest of the decades of her life, what has happened to her will never change. In the car, she looks at herself in the rear-view mirror, thankful she was born a girl, and nothing other, that she turned into a woman. And in the end, she is herself.

"She Is a Girl" appeared in the June/July 2005 issue of Maisonneuve.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Girl with Heart


I'm making changes. For now, they will remain hidden. Soon, I will unveil them. Nothing like a good prestige. One would have to imagine.