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PSA: NCSF Media Update - January 27, 2005


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PSA: NCSF Media Update - January 27, 2005 - 1/31/2005 7:37:46 PM   
LadyBadger


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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: NCSF Media Update - January 27, 2005
Date: Fri, 28 Jan 2005 02:06:51 -0500
From: Keith (Spinoza) Richie <[email protected]>


National Coalition for Sexual Freedom -- Media Update
January 27, 2005
http://www.ncsfreedom.org
media @ ncsfreedom.org

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
1. Porn star delivers satisfaction in debate
2. Tell Me Where It Hurts
3. Welcome to the dungeon
4. Murray's lawyers want evidence excluded
5. The ties that bind
6. Government loses test of obscenity laws

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
Porn star delivers satisfaction in debate
by David Cohen
The Independent Florida Alligator
January 27, 2005

UF [University of Florida] students, brimming with anticipation, finally
got their fill Wednesday when Ron Jeremy came to debate his racy trade
at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center.

The Great Porn Debate, hosted by Accent, welcomed approximately 2,800 to
witness porn superstar Jeremy and award-winning author Susan Cole duke
out the pros and cons of pornography.

Cole opened up the debate in a somber tone toward pornography that would
continue throughout the night.

UF professor Diana K. Nagy attended the debate.

"I don't think anyone really won," she said. "Both of them are coming
from the same direction. They both agree that S&M and child pornography
are unacceptable."

[continued]

To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.alligator.org/pt2/050127porn.php

To respond, write to: editor @ alligator.org

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
Tell Me Where It Hurts
by Keith Bowers
East Bay Express (San Francisco)
January 26, 2005

Are all novels autobiographical at heart? In Stephen Elliott's new
release Happy Baby, the protagonist watches his mother dying agonizingly
of multiple sclerosis. As an adolescent, he flees a household marked by
addiction and abuse. He becomes a ward of the court. Having learned to
associate pain with affection, he grows into a young man haunted by
sexual confusion. He works as a sex-show barker in Amsterdam and strives
to figure out how the whole mess started.

To say that Elliott graduated from the school of hard knocks is more
than just an understatement.

In Happy Baby, he confronts some harsh themes that mirror his life. Its
protagonist Theo grew up in the Chicago foster-care system and returns
in his thirties to visit an ex-girlfriend and learn more about himself
and his past. Elliott wrote the book in reverse order, with each chapter
representing another step backward in time.

Sadomasochism is a recurring theme, but it's not the "safe, sane, and
consensual" flavor that's so popular these days. "Nobody does anything
safe in that book," Elliott says. Theo's girlfriend, for example, is a
brutally domineering fortysomething who burns the backs of Theo's wrists
with lit cigarettes when she learns of his plans to visit Chicago. The
scene isn't negotiated, and Theo takes no enjoyment from it, but he lets
her do it nonetheless. That said, the act -- like other painful
situations in the book -- is implicitly something both characters need,
or at least are drawn to perform together.

He says that writing Happy Baby helped him confront many of his own
fears surrounding sex, intimacy, and S/M. "I learned a lot. ... I could
never write a book like this again. It's discomfort that creates art,"
he notes, and discomfort is something this author has put behind him, at
least as it relates to his sex life. Everything is a little easier now.
For example, in one recent relationship, Elliott and his girlfriend
negotiated dominant and submissive roles and maintained them 24/7.

[continued]

To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/issues/2005-01-26/culture/profile.html

To respond, write to: the author at keith.bowers @ eastbayexpress.com or
the editors at feedback @ eastbayexpress.com

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
Welcome to the dungeon
by Dan Savage (opinion column)
Detroit Metro Times
January 26, 2005

Q: I've just started dating a guy who is into being dominated. He also
has quite the foot fetish. Problem is, I have zero experience with any
sort of kinky sex. He's 35 and has been around the block, while I'm 24
and all I've ever had is sex with guys who claimed to have no fantasies.
I really want to please him, but I don't know what to do. He says that
he's not really into pain and that his kink is more centered around
being mentally and emotionally toyed with. I've asked him for specifics,
but he says he doesn't want to freak me out. I'd wing it, but I'm clueless.
- Tramp In Training

A: "This couple sounds like they're off to a great start," says Lady
Green, author of The Sexually Dominant Woman (Greenery Press). "He's
willing to talk about what he wants, at least in general, and she's open
to trying it. That immediately puts them in the top 10 percent of the
folks I talk to who are into female domination. Now, it's just a matter
of getting the details ironed out."

Your urge to wing it is admirable, TIT, but Lady Green and I both agree
that you shouldn't attempt anything too ambitious until your boyfriend
comes through with some details. "The most she should try without
getting some more specific ideas from him," Lady Green says, "is
building a little control and/or fetish play into your lovemaking. Put
one of your feet in his face for him to smell and nuzzle during
intercourse, for example, or place a hand over his mouth to block speech
during whatever else you might be doing."

[continued]

To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=7231

To respond, write to: the author at mail @ savagelove.net

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
Murray's lawyers want evidence excluded
by Eric Weslander
Lawrence Journal-World (Kansas)
January 23, 2005

Attorneys for a Kansas State University English professor charged with
murdering his wife have filed a pretrial motion alleging some evidence
was mishandled.

Attorneys for professor Thomas E. Murray, who's charged with murdering
his ex-wife, Carmin D. Ross, in November 2003, asked Judge Robert
Fairchild on Friday to keep several categories of evidence out of
Murray's upcoming jury trial.

... Other categories of evidence Murray's attorneys are seeking to keep
out of court:

Evidence that Murray, a linguistics scholar, co-authored the book "The
Language of Sadomasochism," a glossary of terms used in sexual
sadomasochism. They say it's irrelevant and prejudicial, and there's no
evidence he has ever engaged in sadomasochism.

[continued]

To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.ljworld.com/section/citynews/story/194081

To respond, go to:
http://www.ljworld.com/site/submit_letter/

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
The ties that bind
by Helen Rosner
Jewsweek
January 22, 2005

After 5000 years of persecution, you'd think we'd be sick of it:
name-calling, whips and chains, submitting to dominance. We Jews ought
to be pretty over that whole scene by now. And we are -- until it comes
to the bedroom door. Most sex experts estimate that ten to fifteen
percent of sexually active adults regularly go in for kinky sex -- and
much as our rabbis might prefer to keep it under wraps, the tribe fits
right into that kink-inclined population.

Jews who like it a little different have been going public lately,
coming clean about their interest in the intertwined cultures of
sadomasochism, bondage, and leather play. Many express this by joining
fetish groups: some general interest, some drawn together precisely
because of a shared affinity for knishes and kreplach. At this past
November's Fetish Fair Fleamarket, an annual event in Boston that brings
together BDSM leaders, practitioners, and the just plain curious, one of
the most popular discussion sessions was "Birds of a Feather" -- a space
for Jewish conference participants to discuss pressing issues like how
to reconcile traditional Jewish views of sexual behavior with an active
BDSM lifestyle.

... Most Jewish BDSM adherents don't mind interpreting halachah to
their advantage: Vivienne Kramer, an observant Jew and a fixture on the
Northeast fetish scene -- she's chair of the New England Leather
Alliance and president of the National Coalition for Sexual Freedom --
has no problem reconciling her religion with her sexual practices. "I
probably wouldn't play [engage in BDSM] on a Friday night," she says,
merging the two practices into her own version of religious observance.
Madame Alexia, a product of 12 years of Hebrew school and a Jewish
Studies minor at a state university, views the textual omission as a
go-ahead: "my understanding is that the Torah forbids certain actions --
sex outside of marriage, rape, and things like that," she says. "Even if
you interpret it in a modern context, there's no mention of restraint,
domination and submission, or anything like that being taboo."

[continued]

To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.jewsweek.com/bin/en.jsp?enDispWho=Article%5El1607&enPage=BlankPage&enDisplay=view&enDispWhat=object&enVersion=0&enZone=Articles

To respond, write to: editor @ jewsweek.com

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
Government loses test of obscenity laws:
Case involves films of women being abused
by Torsten Ove
Pittsburgh Post-Gazaette
January 22, 2005

The Justice Department yesterday lost the first major test of obscenity
laws in at least a decade when a federal judge in Pittsburgh threw out
an indictment of Extreme Associates, which sells films of women being
gang-raped, defecated on and having their throats slit.

U.S. District Judge Gary Lancaster dismissed charges of distribution of
obscene materials brought here last year against the California company
and its owners, Robert Zicari, 31, and his wife, Janet Romano, 27.

In a 45-page opinion, the judge said the federal obscenity statutes as
applied in the case violate constitutional protections of liberty and
privacy.

The statutes say possession of obscene materials is legal but
distribution of them is not.

In essence, the judge said that the government ban on distribution of
obscenity illegally infringes on the people's constitutional right to
possess it.

[continued]

To read this entire article, go to:
http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/05022/446543.stm

To respond, write to: the author at tove @ post-gazaette.com or the
editors by going to:
http://www.post-gazette.com/contact/comments_form.asp?ID=40

[Editor's note: for additional commentary on this case and how it may
effect NCSF and Barbara Nitke's court case regarding the Communications
Decency Act (Nitke vs. Ashcroft), we recommend visiting:
http://www.livejournal.com/users/alanesq/47050.html ]

* ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ * ~~ *
HOW TO WRITE A LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Feedback letters are an effective way to convey a positive image of
alternate sexual practices such as SM, swinging, or polyamory. You can
help to correct negative social myths and misconceptions about these
types of practices. These letters help achieve the advocacy goals of the
NCSF.

Generally, for a letter to be published, it's important to include your
name (or first initial, last name), city and daytime phone (for
verification only). For more information, see:
http://www.ncsfreedom.org/media/writelettertoeditor.htm

Please alert us to positive, negative or neutral stories about SM,
swinging and polyamory at media @ ncsfreedom.org

###

A project of NCSF and the NCSF Foundation

National Coalition for Sexual Freedom (NCSF) is a national organization
committed to altering the political, legal, and social environment in
the U.S. in order to guarantee equal rights for consenting adults who
practice forms of alternative sexual expression. NCSF is primarily
focused on the rights of consenting adults in the SM-leather-fetish,
swing, and polyamory communities, who often face discrimination because
of their sexual expression.

National Coalition for Sexual Freedom
822 Guilford Avenue, Box 127
Baltimore, MD 21202-3707
410-539-4824
media @ ncsfreedom.org
http://www.ncsfreedom.org

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