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Sex and Relationships

Sex From a Can

By Joyce McFadden, Huffington Post. Posted July 4, 2008.


Most representations of sexuality in pop culture are not sexy or sexual, erotic or arousing; they're shallow and laughable.
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I was driving my 6th grade daughter to her last day of school this morning. It was 7:29.

She immediately turned the radio from NPR to the mainstream station she and all her friends listen to.

I love music and am one of those moms who sings along and car dances whether I'm alone or with a gaggle of girls. My daughter loves music too, plays the viola and has a fine reverence for The Beatles. However, I have to say most of the playlist on this small Connecticut station is to me simply mind numbing. I tease my daughter with my critiques of these singers, telling her I would like so and so, if they had any, you know, talent. I complain that they're overproduced, and when their lyrics are too big girl, off goes the station.

Anyway, a dreadful song had just wrapped up and a new one began. But lo and behold this one had an interesting beat, and I said, "Ah! Thank God. Finally a fresh sound!" The words were still leaving my lips as the artist produced this lyric: "She goes down like she never wanna breathe."

Rise and shine.

I paused, cocked my head the way a dog does when it appears confused, and quick, clicked us back to Morning Edition. My daughter, because turn about is fair play, proceeded to tease me by singing her interpretation of the intro music to NPR shows, little ditties she makes up that are a cross between those plucked Law and Order punctuations and the Mission Impossible theme.

I realize that in my last post I went on a tear on this very same topic over a beer ad, and yet here I find myself again, which is the whole point of going on this second tear.

My ire doesn't come from prudishness. It's that I'm disheartened by the ridiculous quality of it all and the dulling influence it has on us, especially our kids. These visual and auditory messages don't even convey what they intend, they're not sexy or sexual, erotic or arousing; they're laughable and they provide us with nothing. They're so removed from the real thing they lead us to believe sexuality comes from a can.

I contrast this with the shopping expedition my daughter and I went on yesterday, which involved buying her some special pieces to accommodate the ways she's getting older. As I watched her trying things on, she looked so quietly proud, and I felt celebratory for this emerging sense of her dignity.

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See more stories tagged with: media, music, sexuality

Joyce McFadden is a faculty member, training analyst and clinical supervisor at the Training and Research Institute for Self Psychology, and author of the ongoing anonymous web-based Women's Realities Study.

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A commodity and 'finished product' that keeps on giving
Posted by: talkville on Jul 5, 2008 2:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ah! sex! I'm gonna go out and 'get me some'! Might have to buy it, might get 'it' for free! Wait a sec, no need to run; it comes to me, I just gotta have fun! It comes on the tv, it comes on the net. Just enough of a look to make one wanna see. I just need to remember and indulge fantasy!

How easy is that?? Sex from a can, and straight into the head. Some things can and maybe ought to be reified. Others? Can't think of any way to prevent it, and the quickest way to sublimation is repression. The artist might produce a fine painting; the marketeer produces things like sex. That's where the money is. And "the Business of America is Business".

Meanwhile, in the actual world, social and sexual relations are becoming more and more difficult, alienated, time-constricted, rigid and arid. Repressed, one might say.

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Just a thought:
Posted by: oregoncharles on Jul 6, 2008 10:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
did you discuss that offending line with your daughter?

There was a rash of publicity not long ago, including a piece on Alternet, about astonishingly young girls going in for oral sex. (In my day, it was something college girls did, when they weren't quite sure of that new guy.) You can be sure your daughter has heard the song out, since she listens to that station, and has talked about it with her friends - who know either nothing at all, or far too much.

Teachable moments are the essence of parenting. Not that I was so good at it.

And a thought about the music: very young people can smell and taste things adults cannot. Do you suppose they can hear things we can't, too? None of our senses get better as we get older.

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I Hear You
Posted by: nen on Jul 7, 2008 8:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Has anyone seen the music video "Concentrate" by Xibit? Having actually studied Buddhism, Japanese, and Japanese history, I watched this music video on YouTube only because someone who plays World of Warcraft made a rather amusing parody of it.

Through the entire thing, I held my sides and laughed. Some of the hip hop and rap that comes out these days I have to watch again and again to try and figure out if they're actually serious or doing a spoof of the genre. It's also saddening how hard one has to look for good music these days.

While I believe that it's important for young people to have a wealth of knowledge about sex (yes even the unconventional kinds) from the age they can begin to understand it, it's also important to make sure the information they get is REAL. Children's brains in our present time are maturing at younger and younger ages. They understand far more than we give them credit for.

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