industry
The erotic industry is booming. Learn about its past, present, and what the future has in store.
History of Sex Toys
Historians will have to search far and wide to find any household item that has changed in function as little as the sex toy, while managing to fluctuate in social acceptance so much. After all, we as humans have not changed biologically, so of course we are still sexually stimulated in the same manner as we were years, even centuries ago. However, technology, both in sales and design of sex toys, has changed the industry and its products immensely.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyAlberto Mielgo Erotic Artist Interview
Erotic artists did not start off as shock artists. The public’s reception to this kind of art has changed dramatically from the later part of the 20th century when experimental art, a euphemism for eroticism, was intended to explore sexuality and the artist's perception of its place in society. Alberto Mielgo is often referred to as a shock artist. Shock art was born out of necessity. As the digital space exploded in the 21st century, the lines of erotic art and pornography began to blur. A new generation lost sight of the beauty inherent in sexuality. Artists and creatives pivoted in their messages as it became important to make a statement. Statements by artists, like Alberto Mielgo, became a signature art form that were intended to challenge the status quo, the puritanical, and the hypocrisy of a society that bends to the will of the media. In his own words, Alberto Mielgo explains his view of the world around him, that seems to close one eye with disdain and open the other eye wide with desire.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyWeird Breast Implant Facts
Since the start of the 21st century, breast augmentation has been the most common type of cosmetic surgery chosen by women. Breast augmentation is so popular, in fact, that in 2010 alone, consumers paid over $2 billion on breast implants. It’s estimated that nearly 5 percent of all American women have breast implants. With those statistics, it’s pretty much guaranteed that you know someone who’s had their breasts enhanced.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyHistory of Women Jumping Out of Cakes
Drinks, laughs and bow ties. It’s your last night as a single man. Your fellas took you out to celebrate and say goodbye to the old times. It’s getting late and the alcohol is starting to hit. People dancing and joking around. Suddenly the music stops and your friends look at each other as if trying not to laugh. Everyone turns their head towards the door as a giant cake comes in while Cabaret music starts playing. At this point, every single person in the room can imagine what’s going to happen: all of the sudden, the cake explodes and a scantily-clad and attractive young woman burst out of it, dancing and moving to the beat.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyHow to Become a Male Porn Star
Every. Single. Day. At least one guy will tweet me asking, "How do I get into porn?" The short answer is, "You don’t." But for those of you that actually might have the drive, perseverance, and sheer talent to be a male porn star, Imma break it down for you.
Samantha BentleyPublished 8 years ago in FilthyMichel Gyarmathy Interview
Built as a music-hall, the locale was home to various operas, concerts, gymnastics, magic and comedy shows. Its boards were trodden by such famous beginners as Charlie Chaplin and Colette (before she turned novelist). The theater shifted emphasis during World War I, when "the exhibition of feminine pulchritude in the nude became the most sensational aspect of a Folies show." Nothing to do with shepherdesses, the Folies's name was intended to be Trévise, but some dispute developed and Bergère was taken from the name of a nearby street. In the sparkling era that followed, stars included Maurice Chevalier and Mistinguette, Raimu, Fernandel, Yvonne Printemps, and Josephine Baker.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyAl Goldstein Interview
Al Goldstein was a cabdriver, an insurance salesman, an international photographer, and a reporter. He is best known, however, for his time as the executive editor and publisher of Screw, a position he held since he and Jim Buckley created the tabloid in 1968. A blend of explicit sexual material, political commentary, and social satire, Screw mirrored society and the personality of its outspoken publisher.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyDrugs, Sex & Money on Wall Street
Too much money isn’t always a good thing. Back in the 1980s, Wall Street gave rise to a notorious New York City subculture whose principal goals were sex, drugs, and lots of money. That disconnect between material success and personal happiness was a byproduct of the opulent materialism of the decade. The 21st century ushered in an era of scrutiny and overt criticism of the decades of excess that led to a near collapse of the financial system starting in 2008. There is a feeling on modern Wall Street that you work harder for less money, and a lot less fun. When it comes to a cautionary tales of excess from the 1980s, most of us are inclined to refer to Martin Scorsese's Wolf of Wall Street starring Leonardo DiCaprio. The realities of Wall Street decadence are rarely aired in public. All too often, in a society of consumer pleasuring and narcissistic social media addicts, cautionary tales like that of Philip Hehmeyer, who was the subject of Peter McCabe’s article on sex, drugs, and money in the world of finance originally published in the February 1985 issue of Penthouse magazine, get a revisionist makeover by a society that admires Gordon Gekko and aspires to party like Jordan Belfort.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthyLego Sex
Everything is awesome when it comes to LEGO, even sex. LEGO's immense popularity is demonstrated by its wide usage and representation in diverse formats and cultural works. From movies to TV to sexuality, LEGO has become more than a toy. It is a symbol of change for a generation looking to define itself sexually. LEGO pieces of millions of varieties constitute a defining universal system of acceptance. More than just a metaphor for sex, LEGO is taking its place in pop culture history and the ongoing sexual revolution. Despite the numerous variations in design and purposes of individual pieces, just like human sexuality, each piece remains compatible in some way with the existing pieces.
Frank WhitePublished 8 years ago in FilthyHistory of Erotic Inventions
A technological age that sends men to the moon and drains gas from the seabeds—among other feats—shows a surprising lack of invention in enriching the intimate life of 20th century man. H. G. Wells, if he were to peruse the catalogues of the Western world's proliferating sex shops, would be appalled at the scant originality revealed. In both hardware (metal and wooden tools of sex) and software (creams and stimulants) the century offers strikingly little that is genuinely new. The only important exception was the electric vibrator, named by the Danish sexologists Sten & Inge Hegeler as the No. 1 must for the erotic couple. The vibrator must be accorded the palm as the 20th century's principal contribution to eroticism.
Filthy StaffPublished 8 years ago in FilthySkin Diamond is Raylin Joy
Skin Diamond has had an incredibly successful career unveiling her body, talent, sexuality, and undeniably intoxicating presence for the world to behold. But as Raylin Joy—singer, songwriter, and artist—she unveils something different and far more powerful: her soul.
Natasha SydorPublished 8 years ago in FilthyBringing Back the Bush
When I first started in the business of removing my clothes for money (I include here my time during university when I worked as a dancer in London) I shaved my nether region completely bald. I wasn’t alone, pretty much every single girl I met both in dancing and modeling, and then eventually in porn, were also rocking the Hollywood pussy. It seemed to be the desirable look, not a solitary hair. Clean and smooth. I was also under the impression that this was what men found attractive and of the uneducated opinion that it was more hygienic.
Samantha BentleyPublished 8 years ago in Filthy