September
Getting Off
I talked to men and women all across the country
about pornography. Are you ready for what they
said?
I was at a dinner party recently with the CEO of
a company involved in the video infrastructure of
Verizons FiOS service. He told me (in gory
detail) how the capacity constraint on the system
is quite literally being driven by $14.99
pay-per-view pornography.
He was understandably amused by the stupidity of
guys across the country, who eagerly consume porn
moviesonly to turn them off after an average
of eighteen minutes. A porn purchase lasts 15
percent as long as a two-hour movie and still
drives the capacity requirements of the entire
system.
It is difficult to overstate the role that
pornography plays in American life (especially, one
could argue, in Utah, the nations most
prolific downloader of online porn), or the
hysteria that surrounds it.
Is Internet pornography really turning us all
into sex addicts? Will boys who grow up on
degrading porn be unable to form healthy sexual
relationships as adults? Is repetitive porn viewing
really changing our brains?
And, most importantly in my mind, are weas
guystalking honestly about any of this? Are
we ready to have a frank discussion about the role
that online pornography plays in our lives? Are we
ready to man up and tell the truth?
I recently set out to speak with readers and
thought leaders about pornography in modern
America. The response, which you can read below,
was overwhelming. I invite you to continue the
conversation in the comments area.
What is going on to create such an
accelerating and insatiable appetite for porn among
men in our country? You clearly have no idea how
much of 1985-1989 I spent looking at the same three
1978 Penthouses. Joel Stein, Time
The inherent problem with porn, from a
female perspective, is there is minimal kissing or
tenderness, much less sensuality. How many women
want to wear high heels to bed? I would like to
view what transpired between Rhett and Scarlett
after he carried her up those stairs. Cherie
Welch, Atlanta, Georgia
If you have to ask whether porn is good or
bad, then you already have the answer. The question
is how bad? Todd Dagres, Spark Capital and
owner of Twitter
A couple of years ago, this tall, very
fun, smart, and pretty 22-year-old woman told me
shed been with men her age at least twice who
couldnt have sex with her because she did not
look like, or do in bed, what theyd seen in
pornography. How depressing is that? Margery
Eagan, Boston Herald columnist and talk radio
host
An older gentleman friend told me that all
that his 19-year-old grandson (who is a university
student and lives with him) did with his time was
visit porn websites online and that he, the
grandfather, was convinced that it was why the
grandson was failing at the university. In fact,
the grandson had viewed so many of the sites that
the computer became unusable; it had become
infested with sexually explicit spam. He said he
couldnt decide whether to throw the computer
or his grandson out. Antwone Fisher, author
of Finding Fish: A Memoir and How to Tie a Tie
Porn just is. Its not inherently
good or bad. You cant legislate desire. As
soon as photography was invented, the French
immediately began taking dirty pictures. As soon as
the Internet was invented, Americans (and everyone
else) immediately began sending dirty pictures. I
think anything that is consensual, respectful, and
above the age of 18 is okay. The problem comes when
women are objectified and degraded. I think
its a huge problem that encourages and leads
to violence. Unfortunately, thats where a lot
of porn has gone. And the porn involving children
is horrific. Does this mean that porn is inherently
bad? Im not sure. Michael Kamber, New
York Times photojournalist
Personally, I think theres cause for
concern, but I dont think porn is the
problem. The concern I have is with the lack I see
of rational vocabulary about sex among young men
and men in general. Its easy enough to find
porn of somebody having sex with themselves, or
with lawn furniture, or whatever, and always has
been. But if thats all it is, sheer
titillation and masturbation, then everybody
involved is ultimately harmed in some way;
consumers, distributors, and producers alike. My
observation is that theres precious little
context for young men trying to figure this all
out. And a lot of times, that precious little
context is being provided by men who are still
trying to figure it out themselves, or worse yet,
by people who are profiting by exploiting the
confusion. Todd Mauldin, Bluesman, Reno,
Nevada
The hysteria around pornography is just
not useful. A good bit about it is an ugly
side-effect of the negative part of modern
feminism; unattractive women who cant get
what they want, and instead of doing the logical
thing, doing the best with what they have, they
demonize male sexuality.
We live in what are evolutionarily
novel times. Men evolved to be visualit
was part of continuing the human race. Women
evolved to be more circumscribed about who they
have sex withthey have a far greater cost per
sex act (potentially being pregnant for nine months
and then having a child to raise). Male sexuality
isnt wrong or nefariouswe just live in
times where there are forces playing on our evolved
preferences.
Similar to the hysteria about porn consumption,
people are beside themselves about young people
hooking up. Well, at a certain point,
many or most will tire of that and want something
more. And then they will go look for that. You can
become addicted to lots of thingsfood, porn,
shopping, collecting action figures. If its
disrupting your life, keeping you from what you
want, its a problem. Maybe not all men will
want to connect or to develop themselves to a point
where they can connect. This is their choice. Some
will. And its up to parents to do the actual
work of parenting to see that their kids turn out
in a way where they have values, and can make
choices that enhance their lives. Amy Alkon,
syndicated advice columnist, advicegoddess.com;
author, I SEE RUDE PEOPLE: One womans battle
to beat some manners into impolite society
The scale of porn is huge. What causes the
acceleration? Its not abundant supply.
Its demand. Porn and teenaged boys have been
inseparable since the beginning of time. The
Internet offers more extreme porn than the
airbrushed Playboy images I grew up on, but
thats not a reason to get unduly riled.
Im much more concerned about porn and adult
males, many of whom seem to use it as a substitute
for real relationships. Substitution quickly
becomes distance, and distance becomes an
unbridgeable chasmand the porn-obsessed
masturbator develops an unhealthy view of sex and
women. Millions and millions of sick men out there.
If I were an American woman, Id be very
cautious. Jesse Kornbluth, former AOL
editor-in-chief
I dont know how we put the genie
back in the bottle on this one. I mean, its
nice that the courts are taking a look at teen
sexting, but what really has to be faced is the way
were seeing a pornification of the
culturewhere young men are taught that the
objectification of the self, the marketing of the
sexual persona to others in slick media formats, is
normal.
If you stand in a CVS and look at the magazine
rack, youll see guy after guy who could be an
Ultimate Fighter or porn star, and it feels like
the message coming off the culture is that to
succeed, or just to live, we all need to turn into
killer porn stars; with tattoo sleeves and no
privacy. If you look at the blog (NSFW) Guys With
iPhones, I feel like what you see are picture after
picture of guys looking to see if they fit that
mold yet. And I dont think that blog is
hotthose guys all look lonely. Im
actually very pro-porn and erotica, but what I
wonder is, where is all this loneliness coming from
in the booming age of so-called social media? I
think that loneliness is more of a problem than the
porn which, to my mind, is just a symptom.
Alexander Chee, novelist
Sex sex sex; Americas favorite
neurosis. While I always support relative,
appropriate boundaries and a parents right to
determine those for their family, we too often jump
to the presumption that we all agree that porn is
at its moral core a negative. Whether its
wrong or detrimental or
anti-progressive (a catch-all for
feminist, gender sturdy, marxist, etc. critique), I
cannot help but be aware of Foucault. The
archeology of attitudes on porn in America begins
in Puritanism.
If you think that is reductionist, I listen, but
refer you to psychotherapy; sometimes a core issue
is just that simple, despite the layers of
complexity it engenders. We are not supposed
to have sex or, certainly, wrong
sex as defined by any number of social codes
stemming from a 1,500-year history of cultural
repression.
Consider this: in this code, we are not
supposed to be gay. Period. We all know that
has hung in our emotional philosophies since they
burned us fags out of the culture by the millions.
Thankfully, the social progeny of the
Enlightenment/American philosophy of liberty and
equality is changing this slowly.
My short answer to why porn proliferates is that
its about time we expressed our sexuality in
its natural fullness again. Porn is the toe in the
water made possible by new technology.
Regarding teens and porn
every family must
set their guidelines. I myself have no problem with
the natural sexuality of children, provided it is
guided and channeled and not abused. Porn provides
fantasy images, and I do not find that the majority
of people, young or old, mistake it for either
reality or the same expectations from the visual
fantasy to the real relationship, other than
wanting to try a technique discovered.
The problem with addiction and unrealistic
sexuality comes from the absence of fathers in the
post-industrial revolutionary world, and the
narcissistic abdication of parents and elders from
their traditional jobs as trainers and mentors.
Fill that ancient and human need in children and
teens and watch additions recede. Teach people how
to be a full human being and watch the freedom of
their exploits in reality. Bennett Schneider,
Los Angeles
Not only is most of it deeply misogynist,
but it provides both men and women an incredibly
unrealistic sense of what sexuality is. Porn has
nothing to do with actual, real-life sex, which
isabove alla deeply emotional
experience, charged with shame and desire and anger
and sadness and ecstasy. Porn is more like an
infomercial for Sex: the Rowing Machine! Id
hate to be a teenage boy inundated by pornit
just makes them feel inadequate and angry and
dismissive of women and their desires. Steve
Almond, author of Candy Freak
Porn addiction will one day be recognized
as a major public health crisis on the scale of
alcohol and tobacco abuse. My primary concern is
the use of porn for sex education. For many people,
the first exposure to the intimate realm of sexual
behavior is these selfish male fantasies which use
female bodies with no reciprocity. We who advocate
an enlightened sexual ethic find the messages in
porn contradict true intimacy between couples. My
second concern hurts fewer people, but far more
deeply. The exploitation of young women and men who
work in the porn industry is a sickness fed by high
demand and all porn users bear some
responsibility. Haji Shearer, Fatherhood
Advocate
Clearly, there is a lot to say about how
insidious and deleterious porn can be for women.
But then theres the whole argument that I
even hear from my friends and peers about
consensual porn use etc., everyone wants to say it
doesnt hurt them, just others. Anyway, I tend
to go with the idea that sexual health is good for
men (for themselves and their
relationshipsstraight or gay) and the flood
of pornography isnt helping the sexual health
of boys. All that being said, I think theres
another question for you about how you lead into
this and whether you discuss the idea that
weve known for a long time; that pervasive
pornography has hurt women and girls but we
havent stepped up for that, and now we step
up because it isnt good for boys
I
think you can find a way to say something about
both. This is what I think you are referring to
overall (and you are not alone) for every time you
discuss manhood, you will get the what about
women? question. Its legit because of
the context in which we live. Lonna Davis,
Family Violence Prevention Fund
Porn is a core economic driver in Southern
California, and a huge driver of hardware and
software innovation on the internet. The press
focuses on the victims in the industry,
which is undoubtedly true, but Jenna Jameson and
Jenny McCarthy have used it as a starting point for
more mainstream careers. The empowerment of women
has been pushed real hard. In my view, one of the
unintended consequences of that empowerment is that
porn, strip clubs, etc., have become socially
acceptable career paths. I could handle most
anything, but the thought of one of my children in
that business may be more than I could take.
Andy Oleszczuk, former Senior Vice President
responsible for cable channel development, Tribune
Company
My concern about the rise of
pornographyor the rise in its ease of access,
especially onlineis that it desensitizes both
boys and girls, it makes serious activities casual
and thereby serious relationships casual, and it
rushes kids into matters that need maturity, if not
adulthood. In different terms, it simply raises the
pressure by raising the exposure. Does it cause
more sex? More babies? I dont knowand
one needs to look empirically and not just react
emotionally. But in a world where it is harder than
ever for kids to be kids, I worry that the
pressures only increase. Rick Melvoin,
Headmaster, Belmont Hill School for boys
Im probably the wrong guy to ask
about porn because I dont see nearly enough
of it. Truly, Im abashed when Im among
men who clearly do see their share, because I
havent kept up, and it can be borderline
embarrassing: flashback to talking to upperclassmen
in high school and not wanting to reveal that
youre still a virgin. No man wants to be seen
as a prude
Aside from the well-documented and galling
exploitation of those who work in porn, my general
complaint with it has always been that porns
so damn artless, so crass. Fast food versus slow
food.. .Now that Im raising boys, I expect
Ill get more and more sensitive to how
ubiquitous it is, because I guess I do believe that
a steady diet of porn warps guys expectations
about sex. Yeah, I get the argument that a little
arousal, self-abuse might be cathartic, and
fantasies are better than rape. But I think porn
generally encourages objectification of
womens bodies and leaves boys obsessed with
sex acts/techniques rather than getting to know the
person theyre having sex with.
I can recall guys for whom porn got in the way
of real discovery. They thought porn was showing
them something/spilling secrets, but it left them
kind of screwed up/unable to even approach women. I
dont suppose Ill be able to keep my
boys from it, but I will discourage it, although
maybe at some point Ill watch it with them so
I can express what I dont like about it:
Its that so much of it is crude, ultimately
numbing, that it steals power from something that
should be great in your life. Porn cheapens sex,
and if we all want to boast of cheap sex once or
twice, we want better than cheap sex for
all-time. Brad Wieners, Executive Editor
Mens Journal
Dont forget the porn mongers at the
S.E.C. While the country is crumbling and
theyre supposed to fix it, these guys are
spending eight hours a day surfing and downloading
from porn sites. Kevin Williamson, Los
Angeles, California
Porn is the biggest business on the
Internet. There is currently an epidemic of men
across America who prefer masturbating to porn over
sex with their partners. Adolescents and children
are overexposed and overstimulated. While I see
nothing wrong in erotic material per sethere
are couples who enjoy porn
togethertheres a difference between
eroticism and inundation. You could land in any
major city in the U.S. in the morning and have a
willing sexual playmate that evening. The Internet
has distilled the porn industry, strengthened its
breadth and reach. Terry Real, author of I
Dont Want To Talk About It
Just imagine the pressure inexperienced
teens must feel, particularly those exposed to
hardcore porn. They know its a fantasy, but
how could they not be affected, consciously or
otherwise, when their first time/first relationship
finally arrives? As if there wasnt enough
pressure already (longer! stronger!), pornography
simply adds one more layer of distortion (bite me!
spank it!) and misinformation (hurts so good!) that
impressionable teens dont need. On the bright
side, maybe porn has an intimidation factor that
will frighten some youngsters into keeping their
pants on a bit longer? Naw
Jeffrey
Wallace, writer and father, Orange Country,
California
Were asking the wrong questions
about porn: How bad is it? Is it morally wrong? The
discussion Id like to see us having,
especially as it relates to teenage boys, is about
the emotional impact of porn
what do boys
get from viewing or using porn? What is
the charge (not just physically, but emotionally as
well)? Are they aware of any feelings of
disconnection, either before, during, or after
viewing/using porn? Do boys feel that porn impacts
their actual relationships with girls and women? If
so, how? Would boys look differently at porn if
they were aware that many of the girls/women who
are shown in the images/videos are likely not
enjoying the experience? Would they experience porn
differently if they knew some of the girls/women
are coerced or forced into being objects for their
desire? John Badalament, author of The Modern
Dads Dilemna
For me
I would rather approach from
a pragmatic place rather than a values place.
Approaching the subject from a good or bad place is
engaging with parts of the psyche that are not (in
my opinion) going to help someone face honestly
what is going on in their relationship to porn.
In my life, it triggers the years that I
discovered porn as a prepubescent born again
Christian. Porn and sex were entirely entwined with
guilt, shame, fear of my mother and God, and fear
of becoming my father. It continues to be difficult
to disentangle myself from early associations; dark
and dirty, filled with cigarette smoke, the smell
of body odor, and emotional paralysis.
Was it good? Bad? YES. Absolutely. Making a
judgment call about porn creates a clear line in
the sand that, in my experience, has been
ineffective in helping men come to a healthy
understanding of themselves and others.
Did it work? Yes and no. It provided an escape
into fantasy out of a life that was often very dark
and scary. And, at the same time, I developed a
relationship with my own body and the bodies of
women that was not tied very well to reality and
definitely harmed my relationships
all the
way to today.
Does porn work in the culture? For whom? When?
How? It most definitely does not work well for a
vast number of women who perform in the sex
industry. In my opinion, it does not work well for
boys trying to develop a realistic and functional
way of creating intimacy with women. It may work in
some adult relationships where a consenting couple
chooses to actively spice up their
bedroom life. It may work for some men as a stress
relief and a way to engage the right brain in a way
that they are not encouraged to do in our culture.
It also easily becomes addictive and compulsive
(the SEC workers are a great example).
It works well to help boys and men create a dual
existence a kind of split personality which I
believe strongly translates into a lack of
emotional integrity or authenticity. Men lie about
porn; to themselves, to each other, and to their
partners. This lying becomes a habit
a way of
interacting with the world. And I believe that any
transition to a new masculinity is going to AT
LEAST require that we get honest about it and ask
ourselves
is this WORKING in our lives as
men? And, what needs to change in order to make it
work better? Boysen Hodgson, Mankind
Project
©2011, Tom
Matlack
* * *
While all complain of our ignorance and
error,
everyone exempts himself. - John Glanville
Tom Matlack,
"I am a sucker for real-life heroes, particularly
the ones that get overlooked. My profile work grew
from my first published piece, THE RACE, which
describes my own life altering experience in an
athletic event barely worthy of the local paper.
Coaches and athletes in the sport of rowing were my
initial focus before expanding to mainstream sports
like professional basketball. Music, film, and
television have proven fertile ground for heroic
journeys of a different, but related, kind.
Finally, I have continued to write bits and pieces
of my own story in an attempt to inspire and
enlighten."
Thomas Matlack was Chief
Financial Officer of The Providence Journal until
1997. He was the lead investor in Art Technology
Group, which reached $5 billion in market
capitalization in 2001. He founded and ran his own
venture firm, started companies like American
Profile (sold to Disney for $260 million) and
Telephia (sold to Neilson for $560 million), before
turning to writing. His work has appeared in
Rowing News, Boston Common, Boston
Magazine, Boston Globe Magazine and
Newspaper, Wesleyan, Yale,
Tango, and Pop Matters.
In 2008, Matlack founded
www.TheGoodManProject.org,
with his venture capital partner James Houghton. He
has appeared on national and local television and
radio as well as print across the country. The fall
of 2009, Matlack led a non-conventional book tour
for The
Good Men Project that
started inside Sing Sing and ended in Hollywood
with a screening of THE GOOD MEN PROJECT
documentary film followed by a panel discussion
including Matt Weiner and Shepard
Fairey.
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