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Everyone can have their own personalized, algorithmically curated e-stash. As porn and porn-adjacent content became available at the tap of a touchscreen (Pornhub launched in 2007, Instagram in 2010), sex bled into pop culture with less frequency. It was a slow death, brought forth in part by the internet’s tightening grip on our personal lives and the media’s recognition of women as … people. The decline of early-aughts horny culture can be attributed to a few main developments. Both shows employ intimacy coordinators, whom directors routinely bring in to protect actors “ doing hyper-exposed work.” Euphoria takes the opposite approach with flashy soft-core cinema, Skinemax with an HBO budget.
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Shows like Normal People are lauded for their “realistic” sex scenes - slow to start, sometimes nervous, and free from cinematic orgasms.
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Sex still sells, of course, but it’s packaged in self-awareness, layered with years of internet discourse about consent and kink and modern intimacy. Think: Axe commercials where women want to have sex with you at the grocery store, buddy comedies about taking a road trip to lose your virginity, Maxim covers teasing a list of the best outdoor gear with the tagline “ Spank Mother Nature!” Women sported low-rise pants and high-rise thongs, and men wore trucker hats that suggested careers in adult film. The sheer horniness of the aughts was unique from other eras in its total lack of subtlety, distinctly raunchy in a way that has fallen out of vogue.
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would suggest) mostly because of the fetish-ization of black male sexuality, but also because of the greater socioeconomic workings of the country.Photo-Illustration: by Vulture Photos by Warner Bros, Kevin Kane/WireImage, K Wright/New Line/Kobal/Shutterstock, Moviestore/Shutterstock and Summit Entertainmentĭuring the 2000s, pop culture’s depictions of sex tended toward goofy, as if Hollywood had been run by teenage boys with cartoon eyes popping out of their skulls and mile-long tongues hanging out of their mouths. So in conclusion African American men make up a disproportionate amount of the porn community (much higher representation than the population in the U.S. As such, people who have the opportunity to do other things successfully or people whose communities are the harshest critics tend to stay away from careers in the pornographic industry (this is part of the reason that we don't see many Indian or Asian male porn-stars - there also isn't necessarily a strong demand for them in the U.S.). Pornography for the most part is seen as low-rent in American culture and as such there is a high level of stigma attached to people who chose to make porn their profession. Meaning that African-Americans (read- in America) for the most part do not usually have the opportunity (or do not take advantage of said opportunities) for different means of economic advancement. I believe the poster that spoke of the idea that more blacks being okay with (for lack of a better phrase) doing porn is based on socioeconomic factors that affect African-Americans, not necessarily anyone of African decent. I also thought it was assumed that most things posted about sociologically intensive topics on an internet message bored were immediately thought to be conjecture and as such taken with a grain of salt. I think it is difficult to try and track down any factual information regarding this kind of topic.