Category Archives: ARCHIVE BLOGGERY

Porn Trial

I’ve previously mentioned Myles Jackman (pictured below), aka Obscenity Lawyer, who is currently defending a legal case that you should be interested in if you’ve ever seen a kinky photo. That’s right. All you need to do is to receive an unsolicited picture of an entirely legal BDSM activity in your inbox and you could end up in court. Here’s a snippet from Obscenity Lawyer’s blog post on this week’s case:

“Today the Crown Prosecution Service will attempt to persuade a jury that images of fisting should be classified as “extreme pornography” with the risk to the defendant of three years in custody, inclusion on the sex offenders’ register and damage to his personal and professional standing. All for a type of image which is commonly viewed, of an activity which is itself is legal to perform and is even discussed in the book Fifty Shades of Grey…”

See Obscenity Lawyer’s excellent blog here, find out more about how Backlash is helping people here, and watch how things progress through the Twitter hashtag #porntrial.

Pedestal Pics

Hello, my dears. It’s been a while. I’ve been working on a project that has been taking up nearly all my time, so apologies if you haven’t received replies to emails, texts or desperate screams for help in recent months. I did, however, get to the last Club Pedestal. Here I am with Ms Nikki, who has been my partner in crime – actual crime – since we were twisted teens at a religious school. Click here for more photos from Pedestal.

Better Porn

Alain de Botton is going to make some porn. Yes, that Alain de Botton. The writer and philosopher. I have absolutely no idea what to make of this:

“…We shouldn’t have to choose between being human and being sexual (the Ancient Greeks knew this very well). Ideally, porn would excite our lust in contexts which also presented other, elevated sides of human nature – in which people were being witty, for instance, or showing kindness, or working hard or being clever – so that our sexual excitement could bleed into, and enhance our respect for these other elements of a good life. No longer would sexuality have to be lumped together with stupidity, brutishness, earnestness and exploitation; it could instead be harnessed to what is noblest in us.

The real problem with current pornography is that it’s so far removed from all the other concerns which a reasonably sensible, moral, kind and ambitious person might have. As currently constituted, pornography asks that we leave behind our ethics, our aesthetic sense and our intelligence when we contemplate it. Yet it is possible to conceive of a version of pornography which wouldn’t force us to make such a stark choice between sex and virtue – a pornography in which sexual desire would be invited to support, rather than permitted to undermine, our higher values…”

Yes, I’ve banged on about the concept of fairtrade porn for years – and, of course, there are the inevitable problems of exploitation of workers at the production end and banal, populist content at the consumer end when capitalism meets eroticism – but I’m not sure what de Botton means by “better porn”. Sexuality is something infinitely eclectic. What turns one person on will turn another off. The sacred and the profane are kinks in their own right.

Material that excites us should certainly be produced ethically, but the subject matter of fantasy itself is a more complicated area. I agree that profit often boils mainstream pornography down to a lowest-common-denominator, fairground-mirror reflection of human desire that sells to the widest, least-demanding, highest paying audience, but there are bits and pieces of far better porn out there that suit individual kinks and preferences better than the one-size-fits-all (albeit uncomfortably, with a lot of lube) model that’s so prominent in modern wank-fodder and that society is – in de Botton’s own words – “awash” with. I’m all for his noble mission to make better porn, but he should probably watch some of the good stuff first. It’s hard to know what we should point his stiffy at without us knowing his personal peccadilloes, but have you got any recommendations for him? List them in the comments section…

Click here for the Indy article on Alain de Botton’s “Better Porn”.