Biggy |
06-22-2007 06:36 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by After Shock Media
(Post 12644045)
Just read article now, do not see what is fucked up about it.
Unless they spin in it some horrid way and grab just the fucked up people and misquote people. Or are you that worried about people learning about the industry?
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I just find it messed up because of the amount of people out there who blame site operators for children viewing porn. Hence the whole government wanting search data info from Google and COPA -- then you have MTV -- home of TRL, my Super Sweet 16, etc -- popular shows that totally revolve around underage audiences imo. I've seen some of the other True Life documentaries, many times it features individuals still in high school and themes around high school. I dont have true to life demographics, but I would imagine a significant portion of their viewers are well under 18, and theyre essentially doing a program looking for people who work in the sex industry,
Here's an excerpt from the article:
?Do you work at a store that only sells sexually explicit content and products?? MTV said in the release. ?Are you a stripper at a big city nightclub? Part of a production crew that shoots adult films? Making big money as an escort in Las Vegas? Starring in your own daily sex show online? Do you work in a factory that manufactures sexual toys? Do you hide your job or flaunt it? MTV wants to know what your life in the industry is really like.?
Am I too conservative or what? Maybe I just find it interesting people blame us for it, when it's really mainstream media forcing it down their throats. I've always felt this was a product for adults, intended for adults. This TV program is counterintuitive to that imo.
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