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The Legend of Saturday Night
by Steven Kurutz
An oral history of the world's most famous disco. *music issue*
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Sex Advice From Accordion Players
by Catherine Adcock
Q: How much is too much masturbation?
A: I don't think there's too much . . . unless it's interfering with your accordion practice.
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In Good Company
by Will Doig
Legendary DJ Mr. Len aims to change hip-hop with his latest title: CEO. *music issue*
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Inspiration Point
by Andy Duncan
A survey of responses to the "what music puts you in the mood?" question on Nerve Personals. *music issue*
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Smut City
by Ryan Kennedy
The filthiest music in the world: Baltimore club.*music issue*
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Toronto Calling
by Bruce LaBruce
Meet the Hidden Cameras, Canada's premier gay socialist sex-worshipping indie-pop symphony. *music issue*
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The Weekly Pic
by Jason Wishnow
Our favorite online video. This week: geek fantasies run amok in a film titled . . . Geek Fantasies.
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Don't Croon at Me, John Mayer
by Amy Keyishian
I'm onto your game. *music issue*
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Let It Be. . . Naked
by Grant Stoddard
Say you want a revelation about the Beatles' sex lives? Tony Bramwell has a few. *music issue*
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Scanner
by Ada Calhoun
Mint condoms, fishing-as-pornography, and racecar driving sexpot Danica Patrick.
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Postcards From Fist City
by Kate Sullivan
The country lyricists' guide to dating, mating and beating down the piece of trash next door. *music issue*
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Anarchy in the People's Republic
by Justin Clark
My punk ambassadorship to China. *music issue*
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Horoscopes
by Neal Medlyn
Your week in sex.
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That Obscure Object of Desire
by Margaret Wappler
We're condescended to, charmingly, by the authors of The Rock Snob's Dictionary. *music issue*
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Miss Information
by Erin Bradley
The orally averse boyfriend; when your partner's sexual past is tough to swallow.
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Sex Advice From . . . Star Wars Fans
by William Bright
Q: What Star Wars fantasy is best played out in the bedroom?
A: Anything with a chase involving lots of male stormtroopers.
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Afternoon Delight
by Patryce Bak
You wouldn't get out of bed either.
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Bodies, Rest and Motion
by Ron Amato
Men of leisure.
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Film Reviews
by Bilge Ebiri and Logan Hill
The Exorcist prequel should have been banished; Tell Them Who You Are is a documentary tribute enlivened by real-life director-subject squabbling. Plus, Date DVD.
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Sex Advice From . . . Music Critics
by Seb Matthews
Q: Describe a new sexual position you've created.
A: I call it the "Rhythm Nation 2005," inspired by my choreography idols Janet Jackson and Paula Abdul. *music issue*
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Quiet Riot
by Adam Kaufman
Four Tet evokes adventure and romance, not just another guy with a laptop. *music issue*
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t
speaks volumes about America's conflicted attitudes toward sex that the
country's most profitable film tells the story of a woman whose
clitoris is lodged in her throat. Produced in 1972 for $25,000, Deep Throat
has since grossed more than $600 million — proof that the only better
publicity than public controversy is an actual obscenity trial.
When Deep Throat
was released, it was the first mainstream film to feature hardcore sex.
While hundreds of thousands of Americans waited in line in broad
daylight to see star Linda Lovelace practice her considerable talents,
the Nixon administration used outrage against the film to distract from
the war in Vietnam. Sound familiar?
As the forthcoming documentary Inside Deep Throat illustrates, Deep Throat
didn't just spawn an industry, but a culture war that still rages.
After teasing apart the skein of reactions — titillation, disgust, and
nostalgia — from 800 hours of footage, directors Randy Barbato and
Fenton Bailey (Party Monster) told us how they did it. — Justin Clark
This is the first NC-17 movie released by Universal since 1990, an accomplishment in itself. Whom did you have to fellate?
Bailey: Brian Grazer, the producer, is the one that made that happen. He has a lot of weight at Universal.
Barbato: There was never any discussion about what could or couldn't be in the film. They were very cool.
You mention in the press notes that the first time you saw Deep Throat, you were so bored you turned it off.
Bailey:
We weren't bored, we were mortified. It was surprising because we could
sit around watching incredibly violent movies, but watching sex was
something we couldn't handle as a group.
Was it difficult to comprehend the spirit of a more sexually naïve age?
Bailey:
We took our marching orders from the original movie. There's an aspect
of documentary about it, because Linda Lovelace was a real person who
could do this amazing thing. You've said Deep Throat
succeeded because it was a comedy, so that people felt comfortable
talking about it. Do mainstream filmmakers still need an excuse to put
sex in a film?
Barbato: Hollywood made a choice
back in the '70s to go for violence over sex. I don't think filmmakers
need an excuse, but sex by and large isn't what we expect from the
movie industry, it's become a privatized experience.
Bailey:
Sex is such an integral part of our lives, whatever people say. It's
odd it has been so taken out of cinema. It should be more noteworthy
when sex isn't in the movie than when it is. The director of Deep Throat,
Jerry Damiano, wasn't trying to be the founding father of the adult
movie biz. He was just trying to introduce sex into mainstream movies.
You mention that a lot of acclaimed filmmakers started out making porn
movies. What influence has porn had on recent mainstream film?
Barbato:
I think back then, there were more people behind the scenes who
graduated to the mainstream, directors like Wes Craven and Coppola. Now
we see more people in front of the cameras graduating. Today it's Jenna
Jameson and Paris Hilton.
What about its influence on reality TV?
Bailey:
It has everything to do with reality TV. Linda Lovelace can be seen as
an early example of a reality star. She's an ordinary person with the
kind of challenge you might see on Fear Factor. Instead of
eating a bug, you now have to swallow this. It's also interesting that
1972, when the movie came out, was the first time surveillance cameras
were put up in Times Square, though they were taken down within a year
because of protests. Also, the Loud family was put on PBS [in the
series An American Family], and that was the prototype of a documentary reality series.
You draw a connection between the opening of Deep Throat
in June 1972 and Nixon's landslide re-election five months later, but
the movie was ultimately vindicated, despite the attacks against it.
Should the forces of sexual liberation today take heart?
Barbato:
The forces of sexual liberation today are so bogged down with the
commercialism of sex. There was a hope in the 1970's that today has
become so cynical that it gets confused. Largely because of the huge
commercial success of Deep Throat, the role sex plays in
selling everything creates a moral dilemma in terms of people's need
for sexual liberation. Sex is everywhere but nowhere. It's everywhere
we look, but our dialogue exists behind closed doors. Add that to the
role sex plays in the commercial world and it's very complex and
confusing, even thirty years after the Pill.
Bailey:
I don't think there is much hope, because the battle has shifted.
Thirty years ago the government was the monster. Today it is ourselves.
Even while they're providing pornography on hotel televisions,
corporations will publicly freak out about it. There's an
ever-increasing divide between what people get publicly and privately.
Your movie doesn't focus much on Chuck Traynor, Linda Lovelace's
husband and manager, whom Lovelace later publicly accused of
brutalizing her and forcing her to do porn at gunpoint. What
conclusions did you draw about Lovelace and Traynor's relationship
while making the documentary?
Barbato: Linda was
definitely a victim, though based on people we talked to, it doesn't
seem like there was a gun to her head. That's not to belittle what it
meant to be the victim of spousal abuse, especially back then, before
the concept entered the zeitgeist. Chuck Traynor went on to be with
Marilyn Chambers, who also learned how to perform deep throat via
hypnosis techniques. But her stories of life with Chuck are very
different. n°
Inside Deep Throat opens in select cities February 11.
©2005 Justin Clark and Nerve.com.
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