May 24th, 2012
sexzineblog

FRENCH ANTI-SMOKING ADS PUSH THE ENVELOPE.

Sex sells - no doubt, and the French do it better than most!  But can it be used as a deterrent just as effectively?

The campaign, devised for a pressure group supporting the rights of non-smokers is trying to discourage young people from smoking. The caption reads, “Smoking is to be a slave to tobacco” and shows a young boy and girl kneeling in front of a man as if being forced into oral sex.

The agency behind the ads says only a shock campaign can make any sort of impact, but it has been called everything from “grotesque” to “scandalous” by their detractors. They say that is “inadmissible” that an image implying underage sex should be exploited, even in a good cause.

What do you think?

April 10th, 2012
sexzineblog

AMERICAN APPAREL: THE NEIGHBOURHOOD SLUT OF THE FASHION INDUSTRY.

We’ve featured American apparel ads on here before - exactly because of their sexual nature. We’re fascinated by the ways sex is used in all mediums; from art to film to advertising, so we’re particularly interested in this recent story:

It appears that AA may have pushed it’s luck a  little bit too far according to the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA), who’ve banned their recent campaign which features semi-naked young women, after investigating a complaint that it is “pornographic and exploitative”.

The part that we find particularly interesting is that the ASA said the ads featured a “voyeuristic and amateurish quality which served to heighten the impression that the ads were exploitative of women and inappropriately sexualised young women”.

To their defence, American Apparel rejected the accusations, arguing that the images featured “real, non-airbrushed, everyday people” who were mainly not professional models.

Whichever way you feel about it, you gotta admit that they’re pushing the boundaries of the “sex sells” mantra. It seems to us that AA is at the forefront of companies who are tapping into sexual niches (such as ‘self shots’, amatuer and voyuerism) rather than just relying on the mainsream airbrushed-poppy-perfectly-photographed approach.

How else will companies explore our ever evolving sexual landscape, and what does it say about our sexual attitudes in society? We’ll have to wait and find out…

What do you think about the American Apparel ads? Do you think they exploit or sexualise women any more than other forms of advertising? Send us a your thoughts!


April 3rd, 2012
sexzineblog

TAKE A FEW STEPS BACK FROM YOUR SCREEN.

Tony Moriello’s piece “2 o’clock” encourages us to step away from our computer screens and re-interpret what we see. It is part of a new exhibition at the Museum of Sex called Universe of Desire that examines human desire as seen through the lens of digital behaviours:

“Type. Swipe. Search. Upload. Download. Post. Stream. These are the new verbs of desire. Our most intimate thoughts, fantasies, and urges are now transmitted via electronic devices to rapt audiences all over the world. These transmissions—from sexts to private webcam feeds—are anonymous yet personal, individual yet collective, everywhere and nowhere, and they are contributing to the largest sexual record to date. In short, desire has gone viral.”

As human behavior becomes more clickable than physical, we can’t help but wonder what this means for our most basic, biological impulse: sex.

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A blog about the changing place of sex in media, art and society in Australia and the world.

Sexzine is a side project of the beautiful people at SexToys.com.au

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