Saturday, August 2, 2014

The real reason French women have stopped sunbathing topless

from theguardian





According to French Elle, women have stopped sunbathing topless in France. Two French women reveal why they do, and don't, and how little it has to do with health scares
Brigitte Bardot
Brigitte Bardot sunbathing on the beach in 1960s. Photograph: Bettmann/Corbis
Is topless sunbathing over? It certainly is in France, according to French Elle, if the coverline on its new summer issue is to be believed: "La Fin Du Topless Sur La Plage?" – which translates, verbatim, to "Is this the end of toplessness on the beach?"
According to the magazine the answer is "yes", and the reasons are threefold. First, an increased concern over health and the dangers of skin cancer; second, the "pornified" perception of topless women (indeed Elle suggests the death of the monokini – ie swimming briefs – was linked to the idea that topless women are seen as "loose"); and third, the rise of breast-affiliated activism – chiefly Femen, who use their naked breasts as a means of attracting attention to various causes, and Free the Nipple, a recent campaign that encourages women to go topless to end the stigma surrounding female bodies. "Topless sunbathing was seen by women as a new freedom in St Tropez in the 1960s," says Elle. And now that they're covering up? It's a "worrying sign of a regression in the place of women".
Ever since Brigitte Bardot took off her top on the French Riviera in the 1960s, the correlation between topless sunbathing and women's liberation has been entrenched in French culture as a sign of true equality. Many others followed suit and the breast and beach were reclaimed. News that so few women are now going topless (just 2% of women under 35 said they did) seems extraordinary – and depressing.
But, according to two French women, it's more than a fear of skin cancer and political activism that has kept them covered up.
Alice Pfeiffer, a 29-year-old Anglo-French journalist (who, incidentallydoes sunbathe topless in Biarritz, Guéthary, Monaco and surfing resort Hossegor), thinks the decline is inextricably linked to social media: "Young women in their 20s do it less because they are aware that ... you can end up topless on your own Facebook wall."
Pfeiffer blames "pop-porn culture – Miley Cyrus to American Apparel, ie aggressive naked imagery of young girls" – for the shift in perception of going topless.
"Globalisation and Americanisation of women's portrayal and sexiness in France has pushed away gentle (and generally harmless) French eroticism towards porno, frontal, hyper-sexualised consciousness," she says. "Nudist, beach-like freedom is not what it used to be ... breasts no longer feel innocent or temporarily asexual."
Though probably universal, this attitude towards topless sunbathing has had the biggest impact in France. It is still the norm in Germany, according to one recent survey, which suggests almost a third of Germans and Austrians sunbathe naked. A straw poll in the UK also suggests it's equally de rigueur: one in six women we asked said they have or would sunbathe topless: "I don't think about skin cancer or being photographed or activism when I go topless," says Jess, 32 of north-west London. "I just want an all-over tan."
Valeria Costa-Kostritsky, a Paris-based writer, is 32 and sunbathes (not topless) in Britanny and Côte d'Azur. She says the change hasn't happened overnight: "I've never seen young women doing it loads. But some women over 50 do." 
Pfeiffer agrees that the shift has been generational: "Family albums here can be a strange thing, as you flip through three generations of bourgeois bra-less women." But she maintains that "French women of most ages have, as far as I can remember, sunbathed topless."
What of the links between breasts and activism? Nudity as a political statement is no new thing – indeed, proverbially speaking, the personal has always been political – but, thanks to the internet, it has become a mainstay in the world of political activism: in France "showing your breasts wisely (a dodgy street will always be a dodgy street, so you have to act responsibly) can be a political statement," says Pfeiffer.
Costa-Kostritsky thinks the decline could be linked to health concerns, but these are less about skin damage and more about vanity: "Women of my generation have always been told that the sun was bad for our skin. But add sun damage to gravity and the fear is you won't have pretty breasts."
Pfeiffer agrees: "The ones who do it all look the same – slim and small breasts, which contributes to keeping a social order and aesthetic norm in place."
But both agree that the issue is not one of self-consciousness. "[French women] feel comfortable doing it!" says Pfeiffer. The real reason French women cover up, says Costa-Kostritsky, is because "it makes uncovering them for a lover more interesting".

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Escort charged in Google executive's heroin death

from usatoday

Jessica Guynn, USATODAY8:06 p.m. EDT July 9, 2014


Alix-Tichleman-1920

SAN FRANCISCO — An alleged prostitute has been charged with manslaughter for injecting a Google executive with heroin and then leaving him to die of an overdose on board his yacht.

Alix Tichelman, 26, who is being held on manslaughter and other charges, did not enter a plea Wednesday when she appeared in a Santa Cruz, Calif., courtroom in a red jailhouse jumpsuit. 

Her bail has been set at $1.5 million. She is due back in court next week.

The sensational charges rocked Silicon Valley where Forrest Timothy Hayes, 51, was a longtime — albeit not well-known — executive.

Hayes, who also worked for Apple and Sun Microsystems, died Nov. 23 on his 50-foot yacht, Escape, in the Santa Cruz harbor.
His body was discovered the following morning by the yacht's captain.
Police say security footage from the yacht shows Hayes suffering "medical complications" after shooting up heroin.
Instead of trying to get help for Hayes, Tichelman is seen gathering her belongings including drugs and needles, downing a glass of wine and lowering the blinds before leaving the yacht, Santa Cruz Police Deputy Chief Steve Clark said.
"She showed no regard for the victim," Clark told KXTV-TV in Sacramento.
A Google executive shooting up drugs and hiring prostitutes contrasts sharply with the spic-and-span public image of Silicon Valley as a place where geeks in hoodies sleep under their desks and devote their lives to inventing the next big thing.
But people here say that illicit activity is not uncommon.
Tichelman had an "ongoing prostitution relationship" with Hayes that began when she met Hayes on SeekingArrangement.com, which specializes in connecting "sugar daddies" and "sugar babies," authorities say.
An undercover policeman lured Tichelman back to Santa Cruz by posing as a client and offering her $1,000 for sex.
Tichelman, who was living with her parents in Folsom, Calif., was arrested Friday.
Police say they are also investigating Tichelman's possible involvement in a similar death in a different state.
Her attorney, Diana August, did not respond to a request for comment from USA TODAY.
Assistant District Attorney Rafael Vazquez said authorities could file more serious charges.
"The investigation is ongoing," Vazquez said.
Tichelman, 26, described herself on social media as a makeup artist, writer, model, hustler, exotic dancer and "baddist bitch."
She was fond of posing for pursed-lipped selfies with dyed red hair, tattoos and black lingerie.
Tichelman had a fixation with fictional blood spatter expert and serial killer on cable television's Dexter. And she wrote poetry about drugs, even an ode to heroin.
At least on the surface, Hayes seemed the model of Silicon Valley success.
Married for 17 years to his wife Denise and the father of five children, he started out in the automotive industry in his native Michigan before segueing into tech.
After stints with Sun Microsystems and Apple, he joined Google, where he was an executive with the Internet giant's high-profile X division responsible for experimental "moonshot" projects such as Google Glass and driverless cars.
Google put out a statement late Wednesday: "Our hearts go out to Forrest's family during this difficult time."​
Hayes' other former employers did not respond to requests for comment from USA TODAY.
"You showed us how to be better engineers and a better team. It is wonderful to reflect on all the advice and direction you shared in our short time on Glass," one Google X engineer wrote on a memorial website. "Your impact and focus was tremendous, but your touch for inspiring those around you is what made you an incredible leader."
Friends remembered a decisive man who lived fully.
Fed up with his 40-minute commute from Santa Cruz to Google's headquarters in Mountain View, he bought a hybrid Chevy Volt in order to access car-pool lanes.
"We all know Forrest, he is a very practical guy, yet impatient to fix the issue," wrote Mahesh Krishnaswamy on the memorial website. "He always came up with fairly simple and elegant solutions — very candid in his opinion, yet reasonable in his judgment and caring with his interactions."
A family obituary published in the Santa Cruz Sentinel in January remembered Hayes as someone who "enjoyed spending time with his family at home and on his boat."
Contributing: Marco della Cava, Donna Leinwand Leger and KXTV-TV in Sacramento.



Lawyer: Va. cops want to photograph teen's erect penis

from usatoday

Michael Winter, USA TODAY8:37 p.m. EDT July 9, 2014

Virginia police have obtained a search warrant to photograph the erect penis of a 17-year-old facing felony child-pornography charges for sexting an explicit video to his 15-year-old girlfriend, the boy's lawyer says.
If he doesn't cooperate, the Manassas City Police Department has threatened to take him to a hospital and have him aroused with an injection, attorney Jessica Harbeson Foster toldThe Washington Post.
Police already photographed the teen's genitals against his will when he was arrested in late January, she said.
The boy is due back in juvenile court in Prince William County next Tuesday.
Wednesday night, Manassas City authorities, who previously have had no comment, defended the filing of child-pornography charges and addressed the search warrant.
"It is not the policy of the Manassas City Police or the Commonwealth Attorney's Office to authorize invasive search procedures of suspects in cases of this nature and no such procedures have been conducted in this case," the statement said.
The teen was charged with manufacturing and distributing child pornography after his girlfriend's mother called police. He allegedly sent the girl "pornographic videos ... after being repeatedly being told to stop," the statement added.
Foster said the boy sent the video after she sent him photos of herself; the content has not been described. The girl has not been charged.
Officers seized the boy's iPhone and iPad when they arrested him. He told his aunt he tried to refuse to have police take photos of his genitals but was told that if he didn't cooperate "they would do it by force," his aunt told WRC-TV, which first reported the story.
Late last week, a Northern Virginia magistrate approved a new search warrant seeking for more photographs of the boy's genitals to compare with other evidence.
""The prosecutor's job is to seek justice," Foster told the Post. "How does this advance the interest of the Commonwealth? This is a 17-year-old who goes to school every day, plays football, has never been in trouble with the law before. Now he's saddled with two felonies and the implication that he's a sexual predator."
The boy's court-appointed guardian said Manassas City police want to prosecute alleged child pornography by making their own child porn.

"The irony is incredible," Carlos Flores Laboy told the Post.





Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Sex researchers manage to study the most intimate of human experiences. Here's how.

from vox.com






The Showtime series "Masters of Sex" is a fictional drama about researchers Masters and Johnson, who did critical work on sex starting in the 1950s. Today, researchers have many additional methods for studying sex.Showtime
Sex is one of the most primal, most pleasurable, and — from an evolutionary standpoint — most essential of human functions. So it makes sense that biologists, psychologists, and other scientists would want to study it.
But researchers in this field have a huge obstacle: sex is also one of the most private of human activities. That makes it hard to study.
So how do sex researchers manage to get good data without hiding in people's bedrooms?
In the early days, scientists simply talked to people. This was sex researcher Alfred Kinsey's main technique for his formative studies in the 1940s and '50s. And it turned out that people were happy to share an incredible amount of information.
Kinsey and his team at Indiana University conducted more than 18,000 extensive interviews, with the simple and unprecedented goal of thoroughly documenting sexual behavior in the United States. Some of Kinsey's major — and controversial — findings included that men and women commonly engaged in premarital sex, oral sex, and masturbation. He also reported that 37 percent of men had had a same-sex encounter that included orgasm.
The interviews also helped Kinsey develop a new way to think about sexual orientation: instead of discrete categories of homosexuality and heterosexuality, they proposed the sliding, 0-to-6 "Kinsey Scale."
Over time, however, sex researchers pushed further. The team of William Masters and Virginia Johnson directly observed hundreds of men and women masturbating and having sex in their laboratory, while they documented sexual anatomy and physiology. Their studies, published starting in the 1960s, popularized the idea that sexual response starts with excitement, a plateau, an orgasm, and a resolution phase. (However, only a subset of humans are comfortable having sex in front of spectators, which was definitely a limitation of their methods.)
But that wasn't the only thing going on then. Also in the 1960s, researchers began developing new tools to objectively measure erections of the penis and arousal in the vagina and labia. As these instruments improved, they could pick up small changes in arousal that a human observer would probably miss.
Today, sex researchers use a wide variety of different methods to study human sexuality. Participating in a sex study could include any of these (and others): filling out a survey online, having sex with your partner in a lab, watching pornography while instruments measure your arousal, testing if a drug helps with your sexual problem, or masturbating in an MRI machine.
Here's a rundown of four common methods of modern sex science:

1) Hooking people up to machines — and measuring arousal

Modern sex researchers employ a wide array of seemingly bizarre tools that can help them objectively measure physical arousal — often in response to masturbation or erotic imagery.
Vaginal_photoplethysmograph.cropped
Sarah Sudhoff
These tools can be especially helpful because what people saythey find arousing and what seems to arouse their genitalia doesn't always align.
The vaginal photoplethysmograph shown on the right, for example, measures the blood volume and pulse of the vagina's blood vessels. Another tool that's sometimes used is one that's essentially a thermometer for labia. And penile strain gaugescontinuously measure changes in penis circumference.
One big benefit of these devices is that participants in sex studies can use these instruments by themselves — no researcher has to touch their private parts. That has helped sex researchers attract a broader sample of test subjects with a wider variety of comfort zones, which makes for more representative science.
"You would be surprised how many people from all different backgrounds are willing to participate in this," Erick Janssen told me. He's a sex researcher at The Kinsey Institute at Indiana University. "[These tools] opened up this kind of work to a lot of people."
Sex researchers have used these tools to discover that women's self-reporting of what makes them aroused often differs from what their vaginas say, whereas men's reporting matches up better. For example, heterosexual women have shown equal physical arousal from watching videos of women or men masturbating. Heterosexual men respond more to females on screen. This kind of data seems to support the idea that women's sexuality is generally more fluid than men's. (Researcher Alice Dreger has a nice summary and critique of these studies here.)

2) Simply asking people about sex

Plenty of researchers still do things the old-fashioned way and simply ask lots of people about sex, through interviews and surveys. One major benefit of surveys is that they can identify trends across a broad population.
For instance, the 2010 National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior surveyed 5,865 adolescents and adults. And it spotted some intriguing things. It found that single teens were more likely to use condoms than single adults. And that adults using condoms were as likely to rate their sexual experience as pleasurable as those not using them.
The survey also found a "fake orgasm gap": 85 percent of men reported their partner had an orgasm last time they had sex, while just 64 percent of women reported having one (that gap was too big to be explained away by men who had had sex with men).
That said, asking people how they feel or think is always tricky because there's room for people to skew their answers — consciously or unconsciously — to make them more socially acceptable. (For example, my answer of whether I went to the gym today is probably more reliable than my count of how many times I went to the gym this month. I'm likely to overestimate the latter.)
So, for smaller studies, sex researchers often get quicker self-reports, in the hopes that this will be more accurate. For example, researchers might ask participants to use real-time diaries or put information into smartphone apps during their everyday lives instead of doing retrospective interviews later.
Likewise, in a laboratory experiment, researchers might ask people to rate how sexually aroused they feel while, say, watching pornographic material.

3) Scanning people's brains during sexual activity

Brain imaging is one of the newer tools for studying sex. One example is functional magnetic resonance imaging, fMRI, which measures changes in brain activity in real time. These kinds of studies often involve someone lying in the machine while thinking about something in particular, looking at erotic imagery, or masturbating or receiving sexual stimulation.
Mri
Barry R. Komisaruk via New Scientist
These sorts of brain scanning can sometimes lead to overblown claims by researchers and the media alike. A big problem here is that there's currently no particular brain area or pattern that reliably and specifically measures sexual arousal.
That said, brain imaging can still be useful. For example, Barry Komisaruk, a psychologist at Rutgers University, has been using fMRI to study what happens in the brain during an orgasm. He found that the prefrontal cortex, which is involved in higher order conscious functions, seems to have more activity during orgasm. (Others have found less activity.) This kind of work might someday help people who have difficulty having orgasms.

4) Measuring people's skin conductance during sexual arousal

Another long-standing technique, which has been in use for decades, is to hook someone up to electrodes and measure tiny changes in how much someone has been sweating. Changes in psychological states (including general arousal and perhaps attention) cause tiny changes in sweat. And changes in sweat can be picked up as tiny changes in how the skin conducts electricity, or skin conductanceBecause this technique can be done with subjects fully clothed, it might seem more inviting to more participants.
However, skin conductance isn't specific to only sexual arousal, but arousal in general. "You may find changes during sexual arousal, but also during other emotional states," Janssen told me. It can be handy for sex researchers, especially when used in parallel with other methods.

Special thanks
 to artist Sarah Sudhoff for letting me use her image, which I had to crop to look decent in this layout. You can see it in its full glory as part of her amazing photo series at Wired on sex research tools.