Being the coach is not all bad. Not, at least, in the team events at the international pole-dancing competition:
Art is from that Sex Gangsters game.
Similar Sex Blogging:
ErosBlog posts containing "leda"February 3rd, 2016 -- by Bacchus
The Poledancing CoachBeing the coach is not all bad. Not, at least, in the team events at the international pole-dancing competition: Art is from that Sex Gangsters game. Similar Sex Blogging: July 1st, 2008 -- by Bacchus
Leda And The Swan, More ExplicitWe have treaded before on the well-trod ground of Leda and her excessively friendly swan. But this circa 1740 painting attributed to François Boucher puts things in a more sexually vivid (not to mention, better shaved) perspective than we had formerly seen here on ErosBlog: (Click the image for a larger and uncropped version.) By the way, if you were so inclined you could use this bit of art to mock all the people who complain about the “modern trend” to show hairless pussies in porn. March 21st, 2008 -- by Bacchus
Leda And The Swan, ReduxRemember Leda And The Buttsecks Swan? Well, here’s a more typical nude Leda from alt. binaries. pictures. erotica. vintage:
June 10th, 2007 -- by Bacchus
Leda And The SwanIf your grasp of mythology is sub-par like mine, you might sometimes wonder “What is it with all these images of naked women and swans?” For all the answers you might want, there’s an extended discussion (with many many images) at Silent Porn Star. All you’re going to get for an answer here is a Yeats poem and a strangely menacing rear-entry swan:
December 6th, 2009 -- by Dr. Faustus
More Engines of ProgressA little while back in a post on media technology I mused a bit about audio erotica. Well, this past Friday I managed to get a bit more concrete experience with the format. Picture this, if you will. In the cold, pre-dawn darkness a battered, schmutzy commuter train grinds its way across one of North America’s grittier industrial landscapes. The train is full of morose-looking men and women on their way to a day’s toil in Metropolis. Some doze fitfully, some clutch styrofoam cups of coffee, some scowl at that morning’s Wall Street Journal. You can tell just by looking at them that every last one of them would really rather be somewhere else. Except for one man, who blogs in his spare time under the name of Faustus. Faustus is grinning from ear to ear. Why? Because on Faustus’s hip there rests a media-playing BlackBerry, wired to Faustus by a small set of headphones. And if you could hear inside the buds resting snugly in Faustus’s ears, you could hear something like this:
Yes, indeed. Circlet Press, since 1992 the world’s leading (arguably, world’s only) exclusive purveyor of science fiction and fantasy erotica, has entered the podcast era by putting out a four-part MP3 version of Vinnie Tesla’s story “The Ontological Engine, or, The Modern Leda.” (You can have a lot of fun just mining that title for sly references. The story appeared earlier in the Circlet anthology Up for Grabs: Exploring the Worlds of Gender, edited by Lauren P. Burka.) Mad science, flagellation, Victorians Gone Wild, sex machines, erotically-inquisitive monsters, and the power of female orgasm harnessed to questionable purposes. Seriously, what’s not to love here? To be sure, it does do a lot with the whole Mad Science thing, which discerning ErosBlog readers have perhaps noticed is somewhat up my alley. And perhaps most attractive of all, the first part of four is available for free (mp3 download here with the remaining four parts available for a very modest outlay. If audio erotica or steampunk erotica or Mad Scientists are your thing (or if you just hate your commute and need to liven it up a bit, maybe?), you owe it to yourself to have a look. January 8th, 2003 -- by Bacchus
Because She CanJust in case anyone had not figured this out yet, it’s worth highlighting: Dancers could take over the world any time they decide to do it. |