A Hummer In The Subway
At certain off-peak hours, you get long gaps between trains. There’s plenty of time for a skilled professional who knows where the gaps in the camera coverage are:
Artwork is by Tonton Ficelle.
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November 10th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
A Hummer In The SubwayAt certain off-peak hours, you get long gaps between trains. There’s plenty of time for a skilled professional who knows where the gaps in the camera coverage are: Artwork is by Tonton Ficelle. Similar Sex Blogging: November 9th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
Air Hostesses Under DisciplineDid you know that stewardesses used to spend their time on the ground kneeling on thin mats in fetching silk nighties while being schooled in “exercise and beauty culture” by Mary Poppin’s sadistic twin sister? That was my general takeaway from this two-page spread in the April 1941 issue of Peek magazine: Similar Sex Blogging: November 8th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
Marilyn Monroe’s Potato Sack DressYou’ve heard the saying “She’d look good even if she was wearing a potato sack”, right? Yeah, that was Marilyn Monroe’s doing: The oft-told story around this photo is that a reporter told Marilyn that she only looked so good all the time because she wore expensive dresses. This was her rebuttal. I don’t know if all this is actually true, if it was a story dreamed up by her publicist to get her onto magazine covers, or if it’s completely-spurious popular folklore. Similar Sex Blogging: November 7th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
Happiness Is A Warm NoseThis 1918 woodcut by Max Svabinsky is titled In Paradise, and I gotta say… yeah, that checks out! Similar Sex Blogging: November 6th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
Good Girlfriends PegThere’s a story on the Tamsin Flowers erotic stories site called Good Girlfriends Peg Their Man. The narrator of the story seems to be a very good girlfriend indeed:
A ridiculous amount of the pegging porn out there is bundled with assorted tropes of female supremacy, leather gear, sneering femdom disdain, and/or professional-dominatrix simulated power exchange. All of those things, together or separately, are perfectly fine fetish spaces, as valid as any others. But none of those ways are the only way. A slim dildo (or a thick one, you do you!) in a secure harness is just another sex toy at the end of the day; there’s no reason it has to be seen as a BDSM thing specifically, or any kind of power exchange thing at all. Couples plus toys equals orgasms; every other layer of symbolism and and significance we want to layer on top of that is optional. Sure, the fantasy toppings are the whipped cream and the cherry for lots of people, but with different toppings (or no toppings at all) you still have a delicious dessert. That’s why I enjoy the story quoted above. It’s the simplest possible plot in a sex story: “I had this fantasy, so did my partner, but we didn’t know! Once we found out, boy did we have a wild night of sex!” That’s good stuff. It’s always good stuff. It literally never gets old. In twenty years of sex blogging I’ve seen a whole lot of different accounts (fiction, non-fiction, instructional, autobiographical, accounts of every kind) about why people enjoy the kinds of sex that they like. As always, the accounts of male sexual pleasure strike me as not very complex. Men like pegging, power dynamics aside, because the pleasure of prostate simulation is different in kind from other male sexual pleasures, and is more rarely experienced due to it often requiring a bit of a “long and mysterious procedure” for a lot of straight men. Women’s reasons for enjoying it are more diverse, per the accounts I’ve seen, with the various power exchange motives frequently predominant. Among these, one recurring theme is their enjoyment at wreaking utterly massive ejaculations out of men whose normal emission is less impressive. We see this motive on display, perhaps, in the final illustration: Image credits, top to bottom: The romantic pegging at the top of the post is by Angeban93. The greyscale pegging with a thick strap-on is by Aru (或). The busty lady piledriving her strap-on straight down into her doubled partner is by Rtil. The pegged man ejaculating while one nipple gets twisted is by Gamingarzia. The happy fellow spurting a whole lot of thick cum is by Mosbles. Similar Sex Blogging: November 5th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
Skincare Posting Through The PornocalypseI can’t stop thinking about a tiny detail from yesterday’s big post about the microscopic liberalization of #pornocalypse terms of service over at Tumblr. I’m talking about the woman on Twitter who had a video flagged under the new terms for being sexually explicit, because she was sucking on a fake (dildo) dick. If that’s sexually explicit, than what about this weary woman on Tik-Tok squirting lotion on her own face? Is symbolic cum any less sexually explicit than a symbolic dick, and if so, why? Does it matter that she labels it a skin care post? The moral of this story is that moderation is very hard, and keeping sexuality out of human communities is impossible. I don’t care how badly the stockholders want it. They can’t have it. Tell ’em to fuck off. Similar Sex Blogging: November 4th, 2022 -- by Bacchus
Did Tumblr Blink And Un-Pornocalypse? TLDR: NoI’m sorry to report that recent news of “mature subject matter” returning to Tumblr is pretty much totally a scam. I mean, you can post it, but nobody can see it. Search invisibility is near total, even for logged-in Tumblr users. So you’re posting into a black hole of non-discoverability. What’s the point? Let’s get into it. There’s a lot of ground to cover. September: Rumors Of The Tumblr Un-PornocalypseIn late September Tumblr issued a sort-of-sideways announcement about their intention to relax the anti-porn rules by introducing new community labels for mature content. However, the announcement was at pains to explain that the actual content policies were not changing at that time. Specifically: “We haven’t updated the official content policies yet.” I didn’t blog about it, although I did Tweet. As far as I was concerned, it was a nothing-burger. Wake me up when you can show me the fine print about what’s allowed. I also wanted to wait and see if any new adult-content flexibility extends to search discovery both internally and externally. I’ve seen parts of this movie before… Tumblr Speaks A Truth: Social Media Porn Is A Hard ProblemAt roughly the same time as the nothingburger announcement, Tumblr’s Matt Mullenweg posted, to his eternal credit, the single most-honest explanation from a social media platform perspective about why porn-friendly social media is essentially impossible in 2022. In Why “Go Nuts, Show Nuts” Doesn’t Work in 2022 Mullenweg said all the quiet parts out loud and with his full chest:
He went on to list, in detail, the barriers imposed by credit card companies, app stores, age and consent verification, and the pornocalyptic reluctance of other companies to provide the necessary service stacks modern websites rely upon. Matt’s essay is a good essay. You go read. I’ll just share part of his conclusion:
November: “Bruh! Tumblr Allows Noods Again!”Nah. Not really. Allow me to explain. Yesterday was the big day. Tumblr’s new nudity-friendlier community guidelines dropped. They… aren’t completely terrible, if your expectations were as low as mine: Hardcore porn (“sexually explicit acts”) is still off limits, but the dreaded and mysterious “female-presenting nipple” is back on the menu, everybody! But… what’s a “sexually explicit act”, you may well wonder? Ha! That’s not defined. Who wants to bet that “gay sexually explicit” and “straight sexually explicit” turn out to be two different things? Or, what about sex education? Demonstrating how to roll condoms onto a banana with your mouth, say? Or… wait! Breaking news from our field reporter on Twitter: sucking a dildo has already been flagged under the new rules, and the appeal apparently rejected. I guess “sextoyly explicit” is the same as “sexually explicit” now? But wait! There’s more… and it’s worse. The above is Mullenweg’s summary of the new community guidelines. The actual text of the guidelines is rather more crabbed. Specifically, the forbidden “sexually explicit acts” are joined in the naughty booth by “content with an overt focus on genitalia.” What does “overt” mean, do you suppose? Guess! See if you get lucky! Would you have guessed that it included sucking on a sex toy? So, have I got this right? Nudity is allowed, but if it shows too much pussy and cock, it’s not allowed. Or maybe — we’re guessing here — it’s not too much pussy and cock that gets you in trouble. Perhaps it’s a question of how closely the camera zooms in, or how brashly the genitals in question are displayed. “Overt focus” leaves a lot of room for interpretation, doesn’t it? Search Invisibility And Your Tumblr NudesSo, nope. I wasn’t too excited by the nothingburger news in September. But you want to know the real reason for my skepticism? It’s search invisibility. I wanted to see whether the newly-allowable adult content would be searchable, taggable, findable. Because if you can’t search for a thing, or link to it, it might as well not exist. You all know this routine by now. We’ve written about search invisibility before. The way this scam works is that you can post stuff, but nobody can find it. Your tags don’t work; tag search results don’t have your stuff in it. Your keyword searches don’t work; the results don’t have your stuff. I’ve called this totalitarian in the past, because it’s creepy: people who don’t understand the game just assume your stuff doesn’t exist. “I just don’t understand why nothing comes back when I search for Jenna Jameson nude!” (See next link for answer.) I first wrote about this happening to Google search suggestions back in 2008. In 2015 or before, Instagram started banning hashtags, sometimes silently and sometimes not. Likewise Pinterest and, yes, Tumblr, although Tumblr in those days had an easter egg pixel-hunt you could do to turn banned searches back on. In 2019, I caught Twitter putting adult stars in search invisibility; their names wouldn’t pop up in the @-name autocomplete function, and the one I tested back then still won’t. These are far from the only examples. I would hazard the proposition that search invisibility is the preferred treatment for grudgingly-allowed adult content on most social media platforms these days. So what about Tumblr? Yeah, you know it. To test, I set up an ErosBlog-themed outpost on the new more-lenient Tumblr. (Look for an update when my outpost Tumblr-blog gets inevitably banned, perhaps because of the general porn-hostile social media principle that “if you have an off-platform porn destination/brand they will ban you no matter what content you post.”) So, yeah, it’s here: tumblr.com/erosblogbacchus. I started with one post, which is a link back to this recent comic/vintage/upskirt post on ErosBlog. Here’s what the Tumblr post looks like to me, logged into Tumblr: Note the Community Label: Mature flag at the top, which I dutifully set per the new rules because I am such a good social media citizen, and even though this image is not even nude, it is mildly racy and shows a fringe of petticoats. So, who will find and see that post? Presumably, logged-in Tumblr Users who have their mature content filters set properly in the non-default position, if they also know about my Tumblr blog and have chosen to follow it. That’s gonna be “zero” if nobody can see my posts to ever find out my new blog exists, though. No problem, I’ll just grab the URL and share it elsewhere, because that’s totally how well-functioning social media is supposed to work. Here, look at my post! Again, if you’re logged into Tumblr and your settings are right, perhaps you see that. But if you’re just a random person coming in from the web (right here!) without an adult-verified settings-optimized Tumbler account, this is what you’ll see: Woo, exciting! “Mature subject matter” is totally back, boyz! Still, I shouldn’t be too negative. Just click that big easy “Show Post” button, right? If you listen carefully, you can hear the sepulchral laughter echoing from the crypt underneath Tumblr headquarters. Because guess what? Cock-blocked! Yes, my “Community Label: Mature” post is not visible from the open web. Members only: Tut-tut! “Ah, now, you need clearance for that.” But wait a minute! Back up. What about all those hashtags? What about keyword searches? Surely… If you’re on Tumblr, try the exercise. Type “Balloon Crash” into the “Search Tumblr” box. You will find a lot of posts, but not mine. Or search the #petticoats hashtag. You’ll get lots of petticoats, some of them pretty sexy, but you won’t find my “Mature”-flagged post. It is thoroughly invisible on this social media platform, for any reasonable definition of “social”. The “mature subject matter returns to Tumblr” storyline is at least 85% pure scam, because of search invisibility. I had to poke at all of this, so I posted one more post. This one has an actual nude — a vintage nude — in it. Female-presenting nipple! Hashtag: “Vintage Nude”. When I typed in that tag, a little “popular tag” badge popped into view. Awesome! Then I clicked the tag. Not much there. Not my post, for sure! Half a dozen old posts, carefully chosen to avoid the dreaded female nipples. Popular tag? Sure! But only among friends. Only in the dark. In Conclusion: Tumblr Can Suck My “Overt Focus” DickSo yeah. That’s where we are. Maybe you can post some stuff on Tumblr today that you couldn’t post last week. But nobody can find it by accident. Nobody can find it by looking for it. Nobody can find it socially. You can’t show it to your off-platform friends. Time will tell if Google can see it, but I’m betting against, and what good would a Google Search result even do you? Within Tumblr, if people already know you, are following you, have given Tumblr their date-of-birth info, and managed to set the right settings correctly, then sure, those people can now see your mature-subject-matter posts. That’s… not really very much. It’s not social media. At best, it’s in-your-bubble media. Fuck that. Just fuck it. I’m not impressed. Bacchus verdict: Tumblr is NOT back. Similar Sex Blogging:
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