How 'Fifty Shades of Grey' is contributing to shift in norms on sexuality
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| Los Angeles
The erotic movie 鈥Fifty Shades of Grey鈥 sold a record $94.4 million in movie tickets over Valentine鈥檚 Day weekend, but that is not all that the tale of two Seattle 20-somethings is selling, say some observers. The narrative of explicit and humiliating behavior聽is helping to reset the mainstream base line for acceptable sexual behavior, a shift that has been under way for years and has implications not just for adults but for children as well.
While many argue that "Fifty Shades of Grey" is for adults, "the media firestorm has pushed it into the awareness of children of all ages," says Dawn Hawkins, executive director of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation, via e-mail. A quick search of social media posts on the film, she says, shows throngs of teenage girls fantasizing about having their own 海角大神 Greys. "These girls are wishing to have a man who intimidates, humiliates, and abuses them,鈥 she adds.
鈥淭he sexual templates of children are being altered to think that sexual violence, emotionless sexual encounters, and fetishized practices are normal and healthy behaviors," Ms. Hawkins says.
Much of this push has been driven by images from the pornography industry seeping into the popular culture, points out Gordon Coonfield, associate professor of聽communication聽at Villanova University near Philadelphia.
Calvin Klein鈥檚 now-infamous ads from the early 1990s were staged, filmed, and photographed to appear as amateur kiddie porn, he says, 鈥渃omplete with wood paneling in the basement, too-young models, and an off-camera voice asking strangely inappropriate questions like he is 鈥榞rooming鈥 them to do something no one should want to see.鈥 Professor Coonfield made his comments via e-mail.
What鈥檚 important now is not the debate over conservative or liberal views on human sexuality, he says, but rather a deeper awareness of who is controlling what we think.
鈥淚鈥檓 not saying we need a national conversation about how uptight and uncomfortable we are with these subjects,鈥 says Coonfield, adding, 鈥淣or do I think we need a national censorship board to make sure we neither see, hear, nor speak about it.鈥
If the film leads to conversations about sexuality, this is a good thing, he says. However, he says, 鈥淲e have been letting advertisers, who rip off the aesthetics, themes, and genres of pornographers, talk to our children for us instead of really talking to them ourselves.鈥
Many parents find the issue inescapable, a trend only reinforced by the saturation marketing that accompanies a major studio film such as 鈥淔ifty Shades.鈥 A study by the Parents Television Council found that 47 percent of TV ads for the film ran in the so-called family hour between聽8 and 9 p.m. The push to market merchandise from the film has raised the visibility of sex toys, which are now marketed to mainstream consumers in such outlets as Target.
Los Angeles mother Rebecca Cody, shopping in Target with her 4-year-old daughter, Gwynne, and 9-year-old son, Tommy, says the conversations are being forced upon families by such marketing. 鈥淵ou have to explain everything to them anyway, with Viagra commercials on at dinner time,鈥澛 she says.
The Los Angeles mother says the film鈥檚 billboards that are visible all over town have made it impossible to ignore the movie. 鈥淭he one that just says, 鈥楥urious?,鈥 is something I had to explain to them,鈥 she says, adding that parents almost can't keep adult themes away from children anymore.
Representatives of the adult merchandise industry say their products are aimed at informed adults.聽鈥淥ur corsets and handcuffs are pretty, almost like fashion accessories,鈥 says Desiree Duffie, spokesperson for California Exotic Novelties. She is quick to add, 鈥淲e do not market to teen girls.鈥
But 鈥淔ifty Shades鈥 is a step backward in terms of the fight against all forms of domestic violence, in particular the current prevalence of rape on college campuses and in the military, says Patrick Wanis, a human behavior therapist based in Miami and Los Angeles. 鈥淭his movie sends the message that a woman does not mean no when she says no,鈥 he says.
Mr. Wanis sees this trend in the context of a much larger evolution.
鈥淲e are seeing the dissolution of all boundaries, particularly moral ones ... a concept of what is right and what is unacceptable,鈥 he says. 鈥淔or a culture to survive, it has to be able to draw some boundaries. If it doesn鈥檛, it will slowly collapse from within.鈥
鈥聽Staff writer Daniel B. Wood contributed to this report.