MISCMEDIA.COM. A daily report on popular culture by Clark Humphrey.
MISCmedia RADIO
Your 24-hour streaming Net-audio source for the best indie pop, power pop, and other fun stuff from the music-drenched PacNW region.
Listen now with your favorite streaming-MP3 software.
Or, launch said player and then open the URL http://166.90.148.106:8458.
For playlists and reception instructions, visit our server provider, Live365.com.

MISCmedia, The Magazine
MISCmedia,
THE MAGAZINE

The best of this site and more; in bathroom-friendly print form every month.
Subscribe now.

LOSER: The Real Seattle Music Story
LOSER
THE REAL SEATTLE MUSIC STORY

The most complete account of the early-'90s Seattle music scene.
Get your copy of the updated second edition.

The Big Book of MISC. Get it now!
THE BIG BOOK OF MISC.
The best Misc. items ever, now in one handy collection.
Read more about it here.
Get it here.

TABLET logo

Selected MISCmedia items also appear in
TABLET, a fortnightly arts-and-culture tabloid available in and around Seattle.

   Search this site              powered by FreeFind
 
MISCmedia for 12/11/00
Generation S&M, Part 1
by guest columnist Charlotte Quinn

THE OTHER DAY I was surprised to see a preview to the new movie Quills, a tale loosely based on facts about the Marquis de Sade.

Surprised because I thought that S&M was out. The movie is complete with a star-studded Hollywood cast and lots of flogging.

Some fads go out slowly, occasionally bobbing their heads aggressively before drowning completely. You can't really write a fair essay about a fad until it's over. You have to give it time to die, and God knows you don't know a fad is happening while you're in it. No one knew the roaring '20s were roaring until at least the '50s.

So it's stupid for me to reminisce about S&M and the glorious late '90s yet, but I'm doing it anyway.

S&M made a comeback in the early '90s. I heard someone once say that Seattle was some sort of Centre de Sadism renowned throughout the world. I don't really think so.

I mean, of course there was the Vogue, which started having Sunday fetish nights in the nineties. Then the Catwalk, where you could playfully whip boys in leather, a few underground S&M raves that were hard to avoid if you ever danced.

There was even a more serious bordello/dungeon of sorts in Magnolia. The torturous Jim Rose Circus Side Show and The Pleasure Elite originated here. Still, I never thought of Seattle as an epicenter for S&M.

I did notice that suddenly S&M was cool. People were wearing corsets and spiked heels and dog collars again and suddenly black rubber was everywhere. People were "coming out" about their sexual strangeness. The personals started being really entertaining with all the weird fetishes. Post-grunge fashion picked up on the trend.

The S&M love story by Anne Rice, Exit to Eden, was made into a (crappy) Hollywood movie. Xena: Warrior Princess started kicking the shit out of men; as did Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Catwoman, and Lara Croft the cyberbabe.

Obvious dominitrixes like Miss Parker of The Profiler came back to TV. The gimp appeared in Pulp Fiction; vampires made a comeback; Clinton was elected (and everyone knows he's a bottom).

When you write an essay about a fad, like for example the slew of Vietnam movies made in the late '80s or the preppy movement of the early '80s, or even anorexia nervosa, you have to say what were the factors that allowed the fad to be.

Like for example, a lot of preppy kids had these cool ex-hippie, pro-pot, pro-everything parents, and the only way suitable for them to rebel was to change their name to Buffy and buy stocks and iron their clothes. Works for me.

Much the same thing happened with S&M.

Everyone knows that our parents raised us in the '70s and they were into the most hideous, revolting, normal sex.

Encounter groups, est, Unitarian Church Singles Groups (called USAG). I'm OK, You're OK. The Show Me book, the anatomically correct dolls. The '70s, when people sang "I'm Easy" and "Sometimes When We Touch" with a straight face.

Yeeech. Blek.

Our parents' sex, although "open" and "free", bored us all to tears. I mean, Alan Alda and Woody Allen as sex symbols?

While their twenties were spent rebelling against the sexual repression of their '50s-era parents, our twenties were spent trying to re-achieve the coolness of repression.

And I think I personally found it in Catwoman.

TOMORROW: A possible source of S&M fascination--'60s sitcoms.

REMEMBER: It's time to compile the highly awaited MISCmedia In/Out List for 2001. Make your nominations to clark@speakeasy.org or on our handy MISCtalk discussion boards.

ELSEWHERE:

  • No products, no employees, no customers, no business plans; nothing but domain names for sale on eBay, all promising smash revenues...

RECENT HIGHLIGHTS:

ARCHIVES:

SUPPORT MISCmedia
with a voluntary donation

Make payments with PayPal - it's fast, free and secure!

CLARK'S CULTURE CORRAL

CURRENTLY FEATURED:
book cover
JACK BOULWARE
Sex, American Style

A wide-ranging, illustrated history of the days when movie nudity was a new novelty and general horniness reigned from the disco floors to the paperback shelves.

Amazon.com logo

(Support MISCmedia; make your Amazon.com purchases thru this link.)

X-WORD PUZZLES
NOW WITH ON-SCREEN SOLVING!


MISCtalk
DISCUSSION BOARDS

What would you like to see in our little print magazine? Make your suggestions now.

SLIGHTLY WEIRD FICTION
Currently Featured:
'I have destroyed all intelligent life on Earth. Twice.'

CYBER STUFF
Cool, useful, and odd sites.

THINGS I LIKE
My favorite people, places, and things. Plus a few things I hate.

FLY THE FLAG!
Download a MISCmedia link button and wear it on your website.

MISCMEDIA.COM UPDATES
To learn about future changes, join the Misc.-l mailing list. Email to Majordomo@lists.speakeasy.org. Leave the "subject" line blank, and in the body of the message write:

SUBSCRIBE MISC-L (your email address)

Speakeasy DSL, now in 18 U.S. cities

Questions? Suggested topics? Email to clark@speakeasy.org.

Joe Newton drew the caricature atop this page.

We've got a privacy statement.

Made With Macintosh!

Zine-XMember Zine-X - The
   Banner Exchange for Zines
Zine-X

Copyright 2001 Clark Humphrey, clark@speakeasy.org.
Server provided by Speakeasy.