Sport Bookie: Lingerie football players bare it all for PETA campaign
December 12, 2011 by admin
Filed under Latest Lingerie News
By Jean Wright
Monday, 12 December 2011 01:33
Sport bookies can see that when on the field, the girls who play for the Lingerie Football League are no strangers when it comes to competing in scantily clad outfits.
But sport bookies found out that when they stripped down in PETA’s latest anti-fur ad campaign, members of the Toronto Triumph team decided to devote their bodies to tackling something else.
Four of the League’s players bared it all with the field as their backdrop, as they were only covered with a couple of shoulder pads, a football, and a helmet, as seen by bookmakers UK.
Sport bookies saw that in a behind the scenes video released together with the new ad, the players urged people to refuse buying fur.
“When you wear that fur jacket you don’t ever really think about, ‘What happened to this animal for me to be putting this on?’” said one player of the Toronto Triumph in the video.
Not only did the players pose for the ad, but sport bookies learned that they also took part earlier this week in a PETA demonstration that took place at Toronto’s Eaton Center. They showed up in their uniforms with signs reading, “Tackle Cruelty: Bench Fur,” in order to encourage people to not buy fur for the holidays.
“Wearing fur is a personal foul,” PETA Campaigner Emily Lavender said in a statement. “With so many stylish, warm, and durable fabrics available today, there’s no excuse for wearing anyone’s skin.”
PETA wrote on its website:
When people learn that millions of innocent animals are beaten, boiled, hanged, and electrocuted for their fur every year; that each fur coat, each piece of fur lining or fur trim, and each fur cat toy represents the intense suffering of dozens of animals; and that furriers intentionally mislabel the fur of cats and dogs as fur from other species or as faux fur — then every decent human being will want to go fur-free.
Bookmakers UK know that PETA doesn’t stop by simply criticising the fur industry and those that buy he fur, but they also propose solutions. PETA’s cruelty-free clothing guide offers on their website tips on how to look fashionable without any animal getting hurt.
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Sex is the same everywhere, but attitudes toward it differ
December 12, 2011 by admin
Filed under Choosing Lingerie
<!–enpproperty 2011-12-01 07:40:52.0Karl ArneySex is the same everywhere, but attitudes toward it differSex is the same everywhere, but attitudes toward it differ1161356Life2@cndy/enpproperty–>
Halfway through my first year of teaching in Zhengzhou I showed my students a movie. I did this after they had finished their exams, choosing a film relating to the exam’s topic. It would be a nice palette cleanser, a reward for all the hard work that preceded it, I thought.
The problem was the movie contained a sex scene. There was no nudity, just the sweaty faces of two characters in the act of making love. It was a minor scene in the movie that hadn’t made any impression on me, but that wasn’t the case with my 19-year-old college students.
I heard gasps and looked up to face an unexpectedly awkward situation. There was an air of surprise and embarrassment throughout the room and one of the quieter students was staring at me with utter revulsion for exposing her to such a lewd act. The scene, of less than 10 seconds, seemed to stretch for hours, for both the students and myself.
This was my first exposure to the differences between my US homeland’s attitude toward sex in movies and the media generally and China’s. From that point on, I frequently noticed other examples. Until just recently, these examples made China’s stance on sex culture quite obvious, and this might be described as more traditional or conservative.
I figured when I first came here that pornography was illegal (it is). Even so, I was quite amused when I later stayed at a hostel in Shanghai and read the rules of conduct posted on the inside of my door.
Here, porn was viewed on a par with smoking in the rooms, carrying weapons and taking drugs. I understand that laws are laws, but pornography receiving equal billing to health and safety concerns tickled my funny bone regardless.
My understanding of this subject was further strengthened when I started using Chinese downloading websites. They acquire movies and TV shows with an impressive speed and have entertained me on many a bored evening.
But it wasn’t until I watched these shows back home in the US that I realized the movies and shows had been edited. The violence and bad language were largely intact, but scenes involving nudity were often cut. These cuts occasionally made no difference to understanding the movie or TV show, but sometimes they resulted in a loss of plot details. This kind of fine-attention paid to preventing nudity from turning up in entertainment further convinced me that all sex culture here was forbidden.
Only more recently did I notice that, just like most countries, China has a flip side to this particular coin. Sex and nudity might be banned in movies, TV shows and elsewhere, but they do show up in areas I did not expect.
I began noticing this while passing various lingerie shops distributed throughout my neighborhood. It came to my attention that one in every four or five displays were advertisements for evening wear which left absolutely nothing to the imagination. Suddenly American culture seemed prudish in comparison, as publicly displaying see-through or crotchless underwear would never be allowed there.
Then, I started using the train on a weekly basis.
I had somehow failed to notice before that the areas surrounding both Zhengzhou and nearby cities’ train stations are full of sex shops. Imagine my surprise when I saw seven consecutive stores openly showing off their wares to the public, with more prosthetic sex organs and related toys than you can shake a stick at.
For something so inescapable, sexuality creates many strange double standards among the world’s countries and their populations. It’s comforting to know this is as true in China as anywhere else.
China Daily
(China Daily 12/01/2011 page20)