Whoosh! Breaking a new space barrier.
November 13, 2011 by admin
Filed under Choosing Lingerie
There have been some great moments in space exploration.
The first manned flight into space in 1961.
The moon landing in 1969.
The Hubble space telescope launch in 1993.
And now, in 2011, the first sex toy launch into space.
Some may doubt whether this latest milestone ranks with those others, but no matter. It’s generated lots of publicity for an online sex toy shop.
On Oct. 8, SexToy.com launched the vibrating bullet, a vibrator, into space, reaching a peak speed of 1,800 feet per minute and hitting a maximum altitude of 120,000 feet.
Then came the ride down. It was a rough one.
For its descent the vibrator was attached to a solar-powered helium balloon. The balloon was to slow the pace of descent, so the device would hit the ground at between 5 mph and 10 mph.
But the balloon popped about two-thirds of the way back to earth. The vibrator hit the ground at 60 mph.
But no loss. The device was still vibrating after the crash, and in fact had vibrated the entire nine hours of the trip, a testament to the quality and durability of the product under the roughest of conditions.
Unlike previous space launches, the SexToy.com project was not motivated by an urge to break new scientific ground. It was not intended as a big step, or even a small step, for mankind.
The aim was more modest: to generate publicity for SexToy.com’s wares, and it did the job admirably, lighting up the internet in lively discussion.
As with so many such bold ventures, there were and are many doubters, and in fact an online debate has raged over whether the launch actually happened. Some have accused SexToy of engaging in a hoax.
The online shop dismisses all such suggestions, pointing to the video as evidence.
It’s already planning a second foray into the heavens.
“The success of this launch has our team planning the next space endeavor,” says Sextoy CEO Dave Levin.
“We may be launching a sex doll into space to serve as an extraterrestrial representative ‘baring’ the slogan, ‘We Come in Peace.’”
In a gesture to those who found the first launch offensive, Sextoy is auctioning off the space-traveling vibrator on eBay, with proceeds going to a breast cancer awareness charity in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
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Lingerie ad strikes controversy as mother and daughter are pitted together in …
November 13, 2011 by admin
Filed under Latest Lingerie News
The Stars and Lakers campaign. Is this ad going too far?
An underwear/lingerie campaign by the lingerie outlet ‘The Lake and Stars,’ has caused some degree of dissent because of its particular representation of a 19-year-old girl and her mother. What’s controversial isn’t that these two women appear half naked in the ad together but how they actually appear together. Or to be succinct how they relate to each other, which in this case borders on incense, same sex love adulation and the carnal forbidden, which is frankly just another day at the office for fashion brands as they continue to push the limits of proprietary.
Argue the brand’s head designers, Nikki Dekker and Maayan Zilberman:
“A lot of the themes that we’re dealing with are about psychology between women as they’re growing up and dealing with family politics or women in the workplace. We always poke fun at these ideas that people take really seriously, but we’re trying to make it so that people can talk about it and have a sense of humor about it.”
But what family politics are being espoused when the images portray the all too comfortable and slightly awkward veneer not of mother and daughter but what could be interpreted as a young woman and her older female lover longingly admiring each other. Yet then again this could be the deceit of the campaign- that we know that the models are mother and daughter (the resemblance is uncanny) and their suggestive reposes alert us to the un natural or perhaps treacherous- which one assumes is what is suppose to hint at this lingerie line’s viability.
“That’s what really drives the collection and what drives the photos: these women who are experiencing something that we’re not necessarily experiencing. I wanted to present portraits of them so that people would see the chemistry that they have. I think it’s really rare, you don’t see a lot of that.”
Rare because most mother and daughters although having extremely intimate relationships rarely have relationships bordering on the carnal or suggesting as such. Once again it seems the retailer is dangling the controversial and opaque by design to force a discussion of mother daughter themes and by implication the fashion brand’s contentious disposition for bringing uncomfortable or should we argue highly suggestive erotism to the fore between subjects that most of us would be reluctant to spend too much time considering.
The campaign itself according to the designers was an accident and one of coincidence:
The mother and daughter pictured in the campaign are not models by trade, Zilberman said. They are just her next-door neighbors in Brooklyn, everyday women, who seem to have an interesting relationship. “They’re always so loving and tender towards each other,” Zilberman said.
Loving and tender- yes. But loving and tender and sitting in each other’s laps in garter belts? Is that something most 19 year old girls do or have even fathomed doing? But once again this is the kicker of the campaign and its allure that it presents a particular dichotomy about how we as society view certain relationships, in this case mother and daughter and thus cleverly extends its branding as we the consumer take the extra second to consider what it is what we are witnessing and how or why it intrigues and yet as in this case perhaps repulses us…
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