- Joined
- Dec 1, 2011
- Messages
- 33,000
- Reaction score
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- Location
- FL - Daytona
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- Political Leaning
- Independent
It's not a toy!
It's a serious piece of heavy machine equipment.
Can we still call it a dildo?
I'm all for being polite and sensitive to others but where does the word policing ever end?
I simply can't keep up with all these new terms being demanded. It's like the acronyms used by certain professions and gov agencies.
I'm usually like, huh, what?
-- More than 50 percent of women have used a vibrator in their lifetime, but the topic is frequently cloaked in shame or reduced to a kink. Now, sexual wellness company Maude, backed by Dakota Johnson, is pushing the necessity — not novelty — of vibrators by ditching the word “toy.”
"For too long sexual health has been poorly marketed, hyper-aggressive and highly gendered," Johnson, a co-creative director and investor for Maude, told InStyle, promoting the brand’s “This Is Not a Toy” campaign, which encourages women to post photos of their vibrators on social media. "Often the use of language surrounding sexual products is antiquated, gender-specific and belittling."
It's a serious piece of heavy machine equipment.
Can we still call it a dildo?
I'm all for being polite and sensitive to others but where does the word policing ever end?
I simply can't keep up with all these new terms being demanded. It's like the acronyms used by certain professions and gov agencies.
I'm usually like, huh, what?
Dakota Johnson says we shouldn't call vibrators sex toys. Here's why she may be right.
The actress is working with a sexual wellness company that is legitimizing vibrators and other sexual props.
www.yahoo.com
-- More than 50 percent of women have used a vibrator in their lifetime, but the topic is frequently cloaked in shame or reduced to a kink. Now, sexual wellness company Maude, backed by Dakota Johnson, is pushing the necessity — not novelty — of vibrators by ditching the word “toy.”
"For too long sexual health has been poorly marketed, hyper-aggressive and highly gendered," Johnson, a co-creative director and investor for Maude, told InStyle, promoting the brand’s “This Is Not a Toy” campaign, which encourages women to post photos of their vibrators on social media. "Often the use of language surrounding sexual products is antiquated, gender-specific and belittling."