Rain and Feet

I don’t plug consumer products very often in my blog (unless you count books and dirty videos as consumer products). But the rainy season has started with a vengeance here in the Bay Area, and just about everybody I’ve mentioned these to has gone, “Oo! Oo! Oo!” So I thought I’d spread the word a little wider:

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Crocs makes rain boots.

You know Crocs, right? Those ridiculously comfortable, kind of silly-looking plastic shoes with the holes in them? The ones that come in eight million clown-shoe colors?

The people who make them make rain boots. Totally comfy (although not quite as comfortable as the regular Crocs). Keep my feet totally dry, even when it’s pouring buckets. And the black ones are actually pretty stylin’, if you like that “big stompy boots” thing, which I do. (Ingrid tried to convince me to get them in red, but big red rain boots with my bright yellow rain slicker would have made me look like Christopher Robin: a look you can pull off when you’re twenty, but not when you’re 46.)

Anyway. Crocs rain boots. If you’re searching for them, they’re called Crocs Georgies. (FYI, I did have to search for mine, since the Crocs store was out of the size and color I wanted.) And no, I’m not getting any kickbacks from the Crocs company. I just think they’re cool.

Rain and Feet
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Oscarology

Oscar
Years ago, I invented a system of astrology based on what movie won the Best Picture Oscar for the year you were born. (It’s more like Chinese astrology than Western astrology: you share your personality with an entire year’s worth of people, instead of just a month’s worth. But in Oscarology, the signs never repeat. Your year is special and unique.)

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The Skeptical Surfer recently asked me about Oscarology, and I realized I’ve never blogged about it. I’ve discussed it in more than one discussion group and bulletin board (my favorite response: someone asked me what had won for 1991 and 1992, and when I said it was “Silence of the Lambs” and “Unforgiven,” she replied, “No wonder the kids are so weird!”). But I’ve never mentioned it here.

So let’s play! Tell me what year you were born, and I’ll tell you all about your personality based on what won the Oscar for that year. (Assuming I’ve seen the movie, that is.)

I’ll get the ball rolling with my own reading.

Westsidestory
Birth year: 1961.
Best Picture: West Side Story.
Analysis: Although I tend to feel like an outsider in almost any group, I am very concerned with communicating and with making connections and forming bridges with/between people who seem unalterably opposed. Music and dancing are central to my life and identity. I have a somewhat tough exterior, but I dance like a big sissy boy and am as queer as a three-dollar bill.

So what’s your sign, baby?

Oh, and for the record: Astrology doesn’t work. It flat-out doesn’t work. There are many spiritual beliefs — such as the belief in God — that, while highly implausible, can’t be definitely disproven. Astrology is not one of them. It makes testable claims; the claims have been tested; the claims have been consistently and without a doubt shown not to work at all.

Just so we’re clear.

Oscarology

The Blogroll Meme

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I thought I’d start out the new year by trying to start up a blog meme. Let’s see how it goes!

This is actually a very easy meme to execute. And it’s a neat way to give props to your fellow bloggers… while taking a little bow for whatever it is that’s special about your own blog.

It goes like this:

Pick three blogs from your blogroll that you think encapsulate the unique nature of your blog. And post them on your blog, with links of course.

Then tag three other bloggers with the meme. (The bloggers that you tag can be the bloggers from your meme, or they can be different ones.)

That’s it.

Three
Another way to think of it is this: Pick a combination of three blogs from your blogroll that you think nobody else has. Any individual blog can be one that lots of other people have in their blogroll — it’s the combination of the three that should be unique (or at least, likely to be unique).

You can explain your reasoning if you like. Or you can leave it self-explanatory.

So here’s mine. The three blogs from my blogroll that I think sum up the essence of my blog — the three-blog combo that I think may be unique — are as follows:

Daylight Atheism
Spanking Blog
Cute Overload

And I don’t think I’m going to explain my reasoning, as I think the choices are pretty self-explanatory.

So I’m tagging three blogs to try to get the meme going. But if you think this sounds fun and want to play, consider yourself tagged!

I am tagging:

An Apostate’s Chapel
Daylight Atheism
Letters from a Broad

Happy blogging! And if you run with this meme, please drop me a line and let me know.

The Blogroll Meme

Skeptic’s Circle #77

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Skeptic’s Circle #77 is up at WhiteCoat Underground. My pieces in this Circle: “Let Them Make Up Their Own Minds”: Bringing Up Kids Without God, and Thou Shalt Not Bear False Witness Against Thy Neighbor.

My favorite other pieces in this Circle: No vaccine for arrogance by Cuttlefish (in verse, no less!); An Appeal to Skeptics… by Happy Jihad’s House of Pancakes, on scientific illiteracy in the humanities (my favorite quote: “Oh, it’s theory. It doesn’t have to correspond to the real world.”); and “It’s not a miracle” does not mean “I don’t care” by Ranting Daddy.

If you’re a skeptical blogger and want to participate in the Skeptic’s Circle, here’s the schedule and guidelines. Happy reading, and happy blogging!

Skeptic’s Circle #77

Which Side Are You On? Pro-Porn and Anti-Porn Arguments

Note to family members and others who don’t want to read about my personal sex life: This post talks about my personal sex life, including a few details you may not want to know about. If you don’t want to read that stuff, please don’t read this post.

This post was originally published on the Blowfish Blog.

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You’d think this would be a no-brainer. I’ve performed in porn. I’ve produced porn. I’ve sold porn. I’ve written porn. I’ve reviewed porn. And I’ve read and looked at porn, many many times, purely for my own libidinous pleasure. And whenever I read someone reflexively attacking porn, railing about how horrible it is and how it’s degrading and ruinous to all that is good and wonderful about sex, I get very cranky and argumentative.

But here’s the kicker. When I read people reflexively defending porn, raving about how wonderful and uplifting it is and how all criticisms of it are absurd and unfair, I get cranky and argumentative as well.

You might conclude from this behavior that I am a cranky, argumentative person.

You might be right.

But there’s more to it than that. (She said, crankily and argumentatively.)

The core problem, I think, is this. Critics of porn often focus exclusively on the specifics of how porn commonly plays out in contemporary culture. They see the body fascism, the rigidly narrow and male-oriented vision of sexuality, the sexism (and yes, there is sexism in porn, just like there’s sexism in every other part of popular culture). And they conclude that the particular is the same as the general. They conclude that because that’s how porn commonly plays out in contemporary culture, therefore that’s what porn is always like, de facto and by its very definition.

(They also focus on video porn to the exclusion of all other forms. Not entirely unfairly, as that is the lion’s share of the porn market… but somewhat narrow-mindedly as well. And there’s an unfortunate confirmation bias when feminist critiques of porn focus on video, since written fiction is a far more woman-driven form of erotica than video has ever been. Especially when you look at the vanishing line between the erotica and romance genres.)

Revelations
By the same token, though, defenders of porn often focus exclusively on the ideal of what porn could be, while ignoring the ugly realities of what it very often is. And I’ll include myself in that critique. I’ve definitely been guilty of saying, “But what about Candida Royalle? What about Libido Productions? What about the dozens of other wonderful indie porn productions I could name?”… while ignoring the over 10,000 pieces of formula-driven, factory-made, tedious pieces of sex in a box that come out every single year, and that porn customers snap up like candy.

I’m not going to say that the truth lies somewhere in the middle. I think the idea that the truth of two opposing extremes usually lies somewhere in the middle is total bullshit. I am, on the whole, very much pro-porn, if for no other reasons than (a) I think there’s no way to stop the fucked-up kinds of porn without stopping healthy sex information and expression, and (b) I like to get off on it.

And I think anti-porn writers have a very bad habit of ignoring Sturgeon’s Law. They fail to recognize that, yes, 90% of porn is crap… but 90% of everything is crap. And in a sexist society, 90% of everything is sexist crap. I’ve seen some very good arguments on how most porn is sexist and patriarchal with rigid and misleading images of women… but I’ve never seen a good argument for why, in a world of sexist TV and movies and pop music and video games, porn should be singled out for special condemnation — to the point of trying to eliminate the genre altogether.

But I also think that pro-porn advocates — myself included — need to stop pretending that there isn’t a problem. We need to recognize that the overwhelming majority of porn — or rather, the overwhelming majority of video porn, which is the overwhelming majority of porn — is sexist, is patriarchal, does perpetuate body fascism, does create unrealistic sexual expectations for both women and men, does depict sex in ways that are not only overwhelmingly focused on male pleasure, but are rigid and formulaic and mind-numbingly tedious to boot. And we need to be trying to do something about it.

What I think is often missing, from both sides of this debate, is nuance. I think anti-porn writers need to acknowledge that the crappy realities of average porn don’t automatically prove that all porn is evil by definition. And I think pro-porn advocates need to acknowledge… well, the crappy realities of average porn.

And goddamn it, this cranky and argumentative sex writer wants nuance. If I have to scream myself blue in the face to get it.

Which Side Are You On? Pro-Porn and Anti-Porn Arguments

Are You Smarter Than A Celebrity Psychic?

Skeptico did this neat thing last year, where he made predictions about events of the year 2007… and then compared his results to that of several famous professional “psychics.” (Surprise, surprise — Skeptico did as well or better.)

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Rebecca suggested that we steal this idea and turn it into a contest. And I’m all for stealing other people’s good ideas, as long as I give due credit as I run off with the loot. So I hereby present the 2008 “Are You Smarter Than A Celebrity Psychic?” contest, with due credit to Skeptico.

The rules: Make five predictions about world events in 2008: political events, natural disasters, celebrity gossip, etc. Post them in the comments here, no later than January 15, 2008. Predictions should be things that reasonably might or might not happen; totally obvious predictions such as “The sun will continue to rise in the East” and “Saturn will not crash into Jupiter” will not be accepted. However, credit will be given for partially correct answers, since the celebrity psychics do that when they score themselves. Credit will also be given if events can be interpreted to fit the prediction — ditto.

The winner will be announced on January 1, 2009. The winner will be told, “That’s amazing! You must actually be psychic and not be aware of it!” in this blog.

The_crystal_ball
My predictions, to get the crystal ball rolling:

1. John Edwards will get the Democratic nomination for President, and will go on to win the election in November.

2. At least one new atheist book will make the New York Times bestseller list.

3. A new drug will be released treating female sexual dysfunction.

4. Hal Holbrook will be nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his role in “Into the Wild.” He will not win.

5. Britney Spears, Paris Hilton, and Lindsay Lohan will get into legal trouble for out-of-control behavior related to drugs or alcohol.

So what are your guesses — excuse me, psychic predictions?

*****

Addendum to the rules, inspired by the first round of predictions:

You have to score your own predictions. I am not bloody well going to try to stay up on German politics, scandals in the Australian cabinet, or tech industry lawsuits, solely to keep track of this silly game. And besides, scoring your own predictions is much more in keeping with the spirit of the game.

Are You Smarter Than A Celebrity Psychic?

900!

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Atheists and Anger now has over 900 comments!

Comments have been continuing to trickle in on this post ever since the original surge when I wrote it in October; it’s been getting at least one comment a day on most days ever since it was published. But special thanks are due to Friendly Atheist and to Memoirs of a Skepchick for the recent links that put it over the top. Thanks! And thanks to everyone who linked to the piece on their blog or forum or discussion group. This thing really has turned into the blog post that ate the Internet. I am still completely blown away by how many people were touched by it… and I’m very touched that so many people were moved to spread the word about it. Thanks, y’all. If it hits 1000, I think I’ll throw a party.

900!