blackmail

Lessons From Unlikely Places: Letterman and Responsibility vs. Morality

Fri, 2009-10-02 11:26

Fran Langum at Blue Gal is just awesome in her introduction to the equally awesome David Letterman.

Sanford, Vitter, and Ensign need two hours in a Powerpoint presentation on “How to Deal with Your Sex Scandal” with Dave. The slides include, 1. You might lose your job, and probably should. 2. Get a sense of humor. 3. Don’t be an effin’ hypocrite.

Do it like this:

The things you don’t do are:

Decide to be the point person to criticize ACORN and prostitution. (Vitter)

Break the law in order to make your staffer, who is also your mistress’s husband go away. (Ensign)

And above all, you boys, don’t belong to a political party that thinks abstinence only education health policy is a good idea.

‘Cause that’s a joke. And it isn’t funny.

She said it here.

I’d use a different word than awesome to describe having sex with one’s employees, but I thoroughly admire Letterman for owning up to it, for defying someone else who sought to exploit it, for not having his partner(s) into stand-by-your-man charades, and for acknowledging and lamenting the potential consequences but neither whining about nor denying responsibility for those consequences.

HNT Editorial: Straining Credulity in the Defense of Half-Nekkid Self Photography

Thu, 2009-07-23 13:02

Pam Spaulding of Pandagon has a nifty writeup of yet another “family values” Republican, this time Tennessee State Senator Paul Stanley, who a) pursued a typical evangelical religious social-conservative legislative agenda, including some anti-porn legislation, while b) conducting an affair with a much younger employee that included c) taking “compromising” photos of the intern at his apartment.

Instead of just handwringing or tisk-tisking I’m going to try for a different interpretation. But first here are the specifics…

The boyfriend, Joel Palmer Watts. 28, discovered a computer memory disc with sexually explicit photographs of [the intern, Mackenzie Morrison] that appeared to have been taken in Stanley’s apartment. Watts then blackmailed Stanley, demanding $10,000 in return for keeping quiet.

“Releasing the photographs to individuals or the media would cause embarrassment, both professionally and personally, to Stanley,” according to the court affidavit, as if we needed an explanation for why this might pose a small problem for our family values champion.

While this sounds like a garden-variety Republican Sexual Hypocrite, Stanley takes it up a notch with his legislative CV: 1) he campaigned against the right of gays and lesbians to adopt (“When you’re married, there’s a commitment there,” Stanley said last year, while discussing legislation to prohibit gay people from adopting children); and….drum roll…2) he introduced a bill prohibiting viewing porn while driving (WTF!? Is this some kind of rampant problem in Tennessee?)

...

BTW, this hypocrite Stanley told NewsChannel 5 that he will continue his social conservative legislative agenda.

Read the rest of Spaulding’s post, and follow her additional links, here.

It being Half-Nekkid Thursday and all I’m going to see if I can cobble together some way for Paul Stanley to look somewhat like less of a hypocrite… though not less of a jerk… for legislating against porn while taking his own erotic photos. Here’s how something like that might work:

a) A lot of anti-porn people seem to define porn as the depiction of unwilling, disadvantaged victims performing unwanted sexual acts that leave them feeling degraded and abused. Depending on the degree to which one believes women have any sexual agency beyond the limited right to say no before marriage this may include believing that all persons, or at least all women, who appear in porn are by-definition coerced, degraded, and performing unwanted acts. Although it might not.

b) Sen. Stanley, and possibly Ms. Morrison, may have regarded the images found by the boyfriend as mere mementos of a sexual relationship where no one was coerced or degraded and where no unwilling or undesired acts were performed.

Therefore

c) There might be no contradiction and therefore no hypocrisy if the Senator was opposed to a) porn-as-bad-by-definition and b) provocative and/or explicit images taken with only the intention to arouse the parties involved and, possibly, anyone else the participating parties chose to share those images with. Which evidently would not include the would-be blackmailer, Mr. Watts. Nor, obviously, would the “certain members of the media” Mr. Watts proposed to share those photos with without the consent of Sen. Stanley and Ms. Morrison.

d) Which, of course, creates the distinction most right-minded people need to judge publication of so-called “revenge porn.” Revenge porn is often ordinary erotica taken by consenting parties for their personal enjoyment which is then discovered by or shared with third parties without the consent of all the original participants. Often with the intention of humiliating or degrading one or more of the original participants against their will. Thus, if one prefers the “it’s only porn if it’s bad, it’s only bad if its porn” definition then that’s the point at which ordinary, self-taken images can become porn.

Therefore, if that was Sen. Stanley’s position, it would not be hypocritical to legislate against porn while taking personal photos. I’m not buying it, but I could see someone trying to make that case.

Oh, and e) Bonus supporting point: When confronted by Watt’s blackmail attempt Stanley went straight to the cops who in turn set up a sting and arrested Watts. It’s actually kind of remarkable that a married evangelical ‘winger legislator would be so straightforward, but it’s actually the exactly correct thing to do when someone like, oh, say, the average HNT participant or anyone who’s own images are misappropriated. Because whatever social consequences one might run into (remember, even in socially conservative Tennessee Stanley appears to still be married and still be a Senator) the legal consequences to the blackmailer are way harsher. Anyway, Stanley’s behavior would be consistent with my attempted he’s-a-jerk-but-not-a-hypocrite interpretation of what came down.

Now.

That being all said and done there’s a rather prominent loose end I can now address — the bit about Ms. Morrison being an intern and Sen. Stanley being at least her nominal employer and supervisor. Such relationships may or may not be an issue for evangelical tub-thumpers but they’re considered actionable under employment law. Remember I’ve been attempting to be generous here so while not forgiving or forgetting, for purposes of the first part of this post I’m treating it as a separate offense. (For which, to keep things tidy, he probably ought to be investigated, and sanctioned, under any and all rules, regulations, and statutes.)

Happy HNT (or Half-nekkid Thursday!)

Turning the tables on photo blackmailers

Mon, 2007-07-23 10:32

I’m going to guess that since the earliest days photography young women and men have agreed, for any number of reasons, modeled for nude or sexual photography, and then years later been confronted by blackmailers, enemies, and/or sensationalists who seek to embarrass them or worse.

Just off the top of my head there was Miss America Vanessa Williams, movie star and politician Arnold Schwarzenegger, right-wing radio host Laura Schlessinger, and most recently Miss New Jersey Amy Polumbo have been inconvenienced at the least. Some have lost their titles or positions.

We have no idea how many have successfully submitted or succumbed to their blackmailer’s demands, but the Schwarzeneggers and Polumbos are surely only the thinnest layer of frost on the tip of the iceberg.

But here’s the deal: Since he became a credible star in the 1970s Schwarzenegger had to go to untold effort and expense to suppress photos he posed for to support himself when he was only an aspiring body builder. In 1984 when William’s photos appeared there was no question that she would have to resign and so, following a fairly dispirited defense of what was then still indefensible, she did. In 2007, though, when pressed by blackmailers Polumbo simply took her photos to the press herself. (Pretty easy for her since the anonymous group called “Committee to Save Miss America had found the photos on her Facebook page.) At least two of the five Miss America arbitration board think the photos aren’t a big deal.**

And into this evolving context comes word from Art of sexblo.gs about an entry in Documenta, a major contemporary art exhibition in Kassel, Germany.

In 1987, film director Hito Steyerl was 19 and agreed once to be a model for a bondage photo shooting in Tokyo. Lovely Andrea (dubbed “A La Recherche du Cul Perdu”) narrates the search for that photography in the Tokyo bondage scene. Helped by self-suspension performer and guide Asagi Ageha, Steyerl and her team find the image in a sex archive and set out to meet the photographer.

This is just an excerpt of a much larger post that you can read here.

Now there are actually a couple of twists to Hito Steyerl’s story that I’ll try to get to in a follow-up post, but for now I’d just like to say that her move seems like a predictable development in the process of acknowledging that a) humans are sexual, b) humans are visual, c) humans take photos, d) humans take photos of sexual situations, e) photos of sexual situations document us as we are (e.g. “orgasm face,” sticky body parts) rather than as we wished we appeared and f) consequently if those photos are discovered it’s a problem only to the extent we continue to deny or fail to get over items a-e.

But here’s what I see is the most important part of what Steyerl has done. By inverting the age-old procedure outlined in the paragraph introducing this post, by taking ownership of the process of uncovering her early photos, she’s turned the tables on the pornographers who, in 1987, often exploited the economic or social vulnerability of young people like her. (And even 20 years ago pornographers took extreme psychological and sexual as well as economic advantage of their models.)

If, as Polumbo demonstrates, there’s no longer a penalty for having posed naked in one’s youth (even when, as in Polumbo’s case, you’re still a youth!) then scrutiny can finally turn from the subjects of the photography to the potentially exploitative original photographers and/or, even better, any potential blackmailers who have unquestionably seek to exploit them.

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