Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Why Sunny pipped Modi


                                         

By  Sangeeth Sebastian


Whether you like it or not Internet is for porn. Even Prime Minister Narendra Modi, whose mandarins are currently on a mission to muzzle online porn, must have realised that after his drubbing by a former porn-star for the title of the “most searched personality” on Google. The result should not come as surprise for Modi fans.

The Indo-Canadian genetic hotchpotch has been holding the reigns for the most searched celebrity in India ever since she made her debut in 2011 through Bigg Boss, a popular reality show sanitising her image as an American porn star and later gaining mainstream acceptability through a string of soft-core Bollywood films suitable to the “cultural sensibilities” of the Indian audience. Never mind her continuing online presence as a porn starlet peddling everything from used underwear’s to replicas of her vagina “moulded directly from Sunny Leone’s own supple pussy” as a product description on Amazon states, for a tidy profit.

In fact it is this dichotomy between her spruced up Bollywood image and her no-holds-barred attitude on the web that has successfully helped her to retain the numero uno position, year after year.

Sunny Leone’s cleverly constructed image perfectly fits into the Indian hypocrisy and double standards on sex, making her at once a “saint” (for her mainstream audience) and a “slut” (for the sexually repressed Indian).

Her dual identity also makes her the new Savita Bhabhi in flesh and blood. There are some striking similarities between Sunny and Savita, an online cartoon dubbed as “India’s first true porn star” that quickly won millions of fans across the country before being banned by the government in 2009.


                                                                  



Both Sunny and Savita are married and in their early thirties, making the pair ideal to be termed as cougars a popular porn parlance for sexually aggressive older women.

Like Savita who hides her secret sexual escapades with office colleagues, door-to-door salesmen and servants, from her husband, Sunny too hides or at least tries to hide her secrets from her mainstream viewers, revealing her true, errr…bare-self only to fans who pursue her online. (Talk about cross-over appeal).

After all, Indians can be an equally aspirational lot when it comes to sex too. MILF (Mother’s I’d Like to Fuck), a popular online porn category for Indians, according to A Billion Wicked Thoughts, a book on how human desires work online, by MIT and Boston researchers Ogi Ogas and Sai Gaddam, for instance, has an aspirational ring to it. It is not ‘Mother’s I can Fuck’ but it’s ‘Mother’s I’d like to Fuck’ there is a sense of accomplishment that comes with this vicarious conquest. Even Modi’s legendary charm and working class connect can prove insufficient before such primordial impulses.

‘Ragini MMS 2,’ a Bollywood thriller known for its sleaze quotient, starring Sunny had also topped the charts this year for the most searched movie online in the 'Trending' category that also featured Modi. Modi will not be looking forward to any sequels.







Sunday, 2 November 2014

Why Mallu male is a perfect sexual aggressor


                                        



By Sangeeth Sebastian


Perhaps, the biggest irony of Kerala’s ‘Kiss of Love’ protest on Sunday, organised by a bunch of youngsters against moral policing, was how the protesters themselves turned out to be a victim of one.

The group had intended to kiss and hug in public as a mark of protest against vandalising a coffee shop in Kozhikode, by members of a right wing Hindu group, who claimed the shop had doubled up as a dating spot.

But even before the proposed demonstration could take off, the police arrested the group and whisked them away to a police station citing possible law and order crisis their 'unusual' mode of agitation could entail.

The campaign which ‘Kiss of Love’ organisers launched through social media sites had received overwhelming response from across the country and abroad (the group’s Facebook page had received 66,774 likes till Sunday).

Though the police had denied permission for the protest, with the Kerala high court refusing to interfere in the event, the feeling was that the protest would take place. Besides, the State government too had assured that action would be taken against the organisers only in the event of any ‘illegal activities.’

Yet, in a State with a history of pathological aversion towards any public mixing of sexes, other than those within the patriarchal institution of marriage, such deceptive assurances should have been taken with more than a table spoon of salt.

After all, this is the very same State where even married couples, at times, have to justify their status to be in public together to rank strangers. (One of the first things my dad advised when I revealed my plan to go on a honeymoon in Kerala was to carry my marriage certificate with me.)

This made what the organisers of ‘Kiss of Love’ did, subversive, as it was a protest that required men and women to share a public space for reasons other than those defined and approved by the State’s patriarchy.

It is this subversive appeal which the campaign generated that drew an overwhelming number of male onlookers to the protest venue on Sunday evening with voyeuristic anticipation.

Not surprising then that the campaign, which received an effusive response from a huge number of women during its online phase saw very little participation on the ground. Which sensible woman would want to be leered at in such a male dominated space even if there is a compelling desire to be a part of the event?

In fact harassment against women in crowded places in Kerala has a lingo of its own: Jackiveyppe. It is a practise by which men position behind women in such a way that their crotch grinds against the arse of an unsuspecting female in front. If I were a woman I would be the first to stay away from a situation like that.

What actually leads to this situation, among many other factors, is the State’s rigorous gender segregation rules, which begin from kindergarten, at least in some schools (the PTA of a government school in Kerala’s Northern district of Malappuram stalled nursery classes after children belonging to the opposite sex were allowed to share the same bench in class) and continues through college and into public life in the form of segregated seats in buses, women-only autorickshaws, separate queues at ticket counters and segregated workout spaces and timings in gyms, all of which have rendered any meaningful interaction with women impossible.

Bharatmata, a college in Kochi, even went to the extent of installing a vertical iron grill (that runs from the floor to the roof) as barrier inside its college bus to keep boys away from girls. Mar Ivanios, another coed college in Thiruvananthapuram had designated campus guards known as “romance killers” to snuff out any stirrings of romantic expressions on campus and also for chasing out couples who wander the campus in search of a private space. Dating, a term synonymous with college campuses in North India is an alien concept to teenagers in Kerala. The only dates they know is of the edible variety. For many, a chance to enter into a relationship or explore their sexuality outside marriage, without fear or social opprobrium exists only when they move out of the state to more liberal and cosmopolitan cities such as Bangalore or Delhi. The unlucky ones who end up in the State, as Jananpith award winning Malayalam writer M.T. Vasudevan Nair says, takes to drinking liquor with a vengeance to drown his libido. (No wonder Kerala has one of the highest per capita consumption rates for booze in the entire country.) All of this makes a Mallu man an ideal candidate for sexually harassing a woman in the street because that is where his only interaction with women takes place.

By denying a bunch of youngsters their democratic right to protest in the name of maintaining law and order on Sunday and allowing a free run to the disrupters (right wing Hindu and Muslim groups that promote a Saudi Arabian strand of Islam in an otherwise secular state), to dare and intimidate the sympathisers of the campaign, the State has only served to tighten the lid on repression further.


Thursday, 16 October 2014

The issue, oh Pope, is not gays but sex!




By Sangeeth Sebastian



Pope Francis certainly knows how to make headlines. Nothing else explains the frenzy a relatively obscure document, authored by his hand picked bishops’, has generated among his billion plus disciples in the last few days.

The document released midway through an assembly of Roman Catholic bishops on Tuesday, reportedly extends a hand of friendship to people whom the church had hitherto regarded as pariahs, especially homosexuals.

The 12-page report in Latin was quickly interpreted by the media and the Catholic world as Vatican’s softening stand on homosexuality. Nothing could be further from the truth. 

For the record, the church already has a sympathetic attitude towards gays. The Catechism of the Catholic Church published in English in 1994 calls for homosexuals to be accepted with respect, compassion and sensitivity. What the church abhors, is not homosexual orientation but homosexual acts. Deliberate homosexual acts, the church teaches, are mortal sins, meaning those who commit them will be damned unless they confess and are forgiven by a priest.

The new Vatican document does not alter this reality or its official teachings on sex rooted in abstinence. Here is why that is unlikely.

St. Augustine, the fourth century Roman Bishop, who formulated the Catholic view on sexuality, regarded sex as intrinsically evil. Adam and Eve, Augustine believed, was expelled from Eden for their sexual act. This made celibacy the preferred ideal. However, those who succumb to the temptations of flesh can marry. But the teaching is clear. Every single act of sexuality must be open to procreation. This means almost all other forms of sexual acts, right from masturbation to the use of contraceptives are morally reprehensible.

The church is also diabolically wicked when it comes to defending its teachings. Cardinal Alfonso Lopez de Trujillo, Vatican’s former chief of the Pontifical Council for the Family, used to warn his audience that all condoms are secretly made with microscopic holes, through which the AIDS virus can pass. His statements were repeated by evangelical medical practitioners in Kerala as scientific truth during religious conventions (imagine the damage). Church leaders in Kerala also led the fight against implementation of sexuality education in schools in 2007 on grounds that the proposed programme included topics on masturbation and contraceptives. Catholic children, traditionally, have been taught to regard anything connected with sexual organs as improper. They were told never to touch their sexual organs or to speak about them.

To change position on any of these teachings is like opening a Pandora’s Box, as it can force the church to make changes in some of its other controversial doctrines such as abortion, which it strictly prohibits even when the life of a mother is at risk. Such reversals in traditional positions can be detrimental to its credibility or even existence.

The Vatican document, which was read aloud before a gathering of 200 plus Catholic leaders, on Tuesday, offers nothing more than a mere exhortation on whether “Catholic communities are capable of accepting and valuing their (gays) sexual orientation ” apart from a seemingly patronising “gay people have gifts and qualities to offer to the Christian community.” 

To address “real world problems” which the document claims to be its purpose, the church must dare to confront its bete noire: sex.

(This blog was posted before Vatican decided to abandon its document on homosexuality.)






Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Sex Sells & Always Will: Why Shweta deserves better

                                     



By Sangeeth Sebastian


In a country where nearly half the sex workers are either abducted or sold as minors into the trade, arguing that all those who sell sex are not victims of exploitation may be difficult.

Yet, the reality is that at least for a section of women in India, sex work is just that: work. The arrest of South Indian actor Shweta Prasad Babu allegedly for prostitution last week shows how quick we are as a society in branding such women as “victims” in need of “rescue” and “rehabilitation.”

There is a distinction between sex work and trafficking. While trafficking is coercive, exploitative and criminal, sex work can be a conscious choice.

By her own admission, Shewta resorted to sex work to “make money” and support some “good causes.” It was something, which she opted out of her own free will. Publishing images of the actor as an innocent looking child artiste, which she once was, along with the sob story of her arrest, does not alter the reality that she is now a 23-year-old woman capable of taking decisions on her own.

In a statement released to the media after her arrest, Shweta claimed she knew several other heroines who also worked as freelance sex workers to maintain a cosy lifestyle, when film offers dwindle. This makes sex work look like any other normal service industry.

The profession is now less stigmatised than it previously was, thanks to the growing reach and anonymity offered by the Internet. Buying and selling sex online is now easy and discreet, luring many, including better educated women to consider sex work for quick money.
                                                           
Unfortunately, Indian approach on the issue is rooted in moralising and views all forms of commercial sex as products of trafficking. As the very name of the legislation ‘Immoral Trafficking (Prevention) Act,’ under which the actor was arrested, shows.

Police departments in ultra-conservative South India have dedicated anti-vice squads (a term more reminiscent of Saudi Arabian moral police) whose members derive vicarious pleasure in rounding up and shaming out-of-job actors in the name of busting prostitution rackets, on a periodic basis, under the Act.

The farce is all the more apparent as the police themselves admit the futility of the exercise. “By registering cases under the Act, the police cannot solve the problem. Less than ten cases ends up in conviction a year,” says a senior official with the Chennai police.

Rehabilitation programmes like the one which Shweta is reportedly undergoing too can be of little help. Since the idea behind such programmes are to develop 'marketable skills' that can wean the ‘victims’ away from prostitution, the utility of such skills for a national award winning actor is debatable.

In enlightened Kerala, rehabilitation efforts once controversially focused on turning prostitutes into washerwomen, as those who were involved in the project felt that being a washerwoman was more dignified than being a prostitute. Shweta, at least deserves better.


Thursday, 21 August 2014

Wake up, Generation P is here: The truth behind Bangalore rape story





By Sangeeth Sebastian


Last week, a woman in Bangalore was allegedly raped by a cable TV operator to fulfill his 25-year-old wife’s porn fantasy. The news may seem disturbing to many.

But shock apart, what the incident really brings to the fore is the disconnect between Generation P, children of liberalisation raised on a staple diet of coke and porn and their parents who often cringe at the prospect of any open discussion on sex. The rift is as deep as the metaphorical divide between India and Bharat.

Today, unless you are an avid porn watcher, it is a safe bet to say that you have no idea what’s out there on the web and how easy it is to watch. All you need to know is just a few key words and the digital search engine genie will fulfill your wish in seconds. Just type ‘porn’ into Google and you get 36, 70, 00,000 results in 0.38 seconds including hard core videos that cater to all conceivable perversions and pleasures.

But does that make all those who watch porn a potential rapist? Human behaviour is far too diverse for such simplistic generalisations. Yet there is a growing body of evidence that watching porn right from a young age can alter children’s attitude towards sex and sexuality. (All the more reason to commission a study on the influence of porn on young minds in India and make sex education a compulsory part of the school curriculum.)

The accused woman in the Bangalore rape case reportedly wanted her husband to satisfy her desire to watch ‘live sex’ by seducing her best friend who stayed next door.

The truth is women too now get turned on by explicit sexual representations, not just romance novels. No where was this more evident than in the overwhelming popularity of E.L. James’s Fifty Shades of Grey, which dealt with coercive sexual fantasies. The international bestseller, which emerged from the fan fiction community, known for its wide variety of non-consensual sex fetishes, was a favourite Metro read for many Indian women during their office commutes. So are porn sites such as Nofauxx, East Van Porn Collective and Cash Pad series that purportedly cater to the needs of their “growing women audience.”

But as the story of the Bangalore woman, who is now cooling her heels behind bars along with her husband on charges of abetting rape and being present when the incident occurred, shows, getting excited by a fantasy is one thing and wanting it in real life is another. Arousal is not consent.








Friday, 8 August 2014

Looking for an excuse to check porn?






By Sangeeth Sebastian


Here is a lofty excuse that can help you save the blushes the next time you are caught surfing smut: I am doing research.

At least that’s what a bunch of porn enthusiasts seems to be telling their family members and friends ever since the launch of ‘Porn Studies’ an academic journal from the venerable 200-year-old British publishing group, Taylor & Francis.

The fledgling journal, which is into its fifth month of existence, publishes articles by researchers, criminologists and gender studies experts’ analyising and grading online pornographic videos on the basis of its content and sexual acts such as vaginal and anal intercourse, fellatio, use of condom and sex toys, depictions of coercion and portrayal of gender among other things. 

So you can read articles with titles like School Girls and Soccer Moms: A content analysis of free ‘teen’ and ‘MILF’ (of course you know what it means, the uninitiated, check Urban Dictionary) online pornography; Positionality and Pornography, Internationalising Porn Studies and Porn and Sex Education and Porn as Sex Education. 

In case if you intend to read the stuff just for titillation (most of it now comes with a subscription fee) then you are likely to be disappointed. (Unless what turns you on is sociological analysis based on Marxian and Foucaultian theory.)

Porn Studies, which attributes its birth to the easy availability of online pornography and the growing interest shown by mainstream media in covering it, has already triggered a global outrage among anti-porn activists with its editors Feona Attwood and Clarissa Smith, professors at Middlesex and Sunderland University, drawing flak for their “pro-porn” stance.

Interestingly, academic obsession with sex is not something new. Leading American Universities such as Wesleyan, New York, San Francisco State, California-Berkeley, Chapman, Massachusetts-Amherst and Northwestern, have all made their own contribution towards smut, decades ago.

The “Sexuality in Media” studies class at Arizona State University, required students to view X-rated movies such as ‘Deep Throat’, ‘Insatiable’ and ‘Dirty Debutantes’ as a part of their academic work, which culminated with a field trip to the nearest adult stores and campus visits by porn stars. A journal in Porn Studies is only a logical extension of this trend.

Under attack, the editors of the journal have sought to defend their taboo busting venture as a “labour of love” and as a “scholarly” enterprise whose time has arrived. Perhaps, what really makes so many people uncomfortable about Porn Studies could be how it also spits at the delusions and hypocrisy of a polite society.


Sunday, 27 July 2014

The Unkindest Cut







By Sangeeth Sebastian


So the Isis is not going to mutilate its women (they only want them to hide behind veils). But why were we quick to believe that a band of ragtag extremist’s, busy carving a caliphate in the Arabian dessert, was capable of doing something like that?

A leading national daily even carried a front page flyer confidently describing the magnitude of horror that has befallen millions of Iraqi women who now have to undergo genital mutilation, despite reports of scepticism raised in the social media about the veracity of the news. (Since extremist organisations are not known for their image building ways, the possibility of receiving a defamatory suit for publishing a false report is minimal.) This article is not a brief for the Isis.

But what prompts us to make such snap judgements when it comes to Islam? Thanks to some of our regional neighbours, we know for a fact that women and their desires have a rotten time under the extremists. So by extrapolation it is easy to conclude that their plight can only be the same, if not worse, be it in Afghanistan or Arabia, after all the idea behind genital mutilation is to reduce a woman’s libido.

For the record, Islam is not an anti-sex religion like Christianity. There is nothing un-Islamic about sexuality for Muslims. Matters of the flesh are not only compatible with Islam but essential elements of faith.

“The exercise of sexuality was a prayer, a gift of oneself, an act of charity,” writes Abdelwahab Bouhdiba, a Tunisian sociologist best known for his 1975 work Sexuality in Islam.

“To rediscover the meaning of sexuality is to rediscover the meaning of God, and conversely,” he adds.

Even prophet Muhammad extols the pleasures of sex, hinting at the importance of foreplay in sexual gratification. “Let none of you come upon his wife like an animal, and let there be an emissary (the kiss and words) between them,” the prophet is believed to have said.

The 10th century Encyclopaedia of Pleasure written by Iraqi author Ali ibn Nasr al-Katib is known to rival the Kamasutra in terms of its breath and depth on the subject. Written in a hilarious tone, the work covers almost all conceivable forms of sexual acts, save internet porn, across its 43 chapters. Rather than curb female libido, the work urges its readers on how to fulfil it.

In fact, the emphasis of Islam on sensuality was so unabashed that medieval Christians derided the new faith as “devils religion” and as a cunning ploy to win new converts and undermine the influence of Christianity, known for its dim view on everything below the belt.

Sexual open-mindedness, tolerance and innovation was a part and parcel of the intellectual blossoming of the tenth century Islamic cities of Baghdad, Damascus and Cairo, which took turns to race ahead of the Western world.

So when did it all get twisted up for the Muslims? Much of the blame lies with the colonial powers that continued to exert their control and influence even late into the 20th century. Modern reinterpretations of Islam are yet another reason. As Bouhdiba, the Tunisian sociologist reckons “a dramatic rethink is in order.”



Porn Star Causes a Stir in India

                         



A Canadian porn star appearing in India's biggest reality TV show is causing a stir in the mostly conservative country where sex is taboo and open displays of affection are still frowned upon.
The busty Sunny Leone, best known for her roles in films as Not Charlie's Angels XXX and The Virginity Hit, made her entry this week in the Bigg Boss, India's version of the show Big Brother.
"Hi I am Sunny from California," Leone introduced herself to her fellow inmates at the plush Bigg Boss house in heavily-accented Hindi after showing off a few Bollywood-style dance moves.
Leone, a 30-year-old Canadian of Indian origin, said she decided to join the Bigg Boss programme not because of the money on offer but because she was addicted to the show.
"I'm really excited to be a part of it. I think I̢۪d look great cooking... and doing the house chores in pencil heels and sexy clothes that I'm comfortable in," she told the Hindustan Times before joining the show.
In an article headlined "The XXX Factor" on Thursday, the Mail Today tabloid asked "Is porn slowly mainstreaming into our society through Sunny Leone on TV and PETA's adult site?"
Animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is to launch a porn website this year that will also show animal mistreatment.
The site peta.xxx will present visitors with "tantalizing images", followed by graphic ones of cruelty to animals.
"Who will check children from voting for Sunny Leone... and surfing the net to get tutored about her?" asked writer Sangeeth Sebastian. "These are pertinent points because sex is still taboo in India."
On microblogging site Twitter, reactions ranged from the lascivious to the outraged.
"It is shameful that TV shows are now bringing in porn stars to boost their viewer ratings," college student Payal Saxena wrote. "I will not watch this show anymore and will urge my other friends to do so."
Indian cinema and television shows refrain from showing anything that is deemed to be indecent, largely out of fear of running foul of strict obscenity laws and the powerful state censor.
The Bollywood film industry is famous for its "air kissing" -- kissing on the lips is still rare -- and sex is only ever hinted at by suggestive scenes.
Past guests on Bigg Boss include former Baywatch star Pamela Anderson and the late British reality TV star Jade Goody.


This AFP article was published on November 24, 2011

Wednesday, 23 July 2014

The XXX Factor





By Sangeeth Sebastian


Not long ago, in the days of Doordarshan monopoly, a curious prepubescent boy tried to sneak a peek from the edge of his bed at the woodpaneled B& W television - steaming with uncut and racy Heat and Dust erotica. He was reprimanded, told to face the wall and doze off.

Those days, the national broadcaster was bold enough to show and discuss sex. But the good ol'days didn't last long and the prudish censors in the I& B ministry decided to sterilize anything remotely associated with sex.

Our boy, now a testosterone-charged teen enjoying his anatomical changes, got his daily dose of titillation through cable TV (Baywatch and an obscure Russian channel TV6' s late night nude acts) and the morning shows in dank theatres screening Silk Smitha's voluptuous gyrations.

He illegally indulged in the hardcore dose, too, with a borrowed cassette of the latest XXX epic from the neighbourhood "video parlour" and, later, via the MMS sent by a friend or on the Internet.

Today, the boy wears a sprinkling of grey hair and charges his testosterone level with celebrity pornstar Sunny Leone - the 30- year- old jaw- dropping Indian- Punjabi- Canadian genetic hotchpotch - on his iPad. He is not alone. Scores of people around the world surf the Net or watch downloaded smut churned out by the multi- billion dollar porn industry on their personal gizmos.


That prompted British budget airline Ryanair to make its recent announcement - pornography in in- flight entertainment. Ahem! It's a move that raised many brows. Who will stop children on planes from stealing a glance at the adult material? Then again, who will check children from voting for Sunny Leone, currently the guest diva in reality show Big Boss 5, and surfing the Net to get tutored about her? These are pertinent points because sex is still a taboo in India.

"We are living in a hugely contradictory and hypocritical society," author and historian Salim Kidwai says. "These are contradictions, which we have to face as a society. It is inevitable." 

Brinda Bose, associate professor of English in Delhi University, preferred to be direct than philosophical.
"Using sleaze to boost TRP is a ploy as old as the hills. Allowing children to vote is a question that has to be raised with all adult shows," she says.

Adman Prahlad Kakkar says there is deliberate smuttiness when the TV channel roped in a pornstar.

"Porn is legitimate business in the West. Sunny Leone is a businesswoman owning a company. Yet the impression that is being conveyed is that some guy inside the (Bigg Boss) house will eventually get lucky with her," he says.

"We equate pornstars with prostitutes. We are not aware of the difference. A pornstar has the right of choice. She is not getting paid to sleep with a customer, but to act in movies. A prostitute does not have this right," he adds.

Do Indians understand this distinction? One can't be too certain about this uncertainty. The country's collective fascination for smut can be gauged from the latest Google Trends, which ranks India fourth, way ahead of the US (eighth), on the list of nations looking for " porn" in the search engine.

Amazingly, Delhi ranks the third among the cities searching for "porn". The nation is No. 3 for "sex", while Pakistan beats us at No. 1. Delhi, Bangalore and Mumbai came second, third and fourth respectively in this category. The Americans don't even make it to the top 10 in "sex". It's not just a TV channel trying to cash in on the pervasive influence of porn. The People for Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) will launch a US- based adult site next month to spread awareness on - of all things - animal rights.

                      
PETA already has a string of topnotch pornstars such as Jenna Jameson, Ron Jeremy and Sasha Grey as brand ambassadors.

"Experience has taught us that provocative campaigns make the difference," PETA's chief functionary in India, Poorva Joshipura, says. "Adult entertainment sites are visited by people all over the world. It is vital to seize that audience for social causes," Joshipura adds.


So is porn finally going mainstream? "We are coming to terms with pornography. Right (through shows like Big Boss) now we are just acknowledging porn. It has a shock value and people are curious to see what pornstars do in a respectable atmosphere. Mainstreaming may happen in the future," Kidwai says.

If that happens, perhaps the tour guide in Khajuraho won't try to masquerade the ancient Kamasutra idols with a cheeky "Wife performing her nightly duties". For the record, sex was indeed considered a sacred "duty" in the Vedic era.



The article was originally published in India Today Group’s Mail Today on November 24, 2011

How Sunny Leone Sanitised her Porn Star Image



By Sangeeth Sebastian


Salman Khan claims not to have seen her work. The Bigg Boss 5 website describes her as an adult film star (the term has an altogether different meaning in India), businesswoman (well, she has a line of vibrators!) and model. And though she entertained her housemates with a sexy pole dance, they still don't know what Sunny Leone does for a living.

Why is the woman with anatomical augmentations, rated by lad-mag Maxim as one of the world's top 12 porn stars in 2010, being so coy about her line of work? She has even let it be known that she wishes to go back to the profession she abandoned - paediatric nursing - to become a Penthouse Pet of the Month and launch herself as an XXX- rated porn star with side businesses such as having a sex toy for men moulded out of her vagina and promoting the Sunny Leone Exciter vibrator.

That would be quite a comedown for a porn star who had more than 17 lakh Netizens glued to her online oral sex education classes. A Google search for Sunny throws up an 11 million search results in 0.14 seconds! Is Sunny underplaying her track record in porn because of her ambition to act in a Bollywood film? Mahesh Bhatt, insisting "there is no truth in the story that we have signed Sunny Leone for Murder 3," said there was "nothing wrong" on Sunny's part to "sanitise her image" for a TV reality show.


Ironically, Sunny first shared her dream to become a Bollywood star at the porn industry's equivalent of the Oscars, the Adult Video News (AVN) Awards, in 2010. She was speaking after winning the award for the 'Best All-Girl Group Sex Scene'. Bhatt pointed out that "the line between a forbidden zone like porn and mainstream is progressively getting blurred". He said he was keen on casting her in the 2003 film Kalyug, but it did not work out. "I have never felt she should not be considered for mainstream films," he added. "She is a sweet looking girl." Inside the confession room, Sunny informs Big Boss she is not afraid to disclose her identity and dares viewers to make their own judgment about her. "You can call me every name in the book," she says.


"My friends and family have already accepted me, so why should I be scared?" But she's yet to share details of her work with the viewers ofBigg Boss 5. To figure out why, because Bigg Boss 5 producers are silent on the subject, you’ve got to rewind to a conversation Sunny Leone has over breakfast with Pooja Bedi in one of the more recent episodes. Sunny mentions the American television personality and Paris Hilton’s good friend, Kim Kardashian, and asks Pooja if she knows what her claim to fame is (referring obviously to the reality television star’s leaked sex video with R&B singer Ray J).

When Pooja replies in the affirmative, Sunny asks her with staged innocence if Indian audiences would accept such a celebrity if she were of Indian origin. Pooja, whose scant respect for clothes was the only reason why she attracted notice during her brief flirtation with Bollywood, informs her housemate that the Indian audience is conservative and may not take kindly to it.

Sunny and her hosts may be airbrushing her image, but the bisexual star's porn acts leave very little to the imagination.She dumped her long-time companion Matt Erikson, a Playboy marketing honcho, to partnering with an array of leading men of porn, including Tommy Gunn, James Deen and Voodoo, for movies such as The Dark Side of the Sun, The Other Side of Sunny, Sunny's Big Adventure and Co- Ed Confidential.
The ignorance of her housemates about Sunny's antecedents seems a little hard to believe. Even when Bedi briefly insists that she has "seen Sunny somewhere" and the porn star replies, "maybe on the Internet", the other housemates let the matter drop.

They keep talking about her "innocence", "charm", "beauty" and "freshness", and even suggest that she may have a promising career in Bollywood like Katrina Kaif, but they steer clear of the P-word.
When Sunny is assigned to learn a sexy dance number, Bedi says her moves, intended as an act of seduction, need to have more passion, Sunny says: "Usually I just walk around in high heels and it works. I do not need to dance." That's the farthest she has revealed about her line of work.

The article was originally published in India Today Group’s Mail Today on November 27, 2011


Bollywood Divas face Sunny eclipse



By Sangeeth Sebastian


Sunny Leone has dislodged Katrina Kaif, Kareena Kapoor and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan as India's most googled celebrity. Thanks to the media hype over her presence in the reality show Big Boss 5, Sunny has acquired an incredible fan following in the country her parents left for a new life in Canada.

The honour of clocking the most number of searches for Sunny goes to surfers in Noida. Google Trends data collected in the last 30 days shows that her photos and videos have been downloaded the most, after Noida, in Bhubaneswar, Ludhiana and Bhopal.

Among the states, Orissa ranks first in being obsessed with Sunny, followed by Haryana, Delhi, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.

In the last 30 days, the name Sunny has been searched five times more than Bollywood diva Katrina and twice as many times as Aishwarya (despite the hoopla over her newborn baby). And she was ahead of Kareena by over nine times.

Flimmaker Mahesh Bhatt, who met Sunny inside the Big Boss House and offered her a role in his Jism 2, a sequel to the 2003 hit, is not surprised by the fascination of netizens for a porn star.

"This is not a sudden phenomenon," Bhatt said. "The world has a sweet tooth for sex and it has been happening since the dawn of time."

Inside the Big Boss house, Sunny has been consciously downplaying her porn star image. So, will she be able to hold her charm?

"I don't have a crystal ball to predict her future," Bhatt said. "She is a woman of rare integrity who is in the driving seat of life and is not apologetic about what she does." He was quick to add, though, that for long term survival in the movie industry, one has to have acting skills that are different from the kind of acts one has to perform in
a porn film.

The article was originally published in India Today Group’s Mail Today on December 14, 2011

Sunday, 20 July 2014

When Sex Goes to School

Our health minister Dr. Harsh Vardhan, believes the way we impart sex education in schools should change. Will he be bold enough to take a cue from the Scandinavian model, widely regarded as the best in the world in terms of teenage and healthcare education? Here is a fictional narrative of what it means to be a student in Scandinavia.



By Sangeeth Sebastian


Muffled giggles erupted as the girl in tartan pinafore scribbled down the words one after the other on the black board. Standing next to her, with arms folded across the chest and a straight face was a genial looking woman in charcoal grey executive skirt and a matching suit. She was intently observing the scribbles on the board.

‘Fitte,’ ‘Faen ta deg,’ ‘Drittsekk…’  It was a cluster of swear words inappropriate in any civilised setting leave alone to be used in a room full of children. Surprisingly, the woman goaded the girl to be more forthcoming with her abuses.
                    
“These are words, which they know or will come to know anyway,” Irma Krdzalic told me at the end of her class. “The idea is to remove the shock value from them. The words lose its sting the moment we stop reacting to it,” she said.

Krdzalic now wanted her students to ask her questions. ‘Any burning question you have got will be answered,’ she said. However, gauging the inhibition, she decided to break the ice herself.

‘What do you think is the point of sex?’ she said. There was a brief silence before the first answer. ‘It is a good way to lose weight,’ shouted a boy with a moppy hair sitting two rows ahead of me from the back. The class chuckled in unison.

Her session with students from higher classes, in the subsequent days, got even more risqué and explicit. In grade X, she taught a class of 30 how to unroll a condom on a plastic penis and told them, in her characteristic nonchalance, to check for any wear or tear on the rubber.

‘This is unbelievable,’ I muttered to myself trying to make sense of the events unfolding in front of my eyes.
  
I imagined how it would be if something like this were to happen in India. A national outrage no doubt, with 24x7 news channels playing the ‘shocking’ visual of children unrolling condoms on plastic penises, in loop.

Krdzalic’s session, meanwhile, was getting steamier. ‘Can anyone tell me the only living creature in the planet that has an organ devoted exclusively for pleasure?’ she asked.

The responses were swift. ‘Man,’ said one. ‘Apes,’ said another. ‘Chimpanzee,’ yelled someone from the back. The guessing game continued for a while until Krdzalic raised her hand and indicated that she was going to reveal the correct answer.

‘Women,’ she said. There was a gasp of disbelief from the boys.

‘Do you know what it is called?’ ‘Clitoris,’ she said without waiting for an answer. She then drew the attention of the class to a wall hanging poster of female genitalia. ‘Can anybody tell me where the clitoris is located?’ Students peered hard at the poster. Again without waiting for an answer she highlighted the spot with a marker. ‘Here it is,’ she said. ‘It’s a tiny button like structure right above the opening of the vagina. It becomes larger when a woman is sexually excited,’ she said. The class ended with students being distributed a box of condoms.



‘Mr. Mathew, I hope you liked my classes,’ said Krdzalic walking down the aisle. ‘It was unbelievable,’ I said.

Tagging along with Krdzalic, the science teacher of Sogn Videregaende School, Oslo, was to me like taking a stroll through Nicholson Baker’s House of Holes for children.

‘In fact I want to talk to you more about it,’ I said. ‘But first I would like to talk to some students.’

‘Please go ahead I will be in my room.’

I caught hold of the boy who yelled ‘chimpanzee’ and asked him about the session. He was a tall—about six— pimply looking guy named Espen Arild Jenssen. ‘It is good,’ he said. ‘I thought I knew everything about sex from the internet and magazines. I learned a lot of new things.’

His classmate Zahra Ismail in a headscarf framing her face was however worried about taking the condoms home. Her parents who immigrated to Norway from Iraq to escape the war never approved of the classes. ‘I am going to hide this from them,’ she said waving the box of condoms.

Krdzalic’s room was on the second floor. I strolled through the swanky corridor searchingly until I saw a sign almost towards the end of the building, which read ‘STAFF ROOM.’ It was spacious with monochromatic cubicles bearing the names of individual teachers. I looked around for Krdzalic. She was sitting inside her cubicle leafing through some files.

“Please sit. I’m just checking attendances. Do you mind if I finish it first.’ ‘Not at all.’ There was a framed black and white photograph of a feisty looking woman on the wall behind her desk. I looked at the photograph quizzically. ‘That is madam Ottar, the pioneer of sex education in Scandinavia said Krdzalic closing the attendance register.

‘I hope you found the sessions helpful for your research,’ she said.

‘It’s way too progressive and explicit to even think about in my country,’ I said.

‘Yea, our visitors keep saying that all the time,’ she said.

‘But Ms. Krdzalic, how do you manage to conduct the classes without any protest from the parents or the public? Especially with children from conservative religious communities in class,’ I said.

‘Mr. Mathew, Sex education is a non-controversial subject in Norway,’ she said. ‘The purpose of sex-education is to allow students to form their own opinions,’ she said. ‘It is about allowing them to grow up as honest individuals. Yes, there are challenges, but nothing much by way of protest,’ she said.

I recalled my stint as a reporter with The Secular in Kerala when I was told to cover an emergency meeting convened by the Parent-Teacher Association of Scared Heart Higher Secondary School, Pattom. It was one of the largest schools in Asia managed by the Catholic Church. The meeting was in protest against the proposed sex education syllabus for students by the Central Government. The school auditorium was packed with parents, teachers, priests and media persons. Surprisingly, there were no representatives from the students.

Shabeer Khan, the fiftyish looking president of the association was fulminating into the microphone. ‘We send our children to school to educate them. To turn them into future doctors and engineers…But the government wants to corrupt them, teach them about homosexuality… masturbation… pornography…We’ll see to it that the syllabus never gets implemented,’ he said. There was a thunderous applause from the audience. ‘We have a great culture. We don’t want anybody to teach our children about sex. It is for the Westerners,’ he said.

‘Looks like you are thinking something,’ Krdzalic’s voice broke into my ruminations. ‘There was this attempt to introduce sex education in schools in India sometime back,’ I said, ‘but had to be abandoned due to protests.’

‘Oh…that is really sad for a country that produced Kaa-ma-sootra she said.

‘Our culture is inherently contradictory,’ I said.  ‘But with globalisation, things are in a state of flux again. Internet and western media today have the biggest impact on sexual attitudes,’ I said.

‘Even in Norwegian media there is a celebration of sexuality,’ Krdzalic said. ‘From female orgasms to dildos to Q&A columns…This makes sexuality education all the more important for children,’ she said.

‘Ms Krdzalic has Norway always been a permissive society?’ I asked.

‘Teenage sexuality was more or less accepted in Scandinavia for ages. It was never a taboo. We had this tradition of night courtship, though mainly in Denmark, where boys visited girls to lie in bed with them. We also had strong social movements lead by people like Madam Ottar campaigning for women’s rights and sex education,’ she said.
                                                     
                                                        *******

It was the last day of my three-day trip to Oslo. I thanked Krdzalic for her help and decided to explore the city. I had this Oslo Pass with me. The pass gave you access to a whole lot of places, including free travel and special discounts in restaurants. Then I suddenly remembered this Swedish woman whom I met in Kerala last summer. Her name was Ulla Kjellstrand. She had told me she lived in Oslo and had asked to give her a buzz when I visited Norway. I met her through one of our common friends, David Hart, a British priest, who lived in Thiruvananthapuram. She had even gifted me a box of ginger biscuits before she left. She told me to place each biscuit in my palm and push it in the middle before eating. If the biscuit breaks into three I could wish for something, which I wanted to come true. It was some old Scandinavian belief.


I fished out her card from my wallet. It had changed colour from the dampness of my wallet, the writing was almost smudged. But I could still read it. She was an interior decorator and lived at Asker. It was a suburb of Oslo.

Initially, I thought there was no one at home because the phone kept on ringing. Then finally someone picked up the phone. ‘Hello?’ I said clearing my throat. ‘Hello,’ it was the voice of a woman. ‘Can I speak to Ms Ulla?’

‘Yup Ulla here,’ she said.

‘Hi Ulla, this is Mathew Kurian from India. Hope you remember me?’ I said. There was a brief silence from the other end. I could tell she was running my name over in her mind.

‘We met when you were in Kerala with my friend Dav—’

‘Mathew… Mathew…. Mathew Korean from The Secular?’

For some weird reason she kept pronouncing my surname Korean.

‘Yea that’s right,’ I said.

‘How wonderful, what brings you to Oslo?’ she said.

‘I’m here on an offi—’

‘Didn’t I tell you that the ginger biscuits will bring you here?’ she said.

‘Yea..I guess it worked,’ I said. ‘So are you on a holiday?’ she said.

‘No, I am on an official visit. To draw lessons from the Scandinavian model of sex education in schools,’ I said.

“That’s interesting,’ she said. ‘So will you be you going to Sweden and Denmark as well?’

‘No, my colleagues are there. We will file a joint report once we are back.’

‘So you will be filing it for your paper?’ she said.        

‘No, actually I’m no longer with The Secular… I’m now a researcher with NACO… in Delhi.’

‘What’s that?’

‘National AIDS Control Organisation,’ I said.

‘Mr. Korean, it was really nice of you to call me, where are you calling from? Where are you now?’

‘I’m in a phone booth… near Egon restaurant’

‘Egon where? Paleet or Byporten?’

‘Paleet.’

‘How long will you be there? Are you in a hurry to leave?’ she said.

‘Well, I’m pretty much done with my official work… thought will explore the city befo—’

‘If you can wait for sometime, I’ll join you,’ she said.


                                                             *******

It was well past noon, when Ulla finally turned up. She looked stunning in her black halter top and cream coloured trousers. She had a pair of massive hoop earrings and wore her blonde hair in straight natural style. 

‘Nice to see you again, Mr. Korean,’ she greeted me with a hug. ‘Nice to see you too Ms. Ulla,’ I said. 

‘You look good.’

‘Thank You.’

‘So, which all places have you seen?

‘I have just started, but I’m afraid I don’t have much time,’ I said.

‘You should visit the Frogner Park,’ she said.
                                                                                                                 
                                                           


The park was crowded with tan-seekers staking out spaces on its grassy lands. But what made the place unusual were its nude life-sized sculptures. There were hundreds of them all over the place, each striking some inconceivable posture or the other. Some of them were really weird, like this statue of a naked man kicking the shit out of babies. Gustave Vigeland, who designed the sculptures, kept on adding to his collection till he died. Though nude, his creations were devoid of any erotic undertones.

‘For Vigeland, nudity depicted the eternalness of life,’ said Ulla.

                                                    


Flying back to India, my mind was still at the Frogner Park, such audacious display of nudity in the heart of a city, what was the artist trying to convey? ‘May be paying his tribute to Scandinavian openness,’ I wondered.                                                     
                                                           
There were bundles of rolled up newspapers stacked outside my apartment, when I arrived. I instinctively reached for the entertainment pullouts. A sultry siren in a skimpy dress graced the facing page of all the pullouts. The headline emphasised her relevance to be on the page usually reserved for Bollywood celebrities.

‘Porn star Sunny Leone now most Googled celeb in India



The story was short listed for an Indo-Norwegian fiction contest “In Your Shoes” in 2012.