June 2005

The sex blog of my friend Jefferson is linked in various ways to those of his acquaintances, friends and lovers. To help readers follow the interactions and exchanges, I offer this (second) weekly round up!

Jefferson
High School
On Again . . . ?
Transitions
Los Mentes Comprensivas
Cerebral Sensuality
Ghosts

Madeline
Fuckbuddy
Stockings
Cherished

Dacia
The people who made me
Mind the gap
Working abroad

Jane
the first time

Meg
where’s the party?
connect the dots
’cause down the shore, everything’s alright
lab rat
comfortable

Shelby
Jefferson
Wowee!

Colton
(no posts this week)

Theresa
(no posts this week)

erotica, sex, sexblogs

June 30, 2005 (reg. req’d)
By TAMAR LEWIN

IF drinking, driving and college admissions aren’t enough for the parents of teenagers to worry about, there’s a new specter on the horizon: “rainbow parties.”

As explained in a new paperback novel for teenagers from Simon & Schuster, rainbow parties are group oral sex parties in which each girl wears a different shade of lipstick, and each guy tries to emerge sporting every one of the various colors.

While “Rainbow Party,” by Paul Ruditis, has received a less-than-enthusiastic reception from booksellers, it has won plenty of attention from bloggers and conservative columnists and prompted lots of talk among teenagers, parents and school officials.

“We knew it would be controversial,” Mr. Ruditis said. “But everyone involved felt it was an issue worth exploring in a fictional setting. And I don’t think anyone who reads the book could come out wanting to have a rainbow party.”

Mr. Ruditis and his publishers see the book as useful for teaching young people about the dangers of oral sex. But many parents and commentators see it as exploitative, and publications from Publishers Weekly to USA Today have weighed in with articles about large book chains and small children’s bookstores shying away from the book.

By Masuo Kamiyama
June 28, 2005

“Today I’ve been doing ‘tokkan koji’ (urgent rush jobs) from morning to night. That’s why my back’s been killing me.”

The above expression might be used in a conversation between women who work in soapland brothels in Tokyo’s Yoshiwara district. To enlighten readers of Shukan Jitsuwa (6/30) to the latest on-the-job slang term, Nami, 23 met the magazine’s reporter at an Ikebukuro coffee shop, where she divulged that “tokkan koji” meant climbing atop the customer and moving her hips in a frantically rapid motion to make customer ejaculate more quickly. These rush jobs are likely when the girl is not in the mood to dispense a “real fight,” i.e., engaging in slow, sensual intercourse that resembles authentic tender, loving care.

[via The Huge Entity]

Feet

by Viviane on 06/30/2005

in sex

Do you have any posts of female feet?

Ask and ye shall receive, Feetman 78!

  • Feet Me
  • Jack Off Material Links

feet, fetish, sex

By HAL R. VARIAN (Reg. req’d)

ONLINE dating is one of the most popular paid services on the Internet. A 2003 report by comScore Networks stated that 40 million Americans had visited an online dating site, and JupiterResearch reported early this year that industry revenue will reach $516 million in 2005.

Recently, three economists – Günter J. Hitsch, Ali Hortaçsu (both from the University of Chicago) and Dan Ariely (from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology) – examined the experiences of a sample of users of a major online dating service and subjected it to empirical scrutiny. Their paper, “What Makes You Click,” is available on Mr. Hortaçsu’s Web page.

Users who sign up for a dating service typically post a profile describing their age, income and other characteristics along with an optional photo. The researchers asked University of Chicago undergraduates to rate the users’ physical attractiveness based on the photos, adding another variable to the mix.

The online service provided the researchers with information about which sites a user browsed, whether the user sent e-mail to other users or replied to them and whether the user exchanged phone numbers. What happened after that particular milestone was not recorded.

What Makes You Click: An Empirical Analysis of Online Dating (PDF, 45 pages)