To be honest, I never really get BAD reactions. Most people who might react badly are simply too shocked for words. The people I hang out with would model fetish gear if the opportunity presented itself, so it's no big deal to them.DeimosMasque said:Hey that's awesome. I've been a fetish photographer/ erotic photographer for 10 years myself.
what has been the worst reaction you ever gotten to telling someone you were a fetish fashion model?
No, but I'm sure a number of them wouldn't care either way. I know some of the skeletons they keep hidden from the world-at-large, and I was a saint by comparison.Was your family aware of what you did?
You have no idea how many times that happens. That's why I never bring it up in environments in which I can't control the message I'm trying to convey. I'm not referring to dictatorial control, but something like this thread - an audience who's interested in the subject matter, and to whom I can respond in ways that either minimize or completely eliminate the possibility of misinterpretations.How many times have people confused "Fetish Model" with porn actor or prostitute?
Nope! I've never been to a single event with "Con" in its name.Did you ever attend FetishCon in Tampa, Fl?
I enjoyed it, but it was also just a gig. The entire world seemed thrilling at first, then I got tired of dealing with other people (especially junkies) in the industry. I wasn't sad to leave it behind, even though it DID feel like I was letting myself because I wasn't doing something so exotic.DeanCain said:Did you enjoy the fetish modeling, or was it just a gig?
Do you have any of your band(s) music online where nosy escapists may check it out? (I'm asking for a friend <_<)
Heh, I did think Hot Topic and the like would be at the bottom of the confusion. I've always thought it was some sort of romantical revival based on cathedrals, dark castles, folklore and iron crosses, but it's just so difficult to tell these days, isn't it? Goth this, goth that, goth revivals every fortnight. I'm glad I'm not the only one confused.Ten Foot Bunny said:Muspelheim said:Heh, doing the Lord's work ye did, that's for sure! Fascinating, very fascinating. I've always been 'respectable', part of the landless, titleless gentry, so to speak. Bumbling into a sex shop feels like a secret, forbidden adventure of sorts. With that background;Heh, good point. I've heard enough about the royal families to guess the rest. Hell, I'm pretty damn sure that the more distant and 'corrupt' it seems, the more likely it is that you'll entertain some very high profile guests at some point.Even the gentry can be corrupted...![]()
What is the oddest, most weird item you've encountered in your modelling work?Ah, I see, I had this idea of someone from Clitoris Industries or something asking you to present the new Frankenstein 5000 electric sex-aid ("70.000 volts!")or something like that. But now that I think of it, what could they do that would be really outlandish? It's clothes and toys, after all. I think it'd be more like those weird Top Model TV shows to drag a live tiger into the studio or something.Strange, but I never found anything odd or weird. I guess that has to do with my upbringing. I saw Poltergeist in the theater when I was 5, Nightmare on Elm Street in the theater when I was 7, Texas Chainsaw Massacre in the theater also when I was 7, and the list goes on. As a kid, I'd go to parties where I didn't know what the white lines on the mirrors were, much less why people put those lines up their noses. I listened to New Wave when it was brand new, saw the first broadcast of MTV, and was pretty much exposed to everything.
Point is (I think) what other people find weird doesn't phase me. I can't understand people who alter themselves to fit in. It's a totally foreign concept. I raise my freak flag high and don't give a shit what anyone thinks.![]()
Heh, about the nose-candy, I was a rather late arrival to that realisation, but it's been my curse ever since I grew old enough to visit the pub to bang on the toilet stall door shouting "Come ON! Some of us want to use the loo for real, you know!" while they yell at me to shut up between the lines.
I know what you mean, though, and I agree. Fly your colours high, and march them far!
More a catch-all term to vaguely describe a certain aesthetic in dress, music, and art. It's a convenient descriptor that became so diluted over the years as to be practically useless today. Thanks a lot, Hot Topic.What would you call 'Goth'? What is Goth?
What do you think is the general idea of contemporary punk, as it were? I certainly can't tell anymore.
I do hope I didn't come across as too presumptive with all these questions, although the answers certainly are interesting. The only punk I've listened to is the classic 70, early 80's punk as well (Oooh, black sheep, indulging secret pleasures, he'll topple parliament next!), and I've got no clue what they're up to anymore as well. Glad to know that I'm not alone in my feelings about contemporary punk.Hell if I know. lol It seems these days that everyone is too enamored of thrash and having a vocalist that sounds like every other vocalist out there, which itself sounds like almost every Cali punk singer that's ever held a microphone. To be fair (and to lay my biases out on the table) about the only punk I listen to is late '70s UK punk. However, I have an opinion that almost always results in shit getting flung my direction: Nirvana's In Utero was the last great punk album ever recorded.
How is the fetish industry? I imagine some sleazy tatooed blokes in a warehouse somewhere, but I doubt that is true.
True, true. Again, I hope I didn't come across as a presumptive prat, but I forgot how huge the industry must be and how different it must be from place to place. The porn/fetisch industry ranks pretty damn high on the sleeze-factor here (Gothenburg, Sweden, Scandinavia's cigarette filter, in some ways), but it's impossible for an outsider to really judge from a glance outside of the window, as it were. But how was it on a local level at the time? Odd question, perhaps, but I've always been interested in just the general day-to-day work in industries I don't really know anything about.There's probably some sleazy, tattooed, greaser polishing his pewter while ogling a fetish mag, but that's WAY beside the point.I honestly don't know what the state of it is today. Even back when I was in the scene, it was different based on where you lived. Baltimore (where I lived at the time) was probably a lot different than Denver. And Baltimore certainly WAS different than it was in New York.
I think there are so many variables to consider that it'd be impossible to provide a statement about the industry as a whole.
Y'know I thought I've never met someone else with that opinion before. Its nice to know I'm not alone in the dark about that.Ten Foot Bunny said:I have an opinion that almost always results in shit getting flung my direction: Nirvana's In Utero was the last great punk album ever recorded.
Even worse these days is people confusing Emo and Goth.Ten Foot Bunny said:More a catch-all term to vaguely describe a certain aesthetic in dress, music, and art. It's a convenient descriptor that became so diluted over the years as to be practically useless today. Thanks a lot, Hot Topic.What would you call 'Goth'? What is Goth?
I'd record something if I had the tech to do it. Right now, I have about half of the tech. I'm missing microphones that can withstand the loudness of the drums without serious distortion. That's kind of important if you want to record drums.Vicarious Reality said:I wish to hear you slap those naughty drums
Which bands have you been in
Aww... thanks!DeanCain said:Aw, I was hoping to check out some new tunes! Well, a follow-up question then: What punk bands are you digging these days?
And thanks for the reply. For what it's worth, you always seem to have something interesting to say here on the Escapist!
Quoting this bit as an opening to say thanks for an interesting thread and to then sing back the sentiment.Ten Foot Bunny said:*reject moral standards, make anarchy and snipped posts your trademark*
bash out some major-key riffs, do away with trying to sound perfect, and make some music that's FUN to listen to. Music with a meaning. Music with heart.