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SAN FRANCISCO TO VOTE ON PROSTITUTION

// October 25th, 2008 // No Comments » // Hott Articles

solicitation decriminalized

San Francisco would become the first major U.S. city to decriminalize prostitution if voters next month approve Proposition K, a measure that forbids local authorities to investigate, arrest or prosecute anyone for selling sex.

By John Charles Reedburg

Believe it or not.

In this live-and-let-live town, where medical marijuana clubs do business next to grocery stores and an annual fair celebrates sadomasochism, prostitutes could soon walk the streets without fear of arrest.

San Francisco would become the first major U.S. city to decriminalize prostitution if voters next month approve Proposition K — a measure that forbids local authorities from investigating, arresting or prosecuting anyone for selling sex.

The ballot question technically would not legalize prostitution since state law still prohibits it, but the measure would eliminate the power of local law enforcement officials to go after prostitutes.
Proponents say the measure will free up $11 million the police spend each year arresting prostitutes and allow them to form collectives.

“It will allow workers to organize for our rights and for our safety,” said PATRICIA WEST, 22, who said she has been selling sex for about a year by placing ads on the Internet. She moved to San Francisco in May from Texas to work on Proposition K.

Even in tolerant San Francisco — where the sadomasochism fair draws thousands of tourists and a pornographic video company is housed in a former armory — the measure faces an uphill battle, with much of the political establishment opposing it.

Some form of prostitution is already legal in two states. Brothels are allowed in rural counties in Nevada. And Rhode Island permits the sale of sex behind closed doors between consulting adults, but it prohibits street prostitution and brothels.

In 2004, almost two-thirds of voters in nearby Berkeley rejected decriminalization. But proponents of Proposition K say their proposal has a better shot in San Francisco, which they believe is more sexually liberal than the city across the bay.

After all, the world’s oldest profession has long been established here. During the Gold Rush, the neighborhood closest to the piers was a seedy pleasure center of sex, gambling and drinking known as the Barbary Coast.

These days, on certain corners, prostitutes sell their bodies day and night, ducking into doorways and alleys when police pass by. One recent afternoon in the Mission District, six prostitutes were plying their trade on a single block.

Police made 1,583 prostitution arrests in 2007 and expect to make a similar number this year. But the district attorney’s office says most defendants are fined, placed in diversion programs or both. Fewer than 5 percent get prosecuted for solicitation, which is a misdemeanor punishable by up to six months in jail.

Proposition K has been endorsed by the local Democratic Party. But the mayor, district attorney, police department and much of the business community oppose the idea, contending it would increase street prostitution, allow pimps the run of neighborhoods and hamper the fight against sex trafficking, which would remain illegal because it involves forcing people into the sex trade.
The San Francisco Chronicle editorialized against the measure, saying it could make the city a magnet for prostitution.

If the proposal passes, “we wouldn’t be able to investigate prostitution, and it’s going to be pretty difficult for us to locate these folks who are victims of trafficking otherwise,” said Capt. Al Pardini, head of the police department’s vice unit. “It’s pretty rare that we get a call that says: ‘I’m a victim of human trafficking’ or ‘I suspect human trafficking in my neighborhood.’”

The proposition would also prohibit police from accepting federal or state funds for sex trafficking investigations that involve racial profiling. Such investigations often arise from raids on brothels that advertise as Asian massage parlors.

“We feel that repressive policies don’t help trafficking victims, and that human rights-based approaches, including decriminalization, are actually more effective,” said Carol Leigh, co-founder of the Bay Area Sex Workers Advocacy Network and a longtime advocate for prostitutes’ rights.
But San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris said the ballot question mistakenly assumes prostitution is a victimless crime.

“The crime of prostitution does not exist by itself,” Harris said. “Along with it come pimps, johns and other crimes that really impact the safety of neighborhoods.”
If the measure passes, supporters say, prostitutes would not feel the need for pimps as protection. But opponents insist it would embolden pimps who trap drug addicts into prostitution by plying them with drugs.

“The proponents usually paint a fairly rosy picture of two consenting adults and a monetary exchange at the end,” Pardini said. “They don’t factor in the people that are being exploited and people that are being controlled, the ones manipulated both physically and chemically.”

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JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE RETIRES

// October 21st, 2008 // No Comments » // Hott Articles

fans shouldn’t feel so sad

I can actually hear the hearts of pre-teens ripping everywhere.

For what reason, I’m not sure.

JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE’s days of bringing sexy back are officially over. Well, that’s not totally true. He’ll still bring it back like usual, just not with the help of his hit song SexyBack.

This past Friday at the “Justin Timberlake and Friends: A Special Evening Benefiting the Shriners Hospital for Children” the singer announced that he was officially retiring the song from the pop music world, he then performed it one last time.

Didn’t think a song could actually be retired? Well, then you underestimated the musical power that is Justin Timberlake.

Timberlake said he intends to concentrate on writing more songs for other artists and himself. Before you get too sad, expect to still hear the song at clubs, on the radio and anywhere else, except from Timberlake’s mouth.

Still, without SexyBack his concerts will never be the same.

Agree or disagree? Let me know your thoughts.

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BRITNEY SPEARS FOR PRESIDENT

// October 5th, 2008 // No Comments » // Hott Articles

in case you were wondering how bad can it be?

Part sketch comedy, part performance art, Britney for President is billed as a “pop-culture disaster.” Which is as good a description as any.

A demented fantasia on celebrity worship, plastic surgery and post-9/11 politics, it’s the brainchild of John Caswell Jr. and his Progressive Theatre Workshop. His debut piece was last year’s Shots: A Love Story, which used ritualized gestures and relentlessly repeated dialogue to re-create the experience of alcohol addiction as a suffocating downward spiral.

That Caswell uses similar techniques in BS4P (as it is abbreviated with ironic hipness) is suggestive – that America’s obsession with celebrity is itself an addiction, certainly, but also that the director’s “progressive theater” toolbox might need a few more tools in it. He wields his contempt like a sledgehammer, pounding home the message that the cult of “fame, fortune and beauty” borders on a national psychosis.

The nominal plot involves a vapidly gorgeous couple, Steve and Cheryl (Dane de Bruin and Emily Pelzer), who live vicariously through tabloid television, calling each other “Brad” and “Britney” after their favorite stars. At night, Steve tosses and turns through a fever dream about BRITNEY SPEARS in the White House.

The multimedia production is pretentious and occasionally ponderous, but it does have its moments, most of them involving the title character (Jannese Davidson).

Dressed in a miniskirt and go-go boots made out of the American flag, she stumbles about the stage in a drug haze, mumble-singing into a headset. The genius of her performance is that it is viciously satirical but still suggests a germ of humanity buried under a mountain of self-indulgence and desperation.

It doesn’t seem that anyone else in the cast was asked to deliver more than sketch-comedy caricature. That may be by design, but the histrionic hamming gets old, especially because laughter is not a primary objective. For more than 90 minutes, the ensemble flails away at an endless lineup of pop-culture icons, from Oprah to Survivor, all of them detestable, but none so much as the hollow wannabes who worship them.

Yes, Caswell makes his point. Again and again and again. But when it’s all over, he doesn’t leave you with anything new to think about. Or anything to feel except relief.

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DEATH TO THE ERA OF POP VIDEOS – R.I.P ‘TRL’

// September 16th, 2008 // No Comments » // Hott Articles

mtv will never be the same again

Shocked and appalled.

Total Request Live is going off the air after a decade, and all we can think about is MARIAH CAREY. What a bummer.

Flashback, summer of 2001: A glassy-eyed Carey unexpectedly wanders onto the set and begins to wriggle out of her T-shirt. “All I know is, I want one day off when I can go swimming and look at rainbows and, like, eat ice cream,” she says dreamily, as host CARSON DALY’s chuckles grow increasingly panicked. “And maybe, like, learn to ride a bicycle.”

Instant-classic.

Try to find anyone age 18 to 29 who does not remember that moment.

So when MTV announced this week that TRL — as it’s been known since the brand pulled a KFC back in 1999 — would broadcast its last fizzy countdown show in November, it felt like the end of . . . something.

Not that the show, which premiered in 1998, was ever that great. Format-wise, it’s a tremendously low concept: Bunch of high-pitched teens pile into a Times Square studio and watch the day’s top music videos, emceed at first by Daly, later by a parade of lesser-known VJs.

Occasionally an “it” boy or girl of the current music scene drops in for a chat and to pump a new release.

Like a museum exhibit on the evolution of the boy band, the groups changed — Backstreet Boys, ‘N Sync, Jonas Brothers — but the giddiness of fans jostling in line outside 1515 Broadway, that stayed the same.

But at least there’s the music. Which, okay, isn’t that great, either. The featured videos, democratically selected by Web votes, are generally arguments for musical dictatorships. Think: I Want It That Way on endless repeat through most of 1999. Producers eventually instituted a “retirement home,” where such songs as Pretty Fly (For a White Guy) could rest up for a while, get a break from rotation.

But the music — at least it’s there. The very presence of music on MTV has become a novelty, as the rest of the station’s lineup degenerates into back-to-back Real World spin-offs. TRL, that sentimental fossil, was one of the few remaining blocks of time in which people actually played guitars and sang.

Question: Can a TRL-less MTV even justify hosting the MTV Video Music Awards anymore?

That TRL managed to hang on as long as it did is more surprising than the news that it’s being canceled.

In the past few years, the whole concept of voter-generated countdown shows has started to feel extraneous. With the on-demand availability of YouTube, why waste time voting again and again and again for your favorites at MTV.com? Why not just watch I Want It That Way 57 times in a row online, retirement home be darned? What if we want it that way?

Still, there was something nice about how TRL taught us about patience — waiting, with fingers crossed, to see whether our wish-list video would make the show. Waiting, with fingers crossed, to see whether Mariah might show up again and what she might remove this time.

The end of TRL is not the day that music died. But it’s kind of like the day that music television died.

Without TRL, MTV is pretty much just . . . TV.

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