In an age when women are gaining more influence in our society, it’s hard to believe how porn can be promoted as being a positive thing for women and an accurate, flattering portrayal of what they’re really like. (And men, too, for that matter.)
While many people have helped to destroy stereotypes about women in so many parts of our society, we seem to have missed one major source: pornography. And while men are also objectified and massively misrepresented in pornography, let’s talk about women for a minute.
Degrading objectification
Porn sells harmful ideas about women, and they’re actually dangerous for both men and women. Consider what kids are seeing on the regular, these days.
Girls in the upcoming generation are seeing porn, and thinking that unrealistic, airbrushed depictions of the female body are how they are supposed to look, or the exaggerated depictions of sex are how they need to act in a relationship to be a worthy partner.
On the other hand, boys in the upcoming generation are seeing porn, often as their first exposure to sex in general without a frame of reference. Because of this, they too are heavily influenced by it and trained to think porn sex is what real sex is like. How is this healthy?
Men and women, boys and girls, are continually influenced by the pressures porn puts on them, and the misinformation it spreads. We figured it was time to call out these lies about female sexuality and spread the truth, for the good of both women and men.
Related: How Porn Dehumanizes Women Through Sexual Objectification
The problem is, porn displays women as simple sex objects who don’t say “no” to sex—even when it’s abusive, painful, humiliating, or degrading—are always willing to please the men/man (or woman) they’re with, and do whatever he or she wants. Her needs, desires, emotional state, and physical state don’t come into play—it’s always about the “other” person, or people.
Is this a healthy depiction of consent and what real sex is like, without conversation, communication, and negotiation included? We don’t think so, either.
Complex sexuality
Let’s get scientific for a moment. In 1966, sexuality researchers Masters and Johnson published a book called Human Sexual Response. They proposed a linear model (like a timeline) for sexual response, moving through four stages: excitement/arousal, plateau, orgasm, and resolution. In 1979, another researcher named Kaplan added the concept of desire, and condensed the stages to three: desire, arousal, and orgasm.
While these models were largely helpful in understanding male sexuality, and what works with men in the bedroom, they have posed problems for understanding female sexuality. These models assumed that male and female sexual response are the same, the same idea porn claims. The problem is, many studies have since shown this to be false. Many women don’t actually move through these stages sequentially or progressively, and at times may skip one of the stages. Do we ever see that portrayed in porn? No, likely not.
Related: Study: Australians Know Porn Degrades Women, But Still Watch It
In 2001, another researcher named Basson created a new non-linear model for female sexual response which took into account things like emotional intimacy, sexual stimuli, and relationship satisfaction. He found that most women in long-term relationships did not experience spontaneous hunger for sexual activity, but it was often brought on by a desire for emotional closeness. Again, that’s not something that porn takes into account, does it?
Explicit lies
Let’s take this science, and apply it back to what porn shows about women.
Porn typically shows women as being immediately aroused and ready to have sex in any encounter—even and especially when it’s painful, abusive, humiliating, or degrading. But, as we see in the research, this is usually not how real life plays out. An old saying that your parents probably know is that men are like lightbulbs, and women are like ovens. Lightbulbs light up immediately when you flip the switch, but ovens take time to warm up.
It’s pretty obvious that popular porn genres, like “teen getting punished,” or “extreme brutal gang bang,” don’t take into account the woman’s emotions or state of arousal, let alone her safety or human dignity.
Porn sells the toxic idea that women are always eager and ready to have sex, and that they are very easy to arouse. They never have bad days, they never turn down sex, they never need a break or need time to recover from tearing or bruising, and they never need time to emotionally connect with their partner. The same goes for the men shown in porn, of course.
To break it down into simple terms, this creates false expectations of women during sex, selling the idea that they should have sex drives that are always in hyperdrive, regardless of the circumstances or relationship.
This can easily set up porn consumers to have unhealthy and unrealistic expectations of them.
Why this matters
While porn portrays women as being simple sex objects that do whatever they’re told, in reality, women have real, unique sexual desires of their own.
Consensual sex in a relationship is healthiest when it’s based on intimacy and communication, not just one partner getting their way and the other being unsatisfied, hurt or humiliated. We know this is a “duh” statement, but in our porn-obsessed society, it needs to be said: women are real, complex human beings who deserve respect in and out of the bedroom.
When this is understood and appreciated, it can help build authentic love for real, complex relationships and help decrease the demand for simplistic and unrealistic porn.
Related: One Simple Rule That Could Stop The Demand For Sexual Exploitation
If society stops demanding to see women as unthinking, unfeeling sex objects, we believe there will be fewer willing performers and consumers, and the industry will eventually stop providing the content that fits that demand. We must unlearn everything that porn has shown about women, because they are worth more. You with us?
To see the female version of the letter below, click here.
Your Support Matters Now More Than Ever
Most kids today are exposed to porn by the age of 12. By the time they’re teenagers, 75% of boys and 70% of girls have already viewed itRobb, M.B., & Mann, S. (2023). Teens and pornography. San Francisco, CA: Common Sense.Copy —often before they’ve had a single healthy conversation about it.
Even more concerning: over half of boys and nearly 40% of girls believe porn is a realistic depiction of sexMartellozzo, E., Monaghan, A., Adler, J. R., Davidson, J., Leyva, R., & Horvath, M. A. H. (2016). “I wasn’t sure it was normal to watch it”: A quantitative and qualitative examination of the impact of online pornography on the values, attitudes, beliefs and behaviours of children and young people. Middlesex University, NSPCC, & Office of the Children’s Commissioner.Copy . And among teens who have seen porn, more than 79% of teens use it to learn how to have sexRobb, M.B., & Mann, S. (2023). Teens and pornography. San Francisco, CA: Common Sense.Copy . That means millions of young people are getting sex ed from violent, degrading content, which becomes their baseline understanding of intimacy. Out of the most popular porn, 33%-88% of videos contain physical aggression and nonconsensual violence-related themesFritz, N., Malic, V., Paul, B., & Zhou, Y. (2020). A descriptive analysis of the types, targets, and relative frequency of aggression in mainstream pornography. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 49(8), 3041-3053. doi:10.1007/s10508-020-01773-0Copy Bridges et al., 2010, “Aggression and Sexual Behavior in Best-Selling Pornography Videos: A Content Analysis,” Violence Against Women.Copy .
From increasing rates of loneliness, depression, and self-doubt, to distorted views of sex, reduced relationship satisfaction, and riskier sexual behavior among teens, porn is impacting individuals, relationships, and society worldwideFight the New Drug. (2024, May). Get the Facts (Series of web articles). Fight the New Drug.Copy .
This is why Fight the New Drug exists—but we can’t do it without you.
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