Filmmaker Erika Lust Brings 'Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On' Pt 2 To Netflix

“Porn today is sex education,” says Erika Lust, a Barcelona-based erotic filmmaker in the first episode of Netflix’s new docuseries, 'Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On'. A spinoff of the 2015 documentary of the same name, this new show explores sex and relationships in the Internet age. 

The six-episode series was produced by Rashida Jones, Jill Bauer, and Ronna Gradus, the team behind the original film. At launch, the project followed a group of teenage girls entering the amateur porn business in Miami. In the new episodes, they expand their content focus from porn into all aspects of human sexuality online. Vogue explains: "One episode revolves around a cam girl and her intimate relationship with one of her customers, whom she’s never met in real life. One chapter explores the question of whether a woman can ever be empowered in the porn industry—the answer is murkier than you might believe. Another centers on a pair of female erotic filmmakers and their efforts to try and challenge the pervasive, and often aggressive, male gaze in pornography."

The producers of Hot Girls Wanted worked alongside researchers at Indiana University, in affiliation with the Kinsey Institute, to produce a first-of-its-kind study on the effects of porn use on relationships and socialization in teenagers and adults. The conclusions of their study -- which drive content throughout the episodes -- confirm that most young adults (even children) are getting most of their information from pornography. Almost 40% of teens have been exposed to porn by age 14. 

The series also explores the racism and classism that is fundamental to the porn industry -- then and now. The majority of young women participating are from poor, rural backgrounds with little hope of a future. Vogue interviews the creators of'Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On'. 

Bill O'Reilly Out At Fox News

Bill O’Reilly has been forced out of his lucrative position as a prime-time host on Fox News, the company announced on Wednesday. The ouster comes after the disclosure of multiple settlements with women, involving sexual harassment allegations against him. Even the endorsement of his good friend President Trump couldn't save O'Reilly, who now joins former Fox boss Roger Ailes in the Bad Boys Club.

His ouster -- brought about by a total loss of support among corporate advertisers and new financial SEC irregularities at Fox, based on how the settlements were reported to stockholders as salary expenses ---  brings an abrupt and embarrassing end to O'Reilly's two-decade reign as one of the most popular and influential commentators in television.

“After a thorough and careful review of the allegations, the company and Bill O’Reilly have agreed that Bill O’Reilly will not be returning to the Fox News Channel,” 21st Century Fox, Fox News’s parent company, said in a statement. The host continues to deny all allegations against him. 

2017 Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-Thon Doubles Entries Of Women Artists

Editors at work at the 2016 Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-Thon at the Museum of Modern Art. Courtesy of Marily Konstantinopoulou via Wikimedia Commons.

The fourth annual 2017 Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-Thon happened in over 200 events held around the world in March 2017. Over 2,500 global participants edited the inclusion of over 6,500 women artists with new or expanded Wiki entries. Created after a 2011 survey confirmed that less than 10 percent of Wikipedia contributors were women, the 2017 events nearly doubled the impact of the 2016 campaign. 

“We were heartened by the response to our call to arms to fight against disinformation and fake news with facts,” Art+Feminism organizers Siân Evans, Jacqueline Mabey, McKensie Mack, and Michael Mandiberg told ArtNet News. “We continue to be inspired by all the dedicated folks who make room in their busy schedules to share skills and improve a collectively held resource like Wikipedia.”

Among the new entries in Wikipedia are Hannah Black, who called for Dana Schutz's 'Open Casket', the Emmett Till painting at the center of the 2017 Whitney Biennial controversy, to be destroyed.