Thursday, July 10, 2014

A lasting impression

Posted By on Thu, Jul 10, 2014 at 1:18 PM

Have you ever been on a date when you think all signs are pointing to a strong possibility of a second or third date? Everything is going right: the conversation is on point; he smells good, looks right and even has manners. He opens doors, makes sure you are comfortable and genuinely seems interested in learning about you and not just seeing what color panties you have on.

Perfect date material, isn’t it. Too bad this isn’t how this week’s date played out.

Once upon a time, a woman named Gloria met a nice handsome man named Lavon. Now, Lavon was sexy — well, according to Gloria. I haven’t seen a picture so I can’t speak on that.

Anyway, Lavon asks Gloria out to dinner. She says everything was right: They had a nice dinner and some great conversation.

Allow me to interject one thing here, fellas. The way to our heart sometimes is being able to hold an INTELLIGENT, WITTY and FUNNY conversation. Learn to talk about other things than just sex and what you can do and what you want in the bedroom. Nobody — well, unless they are looking for a booty call — wants to hear all that for the first few convos. Besides, you might think you are working with a lot and you may just get your feelings hurt later.

Back to the story.

Gloria and Lavon are really feeling each other, so of course they don’t want the evening to come to an end just yet, so Lavon asks her if she’d like a nightcap at his place.

I swear to gawd, I thought that nightcap line was just for primetime dramas and soap operas, but hey, if it works, use what you know!

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Thursday, July 3, 2014

Dating tips with Pillow Talk's Joanne Spataro: Keep it real

Posted By on Thu, Jul 3, 2014 at 12:00 PM

Joanne Spataro is the host of Pillow Talk with Joanne, a local Web series that takes the most fabulous people of Charlotte to bed. She offers the readers of Bangtown some sage, yet speedy, advice on love, dating and more. This week's tip is on keeping it real.

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Tinkle tinkle little star

Posted By on Thu, Jul 3, 2014 at 9:30 AM

Guess who's bizack?

So, most of you probably don't remember me, so allow me to re-introduce myself, my name is ... I almost typed HOV but had to reel that in for a second. Well, you can check the bio and you'll know exactly who I am.

In my return to Creative Loafing's Bangtown, I'm interested in sharing stories of the good, bad and ugly sides of dating in the Queen City. I know I can't be alone in this journey to uncover the one, and we all have to kiss a few frogs and THOTS before you find your Prince Charming or Princess Not a Hoe, am I right?

Let's kick off with a story I had no business eavesdropping on but couldn't stop myself. The names have been changed to protect the dumb and innocent, so buckle up — this could get a little ... wet.

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Friday, June 27, 2014

Dating tips with Pillow Talk's Joanne Spataro: How to flirt

Posted By on Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 11:36 AM

Joanne Spataro is the host of Pillow Talk with Joanne, a local Web series that takes the most fabulous people of Charlotte to bed. She offers the readers of Bangtown some sage, yet speedy, advice on love, dating and more. This week's tip is on flirting.

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Friday, June 20, 2014

Dating tips with Pillow Talk's Joanne Spataro: About looking overanxious

Posted By on Fri, Jun 20, 2014 at 8:25 AM

Joanne Spataro is the host of Pillow Talk with Joanne, a local Web series that takes the most fabulous people of Charlotte to bed. She offers the readers of Bangtown some sage, yet speedy, advice on love, dating and more. This week's tip is on looking overanxious.

Spataro is currently one of five finalists for the Queen City Soup grant presented by Project Art Aid. The grant is $2,000 and will be matched by The Knight Foundation. An audience vote will determine the winner at the presentation on June 22 at 4 p.m. Tickets ($10 each) are available at www.projectartaid.org.

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Friday, June 13, 2014

Dating tips with Pillow Talk's Joanne Spataro: Breaking up

Posted By on Fri, Jun 13, 2014 at 3:35 PM

Joanne Spataro is the host of Pillow Talk with Joanne, a local Web series that takes the most fabulous people of Charlotte to bed. She offers the readers of Bangtown some sage, yet speedy, advice on love, dating and more. This week's tip is on breaking up.

Have a problem and want some advice? Contact Joanne via her website, email or on Twitter.

Spataro is currently one of five finalists for the Queen City Soup grant presented by Project Art Aid. The grant is $2,000 and will be matched by The Knight Foundation. An audience vote will determine the winner at the presentation on June 22 at 4 p.m. Tickets ($10 each) are available at www.projectartaid.org.

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Friday, June 6, 2014

Duke University porn star to host online reality TV show

Posted By on Fri, Jun 6, 2014 at 11:25 AM

The outing fiasco of Miriam Weeks, Duke University undergrad and porn star, seems to have turned our girl into a bonified celebrity. Rolling Stone reports that Weeks, aka Belle Knox, will host The Sex Factor, a new online reality TV show in which contestants who've never done it on camera will compete for $1 million and a chance to become a porn star.

The 16 would-be actors and actresses have never had sex in front of a camera before (or at least shared the experience) and it will be up to an online voting congress to decide the winner, who will appear in a scene (read: "have sex with") Belle Knox. (Note: She says she'll do a scene with the winners, plural.)

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Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Help fund the penis cap?

Posted By on Tue, May 27, 2014 at 4:42 PM

When Charles Powells' friend died of HIV in the 1980s, he started working on an idea that could change the face of protection forever. Or at least its head.

But for your penis!
  • But for your penis!

The Galactic Cap is, essentially, a little cap you wrap around your penis' head that catches semen. All of your little dude's most sensitive parts are exposed, meaning you don't have to sacrifice pleasure for safety. Powell's Indiegogo campaign to help fund the product's FDA approval goes live in June.

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Thursday, May 15, 2014

Self-acceptance during swimsuit season

Posted By on Thu, May 15, 2014 at 4:09 PM

It is that time of year when a woman must muster every ounce of self-esteem and boldly walk into the dressing room with her arm full of skin-baring short shorts and tank tops only to leave the store empty-handed with her emotional reserves depleted. In swimsuit season, the thigh dimples and "bat wings" that are hidden under jeans and sweaters are now visible to the world. With idealized images of beauty held up as the standard, women of all shapes and sizes struggle with body image issues.

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In the past, I have taught classes on "being sexy" and how it is all about confidence. Men have told me how turned on they are by a woman who is secure in herself and her body. Online, I follow people like @healthyisthenewskinny and @militantbaker and @hipsandcurves. I know, in my head, that my dress size is not a reflection of my worth, but right now, after gaining 20 pounds since last summer, my heart doesn't know it. I am in need of someone to inspire me. That's why I am so glad I connected with Rosie Molinary.

Rosie is a local speaker, writer and educator. Her latest book is Beautiful You: A Daily Guide to Radical Self-Acceptance. I have heard rave reviews of her and her workshops, so I was thankful for the opportunity to finally meet her a few weeks ago at the Women + Girls Research Alliance Summit at UNC Charlotte. After one of the sessions, I stopped her in the hall and asked if I could interview her for a post about body confidence, since it was something I was personally having a hard time with, and I was pretty sure I wasn't the only one. She graciously accepted.

CL: There is a video of you online where you were interviewed about your book and you said "Negative body image and negative self-esteem don't usually root themselves only in dissatisfaction with the physical body, but really are rooted in a greater dissatisfaction." Can you unpack that a little more for me?

Given everything that I have seen and experienced, I just don't believe that a negative body image is solely rooted in dissatisfaction with one's physical appearance. I think that when we are fundamentally unhappy, we look for what feels controllable and our physical body at least feels like it should be controllable in our minds and so that becomes where we fixate. I also think that we can become consumed in our physical body when our mind and spirit aren't otherwise invested in experiences that provide us meaning, that allow us to feel a sense of purposefulness in the world.

Poor body image is often a manifestation of a poor self-concept or lack of self-awareness. Beautiful You is rooted in the premise that if we had a better self-image and greater self-awareness, we would be less likely to allow how we feel about our hair or weight or whatever happens to be our hang-up to consume so much of our time and energy.

Self-acceptance represents our decision to not have an adversarial relationship with ourselves. It is an acknowledgment that we have worth and are enough simply because we exist.

I know you work mainly with women, but do you have any thoughts about men and their struggles with body confidence? I know quite a few guys working out like mad and taking scary diet drugs because even at 40, they think they need rock hard abs in order to be relevant.

The beauty standards we see represented to us in the media exist for a reason: to encourage us to buy more things that we are lead to believe will make us more physically attractive and, thus, happier. For a long time, women and girls received the brunt of those messages but, at some point, you saturate your target market and you either reach the pinnacle of what you can earn or you look for a new market. That new market? Men and boys. And just like women and girls were sold a bag of goods by showing them a very limited range of body types and looks that are then excessively photoshopped, men and boys are now receiving that treatment. The result is that boys and men are making risky choices now to get the bodies they see that are just as photo-shopped and/or achieved by using diet aids and steroids. We are sold a limited, unattainable idea of what is attractive because if we choose to buy into it, we will always be buying. And what a company needs from us is to always be buying.

You work with a variety of women, from students at UNC Charlotte to middle-aged moms who attend your workshops. Do 20-somethings and 40-somethings have different demons?

It might be expressed differently but so much of it is rooted in the same discomfort with one's self and desire to be acceptable and enough in what feels like someone else's eyes. The irony is that we think we receive those things by being the stock photo definition of beauty. The reality is that the people who love us love us because of the way that we make them feel.

Why are we so scared to believe in our own beauty?

When we decide to end our reliance on someone else defining worth and beauty for us, we open up a world of possibility for ourselves. I also think that we have this sense that to not be fighting ourselves is arrogant. But arrogance is not someone who doesn't abuse themselves. Arrogance is someone who abuses others in some way because they are so impressed with themselves. Self-acceptance isn't arrogant. It's neutral. The self-accepting person is not right or wrong. She simply exists and takes her experiences for what they are, opportunities to gather information and enhance her life journey as she lives her purpose. The reality is that we are all here on purpose - each one of us is meant to offer something to the world that will contribute to its healing in some way. The fundamental question we have to ask ourselves is what we are not doing while we're lamenting in our mirrors?

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Monday, May 5, 2014

A conversation with Charlotte's newest kink-friendly sex expert, Angelique Washington

Posted By on Mon, May 5, 2014 at 11:07 AM

I recently met with Angelique Renee' Washington, a transplant from Pittsburgh, who came to Charlotte to be closer to friends and family and to start a kink-aware, sex-positive business. I was eager to welcome her and get her perspective on how our fair city measures up in the kink world.

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  • Courtesy Angelique

Creative Loafing: First, tell me a bit about your professional background and how you transitioned into your current role. You used to be a mental health professional. Now you are a sexuality educator and coach, correct?
I previously did social work, case management, education in youth services, and adult programs for over 15 years. In those occupational positions, I somehow always ended up dealing with clients' relational and sexual issues to the point I had to apply crisis intervention techniques and attain certifications in numerous areas of abnormal psychology, sexual paraphilia, and addictions. I found a niche in all forms of sexual health, sexuality and sex related relationship alternatives. So, yes, in being a mental health professional I used that platform to build my own services geared towards sexuality education. I currently consider myself a sexuality educator, advocate, and promoter of sex-positive culture.

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