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A sex show is a form of live performance that features one or more performers engaging in some form of sexual activity on stage for the entertainment or sexual gratification of spectators. Performers are paid either by the spectators or by the organisers of the show.[1][2]
Content
editA performance can include actual or simulated autoerotic acts and/or sexual activity with another performer. The performance can be in a theater style, or it can be in a peep show style. An increasingly popular form of sex show is a webcam performance in which the viewer is able to view and interact with webcam models in real time.
Sex shows are distinguished from entertainment such as striptease, pole dancing and lap dance, which do not involve sexual activity other than undressing and dancing nude or semi-nude. Sexual activity at sex shows is also distinguished from regular prostitution in that the performers usually engage in sex acts only with other performers and not with spectators or paying customers. Sex shows can overlap with other sectors of the sex industry. For example, a strip club may also offer live sex performances, and a prostitute may offer to perform sex acts with another prostitute for the gratification of a patron.
Locations
editIn Havana, Cuba, in the 1950s, during the second presidency of Fulgencio Batista, there were semi-legal sex shows and live pornographic theaters, such as the Shanghai Theater and the Tokyo Cabaret.[3] The English novelist Graham Greene, writing in his autobiography Ways of Escape, described "the Shanghai Theatre where for one dollar and twenty-five cents one could see a nude cabaret of extreme obscenity with the bluest of blue films in the intervals".[4]
During the 1960s and 1970s the Laotian capital Vientiane was famous for sex shows at ping pong show bars during the Vietnam War.[5] Travel writer Paul Theroux described a bar in 1973 Vientiane thus: “Your eyes get accustomed to the dark and you see the waitress is naked. Without warning she jumps on the chair, pokes a cigarette into her vagina and lights it, puffing it by contracting her uterine lungs."[6] British journalist Christopher Robbins wrote that The White Rose, a famous Vientiane bar during the war, featured floor shows in which women used their vaginas to smoke cigarettes and fling ping pong balls.[7]
Around the Reeperbahn, the red-light district of Hamburg, several sex theatres (Salambo, Regina, Colibri, Safari) were once located in the Große Freiheit ("Great Freedom") street. They showed live sex acts on stage, but by 2007 the Safari was the only live sex theatre left in Germany,[8] and that closed in 2013.[9]
In the red light district of De Wallen in Amsterdam there are three main venues for sex shows: a hostess bar called the Bananen Bar, and the Moulin Rouge and Casa Rosso theatres, which feature on-stage sex acts and variations on the ping-pong show.[10][11] Casa Rosso puts on 90-minute sex shows which are made up of nine different performances. The acts include a woman smoking a cigar using her vagina, a dominatrix who humiliates a volunteer from the audience, and a couple having sex on a rotating stage.[12]
In Thailand, locations like Patpong in Bangkok, Walking Street, Pattaya, Bangla Road in Phuket and Ta Pae Gate in Chiang Mai have numerous venues hosting ping-pong shows.[13] The expression "going to Bangkok" sometimes serves as a euphemism in the West for "going to a live sex show".[14]
Legality
editSex shows are subject to varying laws such as licensing requirements and locations are subject to local zoning regulations.[15] Some jurisdictions regard a sex show as prostitution.[16] The content of a sex show may also be subject to national and local obscenity and other laws. Some areas allow striptease, but no sexual activity, others may allow only simulated sexual activity or autoerotic activity, while others allow anything that is legal in recorded pornography to be performed live.[citation needed] Generally, as of 2010, autoerotic activity is the most common legally-available kind of live sexual activity.[citation needed] In some cities and countries throughout the world, live sexual activity between multiple performers is legal. Webcam performances are largely unregulated.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Dita Von Teese Got Her Unpaid Fee From Erotica Limited". Celebrity-mania.com. Archived from the original on 2012-01-13. Retrieved 2012-09-10.
- ^ "UK parliament hosts erotica event". The Australian. 2 October 2010. Retrieved 2012-09-10.
- ^ Miller, John; Kenedi, Aaron (2003). Inside Cuba: The History, Culture, and Politics of an Outlaw Nation. Da Capo Press. p. 129. ISBN 9781569244845.
- ^ Kurlansky, Mark (2017). Havana: A Subtropical Delirium. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 9781632863935.
- ^ Hays, Jeffrey (2008). "Sex in Laos". Facts and Details. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- ^ Theroux, Paul (1975). The Great Railway Bazaar. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0141189147.
- ^ Robbins, Christopher (1978). Air America. Cassell. ISBN 978-1908059017.
- ^ "Death of the Reeperbahn: Hamburg's streets of shame". The Independent. 21 March 2008.
- ^ Schaefer, Daniel (5 February 2014). "Kiezclub Safari schließt nach 50 Jahren seine Türen" [Neighborhood Club Safari Closes its Doors after 50 Years]. Hamburger Abendblatt (in German).
- ^ Sanders-McDonagh, Erin (2016). Women and Sex Tourism Landscapes. Taylor & Francis. pp. 9–10. ISBN 9781317601159.
- ^ "Bangkok Nightlife 2018 (UPDATED!)". Bangkok-Nightlife.com. Archived from the original on 20 October 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2018.
- ^ Pringels, Djanlissa (2 September 2019). "A Night with the Couple Who've Been Having Sex on Stage for the Past 16 Years". Vice.
- ^ Sanders-McDonagh (2016), pp. 9–10.
- ^ Pinkerton, Steven D. (1995). Sexual Nature/Sexual Culture. University of Chicago Press. p. 309. ISBN 9780226001814.
- ^ E.g., in the United Kingdom, sex establishments require a Sex Establishment Licence Archived 2010-11-19 at the Wayback Machine from the City Council under the Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1982, and a premises licence under the Licensing Act 2003.
- ^ Phillips, Rhodri (8 February 2010). "Coffee shop girls face charges over sex shows". News.com.au. Archived from the original on 9 February 2010.