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Smut: A Sex-Industry Insider (and Concerned Father) Says Enough is Enough

Smut: A Sex-Industry Insider (and Concerned Father) Says Enough is EnoughAuthor: Gil Reavill
Publisher: Sentinel HC
Category: Book

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Seller: motor_city_books
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 1952450

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 224
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.3 x 1

ISBN: 1595230122
Dewey Decimal Number: 363.47
EAN: 9781595230126
ASIN: 1595230122

Publication Date: April 21, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • Hardcover - Smut: A Sex-Industry Insider (and Concerned Father) Says Enough is Enough

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Smut has become the new secondhand smoke: It confronts you against your will where you least want to encounter it, and it’s impossible to protect your children from it. Nothing made this clearer than the Janet Jackson episode during the Super Bowl when millions of kids were exposed to an image that used to be restricted to consenting adults. But that’s nothing compared with the sexuality that now saturates morning radio shows, prime-time sitcoms, pop music lyrics, billboards, and store windows. "Just change the channel" doesn’t work anymore.

Enough, says Penthouse and Maxim writer Gil Reavill, the concerned father of a middle school daughter. As a liberal, Reavill always believed that Americans have a First Amendment right to read and view sexually explicit material, and he saw nothing wrong with contributing to publications like Screw. But he now argues that unlike magazines and videos—viewed in private and by consent—smut in the public square has simply gone too far.

Reavill takes the reader inside the sex entertainment industry, recalling his own experiences as a young man from the Midwest seduced by a job at an X-rated magazine in New York City. With witty and fascinating stories, he shows how his colleagues rebelled against a stifling culture by pushing the envelope. Little did they realize that words and images considered porn in the 1980s are now on the public airwaves around the clock.

Many Americans instinctively defend smut because censorship strikes them as unacceptable. But Reavill argues that we have to balance the rights of those who want to buy smut with the rights of those who want to avoid it. His book will spark a long- overdue debate about where we draw the lines in pop culture.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6



5 out of 5 stars Fascinating   June 3, 2005
Kurt A. Johnson (North-Central Illinois, USA)
11 out of 14 found this review helpful

This fascinating book is the work of Gil Reavill, an author and journalist who has worked for such publications as Screw and Penthouse magazines. Mr. Reavill is a proponent of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and fully supports the existence of the porn industry that he has been employed by since the early 1980s. However, American culture has changed markedly since Mr. Reavill went to work for Screw magazine, and the pornographic imagery and concepts that were once relegated to the dark corners of society have now moved into the mainstream.

In this book, the author pleads for the right of the porn industry to exist, but also pleads for the right to not be subjected to the porn industry. Throughout the first and second parts of the book, he shows how pornography has become ubiquitous in American culture, making it impossible to shut it out from out children's lives. In part three, he explains why we are where we are, and why so many support the porn industry with militantly blind obedience. And finally in the fourth part of the book he explains what we can and should do to protect ourselves and our children from pornography (including learning to use the v-chip).

Overall, I found this to be a fascinating book. The "chattering class" will be quick to dismiss the author and his opinions for any and every reason, but he does do an excellent job of presenting his credentials in discussing the issue, defining it, and suggesting moderate and reasonable action. If you are troubled by the R-rated talk and images that appear to be ubiquitous in our society, and want to see an insider's view, then I highly recommend this book. Mr. Reavill is to be congratulated for his excellent work, and his stance on a subject where his pocketbook would normally suggest his quiescence.

I give this book my highest recommendations!



5 out of 5 stars thank god someone's finally talking truth   May 5, 2005
Don Frankl (New York)
7 out of 10 found this review helpful

A thoughtful, interesting, mind-blowing book. Neither right nor left, but instead highly intelligent and original. Free-thinking and true.


4 out of 5 stars To Be Taken With a Grain of Salt   October 22, 2005
M. P. Procter Sr. (Jacksonville, FL United States)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This book reminds me in some ways of the book "Ordeal," by Linda Lovelace. In it, she says that she was forced to do the movie "Deepthroat," in addition to many other unspeakable acts. Later in life, however, she was a minor porn celebrity who hawked various adult products and movies. So is "Ordeal" to be totally believed?

Enter Gil Reavill, a former writer for publications like "Screw" and "Penthouse," to name a few. In "Smut..." he paints a vivid picture of how pornography and the sexualizing of America is having an adverse effect on our society. Television, mainstream movies, magazines, books, the internet and advertising in general are all being affected by smut. But aren't most people aware of this?

The old cliche "one can't see the forest for the trees" comes to mind when describing this book. Sometimes we actually have to be told what we are seeing and experiencing to actual be aware of it. In that regard the book completes it mission: we are surrounded with sex and pornography, yet can do little about it. The Janet Jackson episode is frequently mentioned throughout the book. After the initial outcry, what has really changed? Not much in the author's opinion.

The book is worth a read because the reader is forced to think about the consequences behind what is now normal. How quickly do we now look away from scantily clad girls on billboards? How quickly do we delete sexually explicit emails? How many times do we rewind Victoria's Secret commercials (for the TIVO-ly inclined)?

Returning to Linda Lovelace, my only question is: Is the author a true convert, or just a publicity hound? As in Lovelace's case, only time will tell.



3 out of 5 stars Conflicted!   December 30, 2005
Loyd E. Eskildson (Phoenix, AZ.)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Reavill's first job was at "Screw" magazine, and he has since moved on to writing for literary giants "Penthouse," and "Maxim." Somewhere between Screw and Penthouse he began worrying about the omnipresence of sex in one form or another - but not worried enough to quit his day job or to desire revision to Americans' right to Free Speech.

Reavill claims that more people view smut than sports. Venues include billboards, radio, TV, the Internet, video games, books, sexy clothes for youngsters, phone sex, motel movie rentals, X-rated movies on DVD-equipped autos in adjacent lanes, and raunchy songs played on high-powered automobile boom-boxes.

So what to do? Reavill points out that less than half of those with V-chips take advantage of their capability to block undesirable programs. Another problem is that censors historically end up making themselves (and their cause) look stupid - eg. banning Ernest Hemingway, James Joyce, or Geoffrey Chaucer, or criticizing the Teletubbies. However, Reavill does make a good point that overall the prevalence of smut has become overwhelming.



1 out of 5 stars Methinks Gil Reavill has a guilty conscience...   December 28, 2005
J.T. Benjamin
4 out of 10 found this review helpful

He's apparently made quite a bit of money in smut, but now he's shocked, Shocked! that his daughter has been exposed to lewd and lascivious material, herself. Now, ACLU membership in hand, Mr. Reavill launches into a sermon about what needs to be done to clean up America's act.

I don't buy it. I've got a daughter about Mr. Reavill's age myself, and while I'm concerned about the scope of her access to sexually-oriented materials, I'm more concerned that Mr. Reavill and those who agree with him are trying to keep me from making decisions about my daughter's access, and instead make those decisions for me.

Mr. Reavill's credentials about being a card-carrying member of the ACLU don't hide the fact that his polemic is, frankly, tiresome and unimaginative. Each chapter rails about a different bit of the mass media, how the exposure to sex is simply out of control, and how a crackdown of some kind is needed on freedom of the arts, speech, and expression. All in the name of decency, of course.

One thing I looked for, but never found, while reading this book is a discussion of how Mr. Reavill or his own daughter were HARMED by exposure to Eminem's lyrics and Janet Jackson's bare boob. Shocked, maybe. Offended, probably. But harmed? Not one word. She might be mortified that her father is apparently such a prude, but being an embarrassment to one's children is one of the joys of being a parent.

I found "Smut" to be a typical argument against freedom of speech. "We don't trust you to supervise your kids; we'd rather do that for you." Thanks, but no. This book broke no new ground in the debate.

A more useful book might have been a discussion between Mr. Reavill and his daughter about WHY he has problems with HER watching "South Park" instead of why he thinks I should control my own kids' access to that show.

Maybe I like my kids watching "South Park."

Actually, I don't. But that decision belongs to me, not to Mr. Reavill.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 6