Because Really Who Isn’t a Sex, Food, Internet & Shopping Addict?

gay-guy-dr.drewSEX REHAB: If you’ve seen “Sex Rehab with Dr. Drew,” as we have, then perhaps your favorite character is Duncan The Gay Guy. He’s genuine about rehab, is committed to emotional truth and remains seemingly detached from the limelight-grabbing drama that surrounds him.

In “I’m a Sex Addict, and I Play One on TV“, Duncan spills the deets on how he ended up onscreen in the first place, his strategy for surviving the experience (“I’d be the sober guy who commits to treatment … and to examining this 21st-century obsession: reality TV”), the sketchy behind-the-scenes show business backhanded deals that made him weary of the program (including product placement), how rehab helped him, and why he’s convinced Dr. Drew knows absolutely nothing whatsoever about sex addiction. It’s a rare honest look at the business of reality TV from the perspective of a sane, educated, introspective human being.

computer-addictAnd then at Slate.com, Vaughan Bell asks “can you really be addicted to shopping, the internet, food or sex?“: “This creeping medicalization of everyday life means that almost any problem of excess can now be portrayed as an individual falling foul of a major mental illness. While drug addiction is a serious concern and a well-researched condition, many of the new behavioral addictions lack even the most basic foundations of scientific reliability. In light of Tiger Woods’ extramarital trysts, “sex addiction” has been widely touted by the global media despite the fact it lacks official recognition and scientific support.”

We agree w/r/t internet addiction, and perhaps it’s in our best interest to insist such a thing doesn’t exist, but well … most of us use the internet every day for work, school and keeping up with social networks. Activities like “reading newspapers, ” “writing letters,” “shopping,” “keeping in touch with friends” and “playing games” which never got their own “addiction” stamp when they still took place primarily in “real life” are now internet activities, so where do you draw the line … anyhoo we pity the fool who enrolls in a $15,000 45-day course that aims to free you of Internet Addiction.party-girls

The Slate writer goes on to explain why “the dopamine myth” has been used to define addiction when its roots — the relationship of dopamine to drug addiction — is not applicable to other situations, because drug addiction affects your brain chemically in other ways. Did you know that “addiction” is a relatively new term? We didn’t. Read the article and let us know what you think.

And FYI speaking of alcoholics — Middle-class women hit bottle hardest in UK “Like a huge number of women I am mildly drunk every single evening,” said one woman. “In a tableau played out across the UK, we’re climbing the stairs for bed, pretty woozy on our feet, grinning gently to ourselves.” (@timesonline) (A large number of women I know are mildly drunk every single evening, too … eek.)

SIZE: “You Know They Mean ‘Fat’:” Lara Stone, Crystal Renn, And Body Diversity: Laura Stone Size 4 tells Vogue how hard it is to be a voluptuous model and Jenna at Jezebel says: “these stories never make clear that Stone veers from the accepted modeling standards only every so slightly, and that booking her for a shoot or a campaign is not some revolutionary act of body diversity.” (@jezebel)

TARGET WOMEN: Sarah Haskins finishes 2009 in the latest installment of Target Women:

PRINCESS AND THE FROG: Princess and the Frog: A Feminist Fairytale: “As a feminist, I was highly skeptical when I heard about Disney’s first black princess. The whole princess concept – being saved through partnership — was just so counter intuitive for me. The more rumors I heard about Disney’s Tiana, the more I was turned off. But as finals week died down and the reviews came in from trusted peers, I decided to look past the whole princess/amphibian bit to see for myself what the first black princess was really all about … And… I really enjoyed myself.” (@feministing)

ECONOMY: Dear Santa: Would you bring a job for Dad? There are sons asking for their mother’s return from Afghanistan. Questions about Santa’s technological know-how. Detailed job qualifications for their out-of-work relatives, with a crumbled up cookie inside. (@miamiherald)

LANEIA: last night i wished you would send me a photo of what the world looks like where you are and a bunch of you did just that. (@butcanshedance)

MEDIEVAL HERSTORY: Bones find from abandoned village ‘shows tough life of medieval women’ (@guardian)

TIGER WOODS:Elin Nordegren and Jenny Sanford are feminist activists? “These ladies should be applauded for leaving their nightmare husbands — unorthodox acts in this post-feminist age, where powerful men, from the White House on down, seem to think that they can do whatever they please and get away with it.” (@nymag)

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Riese

Riese is the 43-year-old Co-Founder of Autostraddle.com as well as an award-winning writer, video-maker, LGBTQ+ Marketing consultant and aspiring cyber-performance artist who grew up in Michigan, lost her mind in New York and now lives in Los Angeles. Her work has appeared in nine books, magazines including Marie Claire and Curve, and all over the web including Nylon, Queerty, Nerve, Bitch, Emily Books and Jezebel. She had a very popular personal blog once upon a time, and then she recapped The L Word, and then she had the idea to make this place, and now here we all are! In 2016, she was nominated for a GLAAD Award for Outstanding Digital Journalism. She's Jewish and has a cute dog named Carol. Follow her on twitter and instagram.

Riese has written 3267 articles for us.

21 Comments

  1. On drunk middle class women: “In a tableau played out across the UK, we’re climbing the stairs for bed, pretty woozy on our feet, grinning gently to ourselves.” If they’re making it to bed on their own feet, I’m not that concerned. Heck, I have friends who can barely make it through their own front yards most weekends, none the less all the way to their beds.

    • Right? Getting to bed all by yourself + grinning + able to get up and do it all again = win…

    • on “intervention,” you know that the shit has hit the fan when the mother of five passes out on the lawn and continues talking nonsense. if you are not passed out on the lawn or do not live in an abandoned schoolhouse intervention says = win.

  2. the modeling industry is sad smh they are setting terrible examples for little girls everywhere

    • yeah! you basically can’t have any meat on your bones. like AT ALL. and still be really tall. so essentially you need to do a lot of cocaine.

      • And then when they do get a average size model, with curves and a body they call her plus size. Size 7/8 is NOT plus size. If so then I am obese.

      • I think you all should post a gallery of thicker women. (Only please don;t tittle it plus size) I can help find pictures and send it to you, just let me know..

        • YES YES YES YES! Please do! We actually have quite a few b/c every time we do a gallery or a fashion post I literally make interns comb through the entire internet to find at least a couple pics of girls that aren’t skinny to mix it up. And Christ, that shit is f*cking hard to find, Crystal Renn and Mia Tyler can only do so many fashion shoots. I had three different interns trying to find photos for the boyshorts post, as well as me and alex, and we only managed to find maybe 2 or 3. So yeah, email me some pics and we’ll throw that stuff together.

          We won’t call it plus size, I’m still legitimately really confused as to why they call women who don’t wear plus sizes “plus size.”

          • I must say… I was recently going through some of the galleries and had a hard time finding my ideal kinda girl. I love me some curves! give me a size 7-9 any day! I’m a tiny girl but it doesn’t mean that I’ve got a thing for girls my size. Bring on the curves!

    • The fashion industry is just so far removed from reality, I think. Most of the crazy shit they wear down the runway would look ridiculous worn in real life, and their body type is for the sole purpose of modeling those crazy designs. Why emulate that when it’s so far from what is attractive in real life?

  3. Every time I read Lara Stone being described as “curvy” or “voluptuous,” I indulge myself in a brief fantasy in which Christina Hendricks breaks into the Vogue offices and sits on Anna Wintour.

  4. Oh Elin Nordegren… so pretty. Sweden is awesome/they have good candy. Also, I’m so tired of reading about Tiger Woods. Like I was tired of reading about it the first day that it happened. I’m more tired of hearing about Tiger Woods than I am about swine flu.

  5. I’ve always been a fan of fuller-figured models. There’s a great site with many images of Crystal and other plus-size models here:

    http://www.judgmentofparis.com/

    They’re all gorgeous.

    The site’s forum also has thought-provoking discussions about body image and the media.

  6. I’m sure one of my best (female) friends has a sex-addiction or something like it, but I don’t know how to help her. For the 5,5 years I’ve known her she’s been in six serious relationships. In each relationship, she’s cheated compulsively, with completely inappropriate people. Her current relationship is with a wonderful guy, but she’s having an affair with her married, much older boss.
    This sort of addiction is definitely real. She is an awesome person who makes moral decisions in every other aspect of her life. It’s clearly addictive and self destructive behavior.

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