Brazil Style Lesbi

Brazil Style Lesbi




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Brazil Style Lesbi
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Constitution gets overhauling again


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Brazzil
– Behavior – Cover Story – June 1996
Despite its image of a latter-day Sodom and the land of debauchery and licentiousness,
the country that gave us the string bikini can be downright prudish. It’s true that
prime-time novelas (soap operas) use to boost up their ratings by showing unveiled
genitalia and the annual street Carnaval parade bares breasts and all the rest on the
Avenue, but there are no public nude beaches as in Europe and the hard-core video and CD
ROM sex industry is far from flourishing as in the US. The real sexual revolution in
Brazil is very recent but the natives are catching up fast.
That Brazilians and Cariocas (natives of Rio) are sensual is not just a myth. A
new study from Infoglobo has shown that 17% of Cariocas between the ages of 18 and
49 have sex every day. And while the British spend an average of 3 minutes in a sexual
encounter, the Italians 8, the French and Americans 6, Rio’s residents have a
“whooping” average of 45 minutes per sexual session. Only Africans have the same
high rate in this department. The Infoglobo study, which listened to 300 men and 300
women, also revealed that 48% of Cariocas have sex from two to three times a week.
The profile of the average interviewee: a married person between the ages of 30 and 39
with a monthly salary of $1,200 or less.
In an interview with Rio’s daily O Globo , psychoanalyst and sexologist Sheiva
Cherman complained that the study hadn’t asked for the duration of the relationship among
those interviewed.
— Rio is the most sensual city in the world, she said. And there’s a commitment from
the population to keep this image. Libido, however, doesn’t mean practice of the sexual
act. The sexual practice is more frequent when the love relationship is recent.

Another revealing piece of information is that 55% of all women claimed to have
attained orgasm every time they tried it, without ever having to fake it. Hard to believe?
The American magazine Cosmopolitan interviewed their readers in 29 countries and
concluded that lack of orgasm is a common and universal complaint. The world average for
orgasmic women every time they go to bed is a mere 26.6%. Only Italians, with a climax
rate of 53.2%, come close to their hot Brazilian counterparts.
As for the men, they are a proud, boastful and maybe a tad lying lot. A full 64% of Cariocas
guarantee that they have never had a problem with erection during the sexual act. And the
assertion was confirmed by 69% of their female partners. The secret there seems to be the
fact that 78% of men and 89% of women like to share their sexual fantasies. Machismo,
however, is still strong. Only 28% of the women, according to the research, have the
initiative to start the love game in bed.
This openness, however, doesn’t apply to the disclosure of adultery, which is still
very common despite the AIDS fear. Says biologist Catherine Lowndes from the Escola
Nacional de Saúde Pública (National School of Public Health) which is part of the
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, “Due to social and biological factors, women are more
susceptible to venereal diseases. They ignore several facts dealing with sexuality, have
little bargaining power in sexual relations and are victims of sexual violence on a large
scale. Besides, there is a social acceptance of male infidelity and the habit of
concealing it.”
Research conducted among the patients at the Gaffrée Guinle Hospital in Rio showed
that 70% of the heterosexual men interviewed had had more than one sexual partner the
previous year, while 7.9% had participated in group sex. All of this has contributed to
the increase of AIDS among women who are getting the disease from their husbands and
live-in lovers.
The results from a national Datafolha research project about sexual behavior among
different professional categories, however, show a much smaller rate of infidelity. The
study that was ordered by the Central Geral dos Trabalhadores (CGT), a national
confederation of workers, included 3,644 men and women in seven Brazilian capitals.

As expected, the research revealed that necessity also makes fidelity. Men and women
more likely to stray were those with jobs that allowed an alibi for their sexual escapes.
So, while 21% of metalworkers admitted to adultery this number increased to 27% among
those working in construction.
The study also revealed how faithfulness is seen in different regions of the country.
The national average of infidelity is 23%. Cariocas appear to be just a little over
this number, with an unfaithfulness rate of 29%, the same as Gaúchos (those from
Rio Grande do Sul). In São Paulo 19% of the workers acknowledge extramarital affairs and
only 18% of the workers in Belo Horizonte (capital of Minas Gerais) admitted to
infidelity, but the practice of sex outside the home is something common for 50% of those
interviewed in Belém, capital of Pará, a national record in this study.
If the battle of the sexes is an unequal one all over the world, women in Brazil have
still another handicap: their sheer numbers. Census data show, that among those Brazilians
between ages 15 and 49, there are 1.8 million more women than men in the country. That
means an average of 95 men for every 100 women. In urban centers like São Paulo and in
the Northeast this imbalance goes up to 85 out of 100.
Some experts believe that this will contribute to 10% of Brazilian women never having a
chance to marry. According to census data, in Rio de Janeiro for example, the state where
this difference is more pronounced in absolute numbers, there are 315,056 more women than
men.
To complicate matters, while there are 4.2 million divorced or separated women, the
number of men in the same situation is only 1.9 million. This shows what everybody knows:
that it is much easier for a separated man to find a new partner than for a woman. The
official numbers also reveal that 80.6% of the 37,000 divorced men who decided to remarry
in 1994 chose not-previously-married women. As for widows, there are 4.5 millions of them
in the country compared to 870,000 widowers.
This female disadvantage is explained by the so-called “solitude pyramid”
theory. Interviewed by the daily Folha de São Paulo , Elza Berquó, from Unicamp’s
(University of Campinas, São Paulo) Núcleo de Estudos Populacionais (Center for
Population Studies) explained: “Women look at the top of the pyramid where the offer
of partners decreases, while men look at the base which is larger. The matrimonial market
always favors men.”
This state of affairs has in practice encouraged the number of non-official marriages
and in some cases even a kind of mild polygamy in which men have more than one partner.
The rate of marriages has been decreasing. While there were 7.48 marriages for 1,000
people in 1986, these unions had fallen to 4.96 in ’94. There were 763,000 weddings in
1994 compared to 1 million in ’86, when the country had a smaller population.

In a 1992 study entitled “The contraction of the matrimonial market and the
increase of consensual unions in Brazil” two foreign scholars, American Margaret
Greene and Indian Vijayendra Rao suggested that society allowing men to have more than one
partner makes it possible for women to be married at least once and helps to alleviate the
problem of the deficit of available male partners.
Match-maker agencies have been sprouting all over Brazil. All of them, however, seem to
have the same problem: more female clients than male ones. Paimi (Primeira Agência
Internacional de Matrimônios e Informações – First Internacional Agency for Matrimonies
and Information), for example, has been in business for 50 years and has offices in São
Paulo, Rio and New York. With 3,000 clients, the Cupid helper charges around $1,000 plus a
bonus when there is a marriage. They say they have made “4,000 unions” including
that of Harry Philippe Mihalescu who is the owner and son of Paimi’s founder. Their
telephone in São Paulo: (011) 221-9699.
Apego — (011) 543-2659 — another matchmaker company from São Paulo has been
recruiting their male clients aggressively even with ads in men’s magazines. But really
aggressive is Partner’s owner, who is known only as Vicente and who goes personally to
singles bars and night clubs to convince men to join his company. Partner — (051)
336-8036 is an agency from Porto Alegre (Rio Grande do Sul).
Happy End — (011) 853-7466 — has dozens of connections in the US and Europe and more
than 2,200 clients. To use the services of this company founded in 1992 clients pay around
$1,000 and $1,000 more after 3 months of courtship. One of the newest kids on the block is
Apego — (011) 543-2659 — a service created by Inge Gruber, an Austrian woman who sold
her apartment and used the $80,000 she got to start the company last year. The cost here
varies from $150 to $800 and the number of clients has already reached 500.

In Recife, the Brasil Exterior agency — (081) 421-3080 — is specialized in finding
husbands in Germany for its clients. After seven years in business, the service which has
a catalogue of more than 1,000 women, has contributed to close to 200 marriages. In an
interview with Veja magazine last year, Lindinalva Santana Ferraz, the company’s
owner declared, “We don’t admit sexual tourism or gold-diggers.” Every time
there’s an “I do” Ferraz gets rewarded with $1400.

Contrary to what we may think, most of Lindinalva’s clients are not poor girls looking
for an easy way out of their misery. By and large they are middle-class women who have a
college degree or at least have finished high-school. By the way, completed high-school is
one of the requirements to make the list. Many times they are women disillusioned with
Brazil and Brazilian men. Their average age is 20.
According to IBGE (Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics), Brazilian women
start their sexual life around 19. But this age has been lowering recently mainly in urban
centers. Pregnancy among early teens has been also on the increase and this is due not
only to a more benevolent view towards sex. Biological factors also play a role: every ten
years menarche (the first menstrual period) occurs four months earlier. In the ’90s the
average age for girls to have their first menstruation is 12.
Pregnancies among girls between 13 and 15 years of age have doubled in the last decade
and a half, still based on IBGE’s numbers. Close to 8,000 children were born last year to
mothers who were 15 or younger. In the late ’70s this number was around 3,700 a year.
Another 600,000 children are also born to 16 to 19 year old mothers every year. This
number, although bigger, has been stable for many years. The situation is similar for poor
and well-to-do teens, but for the richer girls, the use of abortion is much more
prevalent.
Another side of the situation of inequality between the sexes is the rampant increase
of prostitution and related services. To hear some people, every Brazilian woman except
the mother, the sister, the wife and the daughter of the person speaking, is willing to go
to bed with the first stranger, for the right price.
The dozens of classified ads under headings like Acompanhantes (Escorts), Casas de
Massagem (Massage Parlors), Termas (Sauna houses), all code names for prostitution, show
that there are plenty of women, and men for that matter, willing to make a buck on the
meat market. On a recent Sunday, daily Folha de São Paulo had 101 offers under
Escorts, from Abigail (“20, top model from the ’80s, brunette, long hair,
hotel/motel. $200 Tel.: (011) 607-9001) to Ymaeda (“burning Japanese, your dream girl
— (011) 693-8007).
In Brasília, the Capital of Brazil, there are more than 30 prostitution agencies, all
installed in residential areas, which cater to the tastes of the men and also a few women
in power. Visitors to the city are showered with cards and ads from night clubs like
Queen’s, Amore Mio, Flor Amorosa, all fronts for prostitution, as soon as they arrive at
the airport. The enticement continues in hotels and places where tourists usually gather.

Prostitution is not illegal in Brazil. What is illegal is pimping. Maintaining a place
for sexual encounters is also against the law. To avoid being caught by a zealous law
enforcer, many of the places present themselves as legitimate businesses charging only for
beverages and other services, letting the negotiations about bedding be decided between
the client and the prostitute.
Prostitutes can be found all over the country. In some towns in the interior they live
together in an area generally known as zona . In Ceará, the red light district is
called curral (corral); in Rio Grande do Sul, viveiro (nursery or aviary);
and in Minas Gerais coréia (Corea). Prostitution is also common on national roads
and big city streets. In Brazil, motels generally charge by the hour and are utilized more
as love nests than places for a family or a business man to spend the night.

“The World Sex Guide”, which is available on the Internet, has very little
about prostitution in Brazil. But it presents the personal accounts of men who have been
to Rio, São Paulo and Recife and who have met prostitutes.
An anonymous French guy, for example, presents himself as having “a good knowledge
of brothels in Brazil, due to my frequent journeys there during the past five years”.
He talks mostly about Recife and divides prostitution there into three categories: garotas
de programa (program girls), mulheres de bordel (brothel women), and vira
bolsinhas (turn purses — girls who ply their trade on the streets.
According to the French libertine, the garotas de programa are easy to spot in
public places like restaurants and bars. “They try to make eye contact, especially if
you are dressed like a gringo. How old you are doesn’t mean a thing. They know exactly
when to talk about money.” A motel will cost from $15 to $50 according to this
report.
He also describes in detail what happens when the garota and the john get to the
bedroom: “The girl will take off her dress and you go together with her to the
shower. She will take you to bed when you seem clean enough. She will touch you, suck you
(without a condom if you don’t ask to put one on), and you can fuck her as much as you
like, in as many positions as you want. She will dress your buddy with a condom before
fucking. Take your time, as there is no problem of time with her. She is not a
“whore” and what she would like is to stay with you all night and you can come
in her mouth if you want.”
The French lecher cites go-go bars at Praça da Boa Viagem as good places to pick up
women and the Cravo e Canela bar at Rua das Creoulas in downtown. As for brothels, he
cites the Twenty Club at Rua Luiz de Farias Barbosa, 20 at Boa Viagem beach. He describes
the place: “The girls are the nicest I’ve ever seen in Brazil. When you enter,
Mama-san gives you the prices. It was $180 on May 1995. You will pay her directly when you
leave, like you would in a good restaurant. For the money you can pick up any girl you
want. The best is to drink something with her and when you are ready just say vamos (let’s
go). The sex itself takes 1 hour for $150.”
For years European tour companies, mainly the German ones, have been exploring the
sexual tourism in Recife (Pernambuco), Fortaleza (Ceará), Salvador (Bahia), and more
recently Maceió (Alagoas). Since assuming the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism
in January of 1995, Minister Dorothéa Werneck has been talking directly to travel agents
in Europe to convince them that Brazil has much better attractions than its women, things
like beautiful places and good businesses.
Porto Alegre offers a special service by fax for those clients interested in seeing the
merchandise before buying it. The Dóris agency, whose girls seem all to have just stepped
out from a photo session for a men’s magazine and whose ages are between 18 and 23, has
been using the photofax since last year. The service became a hit and more than 85% of the
business is now done through it.
Half of the girls, however, still refuse to be photographed, worried that the picture
will fall on the wrong hands like a friend or relative who doesn’t know their line of
work. The price: $240 for two hours of company and sex. Full service for the whole night
costs $600. Zero Hora , a daily from Rio Grande do Sul cites Luciane, one of
Dóris’s girls, saying, “I had a hard time reaching orgasm before. But now that I
know that I am being paid I come every time.”
In Rio, the Vila Mimosa, a zona in the suburbs that housed more than 1,000
prostitutes had been razed at the beginning of the year to make room for a residential
complex called Cidade Nova. This didn’t prevent the world’s oldest profession from
continuing to flourish in the so-called Cidade Maravilhosa. These were naturally poor
girls.
Sex is being seen as a gold mine for many professionals who are abandoning their more
conventional jobs to invest in sex-related endeavors. One of them is William Atella, who
abandoned a career in an engineering firm to start anew as a modern gigolo. In 1994 Attela
used $30,000 he got from his severance pay to rent and remodel a house in Jacarepaguá
that became a clube privê (another code word for whorehouse) called Paradise
House.
Last year, already a rich man, he opened a second Paradise House, this time at Barra da
Tijuca. In an interview with weekly magazine Isto É , the engineer turned pimp,
explained why AIDS doesn’t scare his clients: “Here the girls are always tested for
HIV.”
As for the upper crust of prostitution in the city, according to a recent article from
Rio’s main daily O Globo , the Mafia is controlling it. Agencies such as Ipanema
Models, Rita Modelos and Roberta Modelos offer services of women, sometimes models and
magazine covers, who don’t charge less than $500 per program and can cost as much as
$5,000. The money paid is normally split half and half between the call girl and the
escort agency, which is in charge of preparing books with pictures produced in studios and
placing ads in ma
Mature Born
Im Des Orgasmus
Vintage Threesome Sex

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