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Brazilian pageant for transsexuals where winner gets sex change
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Published: 16:20 BST, 23 October 2013 | Updated: 10:16 BST, 24 October 2013
As the Brazilian contestants sashayed onto the stage in pink bikinis for a beauty pageant held in Rio de Janeiro’s João Caetano Theatre, their incredible figures drew a loud applause and cheers from a hyped up, excited audience. 
The wolf-whistles and shouts of appreciation were not just for the models’ feminine curves; they are also for the breathtaking courage of the leggy, high cheeked sirens, who in flaunting their bodies made an unequivocal statement that they are proud to be transvestites and transsexuals. All were born as men.
But that wasn't the most controversial aspect of Monday night's Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest. 
Glamour: Contestants line up for the Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest in Rio de Janeiro on Monday night
For the first time, the organisers, the Transgender Association for the State of Rio de Janeiro (RIO ASTRA), offered the winner a transsexual operation from male to female in Thailand. 
The prize ran into controversy because a sex change operation is against the law in Brazil.
Instead of withdrawing the prize as they were instructed to do, the organisers dodged the problem. 
'We did not directly offer transgender surgery as a prize. We presented the award as a gift voucher with the option for the winner to do what they want with the money in Thailand.
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Leggy: For the first time, the organisers of the event are offering the winner a transsexual operation from male to female in Thailand
'It will be entirely up to them,' says the President of ASTRA, Marjorie Marchi, carefully choosing her words speaking to the Mail Online. 
It means, the victor can either undergo a sex change or have the best cosmetic facial and plastic surgery in the Far East country. 
The prize was worth £4,000 with a year of counseling if they choose the sex operation.
At Monday night’s event, there were even representatives from the hospital in Thailand who will provide the surgery of choice.
This is the second Miss Trans contest to be held in Rio and the winner of this year's national competition will also go on to compete in the Miss Universe Transgender 2014 contest.
Stunning: A contestant sashays onto the stage at the beauty pageant held in Rio de Janeiro's João Caetano Theatre
As the contestants made their way out onto the stage, their incredible figures resulted in a loud applause and cheers from the excited audience
Proud to be transsexuals: The high cheeked sirens flaunted their feminine curves at the Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest on Monday
The show has grown from fielding 19 candidates last year to one with 28 competitors representing 11 of Brazil’s states.  
The show is sponsored by the government’s Social Assistance and Human Rights Department as part of the campaign to combat homophobic violence in the country. 
Marchi, a 38-year-old, transvestite, is one of the driving forces in the country fighting to change society’s negative attitudes towards those who wish to live their lives as cross-dressers or as transgender women. 
'The beauty constant is essentially a political tool for us to draw attention to a section of the population that faces prejudice and is marginalised in Brazilian society on a daily basis,' explains Marchi.
The victor can either undergo a sex change or have the best cosmetic facial and plastic surgery in the Far East country
'There are still a lot of transvestites and transsexuals who suffer discrimination by being refused for a job, by not being able to use the name they choose for themselves, and by being the subject of homophobic violence and abuse,' said Marchi with a hint of anger in her voice. 
Behind the Miss Tran's glamorous celebration is a dark underbelly of homophobic violence in Brazil with the alarming statistic of 1,341 homosexuals murdered (LGBT – Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) in the country between 2007 and December 2012, according to records held by Groupo Gay da Bahia (GGB), the oldest organisation of its kind in the country. 
'We need to bring in affirmative and inclusive public policies and to open the doors and eyes of society for the sake of transsexuals.  
'In the meantime we are making ourselves very visible and hard to ignore,' Marchi adds resolutely.
Flaunting it: The show is sponsored by the government's Social Assistance and Human Rights Department as part of the campaign to combat homophobic violence in the country
Most of the candidates have jobs working in the beauty industry, as models and make-up artists. 
But it would be wrong to conclude the competitors are only restricted to this area of employment. Sharing the catwalk are saleswomen, video editors, a psychologist and students. 
The crown of Miss Trans Brazil 2013 was won by Raiica Ferraz, a stunning 21-year-old hairdresser from São Paulo who tells the Mail Online that from an early age she only ever played with dolls and at 17 she challenged the taboos in her school by dressing as a woman.
'Everyone was shocked. They just stopped and starred. But I decided that this was what I wanted to do and no one was going to change my mind.
'There was a bit of teasing, but because I was very confident, it didn’t affect me and they soon gave up out of boredom,' said the 5ft 8in tall transvestite.
Most of the candidates have got jobs working in the beauty industry, as models and make-up artists
At Monday night's event, there were representatives from the hospital in Thailand who would provide the surgery of choice
As she accepted her prize to shouts of 'gostosa, linda, maravilhosa’ (hot, beautiful, wonderful) Ferraz revealed she doesn’t want to do the transgender surgery but will opt for cosmetic procedures to make her face even more feminine.
'I don’t need this operation, I already feel like a woman. I have been taking hormone tablets for more than four years now to create my curves and increase my bust size and I am really happy with the results,' Ferraz says confidently. 
'I respect myself and because of that the people in my community and my family respect me. They are going to be so proud that I won,' she adds.
Ferraz and the other contestants also have home-grown international trans-models to look up to. Brazil has recently seen a surge in the numbers of transgender models gracing the catwalk. 
Six-foot-tall Felipa Tavares, who is signed to the 40 degrees international model agency that discovered top super model Gisele Bunchen, is paving the way as laws in Brazil, in recent years, become more favourable to tackling gay rights.
Wow I never knew that the procedure was illegal in...
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WARNING: Sexual content. Some still feel shame about being who they are in Australia. But not in the Philippines.
THE billboard on level one of the two-storey, triangle shaped building reads “Lady, Oil and Midget Wrestling”.
The billboard above it on level two reads: “Mixed Nuts No Cover Charge — No Show Charge — Birdies Martinis — The Entertainment Capital and Only Ladyboy Show in Manila”. The building sits on a major four lane Manila highway, for everyone to see.
I walked up a flight of stairs and into an air-conditioned club.
It’s 1am. There’s a Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show on multiple TV screens, and Major Lazer’s Bubble Butt is playing on the speakers. A beautiful woman, about 21 years old, was doing the most erotic lip sync I’ve ever seen on the spotlit dancefloor.
She was wearing pale blue stilettos, denim shorts and a cowboy hat: hypnotising a crowd of half-a-dozen white men with the spinning white cotton string of her nipple tassels.
The performer’s name, I learn, is Mariel. She’s a star of the 13-member Mixed Nuts team. She is one of seven with breasts and a penis, two of the 13 have breasts and a vagina, four are trans women who had never had any surgery or taken hormones.
Mixed Nuts is not a drag venue. It’s a bar that caters for men who are sexually attracted to transgender women and feminised men.
“Ladyboys have great bodies, they are normally better looking than regular women, they really are,” the Australian man I’ll call David said as we sat in a soft-padded booth facing the dancefloor. He’s 42, and looks like a ginger Piers Morgan.
“I just think they are beautiful, they have this exaggerated femininity. I come to Manila for relaxation one weekend a month. I’ve had sex five times today with five different people, three women and two transgender,” David — who wanted to keep his identity a secret — told me.
“In the Philippines I can walk down the street with a trans woman and nobody really cares what gender your partner is,” he said. “It’s more relaxed here.”
GAMP: POSSIBLY MORE COMMON THAN GAY
David’s playing style is referred to by sexologists as gynandromorphophilia (often shortened to GAMP). But it’s not a medical condition, it’s just a term for people attracted to people born biologically male, but who look, act, or are women, this includes cross-dressing men, drag queens and transgender women.
And GAMP is a very common orientation too.
Porn download data suggests there are more men attracted to trans women than there are men attracted to other men.
“I guess I’m a variety of bisexual. I like trans women and women, I am not attracted to men — not at all,” David said. “I come to Manila because the trans women here are beautiful. But I am not really ready to explain this part of my life to friends, and more especially my family. I’ll have people asking: ‘Why, why, why?’ and people who think I’ve been living some kind of lie because I present as straight.”
Before I went to Mixed Nuts, I had done some reading.
I’d looked at a study by Dr Ogi Ogas, an American computational neuroscientist. He said his analysis of anonymous internet histories indicated that those who watched trans porn almost never watched man-man gay porn — they tended to watch heterosexual porn as well.
Similarly, not that long ago, researchers at America’s Northwestern University attached penis enlargement censors to a group of male research subjects as each one spent time in a room watching a variety of porn.
The researchers found that trans-attracted men were just as likely to get an erection when watching heterosexual porn as a heterosexual identifying man, and the trans-attracted men didn’t usually get erections when watching gay porn. It also found that the men who got erections watching the gay porn rarely didn’t get erections watching trans porn.
That said, at Mixed Nuts I also learned the difference between “straight” and “gay”, even “trans” and “gay” in the Philippines is not the same as we tend to understand it in Australia.
So it was just after 2.15am and I was talking to a guy in his late-40s from Britain who I’ll call Martin.
“I come to Manila rather than Bangkok because they speak better English here. I really enjoy the company of ladyboys, I love that they have a unique perspective on things in the face of so much difficulty,” Martin said.
Then I was interrupted by a tall, dark-skinned trans-Barbie doll who tapped my shoulder very politely asked: “Do you want a blow job?”
I explained that I am gay, And she said that didn’t matter because “I am really a boy, I don’t have breasts and I have a cock”.
And she said: “Straight and gay men sex me”.
A sales pitch? Perhaps — the Philippines is dirt poor and the name of the game at Mixed Nuts is to get white men to buy drinks.
But her comment made me wonder a few other things, like how Martin was attracted to trans woman who didn’t take hormones — therefore didn’t have breasts — but wasn’t attracted to say, very feminine gay men.
“Well most of the trans women I date in the Philippines don’t take hormones, but I am attracted to them and I am not attracted to men. It’s a strange thing, I know,” he told me. “What can I say? The difference is that a ladyboy has no body hair and has a higher voice, they wear perfume, they look like women, very feminine, certainly more woman than man.”
Then the 3.36am curve-ball: we were joined at the table by Valarie. She knew she was beautiful; with her hair piece, perfect skin and black contact lenses, there was something even a little bit humanoid about her. She told me her boyfriend, an American living in Vietnam, “is a GAAAY.”
Vienna breathed in with her nose, lent in, and whispered “because he wants to get a vagina.”
Oh that old story: boys meets girl, girl has a penis, boys likes penis so much he wants to get a vagina. I guess that settles it all then: men are from Mars, women are from Venus, but we are really all humanoid aliens secretly controlled by an intergalactic illuminati. Or maybe I was just asking too many questions.
I’ve often heard some of my transgender friends complain about being treated like a dirty fetish — on one occasion with make-up running everywhere because of her tears and broken heart.
American writer, TV host and transgender activist Janet Mock writes about this problem as a “pervasive ideology says that trans women are shameful, that trans women are not worthy of being seen and that trans women must remain a secret — invisible and disposable”.
That said, while it’s not surprising men travel to Asia to explore their desires for the third sex when it’s still a source of shame in Western countries, it’s important to note that discrimination and violence against transgender women remains common in the Philippines.
A Spanish colony for many hundreds of years, pre-colonial women-led Filipino tribes gave transgender woman roles as Shamans or community leaders.
The Spaniards by contrast had been subjecting gay men to capital punishment during the Inquisition and banned any form of cross-dressing back in their home kingdom (even in the theatre and during cultural events).
This was just before they sailed into and then claimed the 7000 island archipelago. Unsurprisingly, the status of trans people quickly plummeted.
It was hard not to think of the case of Jennifer Laude, 26, the Filipino killed by American marine Joseph Scott Pemberton. After Pemberton’s lawyers first tried to argue there was no evidence Pemberton killed her, they then argued he did kill her — but only after realising she was trans in the hotel room. Therefore, he told the court, he felt “repulsed” and “feared he would be raped” — so he strangled her to death.
And while we didn’t hear about it in Australia, within the same week two other trans women were murdered in the Philippines by fellow Filipinos.
‘I SHOULD HAVE JUST RAN WITH MY TRANSGENDER ATTRACTION’
It was 4.18am and Martin was telling me he “couldn’t give a shit” what people think of his attraction to transgender women. But he has a wife (“a stale relationship ... we haven’t had sex in six years”) and child.
“I couldn’t leave my wife for a trans woman, she would find that so humiliating, then I would have to explain it to my kid who is only 11,” he told me in a drunken, sombre tone — a strange contrast to the camp, fun rendition of Greased Lightning being performed on the dancefloor.
“I met my wife not long after I lost my virginity which I didn’t lose until I was in my early 20s. Looking back now, 30-odd years ago, I should have just ran with my transgender attraction,” Martin said, pushing out a deep breath.
“I should have found a transgender woman and had a serious relationship with her, then I probably wouldn’t have the complications I have today.”
Luke Williams is a journalist. His new book Extreme Asia: When Westerners go East will be released in 2018.
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