Little King Sex

Little King Sex




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Stephen King reads America.
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Thirty years after Stephen King published his best-selling novel It , one scene continues to stick out to many readers as horrific, even though it wasn’t intended that way: a group sex scene between children . In the original novel, the group of kids — known as the Losers’ Club — have defeated the manifestation of their nightmares they call “It” (a.k.a. that evil clown). But they get lost in the sewer tunnels after the showdown and start to panic. The sole girl of the group, Beverly Marsh, tells her male friends that the only way for them to get out of the tunnels is … to have sex with her. What follows is an extended description of Beverly encouraging and having sex with each of the boys. It is, technically speaking, a gang bang featuring children.
The scene still attracts controversy, and both of the onscreen adaptations — including the one in theaters now — have ignored it entirely. If you Google King’s statement on it, you’ll come upon a quote traced back to a forum on Stephenking.com from November 2013 that reads:
I wasn’t really thinking of the sexual aspect of it. The book dealt with childhood and adulthood –1958 and Grown Ups. The grown ups don’t remember their childhood. None of us remember what we did as children–we think we do, but we don’t remember it as it really happened. Intuitively, the Losers knew they had to be together again. The sexual act connected childhood and adulthood. It’s another version of the glass tunnel that connects the children’s library and the adult library. Times have changed since I wrote that scene and there is now more sensitivity to those issues.
Vulture reached out to King’s agent for confirmation on the statement, and he responded, “That sounds like my statement.” He added: “To it I’d just add that it’s fascinating to me that there has been so much comment about that single sex scene and so little about the multiple child murders. That must mean something, but I’m not sure what.”
America, we have just been read by Stephen King.
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Jef Rouner (not cis, he/him) is a contributing writer who covers politics, pop culture, social justice, video games, and online behavior. He is often a professional annoyance to the ignorant and hurtful.



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D.L. Groover has contributed to countless reputable publications including the Houston Press since 2003. His theater criticism has earned him a national award from the Association of Alternative Newsmedia (AAN) as well as three statewide Lone Star Press Awards for the same. He's co-author of the irreverent appreciation, Skeletons from the Opera Closet (St. Martin's Press), now in its fourth printing.





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Bob Ruggiero has been writing about music, books, visual arts and entertainment for the Houston Press since 1997, with an emphasis on classic rock. He used to have an incredible and luxurious mullet in college as well. He is the author of the band biography Slippin’ Out of Darkness: The Story of WAR.





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Stephen King is brilliant. He really is, despite being a mainstream media darling. His books are held up as some of the finest examples of modern literature, are taught in schools, and have been made into Academy Award-wining movies. Not bad for a talent written off as just a hack horror novelist in the beginning.


And yet, there is an area of the man's writing that is consistently sick and twisted, even for the guy that gave us Pennywise the Clown, and that is how he approaches sex and its depictions. He is occasionally capable of a tender scene, such when Johnny Smith and Sarah finally spend one night together in the Dead Zone , or Tommy and Sue in the backseat of his car during Carrie . He's even given us examples of fine smut such as Nadine seducing Harold in the Stand , or Rachel soothing Lou in the bathtub with a handjob after a bloody day losing a patient in Pet Semetary .


But in general, whenever sex comes up in a Stephen King novel it's usually bad news, and will probably leave you filled more with crushing lack of faith in humanity than sexual stimulation.


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FROM inappropriate words hidden in the sky in The Lion King to suggestive language in Aladdin, a Disney insider has opened up about five hidden sexual messages.
THE wonderful world of Disney has long been suspected of hiding subliminal sexual messages in its animated films.
From inappropriate words hidden in the sky in The Lion King to suggestive language in Aladdin , the evidence against the Mouse seems to mount up fast ... or does it?
In the age of the internet, it’s hard to tell what’s real any more. For instance, an image of a purported sex scene in Toy Story 3 went viral after the movie’s release, but that just turned out to be a well-executed hoax.
To learn the truth behind the supposed sexual images in Disney films, HuffPost Entertainment spoke with former Disney animater Tom Sito .
Even though you didn’t know it, Sito was a big part of your childhood. His credits include The Lion King , Beauty and the Beast , Aladdin and more.
Now teaching animation at USC , Sito took some time to school us on what’s real and what’s misinformation when it comes to those scandalous Disney scenes.
Without further ado, here’s the truth behind some of Disney’s most controversial moments:
1. Does the bishop get aroused in The Little Mermaid ?:
The bishop seems like he enjoys weddings a little too much. A close look at the man during the marriage scene in Little Mermaid appears to show him getting an erection.
It turns out that Sito was the actual artist who created the bishop character and drew the scene. “It’s his knees,” he said about the infamous moment. “The joke was he’s a little man standing on a box and his robes, his big bishop robes, are draped over everything so they’re covering his whole body. And people are just seeing what they want to see.”
2. Does Aladdin tell teens to get naked?:
While having some trouble with Rajah, Aladdin seems to say, “Good teenagers take off your clothes.” You can hear it as Jasmine opens the curtains. It’s at that moment that your pre-teen self would giggle and hit the rewind button over and over.
According to the Aladdin director’s commentary , the line is actually an adlib to extend the scene. It’s supposed to say something like, “Good tiger. Take off. Scat. Go!”
Adding to the evidence that the controversial line is just misheard, Sito told us, “The two animaters who were doing that sequence are both, like, very religious guys ... that’s not their sense of humour.”
3. Is there really a naked woman in The Rescuers ?
An image of a naked woman appears in the background as Bianca and Bernard speed by, resulting in your mum never allowing you to watch the movie again.
“[In] the first Rescuers there was the nudey picture,” says Sito. The animater went on to explain that when there was a re-edition of the movie, a lot of the original executives who produced the videotape were gone. Not knowing about the naked image, the new executives used the original negative from 1977 in the re-edition. This reportedly led to a major recall .
“If somebody had asked an artist, he would say, ‘Oh yeah, there’s a naked picture in there. I mean, the Playboy centrefold. Everybody knows that.’ Everybody who was in animation knew about the centrefold. But nobody asked us,” added Sito.
4. Does the word “Sex” appear in The Lion King ?:
After Simba kicks up some dust, the word “sex” appears in the sky and your childhood is ruined.
According to Sito, the word isn’t a subliminal sexual message. It’s just a shout out to the special effects department. The animater says, “It doesn’t say ‘sex.’ It says special effects. It’s SFX.”
Whether it’s Sid’s suspected appearance in Toy Story 3 or Rapunzel showing up in Frozen , Disney films are full of Easter eggs. And it appears this is one of them as well.
5. Does Jessica Rabbit have a wardrobe malfunction?:
After a cartoon car crash in Who Framed Roger Rabbit , Jessica Rabbit is thrown from the vehicle and it appears that her “nether regions” are exposed . Or wait ... does it? That was kind of fast.
Appearances can be deceiving, but reportedly not in this case. According to Variety , there was a run on copies of the movie after the word got out that animaters had Jessica Rabbit appear without underwear in a few frames. Later editions of Roger Rabbit were reportedly digitally altered to give Mrs. Rabbit appropriate coverage.
Though Sito didn’t confirm the scandalous scene, he explained that adding inside jokes into older films wasn’t considered a big deal.
“You know in pre-video and pre-VHS and VCR and stuff, people used to put little inside jokes in films because things were running at 1/24 of a second,” said Sito. “So you say, ‘Well, nobody’s seeing anything.’ ... And then so [cartoonists] will do that as a joke. But really since the modern age of playing back stuff and everything, they look at everything now, even the old films. They’ll go frame by frame, and they’ll pull those questionable things out all the time.”
When asked if he’d share any other inside jokes or hidden sexual humour, Sito laughed. “Well, if there was, I’m not telling,” he said. “It gives people something to do on a rainy day.”
Now that’s what we call a Happy Ending.
This article originally appeared in The Huffington Post .
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