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Adele Stephens set... and a question.
Posted: Fri Mar 19, 2004 1:47 pm
by P-Nix
Found this set of Ms Stephens...
[link removed by mod - various nasties trying to install themselves]
Is it just me that thinks sets like this are a bit dodgy? I know Adele is above the legal age and everything, I just think the whole schoolgirl thing (uniform, lollipop) is treading a fine line, maybe it's not obvious in this set (nobody could think someone with Adele's figure was a schoolgirl) but some other models it's hard to tell what market they are aiming for, almost like it's "legal" child porn (ie the model is 18+, but looks, or is dressed like she isn't). Does this make any sense? I'm sure it's a subject that has been covered here before, apologies for rattling on.
P
dont click on link
Posted: Fri Mar 19, 2004 2:35 pm
by bigjossy
don't click on this link unless you want hitting with a million pop up's
Re: Adele Stephens set... and a question.
Posted: Fri Mar 19, 2004 3:23 pm
by Pianaman
It is indeed a question that has come up before and it's a legitimate one. I do think there are clearly cases of sites where the "youthful and innocent" look has been used as a means of attracting people who really fancy pre-pubescent girls but don't want to get the cops on their backs.
However, I think in this instance you also need to recognise there's a healthy boundary between reality and fantasy and this set with Adele clearly falls into the fantasy camp. No one who is really into pre-pubecent teens is going to mistake her for one. There's absolutely nothing wrong with costume role play - the school uniform fantasy, like the sexy policewoman fantasy, gets a lot of it's erotic tension from having a teasing element of "the forbidden" but without the danger of mistaking the focus of one's desires for a real teenager. It also maybe takes us back to the days when we fancied say the girl in class 6C but were too young and spotty ourselves to have her apart from in our dreams. So it's play - nothing more, nothing less, and as such a healthy and arguably essential part of adult sexuality in my opinion.
Its only when the emphasis is on encouraging people to make that mistake and in deliberately blurring those boundaries that I think there's a cause for concern.