Friday, March 28, 2008

Sex Toy of the Week

RON JEREMYS MAXIMIZE YOUR MEMBER PUMP

Take a lesson from the champ! Look at what Ron Jeremy's penis has done for him. See what your penis can do for you. The penis enlarging kit includes an EZ grip 8" x 2.75" plastic cylinder for allowing you plenty of room for growth. A flexible hose is attached to a medical-style pump ball with quick release valve. A sample of Ron Jeremy's Thickening Cream will help you get the full potential out of your member. A super stretchy cockring will let you maintain that big beautiful cock until you are done with your fun. It worked for Ron, let it work for you!


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Thursday, March 27, 2008

Happy Birthday Viagra


Has is really been 10 years since all the old geezers of the world followed Bob Dole into the land of drug-induced erections? How time flies when you're having fun.

Ten years ago today, the FDA approved Viagra. The drug became an instant cultural icon, and sales took off immediately, prompting some optimistic analysts to predict that annual sales could reach $20 billion some day, the WSJ reported at the time.

Viagra turned into a world-famous brand, a legend that shifted the notion of what the pharmaceutical industry can do and defined a new category of lifestyle medicines. But sales of the Viagra, though solid, haven’t lived up to the early hype — under $2 billion a year world-wide for the last several years, less than sales of humbler Pfizer drugs like the painkiller Celebrex, not to mention Lipitor.

Why the chasm between the idea of Viagra, a global megabrand, and the sales figures for the pills themselves? Part of it is that Viagra now has competitors, Levitra (from Bayer, GlaxoSmithKline and Schering-Plough) and Cialis (from Lilly). But even collectively, the sales of the drugs never came close to the early predictions.

Abraham Morgentaler, a Harvard urologist who wrote a book called The Viagra Myth, suggests that no pill could ever live up to Viagra’s hype.


The whole story is on the Wall Street Journal

Friday, March 21, 2008

Sex Toy of the Week

INFLATABLE DICKY RING TOSS

Perfect for almost any party occasion. This blow up pecker is self-standing and is over three feet tall. With six rings in all the great colors everyone can get in on the fun. So gather around, this dick is the life of the party!


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Thursday, March 20, 2008

The Woman's Remote

 
 


Where can I get one of these?

Friday, March 14, 2008

Sex Toy of the Week

SYSTEM JO H2O LUBRICANT 2.5oz.

Meet Jo – the personal lubricant you need for the most sexual satisfaction. This long lasting, fragrance free, latex safe, Vitamin E, water-based lube provides a silky, wet feeling without any stickiness. Enhance your pleasure every time you play with Jo. Bottle includes 2.5 oz. of personal lubricant.


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Friday, March 07, 2008

Sex Toy of the Week

BOOK, ANNE HOOPER'S KAMA SUTRA RED

Learn the ancient secrets of the Kama Sutra, reinterpreted by renowned journalist and sex therapist Anne Hooper. This book will show you how to achieve fulfillment and ecstasy through personal development with your partner. Includes sections that address the specific sexual needs of women.


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YAY for the Sexies


The Sex-Positive Journalism Awards (the "Sexies") recognize those writers who stick to high journalistic standards in a climate of repression and misinformation around human sexuality.

They are seeking writers who present accurate information about sexual health and sexual diversity, who resist the assumption that sex-negative religious minorities represent the rest of the country's values, and who give news events involving sexual subcultures enough context and background that their readers can get the whole picture.

The Sexies differ from most journalism awards in that readers can also submit articles. Have you read something that you felt was a breath of fresh air?

Anyone can submit a piece for consideration at the "Sexies" website: www.sexies.org.

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Born Gay?

Is sexual orientation something people are born with - like the color of their skin and eyes - or a matter of choice?

Canadian scientists say they have uncovered new evidence which shows genetics has a role to play in determining whether an individual is homosexual or heterosexual.

The research was conducted by Dr. Sandra Witelson, a neuroscientist in the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University, and colleagues at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto who studied the brains of healthy, right-handed, 18- to 35-year-old homosexual and heterosexual men using structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).


About 10 years ago, Witelson and Dr. Cheryl McCormick, then a student of Witelson’s, demonstrated there is a higher proportion of left-handers in the homosexual population than in the general population – a result replicated in subsequent studies which is now accepted as fact.

Handedness is a sign of how the brain is organized to represent different aspects of intelligence. Language, for example, is usually on the left - music on the right.

In other research, Witelson and research associate Debra Kigar, had found that left-handers have a larger region of the posterior corpus callosum – the thick band of nerve fibers connecting the two hemispheres of the brain – than right handers.

This raised the hypothesis for the current study – whether the anatomy of the brain of the sub-group of right-handed homosexual men is similar to that of left-handers.

They found that the posterior part of the corpus callosum is larger in homosexual than heterosexual men.

The size of the corpus callosum is largely inherited suggesting a genetic factor in sexual orientation, said Witelson “Our results do not mean that heredity is destiny but they do indicate that environment is not the only player in the field,” she said.

While this is not a litmus test for sexual orientation, Witelson said this finding could prove to be one additional valuable piece of information for physicians and individuals who are trying to determine their sexual orientation. “Sometimes people aren’t sure of their sexual orientation.”

The researchers also undertook a correlational analysis which included size of the corpus callosum, and test scores scores on language, visual spatial and finger dexterity tests. “By using all these variables, we were able to predict sexual orientation in 95 per cent of the cases,” she said.

- McMasters University