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Enough
of the coy sex talk. Britney Spears needs to tell the truth.
I WILL NEVER FORGET the moment I first saw Madonna's "Like a Virgin" video. I
was standing in front of the TV eating after-school cookies, swaying on one hip,
watching Channel 50's Top Ten Hitz out of Detroit. I was 16 and hadn't been a
virgin for about 10 weeks, something I was not entirely proud of. Madonna
would've been 25 years old, and probably hadn't been a virgin for 10 years,
something she clearly was quite proud of. Watching her writhe around in that
gondola definitely contributed to a little erosion in my Catholic shame.
It's hard to remember a time when Madonna's sexual antics would generate
postdoctoral essays, op-ed columns, and long scholarly treatises by the likes of
Camille Paglia and Andrea Dworkin. Compare it to the current buzz about Britney
Spears' precarious virginity. It's largely relegated to celebrity web gossip,
women's magazines and giggling chat-line speculation.
The past few months have seen a resurgence of is-she-or-isn't-she? speculation,
much of it fed by Britney herself. Recently the New York Post quoted some yahoo
who supposedly overheard Brit bragging about buying her boyfriend a pair of
handcuffs and having "amazing sex," and it was a big story. Ditto when she
reportedly told German journalists that "chocolate is better than an orgasm."
Such coyness knows more reputable bounds. In an Elle magazine interview last
summer, Britney claimed that Sarah Jessica Parker's Sex and the City character
was "just like her" and said, "What they talk about on that show is so true."
Apparently, after being reminded that she has basically sold the world on her
virginity (in much the way she was reminded that, as a Pepsi spokesperson, she
really shouldn't be photographed drinking Coke), Britney finally complained, "I
wish I hadn't said anything at all."
That makes two of us.
Who cares whether Britney's getting any? Journalists do, primarily, because
journalists hate being lied to. (Britney's talking out of two sides of her
mouth, and the urge to sew the lying side shut is hard to quell.) Her fans do,
secondly, as do the parents with whom they still live. After all, they're 12
years old. Nobody wants to picture them having sex (almost nobody), though
recent studies would suggest that many of them are, or are heading that way.
Her handlers know if Britney owned up to her sexuality, mounted the stage (if
you will) and declared that sex with Justin was rocking her world, there'd be a
sick baby boom in backwater Florida, and some silly lawsuits would result.
I exaggerate, but we used to blame Madonna for stirring sexual longing. The
wonderful thing about Madonna is that she was too busy hustling Puerto Rican
gangbangers to give a shit. Her fans were big girls. Britney and her handlers,
however, care too much about her theoretical influence, because she supposedly
holds powerful sway over prepubescent minds--children, really. I feel sorry for
her.
Unlike Madonna, whose fans grew up alongside her, Britney is forced to charm a
fresh batch of preadolescents with each new album. Her eponymous third album is
filled with disingenuous ballads like "Overprotected" and "Not a Girl, Not Yet a
Woman" (uh, last I checked, a 20-year-old was a woman). Ms. Spears obviously
wants credibility with an older set of fans, and who can blame her? Imagine
being in concert, gyrating to the beat of your own drum machine, only to be left
spent and sweaty among a crowd of ... children. Ewww.
But Britney's going to have to put up or shut up about her virginity before she
can graduate to the next level of fandom, because girls don't want to feel bad
about having sex.
Pander Candor
I remember hearing my 7-year-old niece absently singing "Hit Me Baby One More
Time" from the back seat of the car. She had no idea what the song meant. The
charm of that video was that neither did Britney. The setup was soft-core porn,
and it was utterly riveting, because
it married a blank, baby face with a bursting woman's body.
The mind seemed not to know what the body was doing to its audience (that's the
essence of kiddie porn: "I'm being turned on by this underage girl, but it's OK
because, look at her, she has no idea"), which is why it made parents so
uncomfortable, until it was widely reported that Britney was a virgin, a
Christian and a good girl. Don't worry, parents, if your girls love this music,
dress like her, want to sing and dance like her, they're in safe hands.
Britney's not a perv. She has no sexual longings of her own, and if you think
filthy things about her, then you're the one with the problem.
Like that guy who reportedly offered millions to be Britney's first. Isn't it a
felony to offer money for sex? If it were true, and not a publicity stunt
designed to keep Britney's virginity in the papers and generate sales among
increasingly antsy parents, it never would have been leaked by her handlers, and
the guy would have been brought up on pandering charges.
But if it was a stunt, which is more likely, then it was brilliant. Girls could
continue to live vicariously through her onstage sexual persona--a bad girl
who's really a good girl--and boys could continue to imagine they'd be the ones
who'd wrest away Britney's V-card.
But that stunt has backfired, hence her current dilemma: Britney no longer has
that patina of innocence, but she can't grow up. She's old enough to have sex.
She can't get away with twirling her hair around her fingers and shrugging off
the controversy she may arouse by "just being who she is."
But losing her virginity means popping the cherry of her entire career. There's
great importance in keeping her a virgin backstage, to maintain the fantasy of
her innocence onstage.
Problem is, she should have kept her mouth shut to begin with. By constantly
denying she's had sex, she's attached a lot of shame to the notion of sexuality
by virtue of, well, virtue. And by continuing to deny any link between her
onstage and offstage persona, she undermines herself as a kiddie-pop star
seeking grownup status.
It boils down to the kind of havoc fame wreaks on child stars. Britney's been in
the spotlight since she was toilet-trained--she's kind of a JonBenet Ramsey
brought to life. But unlike JonBenet, she can't remain eerily preserved, a
little girl forever. She has to move on, but she's shown little evidence of a
burgeoning intellect, or the musical and marketing savvy Madonna developed
early. (Just compare Britney with Madonna's third album, True Blue; the latter
is a certified classic that includes "Papa Don't Preach," a song about a
pregnant teenager defiantly keeping her illegitimate baby. It's popular and
timeless, because, hell, it happens.)
In interviews, Britney is contradictory and reactionary, a stunted teenager
called up on bad behavior. On her Us magazine cover last summer, the headline
read "It's Hard to Wait." It was accompanied by the photo of a girl who clearly
hasn't. I know that face. It's the face of a girl who's done it, feels
conflicted over it, but wants to do it again and again and again. But if she
comes up with a song about that, I have to tell her it's already been done.
Written by Lisa Gabriele, Metro Active SF Bay Area
Posted by Ruben
updated: 06-22-2002 13:34
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