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Odds are the sex education curriculum at your high school left a lot of questions unanswered. For instance, rarely do schools teach us about different sexual orientations, about sex work, or about eroticism and pleasure. There s plenty left to learn and even more left to unlearn. If you want, you can hit the books. Literally. You can go to the library there are alot of great books about sex. If you re not ready to read a college minor s worth of texts though, and you want to learn more about sex in a concise, engaging way, you can get the cheat sheet version with these eye-opening documentaries.
Why Rashida Jones Is Not Super Popular Among Sex Workers Right Now
Kayla Kibbe, provided by
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You may know Rashida Jones as Ann from
Parks and Rec. That is primarily where I know the actress from, anyway, which is part of what has been so confusing to me about Jones’s current role at the center of an ongoing controversy within the sex industry. This controversy has recently been reignited by news of Jones’s latest project, producing the forthcoming sex industry documentary
Sell/Buy/Date, but her contentious reputation in the sex work community dates back to at least 2015, when Jones produced the controversial Netflix documentary
Rashida Jones’s Battle With Sex Workers Reveals a New Era of Internet Censorship
A years-old controversy surrounding the Jones documentary “Hot Girls Wanted” exemplifies the widening gulf between who gets heard online and who doesn’t.
Griffin Lipson/Netflix
Ronna Gradus, Rashida Jones, and Jill Bauer, producers of “Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On,” pictured in 2017
At the beginning of this year, news circulated that Rashida Jones, Meryl Streep, and Laverne Cox had all signed on to produce a “documentary adaptation” of
Sell/Buy/Date, a one-woman play about the sex industry written and performed by Sarah Jones. A few days later, Cox announced that she would no longer be involved, since she was “not in an emotional place to deal with the outrage by some around my participation in this project.”