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ABC News Finally Figures Out That the Internet is for Porn

Posted by Emily Farris

ABC news has been exploring its own sexuality lately, and this week the fine folks there have finally noticed that kinky sex is on the rise and asks 'is the Internet to blame?'

Duh.

Obviously, they're still becoming comfortable with their own body, and we were a little overwhelmed with all of the "unnecessary quotation marks" ("swinging", "safe") but as one expert who was interviewed pointed out, "what's weird, sick or kinky for you is what practitioners defend as 'normal' for them."

"Credit, or blame, the Internet, making information available in such a level playing field that outrageous acts have become so accessible they seem mainstream," she told ABCNews.com.

But buyer beware: exploring your sexual fetishes online could put you on a slippery slope leading to... cannibalism?

And, according to Quilliam, it's a slippery slope when it comes to what is consensual, especially in one of the fastest growing paraphilias on the Internet -- cannibalism.

"You slice off a piece of somebody and together you fry it and cook it and eat it," she said. "There's a Web site for almost anything." 

[ABC News: Kinky Sex Is on the Rise, Therapists Say]

Related:

ABC Calls Drunken Teenage Anal Sex "Love Making," Interviews Jezzies and Ultimately Tries to be Helpful

Today in Studies that Freak Us Out: Breakfast and Sex

Someone at ABC News is Still Angry About Their High School Cup Size


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About Emily Farris

Emily Farris writes about culture and food for numerous publications and websites you've probably never heard of, including her own blog eefers. Her first cookbook, "Casserole Crazy: Hot Stuff for Your Oven" was published in 2008. Emily recently escaped New York and now lives in a ridiculously large apartment in Kansas City, MO with her cat, but just one... so far.

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