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An Alternate View of Sky's Ladyboy Documentary

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  • An Alternate View of Sky's Ladyboy Documentary

    An Alternate View of Sky€™s View of Ladyboys

    I€™ve delayed posting this for some time because nearly everyone who has posted seemed to love the series; surely my contrary view was mistaken. Well, enough time has passed and I haven€™t changed my mind, so here goes. I watched all six hour-long episodes and thought them professionally videotaped, but that€™s about it. The approach seemed sympathetic, but for me it was Disneyesque, a cartoon lacking in depth and perspective and connection to reality. The Thai ladyboy was not placed in a worldwide, historical, and cultural context---which isn€™t as dull as that makes it sound---and just saying they are women born in men€™s bodies is not only simplistic, it€™s wrong. And€¦cutting away to Scott and David and their ladyboys romping in the surf or cuddling beneath a palm tree every time you get close to revealing something uncomfortable is dishonest.

    I was also seriously annoyed by so much attention being paid to the beauty contests and cabaret shows. Yes, they are an interesting phenomenon---drawing more coverage by local media than the Miss Thailand competitions---but Sky kept going back and back, in episode after episode, drooling over the fact that the performers could lip-synch to Lady Gaga and then get all that money in tips posing with the customers afterward. As if that MEANT something. It does mean something, of course, but Sky was not applauding, it was condescending.

    That was what bothered me most---the faux happy face put on ladyboys: isn€™t it wonderful that they have rich Caucasian men taking them out of the bars and buying clothes and bars for them (thus returning them to a bar) and isn€™t it nice that one got elected to public office and became €œthe most famous ladyboy in Thailand€ and isn€™t it even nicer that an airline no one ever heard of hired a few to be flight attendants (solely for the publicity)? How, exactly, did each of these things happen? Who suffered and who fucked who to make it occur? Nothing wrong with that, mind you, but Sky made it look like someone waved a magic wand. (No pun intended.)

    A ladyboy I€™ve spent considerable time with over a period of about four years---the one who€™s helped me most with the book I€™m slowly working on---told me, €œEvery ladyboy has a sad story.€ Not according to Sky. Yes, Miss Nigeria said she could be stoned to death back €œhome€ in Africa, but she lived in the US, as did Miss Cuba, who grew up in California. Why didn€™t the Sky team ask why that contestant from Chicago spent £60,000 on surgery (including the removal of four ribs!); there€™s a sad story for you. Why didn€™t Sky interview my friends at Cascade and Casanova? Sky€™s take on ladyboys was like what Julia Roberts in PRETTY LADY was to whoring. Take her off the street, buy her a nice dress and escort her to a party and that makes everything alright, makes the whore an improved person, right? When I saw that movie, I wanted to shove Cinderella€™s glass slipper up Richard Gere€™s middle-aged ass.

    I also felt cheated when it came to Sky€™s not revealing that which was foremost in every viewer€™s mind: the ladyboy penis. Even the BBC some years ago in a terrific documentary about the Indian hijras had the guts to show what one of those people looked like, close-up, after having her cock crudely amputated (the only word to use; several bleed to death every year). In Sky€™s six hours there was never more than a hint of cock on show: small, limp and inside a bikini, a quick glimpse that they returned to several times, as if to say, €œOh, wow! Isn€™t it amazing! So gorgeous and they have cocks, too!€ Oh, yeah? This isn€™t radio; show me!

    You can watch these programs on YouTube, but a much better documentary can be seen there called GIRLFRIEND FOR SALE. It follows two young Thai women and a ladyboy into the sex trade and it tells the truth. I never cried once while watching the Sky series. I can€™t say that about this one.

    P.S. to Sky: It€™s pronounced PAH-tee-yuh. Not puh-TAI-yuh.

  • #2
    Jerry fair shout & good on you for looking at it for what it is. However I felt that at least Sky had a shot at it however limp wristed it was. Ladyboys to the public are now coming into the mainstream with the likes of Hangover II and tours such as the Ladyboys of Bangkok. Currently doing the rounds in the more liberal cities of the UK at the moment. I do agree with you about the beauty pageant stuff too. But its the masses and getting funding to make the programme it has to cover a rough broad spectrum. Its not Panorama.

    I think the guys were brave to stand on and good luck to them. Don't forget they will have friends & relations that will have watched it or will come across it in the fullness. They have  come out as it were. The stigma attached is very pungent. We know & feel differently as we have had time to engage it more closely but don't forget this is for Joe Soap.

    Life is prostitution one way or another. We sell things to make money to put bread on the table. Do we really believe in what we are doing. We marry and provide. The missis seems to think that providing sexual delights she can get more. That dress, car, holiday. Everybody is on the game one way or another. LB,s p4p give a service which I actually think they enjoy possibly more than the GG,s. Ive found them more GFE and comfortable with us as we accept them.

    Thats my little punt, but not a bad show. At least its a start.

    I will check out Girlfriend for sale. Bit scared about that. And yes I was considering sticking both slippers up the pretty boys rectum.

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    • #3
      Jerry, good of you to post your opinion on the series, but I guess you have to compare it with a lot of the other documentaries/specials that have been done on Thai lbs to this point in time. In comparison they did a good job.

      The kind of insight you're wanting would involve something that National Geographic or BBC Panorama might do, that is not only trying to pull ratings. From what I understand Sky specializes in reality based TV programs - that means little scripting, basic research and small budget. With those kinds of limitations I think they did a reasonable job, and good compared to what has been done in the past.

      I have an acquaintance who is writing a similar book, trying to relate things back to historical and cultural events - but unfortunately it will be a long time before he can finish as the economic crisis has forced him to look for alternative employment.

      I would also caution that don't be too dismissive of the different stories shown on the Sky series. There are some that can find happiness and success - I know a few who have moved to the US/UK/Australia, have their own businesses, and are happy, successful and well to do. Of course they are the exceptions - but did have a tough life early on.

      I look forward to more contributions from you on this forum - we do have a section called Academia/Non Pornographic Issues that you may find interesting as well.

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      • #4
        Thanks for the heads up on "GIRLFRIEND FOR SALE" - i'll take a look at that for sure.

        Thanks for your opinion on the show - however i'm not sure of the need to show full frontal of ladyboys in a documentary - i can't see it as adding any further "value". But that's just my 2 cents.


        Azza


        A worthy trip report

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