Lego.... shades (Full Version)

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Missokyst -> Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 4:13:09 PM)

https://www.yahoo.com/movies/watch-fifty-shades-of-grey-trailer-played-out-by-110258195747.html




GoddessManko -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 4:17:12 PM)

Hahahaha,I'm ashamed to admit I'm gonna go to a fifty shades party and movie with my sub. We both decided it might be fun, she's a virgin, he's a virgin and it would be kind of playful amusing no one will know we identify with the characters in any way. So touring St Augustine's is reserved for another day. We also get to dress in boudoir, it is something playful/cute to do for Valentine's Day. I feel like somewhat of a sellout but my curiosity finally got the better of me. At least I didn't buy the book. [&:]




ResidentSadist -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 4:43:08 PM)

I think Gilbert Gottfried should really do an audio book of him reading 50 shades of grey. It is probably the only way I could tolerate that book. The slave read about 10 pages into the Harlequin romance style novel before this happened (see pic below). I snatched the book from her hands, took it by the outer edge and paddled her ass with it until it turned pink. Yuppers, that 50 Shades of Grey makes a nice paddle alright. So there is some redeeming BDSM value in it as a paddle . . . but as a book worth reading, I am not so sure.



[image]local://upfiles/390966/09B7FC63498C43838E0EA99D8E5BEA78.jpg[/image]




CreativeDominant -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 4:46:53 PM)

~thinking that if you look at her posterior...just...so...yup,the red areas look like the knot in the tie




GoddessManko -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 4:53:54 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: ResidentSadist

I think Gilbert Gottfried should really do an audio book of him reading 50 shades of grey. It is probably the only way I could tolerate that book. The slave read about 10 pages into the Harlequin romance style novel before this happened (see pic below). I snatched the book from her hands, took it by the outer edge and paddled her ass with it until it turned pink. Yuppers, that 50 Shades of Grey makes a nice paddle alright. So there is some redeeming BDSM value in it as a paddle . . . but as a book worth reading, I am not so sure.



[image]local://upfiles/390966/09B7FC63498C43838E0EA99D8E5BEA78.jpg[/image]


LOL! You're fucking awesome.




ResidentSadist -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 5:05:31 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: CreativeDominant

~thinking that if you look at her posterior...just...so...yup,the red areas look like the knot in the tie

LMAO




SweetnStormySub -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 5:16:54 PM)

FR~

<---- bought the stinking trilogy, read it, took it to the used bookstore I haunt for credit towards future purchases. That twelve dollar credit was the best thing about it. RS was right in likening it to a Harlequin novel. I actually LOL'd a couple of times reading it.




ResidentSadist -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 5:21:16 PM)

That's a true story. Long after the book had hit # 1, we met Laura Antoniou (author of Marketplace series). She mentioned some things about the book and her involvement in a workshop on it that interested me, despite her own parody 50 Shades of Sellout.

My slave had mentioned that I talk down about the book based on what others have said without actually reading one word of it. Plus, I truly wanted to see what the interest in it was and how far it missed the BDSM mark as everyone pointed out. I mean, what the hell, If I can read 8 full versions of the bible when I was an atheistic teen to see what the fuss was about and I read all 25 Gor books which were absolutely awful, I could read 50 Shades of Grey . . . I was wrong. 10 pages . . . that was all the torture I could suffer through before the sadist in me exploded and beatings began so she could suffer with me. Never read another word of it since.




GoddessManko -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/6/2015 5:26:22 PM)

I remember reading Harlequin romances as a teenager and feeling disgust in the "lovey dovey" parts. I always loved when the female protagonist was being a high strung bitch, LOL.




DesFIP -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/7/2015 7:21:31 PM)

10 pages RS? I'm impressed.
I managed 3 before I was so disgusted by the lack of consent, since you cannot consent to what you do not understand, that I tossed it.




Gauge -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/7/2015 10:37:29 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: DesFIP

10 pages RS? I'm impressed.
I managed 3 before I was so disgusted by the lack of consent, since you cannot consent to what you do not understand, that I tossed it.



Pffftttt... I have you all beat. I couldn't get past the title.




inkedone -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 7:19:16 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Gauge


quote:

ORIGINAL: DesFIP

10 pages RS? I'm impressed.
I managed 3 before I was so disgusted by the lack of consent, since you cannot consent to what you do not understand, that I tossed it.



Pffftttt... I have you all beat. I couldn't get past the title.


Wow Gauge that is a record. Have to admit did not buy the books or get caught up in the hype. Have girl friends that have already pre-bought tickets to see the movie on VD. Not drinking the cool aid either.

Kudos RS, compliments to you, love the approach on this smut book series.




ResidentSadist -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 7:27:41 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: DesFIP

10 pages RS? I'm impressed.
I managed 3 before I was so disgusted by the lack of consent, since you cannot consent to what you do not understand, that I tossed it.

I think my tolerance threshold for bad writing is higher than most because I read the Chronicles of Gor . . . well, I had them read to me. When I came to Florida, I bumped into the Gorean subculture. We didn't have that in my social circles back in Detroit. So I vowed to read the books that inspired all those BDSM rituals with odd alien names and 27 some odd slave positions.

The Gor books were . . . well, the first few books were badly written stereotypical B class pulp sci fi plots. They were readable if you ignored the bad writing, took the chauvinistically biased philosophy with a grain of salt and just enjoyed the plot of the story. There were wars, political strategies, utopian cultural constructs, religious systems . . . all on a planet that was running short on slaves and kidnapped women from Earth. 200 - 300 pages per book meant it took one or two nights at bedtime to read them. To make it more fun, I had my slave read them to me in bed while she was chained to the wall.

After 7 successful books, he was fired at the insistence of the Balantine's publisher’s wife. Now with DAW books, female slaves soon went from the chauvinistic construct of pretty things of beauty to be sought after, collected, used to slake your lust and run your house to worthless objects you had lay over the mud on a battlefield so the soldiers could walk on them and not get their boots stuck in the mud. In my mind I could see author John Norman saying fuck you to his nemesis Betty Ballantine as he pictured her as the worthless female slaves under soldiers' foot. The books became his personal fuck you... as if to say, you didn't like the chauvinism, well read this awful abuse bitch, and it got droll fast. They got so bad, my slave begged to disobey the edict of reading them to me. She would rather pay recompense instead of read another Gor book. She opted to be publicly punished, oiled, sprinkled with salt and take a bullwhip lash for every one of the remaining books she would avoid reading.

It took about 7 years and 4 slaves to finally reach my goal of having all 25 Gor books read to me by a slave on a chain. Despite enduring all that, I do not think that 7 years from now I will have actually read 50 Shades of Grey . . . even if I were to get a blow job from identical twins during every page. The book is just that bad, it's not worth it.

So I confess that 50 Shades gave me a deeper appreciation for the (awful) Chronicles of Gor book series. Until Gor I had never seen a sentence with 17 commas or been able to tell when the author took a big bong hit and cranked out a two page long paragraph about the philosophy, history and ritual uses behind doorknobs on Gor. But even at John Norman's (John Lange) worst, he had more creative power in his pinky, more story content and painted a more vivid environment than I felt I could ever expect from the author of 50 Shades of Lame. I admit, I truly did not read enough of it to make that a blanket statement. I mean, maybe, suddenly on page 30 the writing will take an upward swing and become a pleasure to read instead of a painful string of endless romance novel cliche's that make me want to poke my own eyes out in order to end the torture.


PSA: We are professionals, do not try this at home. Attempting to read Gor books or 50 Shades of Grey may cause blindness (poking your own eyes out) and/or brain damage.






GoddessManko -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 7:31:40 AM)

Ha, in truth when I first started domming, I had no idea what it was, I just knew it was fun and "naughty" and I liked it. I became obsessed with knee high platform boots and skirts with splits up the side. I wore tank tops to school without a bra and knee high stockings with clogs and button down shirts. It was just a "thing" to me, a secret, I didn't think too far into it. I was sexually curious but remained a virgin til adulthood. Technically I didn't give my consent to play,even though I was topping him rather than domming him. I was simply "going with it" and doing what felt natural. There was no manual, mentors or munches. So I am curious about this book/movie before I cast judgement. Even though he visited a dungeon for his "input" to his character and I'm sure got bombarded by ecstatic "one true wayers". LOL, Either way, before an opinion on something I'm going to actually know what I'm talking about, hehe. I hated part I of the Nymphomaniac series but loved the sick, twisted and dark elements of part II. I would like to know how the vanilla world sees us if nothing else.
ETA, if you want to know about Gor, you should have a conversation with Gorean_Lord on FL. Gor is more than his lifestyle, it is a part of his history and origins. He is such an intense and amazing person. He taught me about collar making in one skype convo. All I can really say is he's fucking amazing.




usememistress775 -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 7:40:31 AM)

I wish to thank you RS, I was interested in reading the Chronicles of Gor until your post. You have saved me from having to add that series to a very short list of "started but never finished." The entire list so far:
1. Anything Ayn Rand has written

That is all.

No interest in 50 Shades, unless someone wrote a version talking about a half hundred ghosts haunting the smug SoB who apparently (and all of my knowledge of this book comes from the Lego trailer) named their company after themselves but I cannot tell what their supposed to do besides being: rich, white and attractive.




SweetForDaddy -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 7:53:29 AM)

It is pretty badly written, I have had the misfortune of reading all three. All I can remember right now are "Oh Christian" and there was one phrase repeated throughout about legs twisting around the others like vines. They got slightly worse (if thats possible) as the books went on.

Its not the devils work or anything though, its just a badly written book. The story is like the Pretty Woman of BDSM and its about as realistic to BDSM as Pretty Woman was to prostitution. I don't think she was trying to win the nobel prize or anything.

I'm going to go see it and pretty sure I'll enjoy it on some level.





satanscharmer -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 7:53:40 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Missokyst

https://www.yahoo.com/movies/watch-fifty-shades-of-grey-trailer-played-out-by-110258195747.html


I was kind of hoping the link would be some Legos in bondage with the song "Everything is Awesome" playing.




usememistress775 -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 8:09:25 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: SweetForDaddy

It is pretty badly written, I have had the misfortune of reading all three. All I can remember right now are "Oh Christian" and there was one phrase repeated throughout about legs twisting around the others like vines. They got slightly worse (if thats possible) as the books went on.

Its not the devils work or anything though, its just a badly written book. The story is like the Pretty Woman of BDSM and its about as realistic to BDSM as Pretty Woman was to prostitution. I don't think she was trying to win the nobel prize or anything.

I'm going to go see it and pretty sure I'll enjoy it on some level.




The movie equivalent your looking for is 9 and 1/2 Weeks.




GoddessManko -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 8:38:45 AM)

Meh, Elon Musk married an emerging actress. In theory the story is not unrealistic but have yet to see movie or read the book.




ResidentSadist -> RE: Lego.... shades (2/8/2015 9:33:38 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: usememistress775

I wish to thank you RS, I was interested in reading the Chronicles of Gor until your post. You have saved me from having to add that series to a very short list of "started but never finished." The entire list so far:
1. Anything Ayn Rand has written

That is all.

No interest in 50 Shades, unless someone wrote a version talking about a half hundred ghosts haunting the smug SoB who apparently (and all of my knowledge of this book comes from the Lego trailer) named their company after themselves but I cannot tell what their supposed to do besides being: rich, white and attractive.

If you read the following parody, you pretty much have Gor in a nutshell and can avoid the series.

HOUSEPLANTS OF GOR

The spider plant cringed as its owner brought forth the watering can. "I am a spider plant!" it cried indignantly. "How dare you water me before my time! Guards!" it called. "Guards!"

Borin, its owner, placed the watering can on the table and looked at it. "You will be watered," he said.

"You do not dare to water me!" laughed the plant.

"You will be watered," said Borin.

"Do not water me!" wept the plant.

"You will be watered," said Borin.

I watched this exchange. Truly, I believed the plant would be watered. It was plant, and on Gor it had no rights. Perhaps on Earth, in its permissive society, which distorts the true roles of all beings, which forces both plant and waterer to go unh appy and constrained, which forbids the fulfillment of owner and houseplant, such might not happen. Perhaps there, it would not be watered. But it was on Gor now, and would undoubtedly feel its true place, that of houseplant. It was plant. It would be watered at will. Such is the way with plants.

Borin picked up the watering can, and muchly watered the plant. The plant cried out. "No, Master! Do not water me!" The master continued to water the plant. "Please, Master," begged the plant, "do not water me!" The master continued to water the plant. It was plant. It could be watered at will.

The plant sobbed muchly as Borin laid down the watering can. It was not pleased. Too, it was wet. But this did not matter. It was plant.

"You have been well watered," said Borin.

"Yes," said the plant, "I have been well watered." Of course, it could be watered by its master at will.

"I have watered you well," said Borin.

"Yes, master," said the plant. "You have watered your plant well. I am plant, and as such I should be watered by my master."

The cactus plant next to the spider plant shuddered. It attempted to cover its small form with its small arms and small needles. "I am plant," it said wonderingly. "I am of Earth, but for the first time, I feel myself truly plantlike. On Earth, I w as able to control my watering. I often scorned those who would water me. But they were weak, and did not see my scorn for what it was, the weak attempt of a small plant to protect itself. Not one of the weak Earth waterers would dare to water a plant if it did not wish it. But on Gor," it shuddered, "on Gor it is different. Here, those who wish to water will water their plants as they wish. But strangely, I feel myself most plantlike when I am at the mercy of a strong Gorean master, who may water m e as he pleases."

"I will now water you," said Borin, the cactus's Gorean master.

The cactus did not resist being watered. Perhaps it was realizing that such watering was its master's to control. Too, perhaps it knew that this master was far superior to those of Earth, who would not water it if it did not wish to be watered.

The cactus's watering had been finished. The spider plant looked at it.

"I have been well watered," it said.

"I, too, have been well watered," said the cactus.

"My master has watered me well," said the spider plant.

"My master, too, has watered me well," said the cactus.

"I am to be placed in a hanging basket on the porch," said the spider plant.

"I, too, am to be placed in a hnaging basket on the porch," said the cactus.

"I wish you well," said the spider plant.

"I, too, wish you well," said the cactus.

"Tal," said the spider plant.

"Tal, too," said the cactus.

I did not think that the spider plant would object to being watered by its master again. For it realized that it was plant, and that here, unlike on Earth, it was likely to be owned and watered by many masters.

~ By Elle, who has read far too many Gor books and taken far too many finals to be allowed to run rampant on a computer.




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