[Recording Start]
Rick Rosner: So, in the 70’s which seemed like a very white era in terms of sex symbols, you had Charlie’s Angels and Farrah Fawcett and it was a very skinny era in America. People jogged and also did a lot of cocaine and so some of our biggest sex symbols were assless white women and now we’re in a different era. Two-thirds of Americans are overweight and our sex symbols are bigger people. I’ve been watching a show on I think HBO Max maybe, which is about a couple of women rising in the rap world and they are much bigger than Charlie’s Angels used to be. What I’m getting at and what is the most problematic aspect of what I think is that tiny white penises are afraid of big butts because of the penetration issue. Anybody can successfully achieve coitus with anybody just about but I feel like there’s an intimidation factor that with a bigger woman for a little white guy that isn’t there with 105-pound blonde bombshell in 1977.
I think as the culture is shifted and also Americans’ bodies have shifted, I mean the 70’s was a particularly assless time in America. If you look at the Elvis movies of the 60’s, women had asses. I guess we could go through the century and I wouldn’t know for sure but I would guess that people didn’t have asses in the 30’s and 40’s for the most part because it was depression. People were skinnier because it was harder to afford food and also there was food rationing for World War II. Also, if you look at the advertisements coming out of the 40’s and 50’s, a lot of tiny wastes and skinny white women were the people you saw in advertising. Maybe people got a little heftier towards the 60’s and then skinny again in the 70’s, I don’t know, I mean somebody maybe has studied this or maybe they haven’t but now the people you see are bigger than ever and I feel like that includes a culture shift to guys who might be better endowed than white guys.
Scott Douglas Jacobsen: I am reminded of a Richard Pryor joke. “It’s not true what you say about black guys and the big penises.” I think Richard Pryor had a line on that before he became super famous in his first comedy special.
Rosner: As a male stripper, I’ve seen a couple of guys with enormous dongs.
Jacobsen: How big?
Rosner: One was white and one was black. I have a very limited sample size to go from. I do know that when you’re being screened for kidney function there’s a separate calculation. There are two calculations for how well your kidneys functions; one for white people and one for black people. This is based on some study from a long time ago that probably found that black people maybe lower body fat and more muscular because the more muscle you have the more it looks like your kidneys aren’t functioning as well because you have more muscle debris that’s being measured by the creatinine test. Based on this old study that has more recently been criticized for just being faulty in the first place but certainly no longer reflecting because everybody’s heavier now.
In different times and maybe even now, there is maybe a higher chance of a black guy having lower body fat than a white guy and penis size aside, if you have lower body fat, it’s going to look like you’re better endowed because there’s less fat to cushion the area around your dong. So, where am I going with this? I don’t know. We should just end it right here.
[Recording End]
Authors
Rick Rosner
American Television Writer
Scott Douglas Jacobsen
Founder, In-Sight Publishing
In-Sight Publishing
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In-Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Based on a work at http://www.rickrosner.org.
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