The project was organised by St Martins Youth Arts Centre artistic director Clare Watson, who will direct a new play entitled Gonzo that is based on the responses. "I mean, I don't look like that I don't expect every girl to look like that either." or does a better job than most of pretending. She isn't thrown around but the man moves her around like a doll and she wordlessly complies.Women in straight porn are often reduced to sexist stereotypes of housewives, girlfriends, mothers and often demonstrated to be quite objectified and submissive to males.I often watch porn that shows young gay men having sex with older men.I often watch pornography late at night when I can watch it alone.Okay, so this is my question: Do parents watch porn?.I mean, I don't look like that, I don't expect every girl to look like that either. It's like cartoons with y'know pianos falling on people, or action movies with car crashes and explosions. By the time in Year 8 I'd say everyone has. For me, I watched it a lot to begin with and then it kind of eased off. I don't think porn addiction is an actual thing."It's like cartoons with y'know pianos falling on people, or action movies with car crashes and explosions," one boy said. The results of the survey showed while most boys had seen pornography, many were able to understand the difference between those depictions and real life. By the time in Year 8 I'd say everyone has," another boy said. "It's always just there in your face," one boy said.
Hundreds of Australian boys aged 12-18 completed anonymous interviews and surveys that covered everything from how much pornography they viewed, to what they think of it, and what questions it sparked. A new project has delved into the minds of teenage boys to discover just what they think about pornography - and the results will soon be turned into a stage play.