Lara Stone | Playboy France June/July 2010 | Explicit

Just days after Hugh Hefner’s Playboy USA opened a huge disappointment of a website called TheSmokingJacket.com, photos of Lara Stone in Playboy France June/July 2010 hit the Internet.

The two visions give us a dramatic contrast between sensuality in America and in France. This subject is declaring itself daily as a massive fault line between the two cultures, and one that has critical impact on women’s self-image.

If Playboy America lacks sophistication and sensuality of any kind, Playboy France delivers the fusion between fashion and eroticism that has been my focus for the last decade. As a professional, these Lara Stone photos in Playboy cement the fusion of our go-foward sensual mentality.

America will struggle and fight hard not to embrace this comprehensive vision of female sensuality, one that marries female sexuality and respectability. In doing so, Playboy France opens the new media door widely, because of its brand name Playboy and because Lara Stone, one of the top models in the world today under exclusive contract with Calvin Klein is the model.

From a business career standpoint, the implications of these photos are a final confirmation of a huge progression, one that opens as many new questions as it answers old ones. This is fertile photographic territory for both men and women, and Anne of Carversville’s Group Sensuality will gradually take a lead position in executing this concept from a female-centric point of view.

To long-time readers who know us well, including my problems with Google Images, the explicit photos are not in circulation. I could post them all at Sensuality News in a filtered category. As an American woman who has repeatedly cut herself into pieces over what we all agree is an obviously-expressed, deeply-seated sensuality, I refuse to cut myself into little pieces here at Anne of Carversville.

The book to your right and even the short piece I wrote yesterday about my past, Even Small Town Kissing Brands Women Slut Girls, reveal my own determination to shine the light on a repression of female sexuality in America that doesn’t exist today in France, Italy, Sweden or even Brazil.

I believe that the obesity problem for American women is anchored in our self-loathing and ambivalence over our sexuality and respectability. As a 10-year-key executive with Victoria’s Secret in the early years (87-96) — the brand-building years — my mission was to fuse this schism in American women. The arrival of the Angels derailed this Victoria’s Secret relationship between American women.

It’s an exciting day for me personally to post the Lara Stone in Playboy photos. Thank you Lara — and thank you France (and Italy) for making me the woman I am today. My endless months and experiences in your countries helped me triumph over the self-loathing I experienced over being a sexy, smart American woman. 

I should add that there is a great deal of expressed interest in America’s cultural intelligentsia (and there is one) to confront this issue once and for all. If the boomers don’t, it will be decades before we have another opportunity. Anne

 

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