By Jane Garvey

Published: Sunday, 13 February 2022 at 12:00 am


Recent events suggest we don’t like hypocrisy very much, although most of us are obviously hypocrites ourselves, in one way or another. Louis Theroux flourishes in this grey area, between the views of upright, respectable folk and our more complicated reality. We’re all capable of saying one thing and doing another, when we think no one’s looking.

In the case of porn, the subject of one of Theroux’s three new, US-based documentaries (the others are on gangsta rappers and far-right influencers), the contradictions are rife.

“It’s the myriad hypocrisies – which I share, by the way. People who might watch porn on their computer, but think the people who make it are ugly or disgusting. It’s a classic old trope, isn’t it? That double-edged attitude to sexuality in general,” he says.

Indeed. Billions consume pornography, and nobody talks much about it.

“One of the themes in the world of porn is that because many people in the mainstream view it as somewhat distasteful, while probably at least some of them are using it, disreputable people thrive and a lot of bad stuff happens.”

So, as we’re here… what about his own relationship with porn?

“In my life, of course, I’ve been a user of porn. I sort of see it as a bit like… maybe this sounds harsh, but it’s a bit like junk food, right? It’s not something you’re especially proud of using. But there are times in your life when you can’t get a decent meal, or you’re in a rush, or you’re just trying to get a need met.”

He’s hardly alone, is he? Though not everyone would have answered the question. What has changed relatively recently is that very young children now have access to pornography, and while almost everyone agrees this is certainly a problem, nothing much is done about it. Perhaps because no one knows what to do.

The singer Billie Eilish, who’s now just 20, said recently that she started seeing porn from the age of 11, and it “destroyed my brain”. She had nightmares because some of the content was so violent and abusive. It also affected what she expected in her relationships.

Theroux and his wife Nancy Strang have three sons, aged 15, 13 and seven. Is he worried for them?

“It’s something I’m conscious of, [but] slightly tuning it out. I tend to think it’s a legitimate cause for concern, but also that children raised by parents who are looking out for them and keeping an eye on them are reasonably robust. I’m on the cusp of my kids entering that stage of their lives, so I may have a rude awakening ahead of me. I haven’t even disabled the settings on my internet.

“I’ve talked to them. I have said to them, ‘When you see porn, if this is something you’ve stumbled across, just so you know, that’s not the real world. That’s not how people have sex. That’s people who are performing and doing things to satisfy consumers and don’t mistake it for how sex takes place.’ Along those lines. And it’s like, ‘Shut up, Dad.’”

"Louis
Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America
BBC

And of chart star Eilish, he adds: “Someone needed to say to her when she was a child – it sounds like I’m blaming the parents, and maybe I am, slightly – children and young adults need to understand that the porn world isn’t the real world.”

It really isn’t. And if Theroux’s documentary is anything to go by, it’s not a remotely alluring one. The business of making porn has all the erotic charge of a trundle round your supermarket on a wet afternoon in late November.

“Is it sexy? Listen, some of the women are obviously attractive, but when you see the nuts and bolts – no pun intended – it’s quite evidently not being done for pleasure. It’s a day at the office.

“I’m a professional and always in work mode,” says Theroux, laughing, “so even if it were sexy, I would disable my sexy circuits for the duration of the shoot. It’s a bit comparable to being on location when you’re filming surgery: it’s oddly unaffecting. You would think it’s a bit off-putting, or even revolting, seeing someone cut open, and similarly with sex – but you’re actually almost too close to it and it’s all slightly too surreal to have that much of an impact.”

13.02.22
Louis Theroux’s Forbidden America begins on BBC2 and BBC iPlayer#louistheroux #forbiddenamerica pic.twitter.com/fNBsrmBb2s

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