Platonic Sex, a porn star memoir
By: Jack Boulware
Mothers in America may wring their hands over their young children's obsession with
Britney Spears and her pseudo-porn persona. They may even express disapproval over
their teenagers' awareness and understanding of genuine XXX-rated stars like Jenna
Jameson. But in Taiwan, young teens are buying up thousands of copies of a Japanese
porn star's bestselling memoir. Many experts, including school administrators,
don't seem to mind at all.
The 28-year-old Ai Iijima quit the porn biz eight years ago and now works
as a television actress, but her legend lives on via the Internet, as well as in
the fantasies of males throughout Asia. Her new autobiography, Platonic Sex,
chronicles her adventures as a young girl entering the porn video industry,
having plastic surgery and getting paid for having sex with strangers. After
the book was translated into Chinese, sales soared in Taiwan, with more than
70,000 copies snapped up in the last month and a half. It's already gone into
eight editions, and is currently Taiwan's third bestselling book, surpassing
the latest from Nobel literature laureate Gao Xingjian. Her popularity among
teenage girls has been called the "Iijima phenomenon," and in some ways reflects
the younger generation's open attitude towards sex.
Not everybody is pleased with a bestselling porn book popular with youth. Taiwanese
women's groups fear that Ai Iijima's life story will encourage other young girls
to drop what they're doing and run off to join the porn circus.
Tang Li-yen of the Women and Children Protection Foundation told the Straits
Times, "It would encourage our young people to learn from Ms. Iijima."
Fans say they're learning much from the book, but more about overcoming teenage
obstacles, not necessarily how to be a porn sensation. "I want to know how a
former porn actress like her can finally find her way back to the right path
and lead a normal life," said 17-year-old student Veronica Hsieh.
When reached for comment, Taiwan's education minister Tseng Chi-lang was not
concerned at all, and said the Iijima phenomenon was just a "whirlwind," and
would soon pass.