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Short Film Calls for Sexual Pleasure Equality Women Have Long Been Denied

Klick Health skirts algorithms for PodHER

Sexual wellness brands and educators have a challenging time promoting themselves on social media, where content is heavily moderated. An adult store in Iceland went so far as to hide sex toys in a real-estate listing.

Klick Health created a new four-minute video for PodHER (formerly EmpowHer), a female, Latina-run organization behind 2020’s “The Call,” which outlined unconscious bias in healthcare. This time, the company tackles sexual inequality, female pleasure and self-exploration, and cleverly avoids social media algorithms in the process.

Video Reference
PodHER | Thirst

In “Thirst,” water and music are the main metaphors. There’s a woman in a bathtub, a dripping faucet, shots of the woman in social settings, but seemingly her mind is elsewhere. Music softly plays. She’s at a pool, an aquarium, at a lake, passing by signs that say don’t touch, or no swimming.

The woman runs into the woods as the tub fills with water. The music gets louder, the beats get harder. She plays with the bathwater and runs to the top of a cliff. She jumps. Waves crash, she’s underwater. Happy. She resurfaces in the ocean and in the bathtub. As the tub runneth over, copy appears on screen: “For too long, women have been denied the freedom to fearlessly pursue pleasure. Help us change that.”

We spoke with Andrea Bistany and Amy Fortunato, creative directors at Klick Health, about the film, its purpose and why social media algorithms need to change.

Muse: What’s the goal of the film?

Andrea Bistany and Amy Fortunato: First, we set out to ignite conversation around sexual health inequality and the overlooked role pleasure plays in both individual and public health. Second, to drive to our petition fighting social media’s discriminatory algorithms that prevent the platform from being the powerful educational tool in closing the pleasure gap it has the potential to be.

In the healthcare advertising industry, there are few, if any, conversations around female pleasure. This needs to change. Integrating pleasure into sex education can increase people’s knowledge about sexual communication, consent, and safer sex behaviors—all crucial aspects of sexual and public health. Our message of sexual health equality feels even more important now in a time when our very own bodily autonomy is challenged.

Explain how you came up with a way to avoid social media algorithms.

Our film outsmarts the social media censorship algorithms using metaphors that would not be flagged or hidden by A.I. We used water as a visual metaphor for the physical sensation of female pleasure to show a woman on a journey of self-exploration as she seeks what previously felt out of reach. “Thirst” is a film meant to make viewers feel the craving and desire women experience in pursuit of sexual equity and sexual pleasure. The film itself follows the rhythm of the sensation of pleasure and the building of a climax.

What do you hope viewers take away from the film? 

We hope that viewers, especially women and vulva owners, feel empowered to pursue their own pleasure! Because we live in a culture of over-privileging male sexuality and overvaluing penetrative sex, many women don’t feel empowered to explore their bodies or prioritize their own pleasure.

CREDITS

Creative Directors:
Andrea Bistany
Amy Fortunato
Bernardo Romero
Rich Levy

Producers:
Jen Martin
Tamika Knight

Production Company: The Youth
Direction and story: YUCA

Music production company: Jamute 
Musical production: James Pedrozo Pinto and Marcos Vaz

Original music: I wish I knew how it would feel to be free – Nina Simone

Clio Health First Deadline