Tag - Cosmopolitan Magazine

Movie UNPROTECTED The Untold Story of the Sexual Revolution

http://www.unprotectedmovie.com/

The Hook-up culture. Teenage depression. How did the culture become so toxic for women?

Watch this insightful movie that documents the mess we lived through from the fall-out of the sexual revolution, and see how the carnage continues to undermine our society. You’ll learn things you never knew, such as the role

http://www.unprotectedmovie.com/

I didn’t set out to make a movie about contraception. After all, in a country where sex without babies is largely considered a basic human necessity like air and water, telling a story about the disastrous consequences of rendering the conjugal act sterile doesn’t seem like a great way to attract a huge audience.

played by the editor of Cosmopolitan Magazine in turning our view of love and marriage upside down.

And how did one man foresee this all so clearly 50 years ago? From the producer of Convinced, a new documentary about Humanae Vitae, the devastating effects of the sexual revolution, and the counter-cultural movement that is rising from its ashes. Featuring stories and commentary by Christopher West, Jennifer Fulwiler, Janet Smith, Damon Owens, Jason and Crystalina Evert, Sue Ellen Browder, Patrick Coffin, Jennifer Roback Morse, Carrie Gress, Leila Miller, Benjamin Wiker, and Donald Asci. The Hook-up culture. Teenage depression. How did the culture become so toxic for women?

Watch this insightful movie that documents the mess we lived through from the fall-out of the sexual revolution, and see how the carnage continues to undermine our society. You’ll learn things you never knew, such as the role played by the editor of Cosmopolitan Magazine in turning our view of love and marriage upside down.

And how did one man foresee this all so clearly 50 years ago? From the producer of Convinced, a new documentary about Humanae Vitae, the devastating effects of the sexual revolution, and the counter-cultural movement that is rising from its ashes. Featuring stories and commentary by Christopher West, Jennifer Fulwiler, Janet Smith, Damon Owens, Jason and Crystalina Evert, Sue Ellen Browder, Patrick Coffin, Jennifer Roback Morse, Carrie Gress, Leila Miller, Benjamin Wiker, and Donald Asci.

Browder: I Lied to Young Woman about Sex to Sell Magazines

Confessions of a Former ‘Cosmo Girl’ Sue Ellen Browder

I made up stories designed to soft-sell unmarried sex, sexual freedom, sex with married men, contraception, and abortion as the young single woman’s path to personal fulfillment. While I was at Cosmopolitan magazine, “I told a lot of lies in that magazine,” and “we were making up fantasies of women that were jumping into bed”. Supporting Articles – Articles.latimes.com – NationalCatholicregister.comThefederalist.com

Some women’s magazines change quotes, fabricate quotes, invent people and make wild extrapolations in stories about sex and relationships. (“massaging quotes,” as it is called in magazine parlance). The approach is to come up with words on a magazine cover that reader research shows will sell the magazines.

Well, the “Cosmo girl” is a persona. She was a deception from the beginning. In the beginning there was no “Cosmo girl”. It was just a fantasy that Helen Gurley Brown had made up as a marketing fantasy.

In (Subverted, How I Helped the Sexual Revolution Hijack the Women’s Movement), Sue Ellen Browder documents for the first time how it all happened, in her own life and in the life of an entire country. Trained at the University of Missouri School of Journalism to be an investigative journalist, Browder unwittingly betrayed her true calling and became a propagandist for sexual liberation. As a long-time freelance writer for Cosmopolitan magazine, she wrote pieces meant to soft-sell unmarried sex, contraception, and abortion as the single woman’s path to personal fulfillment. She did not realize until much later that propagandists higher and cleverer than herself were influencing her thinking and her personal choices as they subverted the women’s movement. Video interview with Sue Ellen Browder