Wet and Messy Fetishism - in Popular Culture

In Popular Culture

  • The television show Attack of the Show! did a piece on a pie fetish showing different pie related videos including eating pies and being hit by pies, inaccurately labeled all of the videos as Vorarephilia, when in fact videos shown included videos related to WAM and Saliromania.
  • Popular WAM model "Jilly Lane" has been featured on many international films and videos with her sister "Jayce Lane". They are the first sisters to become popular in the wet and messy community.
  • Popular WAM model "Ariel Andrews" has been featured on many international films and videos and has paved the way for most wet and messy trends with her website "WAMbabes"
  • The 1999 Jonathan Creek episode Miracle On Crooked Lane features WAM as a major subplot.
  • 2004 film A Dirty Shame featured a woman who enjoyed WAM, described as "an English fetish". This scene was filmed with input from the British Splosh! magazine.
  • CSI: NY aired on November 4, 2009 an episode which included a WAM-related subplot, though this involved "sploshing parties" - an extremely uncommon practice invented principally for an episode of HBO's Real Sex series.
  • The fetish featured in series three, episode four of Secret Diary of a Call Girl, aired in February 2010.
  • The UK print magazine Bizarre has featured WAM activities and known WAM models, generally under the UK term 'Sploshing', on several occasions, and fully messed up WAM models have competed in their "Bizarre Babe Of The Month" competition from time to time.
  • The cult film Tommy featured an infamous "WAM" scene with Ann-Margret covered in baked beans, chocolate, and foam. It is regarded as one of the best wet and messy movie scenes within the community.
  • Celebrities Kelly Ripa and Sarah Shahi reportedly enjoy this fetish, and have gotten messy at various events and television appearances.

Read more about this topic:  Wet And Messy Fetishism

Famous quotes containing the words popular and/or culture:

    We live under continual threat of two equally fearful, but seemingly opposed, destinies: unremitting banality and inconceivable terror. It is fantasy, served out in large rations by the popular arts, which allows most people to cope with these twin specters.
    Susan Sontag (b. 1933)

    What culture lacks is the taste for anonymous, innumerable germination. Culture is smitten with counting and measuring; it feels out of place and uncomfortable with the innumerable; its efforts tend, on the contrary, to limit the numbers in all domains; it tries to count on its fingers.
    Jean Dubuffet (1901–1985)