There’s something almost childish about the way many people perceive werewolf depictions. Comical. Impossible to pass off as believable. Silly. Lacking refinement.
That’s all well and good — fun, entertaining, and funny, and I’ve got nothing against that, or scary but in an family-friendly inoffensive doglike way — but werewolves are actually also ripe for really filthy adults-only representations.
There’s nothing more appropriate than an inappropriate werewolf.
Lately I’ve been wondering: how “clean” can I keep this werewolf site, anyway? And why would I even want to?
Because I’ve spent so much time — decades, in fact — dealing with ridiculous regulations, censorship, and banking/credit card policies related to sites focused primarily on selling adults-only content (pornography), I’ve been trying to build more “civilian” websites that do not revolve around sexually explicit photo and video content. On top of being too old for it (and the world being over-saturated with free smut), I’m tired of the headaches, costs (ex. higher credit card processing fees) and risks that come with running porn sites, and the expectations and desires fans (understandably) have for ALL the content to deliver spicy stimulation.
On the other hand, I have a hard time ignoring the erotic potential so many of my non-adult hobby blog sites have: Rugaru.com included.
It’s hard to resist the urge to penetrate the sexually super-suggestive implications of werewolves in transformation. And as an American, it almost seems like a duty to balance out the more purely-violent aspects of entertainment that are so easily embraced and celebrated in our culture with more erotically-charged components, themes, scenes, and depictions.
Does it even make sense to pretend ANY werewolf content is “work safe”? Why would the violent stuff be okay to talk about, but not the werewolf sex and sexual body?
On that note, I have a dirty (werewolf) book to read. I wonder if that’s something you’re interested in?