Few professions are as misunderstood, disparaged and infamous as that of the oldest of professions, sex work: particularly male sex work.

Male Sex Work and Society

Though in reality the profiles of male sex workers are nearly as varied those of their clients–encompassing a wide range of personalities, needs and lifestyles–sex workers remain the targets of myriad, centuries old, ugly culturally ingrained myths: Guys become prostitutes because they’re too dumb to get a “real job.” They do it to support a drug habit. They must be self-hating victims of sexual abuse. They have low self-esteem. They are walking petri dishes of yet un-cataloged STDs.

The new website, Me, Us & Male Escorting aims to not only challenge these ignorant misconceptions, but to also lobby for the decriminalisation of sex work through an on ongoing series of informative blogs and resources, including links to widely cited and read books and research papers published on male escorting.

The website is the result of a joint research collaboration between Professor John Scottand and Professor Victor Minichiello, who together co-edited the groundbreaking book “Male Sex Work & Society“ (Harrington Park Press, 2014).

Inaugural blog posts include “The Professionalisation Of Male Escorting,” “Women Who Buy Sex: Challenging Popular Prejudices,” and two blogs written by male escorts, “Male Escorting: What It Takes To Make It Work” and “The Benefits Of Prostitution To Society.” A forthcoming blog will discuss the differences between legalisation and decriminalisation and highlight the benefits of decriminalising sex work.

Above: Guest blogger, David-SF, who contributed the eye-opening article “Male Escorting: What it Takes to Make it Work” to Me, Us & Male Escorting

Me, Us & Male Escorting is for everyone from male sex workers to their friends, families and romantic partners, to government agencies and the general public. Deeply informative, frankly fascinating and utterly necessary, Me, Us & Male Escorting hopes to de-stigmatise male sex work and create a more informed forum for male escorting. “Male sex workers face a double stigma because same sex relationships are stigmatised and sex work is stigmatised,” state the sites founders.

“We need the government to come on board and see this as work,” says Me, Us & Male Escorting co-founder Professor John Scott. “That makes it better for the sex workers who can manage their health and safety and if sex work is decriminalised better in terms of making it easier for people to pay tax and follow all the regulations like all other occupations.”

Look for the soon to be released Me, Us & Male Escorting companion Android app, MALES, which will allow both male and female clients to search a directory of over 300 escort websites (in 60 countries).

Tagged:
About the Author

Popular Publicity, owned by Andy Reynolds. He is a NYC-based book, music, film, event and lifestyle publicist, as well as an expert in LGBT media worldwide.