Steppin' into the world of foot worship

Jun 8, 2005 at 12:00 am

Q: I’m a straight male foot fetishist and, like any other American male, I regularly Google my fetish. Last night I ran across a Web site promoting foot fetish parties in New York City: www.foot-worship-party.com. Have you heard of this event? Is it legit? Is it legal? For a guy with a foot fetish, it seems almost too good to be true, which is why I’m worried. On the other hand, it seems like a great time for someone with my fetish. —Tucson Omits Erotic Services

A: "We’re definitely legit," says Jason, the young entrepreneur who hosts the parties, TOES. "We don’t offer sex or prostitution. It’s just about worshipping women’s feet. It’s an erotic party, but there’s no sex."

Jason got started in the foot-fetish-party-hosting business four years ago and, like all the best kink entrepreneurs, Jason shares his clients’ fetish. "I’m 26 now and I’ve been into feet pretty much since I was 8 years old. I didn’t even know what a foot fetish was, though, until I was 15 and I started to have some experiences with girls. I paid a lot of attention to my girlfriends’ feet and soon they started asking if I had a foot fetish."

Jason was working in marketing at a health club in Manhattan when he mustered up enough courage to attend his first foot-fetish party. "It was awful," Jason recalled. "The women were not attractive, there were 100 guys to 20 girls, and the people who worked there were really unfriendly. My business mind kicked in, and I thought, ‘What if I took this concept and did it right? A better ratio of guys to girls, hot girls with beautiful feet, friendly people?’ Boom, I had my first party and ever since then I’ve been very successful."

Indeed, Jason’s monthly parties were such a success that he decided to open a studio in Midtown Manhattan to cater to foot fetishists who couldn’t or wouldn’t attend his parties. He calls his studio the Foot Worship Palace (footworshippalace.com). Private foot worship sessions at Jason’s studio cost $200 an hour; entrance to Jason’s foot worship parties is $150.

"Women can attend the parties at no charge," Jason says. "Any woman who wants to drop by and have men worship her feet is more than welcome. But we ask women to send an e-mail first with face shot and clear pictures of the tops and bottoms of their feet."

Attractive women who don’t mind having their feet kissed, licked and massaged can make $250 to $300 at Jason’s parties. And what should a woman expect? "She’s basically going to have men who are mostly submissive at her feet. These are men who like the idea of giving up their power and control and being at a woman’s feet, worshipping her feet, massaging her toes." Because he’s not asking them to do typical sex-industry work, Jason says he’s able to hire women who wouldn’t normally do erotic work. "We get real models and actresses, not prostitutes who claim that they’re models and actresses, along with good-looking professional women and college students."

Before we get off the phone I congratulate Jason on his success. "Your parents must be so proud," I say.

"Actually they don’t know what I do," Jason says. "I grew up in a very conservative, very religious family. They still think I’m in the fitness industry."

 

Q: I recently posted an Internet ad seeking to purchase used panties from women. I got e-mails from women who were interested, but I also got a lot of hurtful e-mail from people telling me I’m sick and perverted. Surely sniffing used panties while masturbating is not that bad, is it? —Violated Panty Lover

A: Maybe you should post an ad seeking balls, VPL. When people tell you that you’re sick, don’t lock yourself in the bathroom and cry, you pussy. No! You blast back an e-mail that says, "You’re damn right I’m sick and perverted — and I’m lovin’ every fucking minute of it!"

 

Q: What do you think of new pronouns for transgender people such as "zim" and "hir"? A transgender friend has asked that we start referring to zim by such pronouns. I don’t want to hurt hir feelings, but I question the efficacy of the strategy. Aren’t we supposed to be moving toward eliminating gender from pronouns? And isn’t simplicity the point of pronouns? —Ambivalent Straight Supportive

A: I think they’re ztupid.

 

Q: My straight boyfriend has a gay "slave." My boyfriend is 35, handsome, tall, muscular — the total alpha-male type. His "slave" is a skinny twentysomething gay kid who lives in his building. This kid does whatever my boyfriend orders him to: clean his apartment, do his laundry, do his dishes. I think it’s sick and I want it to stop. My boyfriend loves the free cleaning service and wants me to get over it. There’s nothing sexual about their arrangement, so my boyfriend doesn’t see why it bothers me. I think he’s exploiting a very messed-up kid. What do you think? —The Master’s Girlfriend

A: Drop the bullshit compassion, TMG. Your boyfriend isn’t exploiting a "messed-up kid." To the contrary, lady, he’s delighting a grown man who’s turned on by slaving away for an alpha-male type. You want it to stop because you don’t want to share your boyfriend — not even his dirty dishes — with anyone else. (And the setup is sexual; somebody is beating off about those dishes — hopefully not over them but definitely about them.) Perhaps you’ll feel differently if your boyfriend orders his slave to clean your apartment too.

 

Q: You missed an opportunity in a recent column to talk about HPV and its association with anal cancer. It’s 35 times more common in the gay male population, and isn’t being screened for very well. In fact, anal cancer is now more common in gay men than cervical cancer in women. If it’s diagnosed early, mortality rates are much lower. Researchers in the Bay Area are looking at doing anal Pap smears among the gay male population. Let readers know! —Stanford Med Student

A: Now they know, SMS.

 

Q: Please tell the guy who didn’t know how to tell his sex partner he’d been infected with gonorrhea that he can also send him an anonymous e-card from www.inspot.org. —Been There Done That

A: Inspot was developed by Internet Sexuality Information Services Inc., a nonprofit organization "dedicated to developing and using Internet technologies to prevent disease transmission." Go to the Web site, select an e-card, click on an STD and write a few lines. Then enter the e-mail addresses of the sex partners you would like to notify. Cards can be sent anonymously or with a return e-mail address (not necessarily your own!). I gave the site a whirl and sent anonymous notices to all of my co-workers, letting them know that they had been exposed to shigella, molluscum, and nongonococchal urethritis. Based on the gasps and shrieks I heard coming from other cubicles all afternoon, BTDT, I’d say the service works.

Send letters to [email protected]