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Pee Conversations / Scenes on Mainstream TV


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James Corden had Olivia Colman on his TV show, last Thursday night, advertising her latest movie. Without prompting or questioning from Corden, she volunteered this story:

She said that the costume dress required her to wear what was essentially a full body Spanx underneath it. She said the Spanx made having a wee difficult, in that she had to remove most of it, to go. She complained to the wardrobe lady, who told her, "Oh no, there's a vent in the Spanx for that," and she showed Olivia where it was. So Olivia tried to use the vent, the next time she needed a wee. She said that her wee sounded and felt different than usual, but she went ahead with it. When she finished, she said she discovered that her wee had run down her legs and got her costume dress wet in two places, so she had to appeal to the wardrobe lady for a quick remedy for her predicament.

It is interesting to me that an actress of her stature would voluntarily reveal such a story, on National TV. Do these ladies understand that their stories can be very erotic, for a significant fraction of the (male) population, but may be a turn-off for other males, and some females. Do they use these stories intentionally to enhance their erotic appeal? The talk show hosts don't seem to demand these stories, but they don't discourage them, either. Corden seemed to take this one in stride, as did Kimmel, with Allison Janney, in September, after some initial embarrassment. I am personally very pleased with these incidents, and I hope they become a trend, portraying the naturally erotic nature of female peeing. I had heard similar stories previously from news anchors Hoda Kotb, and Tamron Hall, which I posted on Pee Fans forums.

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17 hours ago, gldenwetgoose said:

I tend to think there are two factors here - both of which play beautifully into our game.  Whether or not these ladies care.

Firstly is the actor's desire to be relevant, to self-market themselves as a name in your mind that stays with you - subconsciously reminding you to watch her movie, make it a smash, get her nominated for whatever award and get cast in bigger and better.   So going on TV and talking about hours in makeup and costume, or about the food in the film set trailers, or how good the co-stars were...  Would anyone remember her name for those things?

Secondly and most wonderfully - pee is steadily becoming more of a thing.   Not only in fetish circles, but just in everyday life - and that's wonderful.   People just accepting that pee happens, and people making it normal - whether it be more bathroom scenes on TV, young influences filming themselves peeing behind dumpsters for ticktok or actresses talking about wetting themselves.  The more open it is, the more conversations and anecdotes we get to hear about, the more colleagues will discuss their desperation or even fetish traits in front of us and the more sights we stand a chance of seeing.

That's my logic anyway...

Both very good points. Thanks for expressing them so clearly. I like your logic! I fervently hope that your second point proves correct. I see increasing indicators that it is. Regarding your first point, I detect a real desire on the part of the actresses to tell their their risque little stories, without being asked or encouraged. That seems to be a departure from past attitudes, where the actress or news anchor would show reluctance and embarrassment, either feigned or real. Present attitudes make the interviews much more memorable, as you point out. Attitudes toward peeing certainly have changed. Hoda's little story was very similar to Olivia's, and Allison Janney's, involving peeing malfunctions, while wearing Spanx. But Hoda had to be urged, almost coerced, to tell hers, with significant embarrassment, real or feigned. Tamron Hall showed a much bolder attitude, a couple of years later, on the same show, when she was asked if she peed in the shower. She answered, (paraphrasing) "Yes, it's such a pleasant release!"

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On 12/12/2022 at 1:11 AM, Dr.P said:

James Corden had Olivia Colman on his TV show, last Thursday night, advertising her latest movie. Without prompting or questioning from Corden, she volunteered this story:

She said that the costume dress required her to wear what was essentially a full body Spanx underneath it. She said the Spanx made having a wee difficult, in that she had to remove most of it, to go. She complained to the wardrobe lady, who told her, "Oh no, there's a vent in the Spanx for that," and she showed Olivia where it was. So Olivia tried to use the vent, the next time she needed a wee. She said that her wee sounded and felt different than usual, but she went ahead with it. When she finished, she said she discovered that her wee had run down her legs and got her costume dress wet in two places, so she had to appeal to the wardrobe lady for a quick remedy for her predicament.

It is interesting to me that an actress of her stature would voluntarily reveal such a story, on National TV. Do these ladies understand that their stories can be very erotic, for a significant fraction of the (male) population, but may be a turn-off for other males, and some females. Do they use these stories intentionally to enhance their erotic appeal? The talk show hosts don't seem to demand these stories, but they don't discourage them, either. Corden seemed to take this one in stride, as did Kimmel, with Allison Janney, in September, after some initial embarrassment. I am personally very pleased with these incidents, and I hope they become a trend, portraying the naturally erotic nature of female peeing. I had heard similar stories previously from news anchors Hoda Kotb, and Tamron Hall, which I posted on Pee Fans forums.

Olivia Colman is a national treasure. She has also told a story of wetting herself on stage!

“My entire bladder emptied and it just went towards the audience in the front row. It made it worse.”

Olivia added that the audience were aware of what happened and were “moving away from little bits of wee”.

https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/olivia-colman-wets-herself-on-stage-story_uk_60827499e4b05c42907479ea

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23 hours ago, gldenwetgoose said:

I tend to think there are two factors here - both of which play beautifully into our game.  Whether or not these ladies care.

Firstly is the actor's desire to be relevant, to self-market themselves as a name in your mind that stays with you - subconsciously reminding you to watch her movie, make it a smash, get her nominated for whatever award and get cast in bigger and better.   So going on TV and talking about hours in makeup and costume, or about the food in the film set trailers, or how good the co-stars were...  Would anyone remember her name for those things?

Secondly and most wonderfully - pee is steadily becoming more of a thing.   Not only in fetish circles, but just in everyday life - and that's wonderful.   People just accepting that pee happens, and people making it normal - whether it be more bathroom scenes on TV, young influences filming themselves peeing behind dumpsters for ticktok or actresses talking about wetting themselves.  The more open it is, the more conversations and anecdotes we get to hear about, the more colleagues will discuss their desperation or even fetish traits in front of us and the more sights we stand a chance of seeing.

That's my logic anyway...

I agree. And I think those of us who grew up before internet ubiquity are more sensitive to it. My personal theory is that reality TV planted the seed. But it was the intersection of technology (particularly cameras becoming standard in phones) and social media that accelerated the deterioration of the barriers between public and private behavior. People today are noticeably more candid about bodily functions than they ever were in my lifetime. Especially women. 

Edited by Takashi96
Clarity of explanation
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23 hours ago, Sophie said:

Olivia Colman is a national treasure. She has also told a story of wetting herself on stage!

“My entire bladder emptied and it just went towards the audience in the front row. It made it worse.”

Olivia added that the audience were aware of what happened and were “moving away from little bits of wee”.

https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/olivia-colman-wets-herself-on-stage-story_uk_60827499e4b05c42907479ea

Thanks for the very interesting link, and your quotes, from her.

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20 hours ago, Takashi96 said:

I agree. And I think those of us who grew up before internet ubiquity are more sensitive to it. My personal theory is that reality TV planted the seed. But it was the intersection of technology (particularly cameras becoming standard in phones) and social media that accelerated the deterioration of the barriers between public and private behavior. People today are noticeably more candid about bodily functions than they ever were in my lifetime. Especially women. 

Thanks for your very astute and penetrating insights. I have noticed the same openness about bodily functions, especially among women. The recent increase in the number and anatomical detail of "bladder leak" underwear adverts aimed at women is one piece of evidence, directly relevant to urination. During the "sexual revolution" of the 60's through 80's, women would discuss various aspects of their sexuality, but would look embarrassed, and change the subject, rather than talk about their peeing. That was always surprising and disappointing to me.  

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7 hours ago, Dr.P said:

Thanks for your very astute and penetrating insights. I have noticed the same openness about bodily functions, especially among women. The recent increase in the number and anatomical detail of "bladder leak" underwear adverts aimed at women is one piece of evidence, directly relevant to urination. During the "sexual revolution" of the 60's through 80's, women would discuss various aspects of their sexuality, but would look embarrassed, and change the subject, rather than talk about their peeing. That was always surprising and disappointing to me.  

Thank you for your thank you. The other factor I left out was the normalization of porn. Porn was always more widely consumed than reported. But eliminating the need to visit a brick and mortar porn shop or the room behind the curtain in your local video rental store caused porn viewing to explode. 

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  • 3 weeks later...
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I know adverts for incontinence products don't quite count as 'discussion'...    But I've just spotted the most aesthetically wonderfully pleasing advert on UK TV.

Here it is in Spanish (didn't spot the English language version on Youtube, but exactly the same actor).

Tell me if you disagree, but the advertising campaign worked brilliantly - I'm sold.

 

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Scotland's favourite sitcom "Still Game" - a show that I had a brief discussion about with @Chrissy89   - tends to have quite a lot of peeing scenes/references. The one I want to share in particular is from the episode "Dial-a-bus" in which Davey the driver (played by the late Robbie Coltrane) ends up having a mental breakdown and taking everyone on a "magical mystery tour" in order to get him to stop, Jack and Victor send Isa to the front to "come over all womanly", none of which seems to phase him until she says "But I need a pish, I could pish, and you could... watch me"

The scene is at about 8:20 in this video:

https://youtu.be/L8oV4f2iRTI

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On 12/31/2022 at 6:40 PM, Kupar said:

This might be worth watching on Friday 13 Jan. Rachel Riley pees in the shower. Yes!

PSX_20221231_183558.jpg

I have this set to record tonight. I hope the shower peeing conversation is in this episode!

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Just now, MC Cumzy said:

Scotland's favourite sitcom "Still Game" - a show that I had a brief discussion about with @Chrissy89   - tends to have quite a lot of peeing scenes/references. The one I want to share in particular is from the episode "Dial-a-bus" in which Davey the driver (played by the late Robbie Coltrane) ends up having a mental breakdown and taking everyone on a "magical mystery tour" in order to get him to stop, Jack and Victor send Isa to the front to "come over all womanly", none of which seems to phase him until she says "But I need a pish, I could pish, and you could... watch me"

The scene is at about 8:20 in this video:

https://youtu.be/L8oV4f2iRTI

Oh my god yes! The most epic reference to peeing ever shown on the BBC! Shame they didn’t do that scene!

 

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Definitely great to hear that Rachel Riley pees in the shower.  

Coronation street had a few references to peeing over the New Year.  Last year, Sally Metcalf was caught short just before midnight on NYE and peed in public.  This year there were several references to last year’s event with Sally saying she wasn’t going to go to the pub because everyone would remember last year,  Tim said that nobody would remember, but there were several people that mentioned it on the night included Carla when they went outside asking “Are you alright for a wee Sal?”.

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On 1/10/2023 at 2:42 PM, gldenwetgoose said:

I know adverts for incontinence products don't quite count as 'discussion'...    But I've just spotted the most aesthetically wonderfully pleasing advert on UK TV.

Here it is in Spanish (didn't spot the English language version on Youtube, but exactly the same actor).

Tell me if you disagree, but the advertising campaign worked brilliantly - I'm sold.

Well, looking at the adverts, in the broadest context, they can be viewed as discussion with the purpose of selling a product, providing supporting data describing that product. lol... I'm very pleased, but not surprised, to hear that the campaign worked so well. I thought that the model/actress would be very attractive to both males and females, due to her well chosen clothing and erotic body language. She shows just enough thigh to be sexy to males, but not enough to turn females off. 

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Last nigh on the Jonathan Ross Show they had Mo Gillingham on.  He was talking about jumping off the bridge into a lake/river.  He said he forgot to ask whether there were any sharks or crocodiles, so he shouted from the water and was told there were eels.  He said he peed a bit in the river.   Made it sound like the thought of the eels scared him so he peed.

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On 1/10/2023 at 11:33 PM, Dr.P said:

Love the TENA Discreet advert! The model takes a very sexy pose, sitting on the toilet!

I was just about to post the same wondering if i was the only one in the world that got turned on by that! 🤣🤣🤣

Edited by satisfied
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On 1/10/2023 at 10:42 PM, gldenwetgoose said:

I know adverts for incontinence products don't quite count as 'discussion'...    But I've just spotted the most aesthetically wonderfully pleasing advert on UK TV.

Here it is in Spanish (didn't spot the English language version on Youtube, but exactly the same actor).

Tell me if you disagree, but the advertising campaign worked brilliantly - I'm sold.

 

bloody hot in any language although i now really want to hear it in sexy Italian 😁

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