Excess
3rd Level Indigo Feather
- Joined
- May 9, 2006
- Messages
- 6,635
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After a little discussion in the "Way too much fake laughing and bad acting in just about all tickle videos" thread, I started thinking about this. Does anyone think video producers may be trying too hard to make their models seem "extremely ticklish"? Because based on what I've seen, and what I've seen said, that may be the case. Most people I believe are ticklish of course, but is it normal to be ticklish to the level expected in videos made for tickling? Could those expectations force the producers to make their models act more ticklish than they actually are?
Considering that the purpose of a business is to make money in order to continue production, I'd think it would naturally. The term "supply and demand" comes to mind here. If the demand for "wildly ticklish" models is very high, then the producers couldn't find models to fill that demand, wouldn't they perhaps cut a few corners to supply the people what they want (or rather, the illusion of what they want)? Could the expectations for ticklishness in videos perhaps be too high for a majority of people to fulfill? And what exactly are those expectations? Thoughts, anyone?
Considering that the purpose of a business is to make money in order to continue production, I'd think it would naturally. The term "supply and demand" comes to mind here. If the demand for "wildly ticklish" models is very high, then the producers couldn't find models to fill that demand, wouldn't they perhaps cut a few corners to supply the people what they want (or rather, the illusion of what they want)? Could the expectations for ticklishness in videos perhaps be too high for a majority of people to fulfill? And what exactly are those expectations? Thoughts, anyone?



