No, he doesn’t have sex in the wolf suit.
Much.
“When I imagined getting a suit, I thought it would be something I would want to do,” says Dominic Rodriguez, director of a new documentary on the “furry” subculture — and a member himself.
“But honestly?” he says. “The suit is so beautiful, it’s so much better than I thought it would be, I don’t want to mess it up. I could just put it on and get [oral sex], though.”
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Still, he doesn’t shy away from talking about sex, the issue that’s dogged (so to speak) the community for years. “There are people for whom it is a completely innocent, sexless experience,” says Rodriguez. “That’s the enjoyment they get out of it. The sexual aspect of the fandom is a huge part of it for me — but I can’t say how big a part it is for people who aren’t me.”
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His interest in furries goes back to his early teens. “It was totally porn,” he says. “That’s not something I’m ashamed of. Furry porn is really beautiful — you can see the artists put themselves into it. It’s the opposite of videos of people f–king. It’s not dehumanizing. It brings humanity into something that’s total fantasy.” Growing up saturated with cartoons and the internet, he says, it isn’t that hard to see why some people gravitate toward being titillated by the idea of being cartoon animals themselves.
“It’s less inhibited — less letting anxiety get in the way,” Rodriguez explains. “People think more, and they have more anxiety. When animals have sex, they have sex and then they’re done. When people have sex they have to think about it. They lose their boner if they get freaked out.”
Rodriguez includes an interview with a furry sex-toy designer in “Fursonas,” whose company, Bad Dragon, makes, among other things, “dildoes in the shape of horse c–ks or dog d–ks.” The company founder, who goes by the name of Varka, is “an artist,” says Rodriguez.