Culture Why We Became Clown Sideshow Strippers - 🤡🌎

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They incorporate sideshow acts like sword swallowing with striptease. Now, the performers reveal why their customers are paying big bucks for this novelty act.​

Sandra Song
Freelance Writer
Published Sep. 01, 2023 8:46PM EDT

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Illustration of Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

It’s Saturday night at a Los Angeles strip club, and a pigtailed clown with a face full of greasepaint is twerking upon a bed of Legos. The crowd is going berserk, some clapping and cheering and throwing dollar bills on-stage as the clown stripper continues to play coquette, taking off their top and striking a series of sensual poses with cartoonish glee. But the majority of onlookers just stare in open-mouthed horror, covering their eyes when it’s clear the clown stripper is about to do the splits. And as soon as it happens, at least one person lets out a bloodcurdling scream. Another looks as if they’re about to pass out.

“People have those kinds of reactions all the time,” said Seraphina, who usually performs their signature bed of Legos act under the stage name Demonic Cupcake. And as they also noted, incorporating eye-popping sideshow stunts into already-sensual performances will usually make a gig even more lucrative, with some people even handing them $20 bill while begging, “‘Please don’t.’”

They stifled a laugh, “And I just take it from their hand, look them in the eye, and stomp really hard.”

As a clown stripper, Seraphina is part of a community of adult entertainers who combine striptease with sideshow acts that range from sword swallowing to shoving 5-inch nails up their noses—an act known as “human blockhead.”

Covered in clown makeup and flamboyantly dressed, they’re burlesque dancers with a twist: a surprising ability to be hot while performing terrifying, titillating, and often extremely painful tricks. And the end result tends to be packed pop-up nights that draw out the novelty-seekers and fetishists alike, intrigued by the crazy promise of a sexy clown deep-throating a 4-foot balloon.

That said, clowning, sideshow, and stripping have always been deeply intertwined, with a shared history dating back to 19th century vaudeville. To sell tickets, some showrunners would include racy “burlesque” segments that saw scantily-clad women performing slapstick comedy routines, which soon made its way into the world of traveling carnivals and freak shows. So despite modern burlesque typically eliciting images of vintage glamor and diamond-soaked pageantry, clown stripper Vita DeVoid said that it can also just as easily be “a sloppy crust punk doing clown stripping, eating balloons, and snapping mousetraps on her tongue.”

But what exactly creates a clown stripper? Well for one, the circus has always had a reputation for attracting outsiders like DeVoid, who recalled growing up “in a very boring small village surrounded by rednecks and spiteful conservatives.”

“It was horrific. I got my ass beat constantly, because I was a little different and the only goth in high school,” she said, explaining that her only respite was “hiding in my tiny room with my itty bitty TV to watch old vaudeville and comedy stuff.”

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Courtesy of Vita DeVoid

However, it wasn’t until she moved to Tampa to work as a stripper that DeVoid started to train with a local enclave of off-season circus entertainers, who taught her how to “poker face” through the pain of being a human pin cushion and sticking her hand inside a bear trap. From there, she was able to feel the power of “creating a person you want to be,” which came with the brave ability to jolt people out of the drudgery of everyday existence, whether they found it disturbing, hot, or just flat-out interesting. And even better, she appreciated the ability to separate herself from this on-stage persona, knowing that she was always ultimately able to “put down the mask of a clown” after a show.

“It’s your little shell,” she said of her chosen method of creative escapism. “You’re still deep in there, but you're presenting this crazy wild character.”

In Kaylith Von Kola’s case though, the circus was not only a mental but a physical escape. Coming from a “rough background,” they decided as a teenager that “it was more conducive for me to be hanging out with a traveling carnival.”

“It was honestly safer for me at the time,” Von Kola continued. “And I could learn how the games work, lend a hand, and just have a place to be where I could do something productive with people who were looking out for me and protecting me.”

Von Kola added that their love of the circus was later deepened by the now-defunct Venice Beach Freakshow, which she called “a beautiful place of acceptance” after “having been an outsider most of my life.” After all, it’s unsurprising that a group of people who exist beyond mainstream social norms would band together and develop a strong loyalty towards their peers, which Von Kola also demonstrates by continuing to be a vocal supporter of the clown stripper community, despite personally gravitating towards different artforms.

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Courtesy of Kaylith Von Kola/@whisky_shotz

Not only that, but their interest in sideshow helped curb their struggle with self-harm, as Von Kola remembering herself thinking that “‘I’ll learn how to do this instead, because it hurts, but it’s not that bad.’”

“I would pull myself out of my mind and was able to raise my pain tolerance, which ended up being a much healthier thing that got me away from self harming in negative ways,” she said, adding they’d use their bed of nails for “pain focused meditation.”

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Instagram (Archive)

“So yeah, they’re things that beat my body up, but it’s for a better purpose than before,” Von Kola noted. And now, they’re able to better focus on putting together intensive festival strip shows as KLIC-B8, which feature comedic narration and daredevil sideshow stunts, performed with unique looks that draw inspiration from candy ravers, traditional clown makeup, and black metal corpse paint.

Meanwhile, Seraphina was drawn to clown stripping because physical pain has always been their reality. As someone with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, fibromyalgia, chronic regional pain syndrome, and pain amplification syndrome, they explained that their “pain receptors are already firing all the time,” meaning that stripping on top of thousands of Legos is far more amusing than ouch-inducing.

“On a normal person’s pain scale, I exist as a six on a working basis, so I’m used to it at this point,” Seraphina said, before admitting that seeing people squirm is also a source of “perverse pleasure.”

“One of my favorite reactions is when they’re confused,” as they said, adding that they’ve had several people come up to them after a show and confess to having a fear of clowns.

“They’ll be like, ‘I don’t think I’m afraid of clowns anymore. I think I just need to go home and evaluate some things now,’” Seraphina said, laughing when I ask whether “ejaculate” would be a better word.

“Yes, let the clowns confuse you,” they quipped. “Let them give you a fear boner.”

When it comes to the so-called “fear boner” though, clinical sexologist, “American Sex Podcast” host, and clown fetishist Sunny Megatron said it’s a result of “playing with fear in an intentional way.” The same kind of psychological mechanism used in BDSM and kink, she went on to explain that being both frightened and turned on can be caused by a combination of brain chemistry and subconscious fear. Because when there’s fear, there’s adrenaline and an entire “cocktail of different chemicals, neurotransmitters, and hormones.”

“So what our nervous system is doing is very similar to what happens when we’re aroused. Like when your heart starts beating fast and you get sweaty,” as Megatron said. “And for some folks, there’s a very thin veil in between fear and arousal.”

According to her, humans have a tendency to “play with our fear and threat responses in a safe way” and can “really get off on safe threats that get as close to the edge of ‘I might die,’ or ‘This is horrible,’ or whatever.”

“But at the end of the day, we know deep in our minds that we’re safe. Like on a roller coaster, you might feel like ‘This thing might go off the tracks and I might crash through the park and die,’ which can be an exciting feeling to have,” she said. “You know it’s not really going to happen though, so you can enjoy the fight-or-flight adrenaline.”

In the case of a clown phobia-turned-fetish, Megatron said clown strippers could even be therapeutic. But while clown strippers shouldn’t be a replacement for actual therapy, she noted that attending shows is similar to “exposure therapy,” where someone “desensitizes themselves to that real fear” that may be a byproduct of a negative experience with clowns.

“In that real life experience, you didn’t get to choose what happened. You were at the mercy of that situation or that scary clown,” she explained. “But now, you can pick elements of that experience. Maybe not reliving it completely, but taking some of those feelings or some of those aesthetics from that experience.”
Megatron added, “Except now you’re able to choose and dictate exactly what’s going to happen. You’re in control.”

However, she went on to say that there’s more to a clown fetish than just fear, as some are just attracted to “the playful ridiculousness and the permission it gives you not to be so serious.”

“And that’s a big one, because so many of us have sexual hang-ups, and shame. We have performance anxiety and think we have to be perfect. We can’t be silly,” Megatron said. “But sex is messy. It’s kind of gross, and we make mistakes. We queef, we fart, we do all of these things, but these natural human experiences mortify us, because we're so ruled by this shame.”

As such, a clown fetish could be a response to a society that’s conditioned us out of being “silly and ridiculous” by telling us sex must “be serious and fancy lingerie and looking perfect.”

“But clowning throws all of that out the window and gives us permission to be our authentic self, even if that authentic self is imperfect and dorky and silly,” Megatron said, adding that the appeal lies within wanting to shed any sexual self-consciousness.

“It’s basically one of the ways to access uninhibited and joyful sex,” she continued. Seraphina also went on to echo this by saying “there’s this fun and freedom” to clown stripping where “you’re still allowed to play,” which they underscored by adding that the bed of Legos act started as a joke about their lifelong obsession with toy building blocks.

“I love Legos. Like, we just finished putting all of our Lego shelves up this week and have an entire wall in our living room that is dedicated to my 40,000 pieces of Lego sets,” they said. But even as a Lego enthusiast, Seraphina reiterated that their signature act was purposefully designed to be a cutesy twist on the classic bed of glass tr’ck; an attempt at bringing a little levity to the strip club through playful clownery and sideshow showmanship.

“Because they’re Legos, and Legos are not serious.” they said. “Except it is serious because it’s Legos, and you know that's gonna hurt. But at the same time…”

A beat passed. “It’s just Legos.”

Source (Archive)
 
That’s the weirdest thing anybody’s ever written in printed media.
Sometimes I wonder what the founding fathers would say if they were shown that their actions would eventually lead to shit like that. Somehow I suspect the constitution would look a bit different. Either that or they'd say fuck that and surrender to the british

Woe-B-Gon (TM) said:
I dunno, "Megatron said clown strippers could even be therapeutic." must be running a close second.
 
Meanwhile, Seraphina was drawn to clown stripping because physical pain has always been their reality. As someone with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, fibromyalgia, chronic regional pain syndrome, and pain amplification syndrome, they explained that their “pain receptors are already firing all the time,” meaning that stripping on top of thousands of Legos is far more amusing than ouch-inducing.

“On a normal person’s pain scale, I exist as a six on a working basis, so I’m used to it at this point,” Seraphina said, before admitting that seeing people squirm is also a source of “perverse pleasure.”
I was gonna make a joke about Hellraiser and cenobites, but this article's already so out there, I don't think it would even add to the weirdness.
 
I wonder if this is related.
College professor with clown fetish asked to paint students’ faces for cash, extra credit (Archive)
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This was not a romantic jester.

A former college geography professor with an apparent clown fetish resigned earlier this year after it was revealed he asked female students to paint their faces, according to a report.

Joseph Tokosh had held positions at two previous colleges and was on track for tenure at Nicholls University in Louisiana before the student newspaper exposed his creepy behavior in March, according to USA Today. Tokosh quit the same day the article was published.

The professor had not been secretive about his sexual fantasies before the report, posting about face painting and clowning on social media.

“I have a facepaint fetish and convince the cute girls in my classes to let me paint their faces,” he once posted on Reddit.

Tokosh held open discussions about his fetish online, joining Facebook groups for new students and posting videos on YouTube.

In one Reddit thread of purported hard-to-believe stories, he posted pictures of several women in white face paint, according to the newspaper.

Throughout his career in academia, he had been reported to campus police twice and other students complained about him online — raising concern about universities’ background check protocol when hiring staff members.

Sophie Levan first encountered Tokosh, then 28, in a Facebook group incoming at Kent State — where he previously was employed — in 2017. Tokosh, who received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Indiana University of Pennsylvania, was hired by the school in 2015.

Tokosh offered cash to any student willing to let him paint their faces.

“If anyone is looking for some extra cash, I am looking for people to practice facepainting on!” he wrote. “I will literally pay you!”

Levan, then 18, accepted, enticed by the cash and her own interest in movie makeup, she told USA Today.

Things quickly turned creepy. Levan, who revealed he was still a graduate student, said he asked if he could pick her up at her dorm and take her to the campus building where the geography department was located where he would paint her face.

Feeling uneasy, she refused — and Tokosh became aggressive. After she stopped responding to his incessant requests she participate, she filed a police report with the Kent State police in January 2018.

“I felt like the school would want to know about it,” Levan said. “I thought maybe they could prevent anything bad from happening since other girls would go with him.”

Levan said she was told to cease communications with Tokosh and to let them know if anything significant happened.

Months later, around midnight, she suddenly received a text of a selfie of Tokosh’s sad-looking face covered in white face. While there was no message, his shirt read “I’m not a failure.”

“There was some negative intention with sending that photo,” Levan said. “It’s definitely burned into my mind.”

Police had received a near-identical report from another student before Levan filed her report against Tokosh.

“She does not have any concerns for her safety, but just wanted this documented,” police noted in the report, obtained by USA Today.

In July 2017, another student retweeted a message from Kent State’s Twitter account that asked for Kent State love stories: “A geography professor requested me on Facebook and asked if he could paint my face like a clown.”

When contacted by the outlet, the student said she believed Tokoksh found her on a freshman Facebook page where she posted often. She now wishes she filed a police report, too.

Tokosh ultimately left Kent State not because of the creepy advances, but after pleading no contest to entering his peers’ offices without permission and taking a USB drive, according to USA Today.

But the clowning around didn’t stop when he started his new gigs at Northern Illinois State and Nicholls State in 2022, despite many of his social media postings online before his hire.

Student journalists with the Nicholls Worth discovered that “Joeography” — a word he’d use to promote his class materials — was also the username of a Reddit user who posted about his “clown fetish” and photos of women with their faces painted.

Additionally, a YouTube account under the name “Joe Tokosh” posted at least two videos in 2020 of a man throwing pies at women — including a young woman also seen in the screenshots from Tokosh’s Reddit account.

Nicholls Worth’s editor-in-chief Sally-Anne Torres interviewed six female students who shared their experiences with Tokosh. Some said they agreed in exchange for extra credit. The women said he sometimes giggled as they painted their faces in his office.

“It wasn’t just this innocent thing that a lot of these girls thought it was,” Torres said. “As a professor or teacher, that is somebody students are supposed to trust. He used his power to ruin that trust and to do these things, and that made me angry for them.”

The student paper published a story headlined, “Geography professor suspended immediately, students allege sexual harassment” on March 27.

When student reporters from the campus TV station confronted Tokosh, he told students that face painting was required for his geography class to better understand other cultures.

“That’s an assignment in one of my classes where they actually come up with their own face paint and makeup design inspired by a culture and they implement it,” he said.

That same day, Tokosh submitted his resignation, although he had already been let go by the university for undisclosed reasons in February.

After the report, more students came forward to share their uncomfortable experiences, according to USA Today. He has not been charged with any crimes related to the face-painting.

Tokosh has refused to respond to any requests for comment.
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“Because they’re Legos, and Legos are not serious.” they said. “Except it is serious because it’s Legos, and you know that's gonna hurt. But at the same time…”

A beat passed. “It’s just Legos.”
You're not supposed to pluralize the term "Lego;" you're supposed to say "Lego bricks."

I question the autism of these genderqueer clown strippers.
 
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