The History of Sex

The History of Sex is a 1999 five-part documentary series by Jim Milio, Kelly McPherson, and Melissa Jo Peltier; and narrated by Peter Coyote. It was first aired on The History Channel. It features interviews of Hugh Hefner, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Helen Gurley Brown, and more.

The History of Sex
GenreDocumentary
Written byKelly McPherson
Melissa Jo Peltier
Directed byJim Milio
Shyam Benegal
Melissa Jo Peltier
Narrated byPeter Coyote
Composer(s)Kevin Kiner
Country of origin United States
Original language(s)English, German
No. of episodes5
Production
Executive producer(s)Charlie Maday
Jim Milio
Melissa Jo Peltier
Editor(s)Bruce Bailey
Diana Friedberg
Allison MacEwan
Running time60 min each
Release
Original networkThe History Channel
First shown in1999
Original release17 September 
21 September 1999

Episodes

The 20th Century
This episode first aired on 17 September 1999.[1] It covers birth control methods, sexually transmitted diseases, sex studies, and Sildenafil.
From Don Juan to Queen Victoria
This episode first aired on 18 September 1999.[1] It covers the sexual lives of Giacomo Casanova to the Marquis de Sade, the pilgrims and the Puritans; African tribal rites; and Victorian society.
The Middle Ages
This episode first aired on 19 September 1999.[1] It covers sex from ancient Rome to the Renaissance.
The Eastern World
This episode first aired on 20 September 1999.[1] It covers sexuality from Japan, India, China, and Arabia. It also discusses the origin of the Kama Sutra. There is an error in this program. It says, "The predominant religion in Baghdad was Islam, which was founded in 1622AD by the prophet Mohammed." Islam was actually founded in 622AD.
Ancient Civilization
This episode first aired on 21 September 1999.[1] It covers sexuality from Mesopotamia, Rome, Egypt and Greece.
gollark: I disagree entirely.
gollark: Purposes are assigned by humans. The universe is cold, uncaring and runs on weird differential equations of some kind.
gollark: I would end up reading over the book several times because the lessons mostly just consisted of taking pointless overly detailed notes for essays.
gollark: School English really liked going over every detail for school reasons.
gollark: This will* happen.

References

  1. "History of Sex on History Channel". TVGuide.com. Retrieved 21 February 2008.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.