#OneTaste #members #Orgasm #stolen #footage
OneTaste members say Orgasm Inc is using stolen footage
Former members of OneTaste – an orgasmic meditation company that has been accused of being a sect – say Netflix’s upcoming documentary “Orgasm Inc” uses “stolen footage.”
A group called “OneTaste Real People” launched a website “Hey Netflix“, Claiming that” the documentary was largely produced using material that was stolen and sold to producers “and contained” very sensitive and private facts about our lives WITHOUT our consent. ”
The website also contains a petition which they say was signed by 400 ex-members, further explaining that the recording – which may contain nudity – was placed “on several hard drives (spanning the period from mid-2000 to 2016) and sold by the former OneTaste employee to the producer of Netflix for money without our knowledge, consent or consent. ”
“We have given OneTaste specific and exclusive authorization to film our participation in certain courses and activities for instructional / educational purposes only,” the petition says.
“Some of these courses have been intimate to us, and fragments of material may depict some of us at different stages of undressing, as part of an OM practice or elsewhere. In some cases, this includes extreme close-ups of our genitals, ”she continues.
OneTaste has been described as a sexuality education company that practices orgasm meditation or “OMing”.
Bloomberg report He claimed that “former employees and members of the community say that OneTaste resembled a kind of prostitution ring – one that exploited trauma victims and other people seeking healing.”
“In the experiences of some members, the company has used flirting and sex to lure emotionally vulnerable targets. He taught employees to be devoted, to work for free or cheaply. And managers often told employees to have sex or OM with themselves or with clients, ”the report reads.
OneTaste called these claims outrageous, and members of the new site refer to them as “false and frightening.”
The group asks Netflix to “give written assurances that no footage … will be used, broadcast, broadcast, sold or otherwise used” and that the streamer “will not use our names, any audio recordings of us, any photos of us. (blurred or otherwise), any video of us (blurred or otherwise), or any images or videos of our bodies. “
The document comes out on November 5.
The representative of Netflix did not have a comment.