Dawn: I think a date should be in a real fancy restaurant, then champagne at a night club with a floor show, then ballroom dancing. Joyce: Unfortunately, we're not dating in a movie from the thirties.

'Get It Done'


Buffy and Angel 1: BUFFYNANGLE4EVA!!!!!1!

Is it better the second time around? Or the third? Or tenth? This is the place to come when you have a burning desire to talk about an old episode that was just re-run.


Stephanie - May 12, 2005 7:29:08 am PDT #708 of 10458
Trust my rage

I always assumed that bedroom skills were the only reason Spike was with her.


Betsy HP - May 12, 2005 7:30:14 am PDT #709 of 10458
If I only had a brain...

But Spike is enough of a horndog that "willing" is probably sufficient; I don't see him holding out for "expert".


Lyra Jane - May 12, 2005 7:33:16 am PDT #710 of 10458
Up with the sun

I don't see Spike as being the world's greatest judge of bedroom skills, either. As far as we know, his experience at that point was pretty much Drusilla -- who doesn't strike me as an especially focused lover -- possibly being used as a toy by Darla and Angelus, and anyone he might have raped. Not exactly experiences likely to teach one the Kama Sutra.


Fred Pete - May 12, 2005 7:36:32 am PDT #711 of 10458
Ann, that's a ferret.

Not exactly experiences likely to teach one the Kama Sutra.

I'll add that William, being a middle-class Victorian male, probably had experiences with prostitutes. Which really doesn't change the above conclusion.


Lyra Jane - May 12, 2005 7:39:05 am PDT #712 of 10458
Up with the sun

I'll add that William, being a middle-class Victorian male, probably had experiences with prostitutes.

You think? I suppose statistically you're right, but I just see him as too much of a mama's boy for that.


Connie Neil - May 12, 2005 7:42:18 am PDT #713 of 10458
brillig

Hey, Spike's sex skills! always fun to discuss.


Fred Pete - May 12, 2005 7:43:12 am PDT #714 of 10458
Ann, that's a ferret.

You think?

Probably but not certainly. Being a mama's boy with Victorian attitudes, he certainly wouldn't have told her if he did.


§ ita § - May 12, 2005 7:48:25 am PDT #715 of 10458
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Being a mama's boy with Victorian attitudes, he certainly wouldn't have told her if he did.

He seemed so flummoxed by women -- not just by the politics of women of his own class, but by their very material existence.


Trudy Booth - May 12, 2005 7:51:34 am PDT #716 of 10458
Greece's financial crisis threatens to take down all of Western civilization - a civilization they themselves founded. A rather tragic irony - which is something they also invented. - Jon Stewart

I doubt William had been with prostitutes considering his reaction when he thought Drusilla was one.


Topic!Cindy - May 12, 2005 7:51:51 am PDT #717 of 10458
What is even happening?

I don't see Spike as being the world's greatest judge of bedroom skills, either.
I don't know. Maybe not if he'd been confined to a normal lifespan, but even were he a slow learner, he had plenty of time to learn. Also, vampirism is inherently physical and sexual. If we take vampirism out of the realm of metaphor (because that metaphor is more akin to rape which is disturbing to contemplate in a discussion about sex, because it lives so far apart from sex in the most important areas), and just look at what canon suggests about vampires, it seems they are possessed of physical skills ordinary humans are not, and are more unabashedly earthy, and lusty than ordinary humans. They continue to exist only by sating their physical desires (for blood).

Spike seemed to knock Buffy's socks off. Granted, her prior experience was--as she described it at one point--barely plural, but the relationship between the two of them suggests both that Buffy is a powerfully sexual woman with a sizable appetite (which is also supported by both the pros and cons of her relationship with Riley), and that Spike satisfied it. Granted, there were a lot of other things going on with her at the time, and granted those things are probably primarily responsible for her becoming involved with someone for she held in such contempt, but had Spike been unskilled in the bedroom, I think it is unlikely that their relationship would have continued as long as it did, in the way that it did.

I'll add that William, being a middle-class Victorian male, probably had experiences with prostitutes. Which really doesn't change the above conclusion.
Hmmm. That's an interesting observation, Fred. I love when you talk about Buffy. I'd never thought of that. I can't decide if his discomfort during his first encounter with Dru supports this, or not.