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Monday, 27 May 2024

Targeted

At Last! He's Mine! All Mine!

Another sportsman, a rugby player, being tied up on the field of play (see Supersaver)
He was the only one who turned up for training, defying the miserable weather.
In the dull light he'd not noticed the figure in black approaching until it was too late.

This does not look like a run of the mill, criminal kidnap (if there is such a thing).
The attacker's shiny, black kit looks highly professional (and just a bit kinky)
It's as if the Special Forces have come to take out an important, 'person of interest',
intending to put him under extreme interrogation at a secret, military base.

It's hard to imagine why a  muscular and very handsome Rugby player would be hunted down by the Army like this. (Oh I don't know though).The mud on his kit suggests he didn't surrender easily, but somehow this skilled operator persuaded him to sit calmly on a bench so that his arms could be tightly clamped behind his back with dense, neat roping. 

His mouth is tightly gagged, it's more symbolic than practical, but nevertheless it muffles his protests and makes him feel uncomfortable and restrained. The same applies to the ropes tied around his thighs. They don't seem to have a restraining purpose, they don't prevent the man from using his legs, but they do restrain the muscles, severely restricting his ability to walk and run. This means the kidnapper can walk him to his vehicle rather than carrying him, but hobbling is a simpler way to do this.

The rain buckets down depressingly. The captive gazes upwards as if resigned to his fate - perhaps he's a deserter, a military offender of some sort whose past has finally caught up with him. Or perhaps he's trying to work out, what's going on, why me? You see, something's not quite right here. His attacker has not hidden his face with a balaclava as you would expect to keep his identity secret. The captive can see it's not someone known to him, pursuing a grudge. He looks more mature than would be expected of a professional kidnapper. Obviously, though, he's still good enough to take out a fit, rugby player. But then again the over-elaborate restraint has taken up a lot of time when you'd think he'd be keen to get away with his catch. Obviously he's done his homework and the filthy weather gives some insurance against being seen, but there's no accounting for the obsessive routines of joggers and dog walkers, so why take the risk? 

The alarming explanation that seeps into the Rugby player's mind at this point is that he's enjoying all this, overpowering him, tying him up, gagging him. It's too late now, his attacker moves to lift him off the bench, in what looks like a precursor to hoisting the guy over his shoulder, commando style, and sprinting off into the wood with him .

~

I'll give links to this artist in a fuller review scheduled for mid-June

for more 'targets' and similar posts at mitchmen fetish blog, 
click on the labels below

5 comments:

  1. I really like this artist's work....

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  2. This isn't art. This was machine-generated. Please don't share images of this nature - they're made by plagiarizing from real artists and as you'll likely notice as you see more and more of them, they have a very sterile, ultra-polished feel to that is only likely to worsen as similar programs produce more images from stolen and blended work, feed them back into themselves and regurgitate them ad nauseam.

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  3. The truth about AI art is more complicated than this and the suggestion that human direction is not involved at all is completely untrue. Artists have 'plagiarising' the work of others ever since images and other art forms were invented were invented and this has often have resulted in even better works of art.
    I show works here purely on their own merits in artistic, historical or crudely erotic terms and if infringement of copyright is involved (or any other objection is raised by the owner) I will, and have, removed the offending item.
    If AI breaches copyright, there are legal procedures for dealing with it which I will happily respect, but where unrecognisable fragments are involved it's hard to see what the problem is. It's not so very different to photo-shopping, captioning, rendering, collage and mixed media offerings.
    Arguments about what constitutes art are not new either and often end up as futile exercises in hair-splitting. Are news photographs art?
    I agree that pictures produced this way fail to achieve artistic credibilty in many respects way beyond the objections you have pointed out and I have articles in the pipeline that address this, but the fetish art genre does not attract many artists of the highest calibre for obvious reasons. The ultra-polished, AI look sometimes adds erotic interest and different perspectives to familiar imagery with this rugby example exemplifying this. As such it has a value in this blog that is quite different to conventional notions of artistry.

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  4. Rain looks Irish coach in sin bin has shamrock badge. But 'look' isnt despite GAA type short-shorts.Is this the problem,AI is as yet too generic?

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  5. AI at the moment seems incapable of seeing an image as a human would and spotting inconsistencies, hence we get random extra limbs and fingers. This engine is the first I have come across that does not render words and shapes like badges illegible. It seems to be designed as an assembly process driven by the details in the spec it is given rather than understanding the nature of the image requested. This weakness allows checks on what are 'safe images' to be circumvented so I suppose we shouldn't complain.

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