Every year, tales of the great and fabled Super Bowl sex trafficking upswing make their rounds online. These rumors instill fear in the upstanding public, and infuse law enforcement and anti-trafficking organization with cash for intervention measures. But this myth has been long-debunked, so why does it remain in such heavy rotation? Join me in talking with Reason.com Senior Editor Elizabeth Nolan Brown about the origin of this moral panic, and check out the Super Bowl Sunday Sex Worker Bail Out Fund, coordinated by SWOP-Behind Bars' Alex Andrews, in partnership with the LGBTQ Freedom Fund


Primary References:


Super Bowl Sex-Trafficking Myths Return - Reason.com


Study Debunks Myth That Sex Trafficking Surges During The Super Bowl - StudyFinds.org


Is There Really a Huge Upsurge in Sex Trafficking Over Super Bowl Weekend? - Slate.com


You're Wrong About: Human Trafficking 


Debunking the Myth of ‘Super Bowl Sex Trafficking’: Media hype or evidenced-based coverage - AntiTraffickingReview.org


ADSW is produced by Blair Hopkins, and brought to you in part by SWOP-Behind Bars. Music by New Orleans' own Johnny Sketch and the Dirty Notes. Thank you to Elizabeth Nolan Brown; find her on Twitter at @ENBrown, and via Decriminalize Sex Work at DSWork.org. Special thanks as always to Alex AndrewsAll in a Day's (Sex) Work is an ever-expanding narrative; if you are a sex worker, partner, patron or other adult industry-adjacent person, I want to hear from you! Email me at [email protected].



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