By BRYAN
WALSH WENZHOU
Lining a wall of the factory show-room like sentinels, the dildos
are the color and size of rainbow Popsicles and give off a faint electric
glow, except for the pink one that appears to have the head of George
Washington. Lift-size blow-up dolls hang nearby, blonds, brunettes
and red-heads with crimson mouths shaped in a permanent 'O', as if
surprised to find themselves rolling off the production line of a
dingy Chinese factory. The sheer variety of sex toys, both anatomically
correct and physiologically implausible, being readied for shipment
from Wenzhou Loves Health Products is disturbing .But as company president
Wu Wei says, "Everyone has their own taste." Which, Hopefully,
explains the inflatable cow-a black-spotted Holstein-tucked in the
corner. "The cow is ordered by European companies," Wu says,
"maybe because Westerners treat animals more equally?"
He shrugs. The sex toy king of China doesn't judge.
It's bad for business. With his crew cut, oversize glasses, blue
jeans and phlegmatic manner,33-year-old Wu looks like a teenager
slouching in the back of sexed class-but he's an empire builder
emblematic of China's only major government licensed erotica manufacturer.
The plan daily pumps out some 10,000 sex toys destined for bedroom
drawers worldwide, but Wu and his Japanese venture partner have
grander plans: a $ 12 million investment in a new factory that could
triple Loves' production and push sales past $100 million.
It's an ambitious goal. Loves' sales last year
were just $8 million .But with China's sexual revolution blooming,
the domestic market for onanism aids is expanding at a pace that
can only be described as blistering. The communist era of enforced
asceticism and prudery has been giving way to more liberal, if not
libertine ,attitudes .After Beijing legalized the sale of sex toys
in 1994, "I knew that sex could be sold," Wu says, Even
so, when he applied for a license, he soft-pedaled, pushing to get
his wares classified as medical devices. "I wanted to promote
the product as a tool for social stability," he says,
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Entrepreneur
Wu Wei wants China to get comfortable with itself
"something
that could help teenagers who want to experiment with sex, cut down
on STDS, help stop couples from divorcing, reduce the number of
rapists." Rapists? "Two or three, maybe."
"The
market will be mature when Chinese people think using this product
is just like when they're thirsty, they drink water."
-Wu
Wei
president
of WenZhou Loves Health Products
Well,
idle hands are the devil's playthings. But redeeming social value is less
of a worry these days. "Even women no longer shy away from buying such
things," says Miss Wang, a lab-coat-wearing saleswoman at downtown WenZhou's
Adam Eve Health Center, part of a nationwide sex-shop chain.
On the dusty glass shelves of the store sit many of
the products from the loves factory. The names range from the whimsical
("The Plump Landlady.") to the boastful ("The Great Penis")
to the perspicacious ("The Strongly Systolic"). Prices range from
$ 1 to $150 plus. Wang, who
is frequently asked for advice because the government still insists that
sex toys bear nondescriptive packaging, |
says
she has got over her initial embarrassment:" I don't feel at
all shy or nervous about my job."
Neither
does Wu, a native of WenZhou, long renowned for producing hard-nosed
businessmen. His concerns are familiar to entrepreneurs the world
over: competition, innovation and industrial espionage. Boosted
by an e-commerce website, sales were up 1,200% last year, half of
the total accounted for by exports. Wu attributes rapid growth in
part to advanced R. and D. With the help of his Japanese partner
(the Japanese are, unsurprisingly, the leaders in sex toys innovation),
he is developing unusual products to fill new niches of sexual proclivity-and
not just farm animals. Work-in-progress in-clude a "lovebot,"
a humanoid doll with life-like skin that will be able to move and
speak lines such as, "Am I going too fast for you? Wu claims companies
in Hong Kong and Taiwan are so worried they've tried to steal his
designs by sending spies posing as foreign journalists to his factory.
Like
Wu, Wen Jing Feng, president of the Beijing-based Adam Eve Health
Centers, if trying to ensure China is not left behind in the race
to perfect the vibrator. During a question-and-answer segment at
last month's Boao Economic Forum, a regional summit held on Hainan
Island, Wen urged prime Minister Zhu Rongji to work with Thailand
on a sex industry technology-transfer agreement. To the amusement
of the audience, Zhu said that sex was not on the agenda.
Maybe
not for Zhu, but sex is ,in fact, on every agenda, as Freud so famously
declared. After much pressure, Wu allows a glimpse of his factory's
musty purification room, where six Chinese women of varying ages
slap translucent disinfectant on a pile of swirl-shaped green dildos,
rapidly passing them down the line like volunteer fire fighters
.Wu fades to the back and begins inspecting a box of pink toys,
examining the motors and picking minute imperfections off the skin.
With sex toys, quality is job one. "The market will be mature,"
says Wu, "when Chinese people think using this product is just
like when they're thirsty, they drink water." |
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