"Pornography exists for the lonesome, the ugly, the fearful - it's made for the losers"
About this Quote
The subtext is less about sex than about power and self-concept. “Ugly” and “fearful” aren’t neutral descriptors; they’re social sentences. Brown ties sexual consumption to personal failure, collapsing a complicated mix of desire, isolation, curiosity, compulsion, and pleasure into one verdict: if you need this, you’ve already lost. It’s a classic rhetorical move in culture-war writing: turn a behavior into an identity, then make the identity contemptible.
Context matters. Brown comes out of a feminist literary tradition that often treated pornography as an industry of harm, not a private pastime, and she’s writing from a vantage shaped by queer politics and the fight over who gets to define “liberation.” The jab reads like a prophylactic against a male-coded porn economy: reject it not only as exploitative, but as beneath you. Its effectiveness is also its weakness: the sentence polices loneliness rather than interrogating why so many people are lonely in the first place.
Quote Details
| Topic | Loneliness |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Brown, Rita Mae. (2026, January 15). Pornography exists for the lonesome, the ugly, the fearful - it's made for the losers. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/pornography-exists-for-the-lonesome-the-ugly-the-164467/
Chicago Style
Brown, Rita Mae. "Pornography exists for the lonesome, the ugly, the fearful - it's made for the losers." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/pornography-exists-for-the-lonesome-the-ugly-the-164467/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Pornography exists for the lonesome, the ugly, the fearful - it's made for the losers." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/pornography-exists-for-the-lonesome-the-ugly-the-164467/. Accessed 7 Feb. 2026.







