![]() They know everyone wants to be a star, so they own all your content. Yeah, man, I do YouTube full-time! But it’s not very lucrative, and it’s kind of an idiot’s game. You should do more videos like that.” And right around that time, I discovered I had all this money waiting for me in my YouTube account from the ads that were appearing in the videos I’d posted over the years. People started emailing me, saying, “That’s called URBEX. I put the video up on YouTube and it got a really good response. I pulled over and went in, and as I was shooting, I was describing what I was seeing and figuring out in real time that it was an old brothel. I guess because I posted nude photos, or maybe the keywords I used? But I was driving back from Burning Man and I passed this abandoned building. I couldn’t monetize my blog using Google AdSense, because it was considered an “adult” website. So I started writing my own blog so I could say whatever I wanted, and I came up with the name “Wonderhussy” because it’s sort of emblematic of, “Fuck this - I’m gonna say what I want to say and be who I want to be! People think I’m a shameless hussy? Well, I’m gonna be the best damn hussy there is.” How did you transition from writing to YouTubing? But the paper was so conservative, I couldn’t post photos with nudity, I couldn’t say anything interesting. I used to write a column for a local paper, which had started a website that was an “adult” guide to Vegas - what’s it like to go to a brothel or a strip club, etc. Where did the moniker “Wonderhussy” come from? Be sure to check out her YouTube channel, Wonderhussy Adventures, to see for yourself. “It’s gonna be a shitshow,” Sarah tells us. We caught up with Woodall on the phone in New Mexico, where she was helping one of her online followers collect rare acorns afterward she’s headed back to Nevada to check out a Facebook-formed Area 51 raid “to see them aliens,” for which over two million people have signed up. Meet Sarah Jane Woodall, aka Wonderhussy, the Las Vegas-based nude model/writer turned YouTuber who spends her days cruising the desert in her Toyota 4Runner, camping, sampling hot springs, and exploring abandoned mining camps, ghost towns, and derelict brothels. But there’s one special lady who caught our attention, not just because she’s a gorgeous badass, but also because she’s doing something cool. So many of today’s YouTube stars seem to make their marks posting videos of inane things like makeup tips, squeezing zits, or simply blathering about themselves ad nauseam. The “Ron Silk Venus Print Shirt” by Stella McCartney featuring the artwork of Pater Sato.Sarah Jane Woodall is a sexy, sassy YouTube adventuress. More follow below along with quotes from Aleister Crowley and French poets Charles Baudelaire and Guillaume Apollinaire. A piece from Sato’s series “SatoMasochims” originally published in Penthouse magazine in January, 1980. ![]() You can see images from the sexually-charged “SatoMasochims” series as well as other examples of Sato’s work below. The artist died entirely too soon at the young age of 49 in 1994, though he has thankfully left behind an extensive portfolio of work, including a fantastic series from 1980 cleverly entitled “SatoMasochism.” Most recently, Sato’s images were used by designer Stella McCartney in her 2017/2018 Fall/Winter line for men. In 1986 a museum and gallery in Harajuku dedicated to all things Pater Sato opened its doors and is still in business today. Upon returning to Tokyo in the early 1970s, Sato began his career as a freelance artist and his work has appeared in magazines around the world, in books, and on album covers. The group would find their way to New York bringing more art opportunities to Sato, including working under New York-based Abstract Expressionist Paul Jenkins. When he was done with school, Sato landed a job with a large advertising studio, as well as hooking up with Japanese rock and roll-oriented performance group Tokyo Kid Brothers. He would go on to attend Setsu Mode Seminar, a prestigious fashion design school in Tokyo named for one of Japan’s greatest illustrators of fashion, Setsu Nagasawa. When his family relocated to Tokyo, Sato enrolled in a graphic design school where he excelled at illustration. A stunning piece from Japanese artist Pater Sato’s 1980 series, “SatoMasochism.”Īrtist Pater Sato-born Yoshinori Sato in 1945 in Yokosuka, Japan- switched out his first name after portraying Pater in a high school play based on the book, The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank.
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