this post was submitted on 22 Nov 2023
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It is definitely labor. And the only unpaid work I've done in 20 years is for showreel, I definitely don't do unpaid theatre and haven't since I graduated drama school.
Learning lines (which is unpaid work before rehearsals even begin), blocking (and depending on role: combat, intimacy as is being discussed, music/song, choreography, props and costume tracks) are all pretty hard work. Not to mention 5 weeks of 10 hour days 6 days a week as a standard rehearsal process (all of which is usually done standing and moving, so generally harder physical work, longer hours and fewer days off than an office job).
To say nothing of "hell week" (tech and dress).
For us semi-pros, I'm often doing my day job around roles as well.
Prostitution is a very hard job.
By that token all labor is prostitution of a sort, and thus the term loses all meaning, so its pointless calling it that.
Pleased to meet you, comrade.
I disagree. Growing your own food is labor. Volunteering is labor. Organizing is labor. Caring for your family is labor.
so, doing something for yourself or people you care about is labour, doing something in exchange for money is prostitution
I mean are you using prostitution to mean "pro-stituere" ("ready" "to be sold") in which case even the most ardent captialist would agree. Or are you making an insinuation that exchanging the brane of labor-time-effort for the brane of exchange-account-value-store is somehow immoral? Because even the most barter-focussed kibbutz or shetl will eventually need to trade some kind of future (e.g. fishermen need boats before they can provide fish, farmers need to survive the winter to sow seeds in spring)