Scientific study: Cara Delevingne donates her orgasm: "Men usually don't have the tools to satisfy women"

For her six-part documentary "Planet Sex With Cara Delevingne", the supermodel took part in a study that tries to explore the differences in orgasms between men and women.

Scientific study: Cara Delevingne donates her orgasm: "Men usually don't have the tools to satisfy women"

For her six-part documentary "Planet Sex With Cara Delevingne", the supermodel took part in a study that tries to explore the differences in orgasms between men and women. This gap is known as the "Orgasm Gap".

The model even visited a hospital in Germany for her study orgasm: "I'm here to have an orgasm and to donate it to science," says Delevingne. For the study, blood was drawn from her before masturbation and again after she reached climax. The tests measured the endogenous retrograde neurotransmitters called "endocannabinoids" in her system before and after orgasm. The chemical increases euphoria and enhances the pleasurable response to sex.

The bisexual model also speaks about women's sexual desire in the documentary: "I think female sexual desire has definitely been suppressed. I know from my own love life how sexual women can be, so you would think that men and women in Have an equally satisfying sex life in the 21st century, right? Well, prepare for a shock. When it comes to orgasm, there's a definite gender difference."

Cara Delevingne backs her claim with statistics, saying that 95 percent of straight men orgasm during intercourse, compared to just 65 percent of straight women.

But the supermodel also questions these statistics: "To be honest, I think that's way too high, most of my straight friends say it's probably more like 15 or 20 percent. Lesbians and queer women definitely seem to have it better."

But the 30-year-old also questions the biology of sexual intercourse in her documentary: "I have the feeling that men in general are not equipped with the right tools to deal with women, especially sexually." But Delevingne also admits that male egos make it harder for women to communicate what they want: "I understand it's a lot more complicated for a woman to have to tell you that you're not doing it right, but you have to sit down and listen to what she says. Yes, it's an ego killer that most men then experience and they can't handle it."

But the "Orgasm Gap" isn't the only thing Cara Delevingne is tracking down in her sex documentary. The model also met a sex expert in Holland, visited an ethical pornography film set and made vagina artworks in Japan.

From November 29, the episodes will first be shown on the American channel Hulu and the British BBC Three.

Quelle: Mirror

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