Allen Stein, of Everett, is the creator of the ThrillHammer, a
700-pound sex machine that sells for a minimum of $2,000 and is notable
not only for its intimidating heft and expense but also for its
pioneering use of teledildonics.

What’s teledildonics? Basically what you’d guess it is: Using new
telecommunications technology to control a dildo. In this case, a
large, high-powered dildo attached to a gynecological exam chair and
connected to the World Wide Web. Not long ago, the Museum of Sex in New
York acquired a ThrillHammer on the basis of its claim to being “the
world’s first internet-controlled sex
machine.”

This business of creating ThrillMachines is not a lark for Stein:
It’s an industry. He is 39 years old, a graduate of Arizona State
University (major: business marketing) who worked in Seattle for a
technology company during the dot-com boom until, as he puts it, he got
“dot-bombed.” Searching for a new career, Stein tried marine waste
disposal, which seemed to have a comparatively large degree of job
security, since boats will always have waste to dump. It turned out,
not surprisingly, to be a stinky business and Stein didn’t last long.
The experience taught him something, however: “I figured, you know,
bodily functions were the way to go. I looked at the market and
thought, well, I like orgasms.”

He bought a 1920s gynecological exam chair, went to work, and the
rest is sex-
machine history—and, Stein hopes, the beginning
of a lucrative teledildonics empire. “A lot of the kids growing up
today are having a lot of their first sexual experiences on the
computer,” Stein explained. “Because of that, the whole niche of sex
machines and computers is going to keep getting bigger—because
computers and sex are so intertwined.” Teledildonics, he says, “is
providing another level of intimacy to online sex, where users can
actually reach out and get someone off.”

So far, the price point for the ThrillHammer is pretty high, but
that’s by design. Stein is for the moment focusing on the high-end
sex-toy market, where his motto has become: “You can’t put a price on
pleasure.” Thus, it is possible to purchase a ThrillHammer that costs
as much as $50,000. At that point, you’re dealing with leather
upholstery, perhaps hand-blown glass attachments, maybe a pure-oxygen
machine to heighten the experience, possibly built-in aromatherapy, or
even built-in vaporizers for pot, as one customer recently requested.
He explains: “When people come to me and say they want the ultimate
pleasure machine, I say, ‘Well what gives you pleasure?’ And we go from
there.”

Who is buying these? A lot of professional women who make six-figure
salaries and don’t have time to date. “That’s a key market of mine,”
Stein says. “They’re usually older professionals making a couple
hundred grand a year.” Condoleezza Rice would be a good candidate for a
ThrillHammer, he says, laughing. “She could use one.”

Stein’s video for HUMP! is called, naturally, The Rise of the
Machine
. But he actually doesn’t see machines ever getting so good
at producing orgasms that they take the place of human-on-human sex,
à la the Orgasmatron in Woody Allen’s Sleeper. “There’s
no energy exchange,” he explains. “The ThrillHammer will never have the
soul of a human.”

But, he adds: “It sure can fuck good.” recommended

Eli Sanders was The Stranger's associate editor. His book, "While the City Slept," was a finalist for the Washington State Book Award and the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. He once did this and once won...

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