Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
‘Pretty Woman’ And Porn: Enslavement As Entertainment
‘Pretty Woman’ And Porn: Enslavement As Entertainment
Jan 11, 2026 10:34 AM

The 1990 movie “Pretty Woman” is still wildly popular; it relies on the Hollywood canard of the “hooker with a heart of gold.” In the movie, a prostitute is paid to spend the weekend with a wealthy handsome gentleman. The two fall in love, and she is swept off her feet by the courtly man who initially wished only to utilize her. Cue the hankies, sigh for the romance, and fade to black.

Now, the movie is being made into a Broadway musical, which the Huffington Post declares will carry the message from the movie of ” the importance of true love, being yourself and shaming snooty salespeople in public.”

Currently, a young woman, Belle Knox (whose real name is Miriam Weeks), has been making a bit of an entertainment splash, doing the talk show circuit. Knox is currently finishing up her freshman year at Duke University as a women’s studies major. She’s financing her education by working in the porn industry. Visiting the tv show “The View,” Knox said she felt empowered by her work.

Miriam’s Catholic father Kevin and mother Harcharan, reportedly have been ‘floored’ by their daughter’s decision to turn to porn to fund her $60,000-a-year education at the elite school.

Miss Weeks said today that her parents were not aware of her decision to enter the porn industry but are now ‘absolutely supportive’ of her choice.

She added: ‘We tell our children through school and socialization that sexuality is bad’ before adding to the shock of the panelists that she had been watching online porn alone since the age of 12.

Miss Weeks has explained that she entered the porn industry to pay for her $60,000-a-year tuition at Duke. The teenager makes around $1,000-$1,500 for each film she stars in.

When asked by Barbara Walters why she could not work at something else to help pay her way through college, she replied: ‘I’m an 18-year-old without a college degree. Any other job would not have footed the bill.’

She described her career in porn as ’empowering’ because it allowed her to make decisions in a ‘safe, controlled environment’.

Knox also claimed it was partially her parents’ fault she had to do what she was doing, as they had laid out money for private schooling for their family, but not saved enough for college. “‘The financial aid that I was given to pay for my tuition was insufficient and just really an enormous financial burden on my family,’ she said.” She admits she was offered scholarships to other schools, but wanted to go to Duke.

I was offered full tuition at Vanderbilt, for example, and was accepted into USC, Wellesley, Barnard, Pepperdine, some others. But I visited Duke last year on Blue Devil Days [Duke’s programmed weekend for admitted freshmen], and I remember walking into the Duke Chapel — I’m a very spiritual person — and just feeling an energy that told me, “This is the place you need to be.”

So what do “Pretty Woman” and Belle Knox have mon? They portray a world that doesn’t exist. It’s like watching a film set in the “Old South” where all the slaves are heartily singing as they gather cotton. Everyone is happy, enjoying their enslavement.

Ms. Knox may feel empowered, but feelings aren’t facts. The fact is, she’s giving all of her power away to the people making money from her willingness to sell her body. The “Pretty Woman” prostitute isn’t real: wealthy men don’t swoop in to save prostitutes (who look like Julia Roberts, no less) and free them. When a man pays for a prostitute, he’s enslaving her, even if it’s just for a few minutes. The Catechism of the Catholic Church says this:

[Pornography] does grave injury to the dignity of its participants (actors, vendors, the public), since each one es an object of base pleasure and illicit profit for others. It immerses all who are involved in the illusion of a fantasy world. [para. 2354]

Bl. John Paul II, in his Letter To Families, addressed the issue of pornography and its manipulation of the truth:

Human beings are not the same thing as the images proposed in advertising and shown by the modern mass media. They are much more, in their physical and psychic unity, posites of soul and body, as persons. They are much more because of their vocation to love, which introduces them as male and female into the realm of the “great mystery”.

What is that “great mystery?” It is “the full beauty of the love which God has given to mankind,” the ability for man and woman to join together in marriage, creating life and family, while at the same time respecting the mystery of sexuality as gift, rather than as product.

Prostitution and pornography are not entertainment. They are the enslavement of people modities – a body that is bought and sold, over and over, like a slave on the auction block.

“Pretty Woman” is not pretty, and the price Ms. Knox is paying for her education is far too high. This type of “entertainment” is cheap, insulting and enslaving.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Defending Free Markets and Private Property
Earlier this week on the Acton Institute Facebook page, Rev. Sirico’s archived article “What is Capitalism?” was posted and sparked a lively discussion between two people (click here to see our Facebook page and the discussion). This blog post is to serve as my response. Your idea munionism, at least from what I understand from ments, bears some resemblances munism which has the end goal of society or munity possessing property mon. This, however, doesn’t preserve human dignity properly; nor...
Rev. Sirico on Helping the Poor
Rev. Robert A. Sirico was recently a guest on The Matt Friedeman Show where he discussed the difference between charity and socialism. He talks about not only how we should give, but also how we can best help the poor. Socialism, according to Rev. Sirico, is the forced sharing of wealth and drains morality out of good actions. A discussion of the Acts of the Apostles also takes place in the following YouTube clip that contains a segment from the...
Cosmos as Society in the Work of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
In the current issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (14.1), Brian K. Strow and Claudia W. Strow challenge the economic impact of our definition of society in their article, “Social Choice: The Neighborhood Effect.” It occurred to me that Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew implicitly challenges our definition of society on a different, though similar, level than Strow and Strow. Strow and Strow analyze the changing results of economic utility functions based upon one’s definition of human society. In his...
Religion & Liberty: An Interview with Wayne Grudem
Religion & Liberty’s spring issue featuring an interview with evangelical scholar Wayne Grudem is now available online. Grudem’s new book is Politics According to the Bible (Zondervan 2010). It’s a great reference and I have already made use of it for a mentaries and PowerBlog posts here at Acton. “I am arguing in the book that it is a spiritually good thing and it is pleasing to God when Christians can influence government for good,” Grudem declared in the interview....
Acton University: A Student Perspective
This year’s Acton University was very successful, and we are still seeing its effects through blog posts, tweets, and Facebook messages. Some of our PowerBlog readers may be wondering what they missed out on, or would also like to think back a few weeks to their favorite Acton University moments. To listen to a favorite lecture, or to find out what was missed, remember that Acton University 2011 lectures can be purchased and downloaded for $1.99. Joe Gorra of the...
Coolidge and ‘the best ideas of democracy’
Coolidge If we are to maintain the great heritage which has been bequeathed to us, we must be like-minded as the fathers who created it. — Calvin Coolidge. The Wall Street Journal published today a timely, and much needed, reflection by Leon Kass on Calvin Coolidge’s address delivered at the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in 1926. Kass asks: What is the source of America’s founding ideas, and their bination” in the Declaration? Many have credited European thinkers,...
On the Relationship between Religion and Liberty
Earlier this year I was invited to participate in a seminar sponsored by the Institute for Humane Studies and Students for a Free Economy at Northwood University. In the course of the weekend I was able to establish that while I wasn’t the first theologian to present at an IHS event, I may well have been the first Protestant theologian. In a talk titled, “From Divine Right to Human Rights: The Foundations of Rights in the Modern World,” I attempted...
Pope Addresses Rising Food Prices
Last week, Pope Benedict XVI addressed the annual conference of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, and expressed particular concern over rising food prices and the instability of the global food market. In his 2009 encyclical Caritas in Veritate, the pope issued this challenge: “The problem of food insecurity needs to be addressed within a long-term perspective, eliminating the structural causes that give rise to it and promoting the agricultural development of poorer countries.” Acton’s Director of Research Samuel Gregg...
Christian Hipsters and Economics
Anarchist punks are out and the socially-aware hipsters are in (even though they don’t want to say they’re “in”). A little over a decade ago, the hipster scene made its eback since the 1940s. Though e in all shapes and sizes, many contemporary hipsters can be found riding their fixed-gear bikes to the farmers’ market or at a bar in skinny jeans drinking Pabst Blue Ribbon. An interesting sub-category has emerged: Christian hipsters. According to Brett McCracken in an article...
On Independence Day
It is no claim to Manifest Destiny, nor act of hyper-nationalism or xenophobic patriotism to say that America is the boldest, most liberal (in its original etymology), most successful and most prosperous experiment in human experience. To state thus is to state history. It behooves us, then, to recall Lord Acton’s axiom to the effect that “liberty is the delicate fruit of a mature civilization.” All who love freedom have their part to play in the cultivation of that fruit...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved