This is the logical conclusion of the genre. The control panel is being handed to the viewer. Are you brave enough to hold the gaze of Lexi Luna? Are you honest enough to admit why you want to look at Lana Smalls?
Lana Smalls addressed this in a behind-the-scenes feature: "In a flat movie, the taboo is a plot device. In VRSpy, the taboo is the character. You have to sit with your discomfort. That is the point of art." VRSpy - Lana Smalls- Lexi Luna - Absolute Taboo...
Together, they have defined the for a generation that consumes reality through lenses. They have answered the question: What happens when the last social barrier meets the last technological frontier? This is the logical conclusion of the genre
Luna’s power lies in her vocal register. In VR, where you cannot see the whole room at once, voice is navigation. Luna’s voice—honeyed, low, and capable of dropping to a conspiratorial whisper—is the perfect tool for the subgenre. She often plays the role of the figure who is supposed to enforce the rules, only to realize that the rules are arbitrary. Are you honest enough to admit why you
For the viewer, watching Lexi Luna in VR is disorienting. Because she often plays characters of a certain age or status, the brain’s prefrontal cortex screams "danger" while the limbic system screams "connection." That tension—the Absolute nature of that conflict—is the entire point. The keyword Absolute Taboo is interesting because it implies a universal constant. In sociology, a taboo is an invisible law. "Absolute" suggests that this law is natural, not cultural.