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==In popular culture== | ==In popular culture== | ||
* First performed by Dan Termotto with Britney Ledgin | |||
* Referenced by Jack Black on MTV's 2006 VMA's - "We gave the mighty Thor a rusty trombone" | * Referenced by Jack Black on MTV's 2006 VMA's - "We gave the mighty Thor a rusty trombone" | ||
* Referenced by the character "Mooj" in the 2005 movie '']'' | * Referenced by the character "Mooj" in the 2005 movie '']'' |
Revision as of 19:04, 19 October 2006
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The rusty trombone is a sexual act performed by two individuals, one of whom is a man. The man is typically in a standing position with his knees and back slightly bent and his feet at least shoulder width apart in order to expose the anus. The other partner typically is on his or her knees behind the man and performs anilingus while reaching up beneath the testicles or around the body to masturbate the man, mimicking the motions of a trombone player. The act is defined primarily by the physical orientation of the partners and the combination of anilingus with penile masturbation, however other positions and variations are possible.
In popular culture
- First performed by Dan Termotto with Britney Ledgin
- Referenced by Jack Black on MTV's 2006 VMA's - "We gave the mighty Thor a rusty trombone"
- Referenced by the character "Mooj" in the 2005 movie The 40-Year-Old Virgin
- Amy Sedaris' character in the film "Strangers with Candy" includes the Dirty Sanchez as an outcome she anticipates with another character, in conjunction with the act "Rusty Trombone".
- A reference to the "rusty trombone" was made during the "Opie & Anthony" radio broadcast on WNEW in New York City in 2001
- Referenced by Andy Dick in the movie The Aristocrats (2005).
- Referenced on the WCTR radio station on the computer game, Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas when a crack-whore recognizes the newsreporter by saying "Hey, don't I know you? Rusty Trombone, right?"
- Also known in the UK as the "Dirty Bristow", named so after darts player Eric Bristow where the "playing the trombone" action is replaced by a similar "throwing a dart" movement.