Hall
promoting impotence drug
June 01, 2006
Millions of women around the
world can't get no satisfaction when their men
can't get it up.
It's a problem Mick Jagger doesn't have, his
ex-wife Jerry Hall said yesterday.
"No, no, he had the opposite problem,"
said Hall, in town yesterday to promote an anti-impotence
drug and to urge couples to seek treatment for
erectile
dysfunction.
Hall, working for Bayer HealthCare, Hall, spent
the day at the posh Hotel Le Germain talking
about sex, sex, and more sex.
"Long day talking about sex," Hall,
49, said, laughing, at the outset of the interview.
Actually she was in town to push the Canadian
launch of the Strike Up A Conversation, an initiative
by Bayer HealthCare to encourage couples to
discuss and seek treatment for erectile dysfunction,
which affects an estimated four million Canadian
men.
Bayer makes Levitra, which
stands alongside Viagra
and Cialis as the top three anti-impotency treatments.
The former supermodel Hall refused to discuss
her own personal experience with erectile dysfunction,
but said her famously philandering ex is still
rocking hard.
"Mick and I were together 23 years. We
have four children together. We're very friendly,"
Hall said. "I think the whole world knows
he has the opposite problem!"
She said she prefers older men in the bedroom
because they don't try to subject her to the
soft rock popularized by certain current bands.
"I prefer older men because they are more
experienced," Hall said.
"They can have problems but there's a
cure for that. But younger men make you listen
to Coldplay and there's no cure for that."
She has visited seven countries in her quest
to get couples to enjoy better sex lives by
informing them that erectile
dysfunction is common among men, and treatable.
Source: http://torontosun.com/News/TorontoAndGTA/2006/06/01/1609420-sun.html |