Reason.com - Free Minds and Free Markets
Reason logo Reason logo
  • Latest
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Crossword
  • Video
    • Reason TV
    • The Reason Roundtable
    • Free Media
    • The Reason Interview
  • Podcasts
    • All Shows
    • The Reason Roundtable
    • The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie
    • Freed Up
    • The Soho Forum Debates
  • Volokh
  • Newsletters
  • Donate
    • Donate Online
    • Ways To Give To Reason Foundation
    • Torchbearer Society
    • Planned Giving
  • Subscribe
    • Reason Plus Subscription
    • Gift Subscriptions
    • Print Subscription
    • Subscriber Support

Log In

Create new account

Sex

There Are Many Good Reasons To Criticize Kristi Noem. Her Husband's Sexual Interests Are Not Among Them.

Who cares if Bryon Noem likes pretending to have giant breasts?

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 4.1.2026 12:26 PM

Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL Add Reason to Google
Media Contact & Reprint Requests
Byron Noem | Credit: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom
(Credit: Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom)

There's something unseemly going on with Kristi Noem's husband—and it's not the giant, fake balloon breasts.

Bryon Noem, longtime spouse of former Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, was just outed by the Daily Mail as a kinkster with a fondness for bimbofication (fantasies in which women undergo extreme transformations into cartoonish sex symbols) and perhaps autogynephilia (in which men are turned on by the thought of themselves as women).

You are reading Sex & Tech, from Elizabeth Nolan Brown. Get more of Elizabeth's sex, tech, bodily autonomy, law, and online culture coverage.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

How should we feel about this? Maybe firstly, like someone in the writer's room of this farce we call 2026 has gotten bored.

War? Done that. DoorDash discourse? Done that. Armed federal agents shooting citizens for protesting cruel immigration policies? We've aired that episode at least twice already! But wait—what if the husband of the woman presiding over those extrajudicial killings dressed himself up with comically uneven fake nipples and a duck face pout and sent those photos to sex workers? Now that's sure to get ratings…. 

I don't mean to sound callous about the killings and other atrocities carried out by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers under his wife's direction. It's precisely those things—the shock and horror of them, the cruelty and unaccountability—that make me extra wary of the Bryon Noem fetish-photos news cycle. There is plenty of legitimate fodder for criticism in Kristi Noem's record. No one needs to go digging into her husband's sex life for fuel.

And, in fact, doing so could actually detract from criticism of Kristi Noem's record, giving her and her supporters room to dismiss political opponents as part of a cruel and personal campaign against her family.

I also feel bad for the Noems' children and grandchildren. And, yes, for Bryon Noem—even if he was reckless, and even if he has other things to answer for. ("At least he did this on his own dime and without shooting protesters in the face," comments Nick Gillespie.) 

Being married to a public figure shouldn't automatically make your sex life fair game. And the Mail's attempt to frame this as a national security issue seems like a weak attempt to justify this invasion of privacy.

For those interested in Kristi Noem's husband cross-dressing, I have written deeply about another man's cross-dressing being "discovered." It ended tragically https://t.co/238162wOj5

— Nancy Rommelmann (@NancyRomm) March 31, 2026

Mostly I just think this sort of thing—the Mail's choice to publish this story, the gleeful and mocking way many have been sharing it—is corrosive to us as a society.

Bryon Noem wasn't hurting anyone with his dress-up time and his bimbofication chats. In fact, he was, per the Mail, paying some sex workers thousands of dollars. He's not out there campaigning against sex work and being a hypocrite.

We gain nothing from the knowledge of his antics but a bit of fun at someone else's expense—and at the expense of values like tolerance and respect for privacy.

A lot of people are weirded out by Bryon Noem's proclivities—OK, fine. All kinks are weird to those who aren't engaging in them. I can even sort of stomach social conservatives piling on right now; at least that's consistent. But liberals and progressives and others who generally support a live-and-let-live attitude on matters of adult sexuality and gender can't in good conscience sneer here.

Sexuality is weird. And it doesn't map neatly onto other political categories. Just because someone supports low taxes or mass deportations doesn't mean they might not also like cross-dressing or flogging or whatever. And I think that actually bolsters the case for respect and privacy when it comes to people's sexual habits. Kinks aren't just the province of any one kind of person or any political cohort.

Don't kink shame Bryon Noem sounds like a punchline but…come on, don't kink shame Bryon Noem. And don't delight in this invasion of his privacy. Even if you don't care about him, a standard where it's ok to publicize and mock people's private sexual antics if they're on the "wrong" side means, effectively, you have no standard against these things at all.

How should we respond to Bryon Noem's sexual kinks? A shrug feels appropriate.

The Noems have enough to answer for. Let's not let a pair of balloon tits distract us from that.

I'm generally tolerant of people's private pleasures, but I draw the line at something as perverse as marrying Kristi Noem. https://t.co/Kn0iMcWfW5

— Jesse Walker (@notjessewalker) March 31, 2026

P.S. This piece about how people in the town where the Noems live are reacting to this news is very good.


Follow-Up: Orgasmic Meditation and Conversion Therapy on Trial

Orgasmic meditation leaders sentenced: Nicole Daedone, founder of the orgasmic meditation company OneTaste, was sentenced on Monday to nine years in prison. Her co-defendant, Rachel Cherwitz, was sentenced to six and a half years. Both women were convicted last summer of conspiracy to commit forced labor, a human trafficking offense.

As this newsletter has mentioned several times before, the case represents a stunning departure from traditional understandings of forced labor or human trafficking. Prosecutors built a case around people—many of whom weren't even employees but volunteers, students, and/or residents in OneTaste housing—saying now that they felt "psychologically entrapped" at OneTaste by fears that going against executives or others in the group would lead to losing friends, losing status in the wider OneTaste community, or losing their grip on spiritual enlightenment and sexual fulfillment.

"That type of fear is not the type of fear that was contemplated by the lawmakers when they passed [forced labor] legislation," Daedone's lawyer, Jennifer Bonjean, told the court last June. Physical violence and threats are "the type of coercion that the lawmakers had in mind," she said, not "fear of being kicked out of the group chat."

But a jury found otherwise. Now, Daedone and Cherwitz now face long prison terms and prosecutors have a new playbook for prosecuting people on forced labor charges even when no traditional force or labor was involved.

Supreme Court issues ruling in conversion therapy case: In an 8–1 ruling, the U.S. Supreme Court held that applying Colorado's ban on conversion therapy to talk therapy is a viewpoint-based regulation of speech and, therefore, should be subject to what's known as strict scrutiny when weighing whether it passes constitutional muster. This means a lower court will have to rehear the case and apply this new standard, which in turn means a high likelihood that the ban will be found unconstitutional.

Here's a key passage of the opinion, which was penned by Justice Neil Gorsuch.

Under the First Amendment, what matters is not how a government describes its law or whether the law may regulate conduct in other circumstances. What matters is whether, in fact, the law regulates speech in the case at hand.

As applied here, Colorado's law does not just regulate the content of Ms. Chiles's speech. It goes a step further, prescribing what views she may and may not express. For a gay client, Ms. Chiles may express "[a]cceptance, support, and understanding for the facilitation of…identity exploration." For a client "undergoing gender transition," Ms. Chiles may likewise offer words of "[a]ssistance." But if a gay or transgender client seeks her counsel in the hope of changing his sexual orientation or gender identity, Ms. Chiles cannot provide it. The law forbids her from saying anything that "attempts…to change" a client's "sexual orientation or gender identity," including anything that might represent an "effor[t] to change [her client's] behaviors or gender expressions or…romantic attraction[s]." Colorado disputes none of this; neither does the dissent.

[…] She cannot voice certain "perspective[s]" the State disfavors when speaking with consenting clients. And, under our precedents, viewpoint restrictions like that are not subject to mere rational-basis review or intermediate scrutiny. Rather, they represent "an egregious form of content discrimination" where First Amendment concerns are at their most "blatant."

The decision has taken a lot of flak from folks on the left, some of whom have characterized it as the Supreme Court endorsing conversion therapy. But it's best seen as the Supreme Court endorsing the First Amendment—no matter who is speaking.

That makes the ruling important, no matter which side of various culture wars you're on. "In the long run, and especially in the current political environment, I can see this actually being a useful bulwark against efforts to restrict gender-affirming care," points out Julian Sanchez.


In The News

New Orleans ditches strip club regulations. After passing and then reversing restrictions on strip clubs, the New Orleans City Council then asked the planning commission to study the issue. It has now dropped that request. No one's really sure what that means for the future of the regulations, per Verite News. Meanwhile, at the state level:

Dancers are also facing restrictions. Louisiana State Senator Beth Mizell, a Republican who represents Washington, St. Tammany and Tangipahoa parishes, recently introduced a bill that would redefine commercial sex activity to also include "any sexual or lewd or lascivious act" done for payment. The law, which Mizell hopes will reduce sex trafficking, is concerning to some dancers who worry it could be used to limit their work.

Chris Olsen owns multiple small businesses in the French Quarter and has been involved in advocacy against increasing restrictions on clubs and dancers.

"There's been this kind of long history of the [sex work] industry being regulated unlike any other business," Olsen said. "There's all of this moral panic around sex work and around strip clubs in general but it doesn't match with what actually is good for people who are doing sex work."


On Substack

"Dopamine is not why kids love social media," suggests Taylor Lorenz in her UserMag newsletter. The piece digs into the supremely dumb way that many mainstream pundits, politicians, and publications discuss dopamine—a neurotransmitter associated with the brain rewards centers—and social media.

Basically, anything pleasurable can create a hit of dopamine. When people itching to regulate or ban something want to lend an air of scientific credibility to their authoritarian impulses, they'll often reach for dopamine. Because (activity to be banned) activates dopamine in our brains, it's like a drug, and should be treated as such, they'll say.

This is silly—and "not supported by science," as psychologist Chris Ferguson noted in a RealClear Investigations piece last year. "Solid research connecting dopamine spikes to drugs and alcohol – that is, the capacity of one chemical to ignite another – has not been shown to occur in similar ways with other behaviors. Drug use is fundamentally and physiologically different from behaviors that do not rely on pharmaceutical effects."


Read This Thread

Idealized versions of everything look good, the problem is people worry they're not going to get the idealized version. https://t.co/pF6JQ626jk pic.twitter.com/fRd2EXiUvb

— Matthew Yglesias (@mattyglesias) March 31, 2026

Matthew Ygelsias rejects the (now weirdly prevalent online) idea that Gen Z men would all be marrying young if it weren't for rejection by their dastardly, girl-bossing female counterparts. The Dilan Esper thread below gives a sort of "yes, and" to Yglesias, suggesting that while he's right about social conservatives overlooking young men's hesitancy to marry, he ignores the transnational picture (data show people are marrying older all over the world) and what that means.

Let's talk about Matt's piece today. His thesis-- that all the discussion about "encouraging women to marry" ignores that men don't want to marry-- is correct as far as it goes. (And he implies, but doesn't quite state, that this has something to do with anti-feminist thought.) https://t.co/0jiTGjAM9J

— Dilan Esper (@dilanesper) March 31, 2026


More Sex & Tech News

A big announcement from the British Home Office:

Police time will no longer be wasted investigating legal social media posts, freeing up officers to patrol the streets and tackle real crime.

By scrapping Non‑Crime Hate Incidents, we are balancing the protection of vulnerable communities while respecting free speech.

— Home Office (@ukhomeoffice) March 31, 2026

• Are middle-aged moms having the best sex? A survey conducted by the Substacker Cartoons Hate Her found that "as far as women having sex with men went, being married and over 40 seemed to be associated with better sex," as defined by likelihood to orgasm and giving sexual enjoyment at least a four out of five. And "being a married mom over 40 was associated with even better sex," she found:

For married women under 40, being a mother increased their odds of orgasm from 69.8% to 76.4%. For women over 40, the odds of orgasm went from 70.8% to 82.6% if they were mothers. Also, 43% of married mothers over 40 rated their most recent sexual encounter a 5/5, compared with only 33% of married women under 40 without kids.

• In rural Ohio, "the backlash to data centers…is leading some communities to consider adopting zoning for the first time," reports Reason's Christian Britschgi, who recently penned a Reason cover story called "The Joys of Data Centers: Debunking the Backlash Against the $7 Trillion AI Building Boom."

• Google will now let people change the name associated with their Gmail address.

• Proton will now let people make end-to-end encrypted video calls.

• Derek Thompson has published part two of his critique of "the smartphone theory of everything."

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NEXT: What If the U.K. Had Free Speech Like the U.S.?

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

SexPrivacySex WorkInvasion of PrivacyMedia
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL Add Reason to Google
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Hide Comments (28)

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.

  1. Dillinger   2 hours ago

    unless it was being kept as ammo how did this information fail to surface until yesterday?

    Log in to Reply
    1. MollyGodiva   2 hours ago

      Because it is not relevant to anything public. He did nothing wrong and it is not a scandal.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Dillinger   2 hours ago

        he did nothing wrong no but his wife was up for confirmation for DHS head ... I think enemies would use the information

        Log in to Reply
        1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 hour ago

          And TDS-addled imbecilic lying shits like MG.

          Log in to Reply
        2. MollyGodiva   38 minutes ago

          By whom? The liberals don't care and the MAGA love her no matter what because she is as evil as they are.

          Log in to Reply
          1. Stupid Government Tricks   12 minutes ago

            What don't you understand about blackmail, and spy honeys, and life in general?

            Log in to Reply
  2. mad.casual   2 hours ago

    Let's not let a pair of balloon tits distract us from that.

    You're not the boss of me.

    Log in to Reply
  3. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   2 hours ago

    • Are middle-aged moms having the best sex?

    Yes, they are banging the pool boy.

    Log in to Reply
  4. Agammamon   2 hours ago

    >Who cares if Bryon Noem likes pretending to have giant breasts?

    Because it's ridiculous. And these people tend to have more serious mental illnesses.

    Log in to Reply
  5. Agammamon   2 hours ago

    >I don't mean to sound callous about the killings and other atrocities carried out by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers under his wife's direction

    More people have been killed by illegal immigrants than by ICE.

    More people were murdered in chicago alone last month than ICE in several years.

    Log in to Reply
    1. MollyGodiva   39 minutes ago

      Immigrants have lower crime rates then citizens. The 2024 homicide rate was 5 per 100,000 people.

      There are about 22,000 ICE agents and 31 deaths, making the ICE rate about 140 per 100,000.

      ICE agents are 28 times more deadly than immigrants.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Stupid Government Tricks   11 minutes ago

        Now make a distinction between illegal and legal immigrants.

        Log in to Reply
  6. Agammamon   1 hour ago

    >But liberals and progressives and others who generally support a live-and-let-live attitude on matters of adult sexuality and gender can't in good conscience sneer here

    Those people do not exist. Your fellow liberals and especially the Progressives are powermongers. They pretend tolerance when it suits them and form mobs looking to tear someone when it suits them. And the mob will use any excuse to purity spiral, let alone attack someone perceived not to be subsumed into their egregore.

    Log in to Reply
  7. Agammamon   1 hour ago

    >How should we respond to Bryon Noem's sexual kinks? A shrug feels appropriate.

    We did that before - how'd Sam Brinton work out for you?

    Log in to Reply
  8. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   1 hour ago

    "Who cares if Bryon Noem likes pretending to have giant breasts?"

    Easy: TDS-addled steaming piles of lying shit.

    Log in to Reply
  9. mad.casual   1 hour ago

    Matthew Ygelsias rejects the (now weirdly prevalent online) idea that Gen Z men would all be marrying young if it weren't for rejection by their dastardly, girl-bossing female counterparts.

    I put Matt Yglesias' opinion on the topic below O.J. Simpson, Phil Spector, and Robert Blake even after they died.

    Log in to Reply
  10. Agammamon   1 hour ago

    >suggests Taylor Lorenz in her UserMag newsletter.

    Who is paying you people to cover this insane bint?

    Log in to Reply
  11. Think It Through   1 hour ago

    Armed federal agents shooting citizens for protesting cruel immigration policies?

    Wait what? When did this happen? What did I miss?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   41 minutes ago

      You should look out back at any airport. Bodies stacked like cordwood.

      Log in to Reply
      1. mad.casual   29 minutes ago

        [Charlton Heston voice] "Airline food is made of people!"

        Log in to Reply
  12. Stupid Government Tricks   1 hour ago

    Who cares if Bryon Noem likes pretending to have giant breasts?

    Blackmailers.

    Log in to Reply
    1. chemjeff radical individualist   35 minutes ago

      It's only blackmail-worthy if enough people decide to have a cow over these kinks.

      Being gay is no longer blackmail-worthy because very few people care anymore if a politician is gay.

      If you don't want blackmail based on adult consensual sexual fetishes, stop trying to shame people for those fetishes.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Stupid Government Tricks   10 minutes ago

        Nice idealism there. What about the real world?

        Log in to Reply
  13. Zeb   1 hour ago

    It's the Daily Mail. It's what they do.

    Anyway, I'd rather criticize Kristi's ridiculous plastic surgery and makeup.

    Log in to Reply
  14. Liberty_Belle   40 minutes ago

    1) Imagine , being shamed for expressing any sort of sexuality.

    That is any average Tuesday for women.

    2) Why is it always conservatives with weird closet fetishes ?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Agammamon   38 minutes ago

      You still re-read Handmaid's Tale over and over I see.

      Log in to Reply
  15. Heraclitus   32 minutes ago

    Next time you get an insurance claim rejected just remember the insurance executives have $30K lying around to wasted on their fetishes.

    Log in to Reply
  16. windycityattorney   21 minutes ago

    I must be the minority. I don't care about Bryon's peculiar fetish. I care about how his parents spelled his name.

    I blame them. They did this to him. Brian Noem would have a generic fetish like a foot fetish. Bryan Noem in contrast would have a bdsm fetish. But Bryon Noem? That boy is getting into to some weird shit.

    Log in to Reply

Please log in to post comments

Mute this user?

  • Mute User
  • Cancel

Ban this user?

  • Ban User
  • Cancel

Un-ban this user?

  • Un-ban User
  • Cancel

Nuke this user?

  • Nuke User
  • Cancel

Un-nuke this user?

  • Un-nuke User
  • Cancel

Flag this comment?

  • Flag Comment
  • Cancel

Un-flag this comment?

  • Un-flag Comment
  • Cancel

Latest

Does the Government Own You—or Do You Own Yourself?

John Stossel | 4.1.2026 2:40 PM

The Islanders Expelled To Build the West's Middle East Fortress

Matthew Petti | 4.1.2026 2:25 PM

There Are Many Good Reasons To Criticize Kristi Noem. Her Husband's Sexual Interests Are Not Among Them.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 4.1.2026 12:26 PM

What If the U.K. Had Free Speech Like the U.S.?

Meagan O'Rourke | 4.1.2026 10:45 AM

Illegal To Defund NPR?

Peter Suderman | 4.1.2026 9:31 AM

Recommended

  • About
  • Browse Topics
  • Events
  • Staff
  • Jobs
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Media
  • Shop
  • Amazon
Reason Facebook@reason on XReason InstagramReason TikTokReason YoutubeApple PodcastsReason on FlipboardReason RSS Add Reason to Google

© 2026 Reason Foundation | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

r

I WANT FREE MINDS AND FREE MARKETS!

Help Reason push back with more of the fact-based reporting we do best. Your support means more reporters, more investigations, and more coverage.

Make a donation today! No thanks
r

I WANT TO FUND FREE MINDS AND FREE MARKETS

Every dollar I give helps to fund more journalists, more videos, and more amazing stories that celebrate liberty.

Yes! I want to put my money where your mouth is! Not interested
r

SUPPORT HONEST JOURNALISM

So much of the media tries telling you what to think. Support journalism that helps you to think for yourself.

I’ll donate to Reason right now! No thanks
r

PUSH BACK

Push back against misleading media lies and bad ideas. Support Reason’s journalism today.

My donation today will help Reason push back! Not today
r

HELP KEEP MEDIA FREE & FEARLESS

Back journalism committed to transparency, independence, and intellectual honesty.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
r

STAND FOR FREE MINDS

Support journalism that challenges central planning, big government overreach, and creeping socialism.

Yes, I’ll support Reason today! No thanks
r

PUSH BACK AGAINST SOCIALIST IDEAS

Support journalism that exposes bad economics, failed policies, and threats to open markets.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
r

FIGHT BAD IDEAS WITH FACTS

Back independent media that examines the real-world consequences of socialist policies.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
r

BAD ECONOMIC IDEAS ARE EVERYWHERE. LET’S FIGHT BACK.

Support journalism that challenges government overreach with rational analysis and clear reasoning.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
r

JOIN THE FIGHT FOR FREEDOM

Support journalism that challenges centralized power and defends individual liberty.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
r

BACK JOURNALISM THAT PUSHES BACK AGAINST SOCIALISM

Your support helps expose the real-world costs of socialist policy proposals—and highlight better alternatives.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
r

FIGHT BACK AGAINST BAD ECONOMICS.

Donate today to fuel reporting that exposes the real costs of heavy-handed government.

Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks