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SUSANNAH BRESLIN

susannahbreslin@gmail.com

CHI TOWN SUCKS

August 17, 2013  /  Susannah Breslin

Chi Town Sucks, Chicago, IL / Photo credit: Susannah Breslin

He was panhandling with a group of friends at the corner of North and Lincoln in Chicago. The group had been hopping trains since Virginia. They are urban hobos. As I took this photo, several police cars and fire engines rolled up, in response to a gas leak around the corner. Meanwhile, fighter jets from the Chicago Air and Water Show roared overhead. So far, he reported, his sign had netted him $1.

3 Likes

BANG BANG

August 16, 2013  /  Susannah Breslin

Gun magazines / Photo credit: Susannah Breslin

From my latest on Forbes, "A Peek Inside The World Of Gun Magazines":

"There are artfully shot weapon porn spreads, catchy headlines (a piece on a 'survivor truck' is titled 'APOCALYPSE WOW!'), and feature stories on subjects ranging from aeronautics to attack dogs to a profile of U.S.M.C. scout sniper Collin Raaz, who lost both legs to an IED in Afghanistan and returned home to found a shooting gear startup. A four-page spread on 'BOURBON: AN AMERICAN MAN’S DRINK' advises: 'SHOOT, THEN DRINK. IN THAT ORDER'; an accompanying sidebar tells you 'HOW TO DRINK BOURBON' (an excerpt: 'Drinking a rocks glass of bourbon is your birthright as an American. It is like drinking a glass of freedom. It fuels your inner man.'). Here, the advertisers are more diverse: truck tires, motorcycle gear, a slim ad in the back offering 50% off an adult video from Adam & Eve ('Use code RECOIL5 at checkout' for your discount). As a bonus, every issue of RECOIL comes with a free target for shooting practice. This month’s poster-sized pullout has a sexy blonde in ripped, bust-exposing clothing being attacked by a male zombie. Thankfully, she is armed to the teeth with a Spike’s Tactical Compressor in her right hand and a large knife in her left hand. The zombie, who is losing half his face, appears hellbent on eating her brains, but with that amount of weaponery, my bet is on the blonde. ('There’s nothing hotter than a heavily-armed beautiful woman,' Harrison observes.)"
2 Likes
tags / FORBES, GUNS, JOURNALISM

THE PROJECTS: WHERE THE BOYS AREN'T

August 15, 2013  /  Susannah Breslin

Photo credit: Susannah Breslin / Illustration: Chris Bishop

THE PROJECTS is a series focused on reinventing the journalist as an autonomous creator, exploring new avenues for digital self-publishing in a transforming media climate, and inspiring a new generation of creators to redefine how they do business in the digital age. Part 1 is here. Part 2 is here. Part 3 is here. The projects section of this site can be found here.

In 2009, I created "They Shoot Porn Stars, Don't They?" To date, it is the only long-form investigation to reveal how the Great Recession felled the multimillion-dollar adult movie industry. It features text and photos and was self-published.

That April, I was working for a high-profile publication that wanted to become Esquire for women. They were commissioning long-form stories that would enable women journalists to do deep-dive work on a par with Gay Talese, Hunter S. Thompson, and Lawrence Weschler.

For years, I had been covering Porn Valley -- what the natives call the San Fernando Valley, where, historically, most of the world's porn movies have been made. For over a decade, I had stood on the sidelines of this strange, secretive industry, one in which unspoken fantasies are turned into reality on poorly-decorated sets and subconscious desires are parroted by bleached and tanned performers willing to have sex in front of cameras. The Feds had come and gone, leaving obscenity indictments and prison sentences in their wake. Technology and content pirating had taken a toll on everyone's bottom line. I had seen the business rise, and I had seen the business fall. The media would have you believe the adult industry drives technology. My rarefied access into this cloistered culture showed me the opposite was true. In reality, technology had undone porn. I would go to the Valley and expose what this quantum entanglement had spawned.

The editor liked the idea. I headed to Los Angeles to document what Ozymandias the industry had become. 

"The products that Jim produces are videotaped vivisections, studies in which homo sapiens lie upon the operating table, the director is the doctor, the camera is the scalpel, and the only question worth asking is, How far will we go if we are pushed to our limits?"*

I spent a week in L.A., meeting with porn stars, hanging out with porn directors, interviewing porn journalists. I went to the offices of AVN, the industry's trade publication; hiked up a winding, gated driveway to a mansion on a hill with sprawling views of the Valley to see a brunette from Las Vegas have sex with a machine; and discovered a giant papier-mâché vagina costume hidden in the dim rafters of an adult movie production company's Canoga Park warehouse.

I returned home, wrote the piece, and filed it. But the editor wanted changes. She was unsure how it should run. She did not appear to understand it. And it was at that moment that I realized: Why would she understand it? She lived in a nice house in a nice neighborhood in Washington, D.C. She had young children and a husband. As far as I knew, she had never set foot on a porn set.

So I pulled the piece. I reached out to other publications to see if they wanted it. No one was interested.

"Most people have no experience with the adult industry, and it never made sense to me why I should let an editor, a publication, or the insidious effects of a marketing department dictate the terms of my work."*

Of course, I knew who should publish it: me. I was the best editor for it, I was highly motivated, and doing so would give me complete control over it.

I hired Chris Bishop to design and illustrate the project's standalone site, and I hired Joanne Hinkel to copy edit.

On October 13, 2009, "They Shoot Porn Stars, Don't They?" went live. It was an immediate success. It was praised as "brilliant" and "bold." One reader noted: "Ms. Breslin has changed the way I think about the business of making pornography."

A year after the project debuted, I wrote "The Numbers On Self-Publishing Long-Form Journalism." By that point, the story had been read by nearly a quarter of a million unique visitors from all over the world. Since then, the "Numbers" essay has been taught in Media, Politics & Power in the Digital Age at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and the Studio 20 program at the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University.

I consider "They Shoot Porn Stars, Don't They?" my best work as a journalist. It was included in "Longform.org's Guide To The Porn Industry" on Slate, and in an interview with The Believer, The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal advised journalists:

"The most important thing you can do is write awesome stuff, no matter where it is published. Seriously, when people tell me they want to write profiles for the New Yorker, I'm like, 'THEN GO DO IT. Have you heard of Blogger.tumblr.com?' I mean, there is absolutely nothing stopping any of us from spending three months with a subject and writing the definitive 10k word piece proving why they are important and fascinating. Except Homeland, bourbon, and laziness. So, shit, write a profile about a lazy alcoholic who watches too much TV. BOOM. Problem solved. (See: Susannah Breslin's They Shoot Porn Stars, http://theyshootstars.com/)"

More importantly, I became a journalist who didn't need permission to tell the stories I wanted to tell.

4 Likes
tags / PROJECTS, PORN, SEX, PHOTOS, JOURNALISM

GOOGLE GLASS FASHION

August 13, 2013  /  Susannah Breslin

Photo credit: Steven Klein

"The Final Frontier"

Photographed by Steven Klein

Vogue, September 2013

[Fashion Copious]

3 Likes
tags / FASHION, PHOTOGRAPHERS, STYLE

I GET EMAIL

August 12, 2013  /  Susannah Breslin

Samantha Saint, Las Vegas, NV / Photo credit: Susannah Breslin

"Dear Ms. Breslin:

I recently watched a late night news broadcast about the porn industry and decided to search the internet for a different perspective.  That’s where I read your story about your time on the sets in the Valley.  Like a lot of American men I have seen my share of porn.  Your piece about the industry really got me to take a hard look at myself.  I don’t think that I ever gave a second thought  to who the women are and where they come from.  As a father I was moved by your story and just wanted to share that with you.  I have a daughter and it would kill me if she ever felt like porn was all she could do to pay the bills.  I will never look at the actors in the same way again  You are one hell of a writer.  Prior to the internet search I was unaware of who you are. 

Good luck to you in the future.

Sincerely,

[redacted]"

3 Likes
tags / PORN, EMAIL, SEX, PHOTOS

MY NEW BLOG

July 30, 2013  /  Susannah Breslin

Photo credit: Clayton Cubitt

This is my new blog at my new home on the internet. Check back here daily for behind the scenes scoops on my latest work, info on upcoming events and appearances, and the creative things that are intriguing me.

4 Likes
tags / NEWS, BLOG, PHOTOGRAPHERS
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