No Joke
Don't like the competition? A porn store seeks to torch a rival outlet:
"A Portland man paid by a porn peddler to torch a competing video store has been sentenced to 2 1/2 years in prison.
Mark Fuston -- recovering Dead Head, Gypsy Joker biker gang member and onetime accused killer who says he's changed his ways -- faced just more than three years in federal prison for the March 27, 2003, arson.
Those who paid Fuston to burn down the future home of Taboo Video in Vancouver won't be serving any time for the arson. Fuston, 61, was the only defendant charged in the arson-for-hire plot; as the statute of limitations has passed, it seems he'll be the only one to face prison for the fire.
Also known as 'Mau Mau,' Fuston pleaded guilty to charges related to the Vancouver arson apparently committed at the behest of a rival porn shop owner. Federal prosecutors contended, and Fuston has admitted, he and another man were paid to set the fire."
Mais Oui
How Much I Got Paid: #3
Title: "Porn from My Perspective"
Publication: Glamour UK
Date: November 2013
Word count: 121
Payment: £100
Notes: In August, an editor at Glamour UK asked me to write a short piece "on the hot topic of porn" for the magazine. The feature would be titled "Porn from My Perspective," and it would feature eight mini-essays by women on porn. I would write one of those perspectives. The final version includes anti-porn pundit Gail Dines, former porn star Sasha Grey, and a sex addiction therapist. Originally, the editor requested 300 words. Subsequently, she revised that to 200 to 300 words. She offered to transcribe my words in an interview if I didn't feel moved to write. I wrote my perspective in about half an hour. The pay was low, but the subject was in my area of expertise, and it was easy.
Conclusion: Exercise your writing muscle as you would go to the gym.
More Wannabes
I've added more emails to my blog of emails I get from men who want to be male porn stars. I get the emails because I wrote a popular post on male porn stars for my Forbes blog, "The Hardest Thing About Being a Male Porn Star." I wrote about the emails for Salon, "How Do I Become a Male Porn Star?"
"I have emailed you before about becoming a male pornstar. This has been a dream of mine for as long as I can remember. Will you please give me a chance to become one? I would do anything to.join the porn industry. I just need a foot in the door and I promise you wont regret it. All I am asking for is one chance. If I dont meet your requirements show me the door. This is my dream please give me an opportunity to show you I would be a great male pornstar."
Play Her
Porn Daze
"9 to 5 Days in Porn" is on YouTube. I believe it's a censored version.
"German-produced docu '9 to 5,' about the San Fernando Valley’s 'Hollywood of porn,' impresses as a more balanced view of the adult-film industry than most, neither a lurid expose nor a portrait of individual personalities. Instead, it follows a dozen-plus folks who make their living on- or offscreen from a biz purportedly grossing some $12.7 billion annually (so much for porn being outside the consumer mainstream). The result is nonexploitative and intriguing, if overlong. Content might be too graphic for most arthouses, but U.S. cable, Eurotube and DVD sales are likely."
Dick Pics
Your Sunday Zen
All the News That's Unfit to Print: 12.14.13
Fucking a drone isn’t like what you’d think. [Clarkesworld]
This journalist knows why strippers hate their jobs. [Slate]
You're dating a porn bot. [Pando]
The mirror has two faces and so does this guy. [Fashion Copious]
It's the scholarly journal on porn for which you have been waiting. [NYT]
How to Photoshop the Flashdance girl. [Digital Arts]
What models think. [YouTube]
The glamorous life of a porn store clerk. [Salon]
"Moral disgust has all too often been put to immoral ends." [Nautilus]
Lizzy Caplan gets hammered. [USA Today]
So much for PlayStation sex shows. [Engadget]
Walgreens stopped selling a zombie dildo. [Walgreens]
Do not invite this guy to your orgy. [WSJ]
Tom Jones interviews Kate Moss. [Playboy]
Idiot with elf ears heckles Terry Richardson. [Instagram]
ATLAS the robot is coming for your women. [YouTube]
Lady Gaga uses a scorpion as a pastie. [Karl Is My Unkle]
Well, it certainly wasn't James Deen's fault. [Radar]
This is a personal kill. [TMN]
Chanel Preston has been naughty. [Instagram]
Single Mannequin
Single mannequin, Hollywood, CA / Photo credit: Susannah Breslin
Fuck in the New York Times
Recently, the New York Times published the word "fuck." Here, the paper's public editor, Margaret Sullivan, explains why.
"Some readers have questioned the use of vulgarity in the series, including two instances of 'the f-word' in Thursday’s installment, the most notable of which is in a quotation from Dasani’s mother as she addresses her directly. It’s highly unusual for The Times.
The associate managing editor for standards, Philip B. Corbett, explained:
'We had a very thorough discussion of the use of the vulgarities in that passage, which are certainly not the norm for us. The writer and editors avoided language like that in other places. But they made a strong argument that the full quotations were important in this very crucial scene. In the end, we decided that for readers, more would be lost than gained if we tried to write around those passages here. And we concluded that using that language in this one spot — but not repeatedly scattered throughout the articles — would not be likely to distract or offend many readers. Our basic guidelines about avoiding vulgarities and obscenities haven’t changed, but we all recognize that there are cases where an exception is justified.'"
The quotes in question:
- "'Shut the fuck up,' she says. 'You know, that’s one thing I don’t like about you — your negativity. You always talkin’ about the problem. You got a solution?'"
"She think she some-fucking-body."
[NYT / Related: "Satan Is Offended"]
Nigella Bukkake
Drone Porn
From "Toward a Drone Sexuality - Part 1: Knowledge and Consent":
"We—the dronesexual, the recently defined, though we only call ourselves this name to ourselves and only ever with the deepest irony—we’re never sure whether the humming is pleasure or whether it’s a form of transmission, but we also don’t really care…There are no dronesexual support groups. We don’t have conferences. There is no established discourse around who we are and what we do. No one writes about us but us, not yet."
How Much I Got Paid: #2
Title: "What No One Tells You About Breast Cancer"
Publication: Women's Health Online
Date: October 1, 2013
Word count: 517
Payment: $1,000
Notes: I was approached by an editor at Women's Health Online to write this essay. They were doing a series of stories on breast cancer for National Breast Cancer Awareness Month, and this would be the inaugural essay. She asked me what I charge. I responded, "These days, I mostly work in the $3/word vein." This is called bluffing. She offered me $1,000. I agreed. I spent about an hour working on a first draft of the essay. That version was gut-wrenching, complex, and probably not a fit for the venue. I spent an hour or two writing what would be the final draft of the story. That version is straightforward, simple, and uplifting. The essay includes before-and-after photos of what I looked like during chemo (bald) and what I looked like after (not bald).
Conclusion: How much I got paid < cost of cancer treatment.
Banned in Australia
"TV watchdogs in Australia have banned a condom commercial for being too sexy." [NY Daily News]
Black Mirror
I was introduced to the amazing "Black Mirror" by Clayton Cubitt. It's must-see TV.
"On the other hand, I haven’t the slightest idea what to expect from a show that opens with a terrorist demanding the prime minister have intercourse with a pig on national television. But that’s how the first episode of Black Mirror begins.
[...]
There aren’t a lot of jokes about sex with pigs, because the prospect of someone actually having sex with a pig is not particularly funny. Which is not to say there aren’t any jokes: In my favorite scene, two hospital orderlies see the terrorists’ detailed specifications for how the unspeakable event must be filmed and get into an argument about Dogme 95."
[Slate]
Hit It List
Not Givenchy
Conflict of Interest Red Foil Raunch Tee Limited Edition, $65 [COI]
How Much I Got Paid: #1
Title: "How Do I Become a Male Porn Star?"
Publication: Salon
Date: December 2, 2013
Word count: 1,262
Payment: $150
Notes: I wrote this piece on spec; in other words, I wrote the piece and then set about placing it. Typically, I don't write on spec. Instead, I pitch editors, get a contract, and then write the piece. I probably spent a total of two, maybe three hours writing this story over a couple days. I ended up sending it to five different editors. Four expressed interest. But there were various issues with those various responses. Eventually, I heard back from the editor I'd sent it to at Salon; I'd worked with her previously and knew she wasn't going to fuck up the piece. I believe I was paid $300 for the last piece I wrote for Salon several years ago; this time, she said she could only offer me $150. I accepted. The piece was good, I trusted the editor, and in this instance, I wanted the piece where it belonged and didn't give that much of a shit about the money.
Conclusion: It's OK to write on spec -- sometimes.