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To: ~digs who wrote (108)5/20/2001 11:59:26 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6763
 
NYT article on pornography as a business.

May 20, 2001

Naked Capitalists: There's No Business Like Porn
Business

By FRANK RICH

In late January 1998, during the same week
that America first heard the ribald tale of the
president and the intern, Variety tucked onto
Page 5 a business story that caused no stir
whatsoever. Under a Hollywood dateline, the
show-biz trade paper reported that the
adult-video business "saw record revenues last
year" of some $4.2 billion in rentals and sales.

It soon became clear to me that these bicoastal
stories, one from the nation's political capital
and the other from its entertainment capital,
were in some essential way the same story.

In the weeks that followed, Washington
commentators repeatedly predicted that the
public would be scandalized by the
nonmissionary-position sex acts performed
illicitly in the White House. But just as
repeatedly voters kept telling pollsters that they
weren't blushing as brightly as, say, Cokie
Roberts. The Variety story, I realized, may
have in part explained why. An unseemly large
percentage of Americans was routinely seeking
out stories resembling that of the president and
the intern -- and raunchier ones -- as daily
entertainment fare.

The $4 billion that Americans spend on video
pornography is larger than the annual revenue
accrued by either the N.F.L., the N.B.A. or
Major League Baseball. But that's literally not
the half of it: the porn business is estimated to
total between $10 billion and $14 billion
annually in the United States when you toss in
porn networks and pay-per-view movies on
cable and satellite, Internet Web sites, in-room
hotel movies, phone sex, sex toys and that
archaic medium of my own occasionally
misspent youth, magazines. Take even the
low-end $10 billion estimate (from a 1998
study by Forrester Research in Cambridge,
Mass.), and pornography is a bigger business
than professional football, basketball and
baseball put together. People pay more money
for pornography in America in a year than they
do on movie tickets, more than they do on all
the performing arts combined. As one of the
porn people I met in the industry's epicenter,
the San Fernando Valley, put it, "We realized
that when there are 700 million porn rentals a
year, it can't just be a million perverts renting
700 videos each."

Yet in a culture where every movie gross and
Nielsen rating is assessed ad infinitum in the
media, the enormous branch of show business
euphemistically called "adult" is covered as a
backwater, not as the major industry it is.
Often what coverage there is fixates
disproportionately on Internet porn, which may
well be the only Web business that keeps
expanding after the dot-com collapse but still
accounts for barely a fifth of American porn
consumption. Occasionally a tony author --
David Foster Wallace, George Plimpton and
Martin Amis, most recently -- will go
slumming at a porn awards ceremony or visit a
porn set to score easy laughs and even easier
moral points. During sweeps weeks, local
news broadcasts "investigate" adult businesses,
mainly so they can display hard bodies in the
guise of hard news. And of course, there is no
shortage of academic literature and First
Amendment debate about pornography, much
of it snarled in the ideological divisions among
feminists, from the antiporn absolutism of
Catherine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin to
the pro-porn revisionism of Sallie Tisdale and
Susie Bright.

I'm a lifelong show-biz junkie, and what
sparked my interest in the business was what I
stumbled upon in Variety -- its sheer hugeness.
Size matters in the cultural marketplace. If the
machinations of the mainstream TV, movie and
music industries offer snapshots of the
American character, doesn't this closeted
entertainment behemoth tell us something as
well? At $10 billion, porn is no longer a
sideshow to the mainstream like, say, the $600
million Broadway theater industry -- it is the
mainstream.

And so I went to the San Fernando Valley, aka Silicone Valley, on the other side of the
Hollywood Hills, to talk with the suits of the adult business. I did not see any porn scenes
being shot. I did not talk to any antiporn crusaders or their civil-libertarian adversaries. I
did not go to construct a moral brief. I wanted to find out how some of the top players
conduct their business and how they viewed the Americans who gorge on their
products.

Among other things, I learned that the adult industry is in many ways a mirror image of
Hollywood. Porn movies come not only in all sexual flavors but also in all genres, from
period costume dramas to sci-fi to comedy. (One series is modeled on the old
Hope-Crosby "Road" pictures.) Adult has a fabled frontier past about which its veterans
wax sentimental -- the "Boogie Nights" 70's, when porn was still shot only on film and
seen in adult movie theaters. (The arrival of home video revolutionized porn much as
sound did Hollywood.) Adult also has its own Variety (Adult Video News), its own
star-making machinery (the "girls" at Vivid and Wicked are promoted like bygone MGM
contract players), its own prima donnas and cineastes. It has (often silent) business
partners in high places: two of the country's more prominent porn purveyors, Marriott
(through in-room X-rated movies) and General Motors (though its ownership of the
satellite giant DirecTV, now probably to be sold to Rupert Murdoch), were also major
sponsors of the Bush-Cheney Inaugural. Porn even has its own Matt Drudge -- a
not-always-accurate Web industry gossip named Luke Ford, who shares his prototype's
political conservatism and salacious obsessiveness yet is also, go figure, a rigorously
devout convert to Judaism.

I didn't find any porn titans in gold chains, but I did meet Samantha Lewis, former
real-estate saleswoman and current vice president of Digital Playground, whose
best-selling "Virtual Sex" DVD's are, she says, "the Rolexes and Mercedeses of this
business." I talked with Bill Asher, 38, the head of Vivid, who is an alumnus of
Dartmouth and U.S.C. (for his M.B.A.) and Lawry's (the restaurant chain). I listened to
the story of John Stagliano, who was once a U.C.L.A. economics major with plans "to
teach at the college level" but who instead followed his particular erotic obsession and
became Buttman, the creator of hugely popular improvisational cinema-verite porn videos
that have been nicknamed "gonzo" in honor of the freewheeling literary spirit of Hunter
S. Thompson. A political libertarian, Stagliano was for a while a big-time contributor to
the Cato Institute.

If the people who make and sell pornography are this "normal" -- and varied -- might not
the audience be, too? It can't be merely the uneducated and unemployed who shell out
the $10 billion. And it isn't. Porn moguls describe a market as diverse as America.
There's a college-age crowd that favors tattooed and pierced porn performers; there's an
older, suburban audience that goes for "sweeter, nicer, cuter girls," as Bill Asher of Vivid
Pictures puts it. There is geriatric porn (one fave is called "Century Sex"), and there's a
popular video called "Fatter, Balder, Uglier." Oral sex sells particularly well in the
Northeast, ethnic and interracial videos sell in cities (especially in the South), and the Sun
Belt likes to see outdoor sex set by beaches and pools.

Yet such demographics are anecdotally, not scientifically, obtained. So few Americans
fess up when asked if they are watching adult product, says Asher, "that you'd think
there is no business." But in truth, there's no business like porn business. Porn is the one
show that no one watches but that, miraculously, never closes.

Porn doesn't have a demographic -- it goes across all demographics," says Paul
Fishbein, 42, the compact and intense man who founded Adult Video News.
"There were 11,000 adult titles last year versus 400 releases in Hollywood.
There are so many outlets that even if you spend just $15,000 and two days -- and put in
some plot and good-looking people and decent sex -- you can get satellite and cable sales.
There are so many companies, and they rarely go out of business. You have to be really
stupid or greedy to fail."

He points me toward

(see next post ...)



To: ~digs who wrote (108)5/24/2001 9:32:24 PM
From: ~digs  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 6763
 
Cool Fact of the Day
Undersea Fishing
What deep-sea predator fishes with a line and lure?
Hovering weightlessly in the deep ocean are colonial jellyfishes called siphonophores. Some of
these creatures catch their prey with a line and a lure, reeling it in once it is caught.

The bait is a tasty-looking, wiggly bit of flesh that dangles at the end of a long, very thin tentacle,
bobbing up and down in the water. But the morsel's appearance is deceptive. When a hungry
fish or squid takes the bait, it gets a mouthful of poisonous stingers. The siphonophore draws in
its long tentacle, and the prey, killed by the poison, is consumed.

Siphonophores are among the ocean's most deadly predators. Some dangle as many as 85
twitching baits at once. Others are important consumers of krill, the tiny shrimp-like creatures
that also feed blue whales and salmon. Some kinds can grow up to 130 feet (40 meters) long,
making them the world's longest animals, although they are no wider than a broomstick.

Siphonophores live in the depths of California's Monterey Bay:
mbayaq.org
fp.redshift.com

A live siphonophore was collected in 1994:
bonita.mbnms.nos.noaa.gov
news_94_summer/news94_summerpg5.html

It's hard to catch one without tearing it apart:
features.learningkingdom.com

Cool Word of the Day
exigent [adj. EK-suh-junt]
Exigent means requiring immediate attention or action. Near synonyms include critical, urgent,
imperative, and pressing. It can also mean demanding or exacting.

Exigent was first seen in the 1400s in Middle English. It comes from the Latin exigentem,
present participle of the verb exigere (to demand).

Person of the Day
Maggie L. Walker, 1867-1934
American businesswoman
Maggie L. Walker was America's first female bank president, and was also the first
African-American woman to hold such a position.

The daughter of a former slave, Walker was born in poverty two years after the end of the Civil
War, in Richmond, Virginia, the former capital of the Confederacy. Educated in the city's public
school system, she helped support her family by assisting her mother with delivering clean
laundry. After graduating from school, Walker briefly taught and then began a family of her
own.

Previously, Walker had joined a fraternal society called the Independent Order of St. Luke.
Reinvigorating the Society through her diligent efforts, and eventually rising to a prominent
position within it, she founded a newspaper and then a bank to support the Society's goal of
helping its members help themselves.

The financial institution she founded in 1903, originally known as the St. Luke's Penny Savings
Bank, has survived to this day. Now called the Consolidated Bank & Trust Company, it is the
nation's oldest bank continuously operated by African-Americans.

More about Maggie L. Walker:
toptags.com
gatewayva.com

Quotes of the Day
Censorship; In the long run, censorship is futile:

"Books won't stay banned. They won't burn. Ideas won't go to jail. In the long run of history, the
censor and the inquisitor have always lost. The only weapon against bad ideas is better ideas."

-- A. Whitney Griswold, 1906-1963, U.S. educator and historian

"You can cage the singer but not the song."

-- Harry Belafonte, 1927-, U.S. singer, civil rights activist

"Don't join the book burners. Don't think you are going to conceal faults by concealing evidence
that they ever existed."

-- Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1890-1969, U.S. President, U.S. general

Today in History
May 24th
1844: First U.S. Telegraph Line was Formally Inaugurated

The first U.S. telegraph line was formally inaugurated between Washington, D.C. and
Baltimore, Maryland. Samuel F.B. Morse, the telegraph's inventor, sent the first message with
the phrase "What hath God wrought?" from the Supreme Court building.

A photograph of Morse's first telegraphic message:
lcweb2.loc.gov

1883: Brooklyn Bridge Inaugurated

After more than 15 years of construction, the Brooklyn Bridge connecting the cities of New
York and Brooklyn, was finally inaugurated. Designed by John A. Roebling, the steel suspension
bridge has a span of 1,595 feet (532 mt). During its construction, 27 men died, including its
designer.

The toll to use the bridge during its first day was one cent:
lihistory.com

1935: First Major League Baseball Night Game was Played

The first major league baseball game to be played at night under lights took place at Crosley
Field in Cincinnati, Ohio. The night game attracted more than 20,000 fans -- 10 times the
number that would show up for a daytime game. In the first game the Cincinnati Reds won
against the Philadelphia Phillies 2-1.

Crosley Field served as home for the Cincinnati Reds until 1970:
pubweb.acns.nwu.edu

1968: De Gaulle Addressed Protest

As 10 million striking workers paralyzed the country, French leader Charles de Gaulle went on
television to speak of "a more extensive participation for everyone." Given that the protests did
not dwindle, the army was called in and battles broke out on the streets. Farmers set up road
blocks around major French cities in solidarity with students and other workers.

One of hundreds of posters produced during the period:
burn.ucsd.edu

1993: Eritrea Gained Independence

The African nation of Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia after a 30-year civil war.
Since the 19th century, Eritrea had been under both British and Italian control, and after World
War II, under Ethiopian control. The civil war forced almost one million people to flee their
homes.

A map and flag of Eritrea:
agora.stm.it

Holidays & Events
May 24
Holy Blood Procession, Wedding of the Sea
BELGIUM: HOLY BLOOD PROCESSION

Every Ascension Day in Belgium is cause for a procession of medieval religious pageantry. The
Holy Blood Procession is an historical parade that recalls the crusades. A centerpiece of the
procession is the bishop carrying a reliquary containing a vial of holy blood said to have been
brought back from the battlefield by Count Thierry of Alsace in 1150. Floats depicting events in
the Old and New Testament are also led through Bruges.

The procession in Bruges dates back to 1303:
visitbelgium.com

An online sightseeing tour of Bruges:
trabel.com

More about Bruges:
trabel.com

ITALY: WEDDING OF THE SEA

Ascension Day is marked 40 days after Easter. In Venice it is cause for a ceremony called
Wedding of the Sea. It recalls Venice's Doge dropping a gold ring into the water from a
ceremonial barge known as the Bucintoro to symbolize the indissoluble link between Venice and
the sea. This event was first marked in the year 1000 and has long been cause for ceremonies
and carnivals.

More about this Venetian celebration:
sevenonline.it

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Copyright (c) 2001, The Learning Kingdom, Inc.
learningkingdom.com