| AMERICAN
PORN
Corporate America Is Profiting From Porn — Quietly
Jan.
28 — Pornography has grown into a $10 billion business —
bigger than the NFL, the NBA and Major League Baseball combined
— and some of the nation's best-known corporations are quietly
sharing the profits.
Companies like General Motors, AOL Time Warner and Marriott earn
revenue by piping adult movies into Americans' homes and hotel rooms,
but you won't see anything about it in their company reports.
And you won't hear them talking about the production companies that
actually make the films — or the performers the producers
hire, men and women as young as 18, for sex that is often unprotected.
"We
have an industry that is making billions of dollars a year, is spreading
to cable television and to the Internet, and yet their employees
are considered to be throwaway people," said former Surgeon
General C. Everett Koop.
Only
a handful of "high end" production companies require condoms,
leaving the majority of performers vulnerable to AIDS and other
sexually transmitted diseases. While some companies require performers
to take HIV tests, there is no government regulation mandating tests
across the industry.
Koop
— noting that performers' sexual activity off the set, with
spouses or lovers, can spread disease beyond the industry —
says America's big corporations are complicit in a public health
hazard: They want the profits from pornography but "they don't
want to get involved."
Nor
do the fans, according to Koop. "Even the people who enjoy
looking at pornography really despise the people they're watching,
and they have no sense of protection for them," he said.
Bringing It Into Homes and Hotels
According
to Adult Video News, an estimated 11,000 hard-core porn movies are
produced in the United States annually, many of them in California's
San Fernando Valley, where modern porn was born.
The
production companies market them over the Internet and to distributors
who feed them to video stores — the industry claims that more
than 30 percent of all video rentals on the East and West coasts
are sex films — and to giant cable and satellite companies.
General
Motors, through its subsidiary DirecTV, delivers hard- and soft-core
porn to homes via satellite. Communications giant Comcast supplies
various kinds of porn to homes via pay-per-view. And AOL Time Warner
owns a cable company that offers erotic programming from Playboy
and other outlets, including hard-core.
It
is hard to estimate how much money these corporations derive from
porn because they do not publicize it in their portfolios or anywhere
else. Their financial statements do not mention profits from adult
movies. However, one industry analyst estimated that the combination
of cable and satellite outlets makes about $1 billion a year from
the adult-movie market.
Many
of the major hotel chains, including Marriott, Hilton and Westin,
also derive revenue from adult films without mentioning it in their
company reports. Adult titles are available as in-room movies in
around 40 percent of all hotel rooms in the United States. The hotels
share the revenue with the in-room entertainment companies that
provide the TVs and the content.
Nothing
on the Record
ABCNEWS
asked the companies to discuss the revenue they derive from adult
films and whether they have any responsibility for the welfare of
the performers.
A spokesman
for DirecTV said he was not permitted to talk about the company's
profits from adult movies. Representatives of Comcast, Hilton and
Marriott refused to talk on the record about the issue.
A spokesman
for AOL Time Warner, Mark Harrad, said that Time Warner Cable "has
traditionally offered what they called ... more soft-core programming."
Also, he said, "in a couple of divisions they have increased
the programming to the next step up, if you will, which I think
some people would understandably call hard-core." The decision
to offer the harder material was driven by consumers, Harrad said.
One
major hotel chain, Omni, stopped showing adult movies in its owned-and-operated
hotels in 1999, citing its commitment to "family values."
It encourages its franchisees to do the same. The company estimated
it lost $1 million in annual revenue.
The Reality of ‘Pornoland’
At
conventions and other public events, the adult industry tends to
portray itself as a happy family promoting shame-free sexual enjoyment.
But privately, many performers say the reality is very different.
"There's
some unwritten law or agenda out here in Pornoland that …
if we tell the truth about what's really going on here, the fan
will get turned off," said Ona Zee, a former performer who
is now an advocate for reform.
While
a hit movie can bring in as much as $1 million — adult movies
have a very long shelf life, and can keep selling for years after
their initial release — most performers see little of the
profits. They are seldom paid residuals, and often get only a flat
fee. The fees vary from $350 to $1,000 for a conventional sex scene
to a few thousand dollars for more extreme sex.
Few
of the companies provide health insurance, and most performers find
they must work without condoms if they want to keep getting jobs.
"The fans don't like to see condoms," said performer Belladonna,
reflecting a belief that is widely held in the industry. Like many
other performers, Belladonna started in the business when she was
18, the legal minimum.
Read
about Belladonna's start in the business.
"The
person that packs the porn in a box in the warehouse... is entitled
to hepatitis B vaccines.... But someone that's having unprotected
anal sex, hmm. There is no standard," said Sharon Mitchell,
a veteran performer who now heads a clinic for sex workers, the
Adult Industry Medical Health Care Foundation.
According
to Koop, many producers and distributors argue that performers are
independent contractors, not their employees, so they don't have
any responsibility for them. But Koop calls that a "copout."
"These
youngsters are not unionized, they don't know how to do anything
for themselves, and they're really stuck," he said.
Mitchell
believes that the producers have an obligation to care for the performers
in their films. "This is not a moral issue. It's an issue about
disease, about HIV, chlamydia, gonorrhea, young men and women entering
an issue that they often don't know enough about."
Bill
Margold, a veteran porn star who now counsels young people entering
the business, says 18-year-olds are too young to make the potentially
life-altering decision to go into porn.
"I
get 18-, 19-year-old girls who just don't understand that once you
do this, you are sociologically damned forever," he said.
Koop
believes that to prompt reform, Congress should hold hearings on
regulating the industry and "subpoena some of the people who
run these shows."
If
nothing is done, "it'll just get worse," he said, adding,
"The appetite for pornography seems to be insatiable."
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