lamale
Posts: 38
Joined: 3/1/2009 Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: playfulotter I have heard a lot about many involved in the porn industries being on drugs....They are working for the money and working that way probably loses its appeal rather fast I would think...I know they just passed a law here in the LA area that they have to wear condoms too but I would guess that would be hard to enforce! The interesting thing about porn is that it's losing the taboo status it held for a long time. It used to be that that the women who got into it came from broken homes, were abused as children by a relative, were street people, and so forth. Now, all classes of women in their early twenties think nothing of doing a couple of adult films for the fun of it, and don't care who knows it. The Internet has been the great equalizer, and these women's attitude is "So the fuck what? So I fucked some guy on camera. That was years ago. Deal with it." They're not going to be nominated for a Cabinet position, but then I don't think they want that . If you want a clue as to where the actors came from, check out the women. Those with bad teeth had, generally, little parental supervision when growing up, and those with bad skin into their twenties generally had terrible diets. They are the ones IN GENERAL, who came from bad homes. The ones with pearly whites and good skin generally came from homes where the parents were involved. There are exceptions to everything, of course. As for the condom rule, every porn has to have a legal page either before or after the movie, stating the date of production and who keeps the records for the actors' ages. So it would be easy to see if the porn was made after the law was passed, and who was responsible. I don't think the city council took into consideration the amount of money the porn industry pumps into the Valley every year. It's in the billions. If the industry decides to move to, say, Nevada as a result, the economy in the Valley would be in much worse shape than it is now. There are probably 20,000 porns shot every year in the Valley, so at least 100,000 sex scenes with over 200,000 actors, and of those, there were a grand total of TWO reported cases of people testing HIV positive. Significantly lower than the general population statistically, I would imagine. The condom rule was a knee-jerk reaction to a problem that doesn't really exist.
|