Thursday, May 15, 2008

One Pretty Girl's Opinion (Part Two)

It seems the media is sniffing around this Calderon thing. I received a phone call today from CNN in Atlanta. They wanted to know if I could come down to their studio in L.A. and be interviewed. Why me you ask? It's a long story. Let's just say I've been interviewed by CNN before. In fact, there was a time I was something of a go-to guy for the media when they wanted to know about certain stuff. It was either because I put a decent face on the adult industry or a stereotypical, evil face. I think they always secretly hoped I'd go all "Jerry Springer guest" on them. Anyway, I declined CNN's kind invitation. Told them I was too busy. I suggested they contact Larry Flynt. I'm sure Larry would have some choice words regarding a California Assembly member's attempts to tax him 25% on just about every pie Larry has his fingers in. I hope, for Mr. Calderon's sake, he doesn't have any scandalous photos floating around. Larry just might put up one of those big rewards for anyone who has the goods on Calderon.

Anyway, here's Part Two of Kayden Kross's article. BTW, Ms. Kross, along with other individuals from the Free Speech Coalition, testified (in opposition to Calderon's bill) before the California Assembly Revenue and Tax Committee. She is definitely a renaissance chick!

Here's the rest of Kayden's article:

To really drive his point home about what fuck ups the girls are, Calderon brought in two extreme fuck ups to testify. Shelly Lubben and Daphne Khoury, ex-pornstar and ex-stripper, respectively, showed up in church-appropriate attire and fake eyelashes as shining examples. Shelly Lubben was in the adult industry for a total of 7 years, two of which she spent making adult films, most of which she hooked, and all of which she spent addicted to meth. While hooking and drugs are not prerequisites for this industry they obviously were in her case, as they came before the videos. Yet she claims she is/was screwed up because of the industry and didn’t know how to get out. Like any other job I can tell you that simply quitting should do the trick. But Shelly isn’t content with quitting. She won’t be happy until everyone does. She testified to Calderon’s committee that she was fucked with scissors on set, given drugs, caught genital herpes, and “couldn’t understand why it was legal for guys to get bodily fluids on her skin” (not kidding). She thinks that girls in this industry are lost and it is her job to find them. She claims that we have higher than normal suicide rates and that since she started her Pink Cross foundation (as I understand it there are only about 5 members) she has managed to “save” about ten girls a year and deal with one suicide attempt a year. These statistics of course should be applied to the 5,000 new girls entering every year that were previously mentioned.

Daphne Khoury, who appeared to be the more put together of the two, was quick to change my opinion of her once she opened up the water works in her testimony (Shelly did the quivering voice thing). Not that either of them would care to hold the development of law to reason rather than emotion though. Daphne claimed that she thought stripping was harmless at first, then she got addicted to heroin that was provided by the club owners. At the press conference earlier in the day I had wondered why she kept complaining about STDs as a stripper. Then i realized the problem. She should have been complaining about STDs as a hooker. You don’t catch herpes from lap dances. You catch herpes from riding a john’s dick. So as the story goes she was hooking and addicted to heroin and after numerous suicide attempts finally got help and quit the strip club. Arguably I think anyone with a heroin habit and severe depression and a side job as a prostitute would probably quit their day job. I’ve known a lot of strippers in my lifetime. This is not a normal story. She ended her testimony with the admission that she is still getting help and battling depression and now she’s scared because her life was threatened if she spoke out and she supports AB 2914.

I know I brought this up earlier but correlation is not causation. I would suggest that Shelly and Daphne would have been fuck ups without the industry. Obviously there is no way to prove this. I don’t really care though whether Shelly and Daphne have problems because of the industry or independent of it though. It’s irrelevant because either way they represent an extreme minority. What is relevant is the underlying ideology behind these two “reformed women”.

Both Daphne and Shelly went into this industry on their own accord. No one held a gun to their heads. (But did i mention that Daphne claimed to have been forced into prostitution- was this by her drug habit?). While in the industry they had all the same options available that the rest of us industry workers/”victims” still have today. They had the option of not doing drugs. They had the option of not being prostitutes. They had the option of leaving at any time or making something of themselves in the industry. They could have gone to school or invested the money or developed a skill that would have been useful for their entire lives. They could have bought a house or somehow planned for their futures in some way. This industry can be the greatest springboard for our futures if we only take advantage of it. But they chose not to take those options. Instead they chose to be weak and follow the path of least resistance. Now, eight years later, rather than regrouping and coming to terms with their mistakes and moving on, they are attacking the industry. They are using extreme cases and making them appear to be the norm. They are citing opinion as fact, and in most cases I believe they are outright lying but how does one prove a negative? The ideological and moral flaw is even deeper than this though. They are actively trying to take away my right to succeed in this industry, and the rights of every other person involved in it, and the rights of every past, present and potential consumer. These girls, who couldn’t even manage a career in one of the easiest industries on the planet, think they are smarter than you or me and know better than us what is good for us and what legal rights we should have as a result. They are so steadfastly convinced of this that they will lie to a committee, take time out of their lives, support a bill that doesn’t even directly state what it is trying to accomplish (because if it were written honestly it would not have even been heard), and emotionally attempt to manipulate the legal system to get their way. That will always be more morally disgusting than a happy and willing pornstar spreading her legs for the camera or a self sufficient stripper transferring her tips from her g-string to her college fund.

Regardless of an extremely dishonest attempt at using government as a tool against the adult industry though, it looks as if Calderon might have failed. Among 150 people who showed to stop this bill in its tracks were Larry Kaplan from ACE of California, “Mr. Kinsey” as Calderon childishly called him, a group of over 100 dancers, club owners and managers, bouncers, porn stars and general supporters, myself, and my personal hero now, lobbyist Matt Gray. Mr. Gray’s closing argument was so cutting that Calderon could do nothing but stand by and huff and roll his eyes like a teenage girl being given a curfew on prom night. Calderon chose not to vote on the issue that day.

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The eye candy at the top is Hannah from last week. Hannah is Vivid's newest Vivid Girl. And yep, they're real. I shot Hannah in the same location that I shot Megan (featured in my last update), albeit on the other side of the room with the windows behind her. Hannah is lit with a 5' Octodome, a couple of shoot-thru umbrellas behind her from the sides, a silver reflector, and a fair amount of ambient sunlight coming in through the windows. Melissa was the MUA.

4 comments:

Lin said...

Cool about the CNN contact. And very interesting that the news channels are starting to read your blog.

I always said blogging would be the new media of the future. You've got quite an influential little media opportunity going there :-)

jimmyd said...

as much as my ego would like to believe the media reads my blog, that ain't what happened, Lin.

i should also mention that in the past (when I've spoken to the media) some of what I said got distorted and it ended up costing me work.

joshua said...

Thanks for reposting this article. I haven't read anything of it yet.

Anonymous said...

Considering that both of the "young ladies" who were to present comments for how the adult industry had been harmfully to them were drug addicted hookers (an illegal activity in California) My suggestion would be to Legalize and regulate Prostitution, one of the regulations should be to require that the practitioners be both drug and STD free. Why do I thing that tax revenue could be raised by this also?

WMS