Sep 202013
 
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Skin Diamond and Derrick Pierce from my new movie, Tristan Taormino’s Guide to Bondage for Couples

Recently, three adult industry performers tested positive for HIV, and there are unconfirmed, conflicting reports that there may be other performers who’ve tested positive. My heart goes out to all of them because it’s a life-changing diagnosis. I’m not interested in debating whether they contracted it on or off set, and I’m dismayed that people within the industry continue to engage in assumptions and finger-pointing about the now HIV positive performers. The important thing is that in the (albeit short) window of time between contracting the virus and receiving a positive test, they could have exposed other performers. These revelations—along with the recent syphilis scare and rumors that a male performer with Hepatitis C has been working without disclosing his status—have once again stimulated the public discussion about condoms in porn. These events, along with feedback from performers who said they’ve felt pressured not to use condoms in the past out of fear of losing work, have caused me to rethink my position.

From now on, I will require all performers I work with to test for STIs according to industry standards[1] and to use condoms in their scenes. Until now, I have adhered to industry standard STI testing and my sets have been condom optional, which, for me means that performers truly can choose to use condoms or not and I always have condoms available. I’ve shot several scenes with condoms (and other safer sex barriers), but the majority of the scenes have been condom-free. Because I want to empower performers to make decisions about all aspects of the work they do, I have respected their decisions in the past not to use condoms. I still want performers to have choices, and they can choose not to work with me if they don’t want to use condoms.

As a feminist pornographer, part of my mission is to support fair labor practices and create a positive work environment on my sets. The health, well being, and safety of the performers is my priority, and I believe that using condoms in addition to rigorous testing is the best way to prevent STI transmission. In the past, I have publicly spoken out against Measure B (as in this piece for The Huffington Post). I am still against mandatory condoms and government regulation of the adult industry. I still believe that the current fight is all about politics, not workers’ safety and rights. But my position on the use of condoms in my own productions has changed. I am not leveling judgment against producers, directors, or performers who choose not to use condoms. I am making the best decision I can based on my dedication to feminist and ethical production practices.

Condoms are not the only answer and not without issues. Performer, registered nurse, and activist Nina Hartley gives a compelling argument about why she believes that condoms can do more harm than good (briefly: she argues that condom use on porn sets causes “condom rash” leading to internal tissue damage that could increase the chances of STI transmission). Condoms don’t protect against every STI including herpes, chlamydia, and HPV, but they are an effective barrier for others STIs including HIV. Some people have latex allergies or sensitivities, and some can develop an allergy after repeated exposure to latex. There are several non-latex condoms, which many people report don’t have the same abrasive qualities as latex. Unfortunately, these alternatives don’t come in the range of sizes that latex condoms do, and, let’s face it, one-size-fits-most doesn’t apply to porn guys. I have always consulted with performers about what I can do to make their job safer and better. I will do the same when it comes to working with condoms. I will strive to find creative ways to decrease the amount of intercourse they have, thus decreasing wear and tear on their bodies (especially the bodies of female performers). I will consider requests by fluid-bonded couples who don’t want to use condoms. I will be a part of an open and ongoing dialogue and adapt as testing technology changes and safer sex practices evolve.

Safer sex issues have been a part of my professional life since I became a sex educator. But the news of HIV in the industry has a very personal dimension for me. My father, a gay man, was diagnosed with AIDS in 1993, and he died in 1995. That was before the good drugs, the cocktail, when AIDS was a death sentence. This hits far too close to home for me, and I’ve got to make a change as a result. Plenty of people say that no one wants to see condoms in porn. That no one cares about the safety of the people who make the images they masturbate to. I hope to prove them wrong, and I hope you, my audience, will help me do it.

P.S. On this subject, I’m quoted in this piece by Senior Medical Correspondent Elizabeth Cohen on CNN.

 

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Because this is ultimately about the sex workers, their bodies, and their labor, I think it’s important to feature their voices in this discussion. This week, I publicly asked performers to anonymously respond to this question: If the choice was entirely yours—not a mandate, not law, not what viewers want, just completely up to you—would you use condoms when you perform? Why or why not? Here are some of their responses. Some of them have been edited and excerpted for length.

“Perhaps I was delusional, but there was a time where I really trusted everyone in porn. I thought we all had this secret handshake, like none of us would ever jeopardize each other’s health and we all agreed to the same code of conduct off camera. I will admit I was pretty sexually irresponsible before porn; I had a lot of partners and I rarely used condoms. Once I started doing porn, all of that behavior stopped. I knew I couldn’t do that anymore because I didn’t just have to think about myself anymore. For some reason, I assumed everyone else was the same way. I felt really safe in the industry for a long time and if anyone were to ask me about using a condom on set I would have laughed, and said they would be uncomfortable and unnecessary. Condoms to me were things that you used if you were having a one night stand with someone you didn’t know—not things you used with people you knew and trusted. Unfortunately, I don’t feel that way anymore. I think condoms are necessary now. I wish it wasn’t that way but it is. I blame a lot of this on piracy. All the tube sites and the torrent sites have made all the studios make less money. A lot of people feel less inclined to adhere to a certain code of conduct, because they just aren’t working that much or they are working for less than what they want, etc. It’s a bad domino effect. I don’t love the state that porn is in at the moment and perhaps these HIV outbreaks were a good wake up call to anyone who is irresponsible, but I think we have to adapt with the times, and now, I think condoms are necessary.”

“I don’t think this question can be answered in a vacuum. If you were to ask me whether I prefer to have sex with condoms in general, the answer would be, ‘No.’ It’s not even the sensation. I don’t like the smell. That said, I’ve had plenty of condom sex. Prior to porn becoming a significant part of my life, I always used condoms. They were never a deterrent from sex. I feel like porn has allowed for condom-less sex as a sort of privilege. I’ve gotten used to it. It’s been over three years since I’ve had sex with someone who wasn’t a recently tested, industry performer. As a man who has sex almost exclusively as a top (at least in regards to who is penetrating who) at this point in his life, I’m honestly not too worried about contracting STIs like HIV or Hepatitis. However, I understand that my partners may feel differently. Women who do boy/girl scenes in straight porn (and men who bottom in gay porn) are at a higher risk of contracting non-curable, potentially life-threatening STIs like HIV. So I have to ask myself whether using condoms is going to benefit the industry as a whole. I don’t honestly know the answer to that question. The industry is in flux and many things have yet to play out. All I can say is that I’m happy to use condoms when it is an option and my partner feels safer with them. I don’t believe hot sex and barrier protection are mutually exclusive. However, I don’t see a direct correlation between a lack of barrier protection and the current problems plaguing the adult industry. STI exposure incidents will continue to put a hold on production regardless of whether condoms are used or not. It is my opinion that economic disruption of adult media is driving many performers to unregulated forms of sex work that put them at higher risk for contracting STIs. The testing system is doing its job to keep these performers—once infected—from re-entering the talent pool. It just so happens that major flaws were discovered in the system over the past six months. As a result, testing protocol has become increasingly strict. While the kinks are being worked out, I commend producers who will allow performers the option to use condoms.”

“I’m not interested in performing with condoms, though I occasionally do so, whether it’s my scene partner’s preference, the producer’s rule, or (rarely) because I don’t trust my partner’s lifestyle choices. In that case, or if she doesn’t seem well, or depending on the freshness of her test, I have requested condoms, and I have never experienced pushback from a director on my choice. All-natural sex on camera is more intimate, exciting and trust-based. That’s what I look for in a scene as a viewer and that’s what I try to create as an artist. I want to be a safe place for my scene partner to let her sexual instincts express themselves. With condoms there is literally something between us, and the instinctual fantasies are dulled. HIV is not a major concern for me. In 500-plus scenes, I have never contracted an STI, though I tend to shoot with established and/or professional, safety-conscious scene partners…We need standards. Agents and producers are betraying their talent when they promote performers who don’t respect the work we’re doing. I think performers doing privates/prostitution and heavy drug use is a far bigger issue than this current condom debate.”

“If the choice were completely mine, I would use a condom for EVERY scene/performance. I believe that it is safer for performers to use condoms, period. I do not accept the arguments put forth by FSC and other industry leaders/lawyers that condoms are more dangerous to a performer’s health. I do not accept that condoms being used in our industry would significantly hurt sales, in fact I believe it would benefit our industry’s image. The only reason I do not request condoms, outside of Kink.com or Wicked (who support condom use), is because I know I will not be rehired IF they even honor the request at the time. I have witnessed talent blacklisted by companies because the girl has asked to use a condom. I think it would be more responsible for our industry and our industry’s reputation to promote safe sex practices to the general public. Personally, I don’t feel that the anti-condom sentiment expressed by the industry reflects the true feelings of the performers, especially female performers.”

“If the choice was mine and when the choice is mine, I choose to use condoms. I still think testing is critical and that testing should be much more frequent.  An STI test that was taken the week of the production coupled with condoms and gloves would be ideal and would be closer to mirroring what I want from a new partner in my personal life. I think condoms can be sexy.  Safer sex can be sexy.  I want condoms and a test when I’m having sex with a partner on or off screen.  A couple of reasons play into this including greatly reducing risk of STI transmission, doing what I feel is necessary to protect my body, feeling confident and turned on by the fact that we are being healthy and aware of our bodies, feeling turned on by communicating, stating boundaries, and sticking to boundaries and limits that are set to protect both myself and my partners, and lastly feeling a certain obligation knowing that the sex I’m having will be viewed by others and that if I can make safer sex sexy then I can encourage the use of gloves and condoms (on cocks and toys) for the general viewing/porn consuming public.”

“My ideal situation is presenting a clear, basic STI test of 14 days, being able to communicate with my co-star about any other known sexual health concerns, AND the use of safer sex barriers such as condoms and gloves. I prefer testing AND condoms, and I want this preference to not only be the choice made by me and my co-star, but also be a choice that is fully supported by the production team. My experience with the majority of productions that were “okay” with condom use for heterosexual scenes have demonstrated to me that condom use is uncommon in porn at best, and discouraged/prevented at worse. I’ve shown up on sets where no condoms were available, and once a crew member offered one of his own, stored in the hot glove compartment of his car. (For obvious reasons, I immediately started bringing my own safer sex kit to shoots.) In queer/feminist-minded (what I’ll simply call “GOOD”) porn environments, condoms were not only allowed, not only encouraged, but actually SUPPLIED…Ultimately, how I shoot is up to me, yet I often have to compromise safer sex practices due to perceived marketability. It has always been a disappointment. I would appreciate the opportunity for myself—and anyone else—to work the way I want.”

“Most mainstream companies are not willing to allow performers to chose whether or not they use condoms in their scenes. Burning Angel has decided with all of the recent unfortunate happenings in the industry, that it should be at performers’ discretion as to whether or not they want to use condoms in their scenes…I am super appreciative that they have made this choice to benefit their performers’ health and safety at any cost. I feel that this choice demonstrates a lot of what I stand for in this industry, which is to promote boundaries, consent, and healthy sexual choices.”

“If the choice was entirely mine, I would not use condoms when I perform. Condoms and my vagina don’t get along so well. I always get very irritated internally after shooting a scene with a condom. From what I understand, this makes me more, not less, susceptible to STDs and infection.  Also, I don’t completely trust condoms to prevent STDs. Condoms break and fail. I would never have sex with someone, on or off camera, with just a condom and no test.”

“To me, the idea of using condoms—or not—is a very personal choice. When used correctly, condoms do lessen the spread of HIV and certain STIs, but they don’t protect against everything. While there are a select number of companies that will “allow” talent to use condoms (and one company that has been 100% condom ONLY for 14 years) many companies discourage the use of condoms because their sales will suffer. I also think it is VERY important to realize that no one entity can possibly be the voice for all performers and say that ALL talent wishes they were condom only. For example, even on a condom-only set, performers complain about having to use condoms and try to remove them during the softcore portion of the filming, citing discomfort for both players, as well as a struggle for the male performer to stay erect. I would like the choice to use condoms without the government mandating what I must do with my body while I am engaged in a very intimate act. I think that educating performers will be the key to enabling them to make informed decisions about their personal safety.”

“If the choice was completely up to me, I’d use condoms in porn with almost everyone, and use my discretion with the partner I’m fluid bonded to. Frankly, I’d *still* want to get tested, and have any sexual partners get tested (condoms break, after all); but hormonal birth control messes my body up and I’d rather use condoms as a form of barrier. Plus, I like to be an example to others and prove that safer sex can and is hot in the context of sexual experiences! I honestly find it sexy and want to demonstrate why on film so others can see that for themselves. I wouldn’t want to be forced to wear condoms without testing being required, which is what could happen, or have porn companies not hire me because I prefer to use condoms, which is what happens now. I’d prefer to make my own decisions.”



[1]Industry standards for testing are constantly evolving. Currently, a performer must test negative every 14 days or less for gonorrhea, chlamydia, Hepatitis A and B, syphilis, trichomoniasis, and HIV. The testing period was decreased from 30 days to 14 days just this week.

  13 Responses to “Porn, Feminist Labor Practices, and The Condom Debate”

Comments (9) Pingbacks (4)
  1. I agree that latex male condoms are not a silver bullet. One option that isn’t talked about enough is the female condom (aka internal condom) which lends benefits that may be more suitable for some performers. It forms to the internal walls of the vagina (or anus), not the penis, so size become irrelevant. And because it covers parts of the outter lips, the female condom protects against skin to skin transmission of STI better than the male condom…. It’s just another safe option that should be considered more.

  2. I am a man well into the Medicare Years who has had genital herpes for some 30 years and have mostly (not always) used male condoms. And yes, for me they diminished sensation. Several years ago a female partner introduced me to Female Condoms. She had been using them for years and found them most convenient and easy to use. She demonstrated how easy they were to use after a bit of practice. And I found that the sensations for me were remarkably improved! Penile skin sliding on the well lubricated female condom is much different (and much better) than penile skin NOT sliding on a male condom. Definitely better.
    FEMALE CONDOMS ARE WORTH A TRIAL RUN. But be prepared for a bit of fun learning how to use them which is all part of the experience. BTW, the Female Condom II (FC 2) is a major improvement over the originals.

    • I’ve always thought the female condoms sounded unappealing, but this makes me tempted to give them a go. What brand would you recommend? Amazon stocks Pasante, is that the mark 2 or would you recommend a different one?

  3. Hi Kenneth. Thanks for your important imput. It’s not often that you hear a guy’s perspective on this method. Do you mind if I post you testimony on our site’s FB page? (Condom Monologues DOT com).

  4. Lifestyles Skyn Large polyisoprene condoms are the best. They are the same size as Magnums, and I (a woman) think polyisoprene actually feels better than latex. It’s thin and preserves a lot of sensation; my ex had the latex allergy, but I continue to use polyisoprene condoms with non-allergic partners. No one seems to know they come in large sizes (my ex and I used way too small condoms for months), but they’re actually pretty easy to find, too; they have them at Walmart and at drugstores and on Amazon.

  5. After the 2004 outbreak, a number of companies went condom-only. All of them saw their sales decrease and only one is still condom-only. So even if you are able to stay in business making condom-only porn, I don’t expect other companies to follow suit.

    And that’s a problem. If you are one of only a small number of producers making condom-only porn, and you don’t have your performers under an exclusive contract, then you aren’t protecting them. Only a small percentage of your performers’ shoots will be made with you. The rest will be made for condom-optional producers, which is to say that they won’t be using condoms. Going condom-only will greatly reduce the chances of a performer contacting HIV on your set, but have no significant effect on any performer’s overall risk.

    As an analogy, think of each time a performer has sex as a link in a chain. The chain is most likely to break at it’s weakest link. A performer is most likely to get an infection on a set where the producer is careless or unconcerned about performer health, or when another performer has been having unprotected sex with untested partners, or when a performer has forged their test results in order to continue working with an infection, or if there’s a weakness in the industry testing policy. Strengthening the strongest links in a chain doesn’t make the chain stronger. The weak links are still just as likely to break. A producer who raises already high safety standards isn’t going to make performers safer if their greatest risk is on sets with low standards or careless or dishonest co-workers or flaws in the testing program.

    Making performers safer requires strengthening the weak links. Shifting to PCR RNA tests and twice monthly testing raises safety across the board. It lowers performers’ risk, regardless of where they work or who they work with. The producers who care the most and are already taking steps to protect performers have very little power to make further improvements in safety. The big improvements in performer safety come not from anything that producers do, but from improved testing technology and raising performers’ costs by requiring them to pay for tests twice as often.

    The alternative is to pass and enforce laws requiring condoms on set. That would drive production to other areas, including places without effective testing programs. The result would be that current performers would be out of work and the performers who took their place would be working under more dangerous conditions.

    One way or another, performers are going to bear the risk of infection and cost of prevention. Individual producers can raise their own costs through safety measures that reduce sales, but that’s not likely to reduce performers’ risks or costs to any meaningful degree.

  6. I just saw Christian’s tweet. Doing what you think is right is never pathetic.

    The whole issue of condom use is complicated and difficult. I think we agree on most things. The difference between us is the difference between optimism and pessimism. I’m more pessimistic than you are about the ability of individual producers to make performers safer, and I think the economics of porn production will ensure that most producers continue to make bareback porn.

    But no one ever made the world a better place by listening to pessimists.

  7. Hepatitis C….while a concern as all pathogens are..is rare to pass during sex…..unless blood play is involved…which has more to do with fetish play than sex…it is blood on blood…not semen…so shaving…open wounds on the genitals are of course always concerns…No one I have had sex with has ever contacted Hep C…most people who have this have probably had it for years…and most likely not from sex…Mine had to do with actual blood play that was though sexual was not from genital on genital sex…most people who have contacted this is either from sharing needles or even operations and blood transfusions…Hep C is a disease few know about correctly…in fact I had to educate my Doctors because I spent the time to educate myself…everyone should get tested because there are so many ways to get it…you don’t have to be a drug addict or sexually active to get it…a lot of people have got it from doctors and dentists…

  8. Wicked Pictures is NOT condom-only, They have a girl/girl scene in each of their productions, and sometimes there are boy/girl bareback scenes when the female performer is not a “contract girl’ but a day performer. Condom porn does not turn me on in the slightest – I know, I’m strange since I don’t jerk off to reminders .about disease and death. Steve Orenstein, Wicked President, is appealing to people like me which is why he includes non-condom scenes.

    More importantly, Wicked doesn’t make its money off of its hardcore product, but its sales to hotel chains, which feature softcore versions of its DVDs.

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