Posted on 10/23/2007 9:40:21 AM PDT by Lorianne
DVD sales are in free fall. Audiences are flocking to pornographic knockoffs of YouTube, especially a secretive site called YouPorn. And the amateurs are taking over. Whats happening to the adult-entertainment industry is exactly whats happening to its Hollywood counterpartonly worse. ___
On Friday, May 18, Steve Hirsch, founder of Vivid Entertainment Group, the worlds largest producer of adult videos, was expecting a mysterious visitor. But Stephen Paul Jones was late. When Jones, an unknown figure in the pornography world, finally arrived in the all-white reception area of Vivids Los Angeles offices at 2 p.m., he was apologetic. His private plane had broken down, he explained, and he was forced to fly commercial. Hirsch, dressed in a T-shirt and jeans, found that excuse a little slick. But he was eager to speak with Jones, so he let it slide and introduced him to two Vivid colleagues. When the four men sat down in the companys conference room, Jones got right to the point: He wanted Vivid to buy his website, YouPorn.com.
As its name suggests, YouPorn lets users upload and watch a virtually unlimited selection of hardcore sex videos for free. The user-generated clips on YouPornlike those on YouTube, the site it mimicsrange from the grainiest amateur footage to the slickest professional product. Also, like YouTube, the site has far more traffic than income. Just nine months after going live, in September 2006, YouPorn was on pace to log about 15 million unique visitors in May, Jones told the Vivid executives, and its audience was growing at a rate of 37.5 percent a month. Today, YouPorn is the No. 1 adult site in the world; Vivid.com, a pay site, is ranked 5,061. According to Alexa, a website-ranking company, YouPorns overall rank is higher than CNN.com (84), About.com (114), and Weather.com (195). (Those numbers are averages for the three-month period from mid-June to mid-September.)
Blond, barrel-chested, and wearing a sport coat, Jones oozed Silicon Valley confidence. According to Hirsch, he mentioned his Stanford M.B.A. repeatedly. He offered reams of documents and audience data, emphasizing YouPorns global reach. (Only 12 percent of the sites traffic comes from the U.S., he said.) Jones told the men that he and one other executive, a young Malaysian man living in Australia, were the owners of YouPorn, and he stressed that with the sites traffic, its opportunities were manifold: dating, gaming, mobile content, pay-per-view, webcams (already very popular in China), and more. He shared his vision of turning YouPorn into a very cool brand, perhaps the Virgin of adult entertainment. As Jones rambled on, Hirsch and his executives traded raised eyebrows. Malaysia?
Still, they were intrigued by YouPornand more than a little intimidated by its size. In recent years, competition from the internet had cut deep into the porn studios revenues. DVD sales, once Vivids financial bedrock, were down almost 50 percent since 2004, and the proliferation of cheap Web-based videos was stealing market share from the company, which specializes in high-end sex films. Vivid and its top rivalsWicked Pictures, Evil Angel, Digital Playground, Red Light District, Penthouse Media Group, and Hustler, to name a fewhad lately been getting an unwanted glimpse of the overnight crisis that the file-sharing revolution brought to the music industry and Craigslist brought to newspaper classified ads.
The meeting lasted an hour. As Hirsch listened to Jones pitch, he considered the risks of acquiring YouPorn. Hirsch had been in the adult-entertainment business long enough to be mindful of its legal pitfalls, and that was a chief concern. How do you verify the age of the participants in these thousands of sex videosor, for that matter, the age of the audience?
It's up to parents to restrict the access. Keep the computer in the kitchen or family room!
I didn’t know that.
Great post. Go to hear you can have a band, copyright your music to protect it, and then promote your music on the net.
The bigger music distributors would simply take other people’s songs, give it to a band to record, and reap the profits knowing the smaller artist didn’t have the resources to sue.
Of course, but my point is that it'll make it harder even for the latchkey kids and products permissive parenting. Anything that restricts or eliminates porn is good in my opinion, regardless of whose responsibility it is ultimately. I've changed a lot since becoming a parent.
Both my daughters keep the 'puter in the family room. Seems to work for them. Of course they watch the rest of the world for dangers, as well.
Besides, we now have Brazilian and Ukranian starlets blanking-the-rooster that American porn stars refuse to do...
Sort of reminds me of a story I heard about Cape Canaveral, FL in the 60s when the Cape was just getting underway. Several times houses of ill repute had tried to open and make a go of it and failed miserable. Too much free stuff running around.
OB
ping
I’ll be back later.
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