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Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 12:55 am
by Scooter
The porn industry is going to find itself shut down permanently at some point if it doesn't get with the program and mandate the use of condoms in all films:
Bad news today for the porn biz: Another performer has apparently tested positive for HIV. This lead the industry trade group, Free Speech Coalition, to call for a stop to adult video production for now.

The possible positive was revealed Saturday and made public via an FSC press release today.

The moratorium on production will go on until those who might have worked with the porn star have been ID'd.

It's bad timing for the industry:

The L.A.-based AIDS Healthcare Foundation has been on a mission to force government agencies to require condoms on-set. In fact it's gathering signatures right now in order to get a citywide vote on an ordinance that would require the city of L.A. to mandate condoms for porn shoots it permits.

FSC says the positive didn't come from its own industry testing service, known as Adult Production Health and Safety Service, which was set up to test performers once a month.

The industry's own system requires porn stars to show up on set with clean results.

The AHF wants the state, county and city to enforce existing federal workplace regulations that would seemingly require condoms.

FSC, meanwhile, states:

Our first priority is to protect performers with reliable health services and assist producers with protocols that minimize liability, while remaining compliant with state and federal regulations regarding medical privacy.

We tried to get FSC chief Diane Duke on the line but she was in a meeting.

The last high-profile HIV-positive test for a porn star happened last last year. That performer, Derrick Burts, has become a poster child for AHF's efforts to get the industry to use condoms. But some have argued he moonlighted as an escort and, as such, shouldn't blame the industry's protocols (or lack thereof) for his situation.

In 2004 another HIV scandal rocked the industry, temporarily halting production.

The industry says consumers won't buy porn with condoms. It also claims that its testing program catches performers with diseases, keeps them off-set, and works.

The AHF says there's no way around federal law that prohibits workers from being exposed to blood-borne pathogens. In other words, you shouldn't be exposed to sperm at your job.
Perhaps they need someone from OSHA dropping in to observe productions in process.

People won't buy porn with condoms? Funny, but I've seen lots of it, somebody must be buying it.

Perhaps if they hired actors who could keep a hard on and actresses who turned them on enough to do so, they would overcome what is probably the main resistance to condom use.

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 1:40 am
by Crackpot
What about fluffers with latex allergies?

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 4:35 am
by Gob
It's a wonder there's any call for new porn movies with the amount that's out there already.

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 4:41 am
by BoSoxGal
Ha! Good point. Very few of those films are actually clever, so really, what's the need to keep making more?

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 5:55 am
by Crackpot
Gob wrote:It's a wonder there's any call for new porn movies with the amount that's out there already.
watch some old porn (and not one of the classics) and get back to me.

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 12:41 pm
by rubato
What is the rate of infection in the porn industry? Is it higher or lower than the general population? If it is lower then maybe we should pass a law requiring all to be tested every 30 days.

yrs,
rubato

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 4:06 pm
by Scooter
Employers are not supposed to subject their employees to hazardous conditions on the job. Requiring people to have sex without condoms in order to get paid certainly qualifies in my book. Forcing anyone in the gen pop to have sex without condoms against their will would be a crime; perhaps it's time it was seen as such in the porn industry as well.

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 5:31 pm
by dales
These should be available on every shoot:

Image

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2011 7:33 pm
by BoSoxGal
I hope those MSDS are laminated. :P

Re: Have they come up for air in the past 30 years?

Posted: Fri Sep 02, 2011 9:41 am
by loCAtek
Who's actually buying porn anymore? I thought the trend was watching free YouPorn?