What the Porn and Newspaper Industries Have in Common

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At first blush the pornography industry and the newspaper industry wouldn’t appear to have much in common.  But they do.   The business model has eroded in both industries.   Both are falling victim to Internet sites that deliver the same information without charge.    Newspapers are going belly up and their staffs of reporters and media people are getting laid off by the droves.   The same is true for the pornography industry, with the exception being that the actresses who work in these productions are getting laid less and laid off with greater frequency.

It is a pity, I suppose, that we have to lament the loss of two of  our most pervasive institutions.    One gave us news, and one gave us distractions.   But these are changing times.   Perhaps all times are changing times, but these times seem to change more frequently and more dramatically than those in the past.   Political and economic tsunamis are now worldwide, commensurate with the global economy.   Even regional industries are affected by the global economy.  It holds true for news and sex.   Although it is ironic that it is “news” that is the four letter word.

Both the news and porn industry are not only  succumbing to the free Internet outlets, but  have been damaged by amateurs who are only too willing to perform the same duties of professionals in the obscure hope of lasting recognition.   Here were two institutions that most thought would never die.   They were the purveyors of public interest and as such thought their need would never end.    But appears those need have been supplanted, and their industrial business models have  been eclipsed by advancing technology.

The pool of applicants for what few jobs remain has increased substantially, while revenue has declined precipitously.  Porn stars who regularly made a good six figures a year are now struggling to make less than half of that.   Journalists who ascended with the status of the industry are watching their salaries reduced, dramatically.   That is if they still have a job and aren’t either exiled to the blog world or faced with only part time work wherever they can find it.

Perhaps not so ironically, both industries had similar, modest starts.   Both were started on the streets, where papers were hawked and sold to the teaming masses on the old city streets.    The reporters and most of the staff were blue collar workers, men and women who barely finished high school yet alone college.   But they knew their business and learned their trade.   They could write well and some with original style and flair.   They built followings and over time their grasp of the world around them evolved with the world itself.

That changed with the advent of a different sort in the newspaper.   Newspapers may have taken the high road as the “Fourth Estate” and such, but the business itself was grounded in gutter fighting for distribution  territory as well as the odd relationships between the “Fourth Estate” crew and the municipal lords on whose deeds they reported.   The local news world was punctuated by the occasional threats to the reporter’s well being and some mutual back scratching, along with bonafide investigative tactics.    There was also the human interest story, the local cat caught up in the local tree kind of thing.

The blue collar guys were supplanted for the white collar guys.     Where you once hung loosely from the lower rungs of the ladder of success, news people now gained new status and with it greater salaries.   You were no longer reporting for the love of it, the proverbial printer’s ink that became indelibly embedded in your system, but also because you could make a buck.  Hell, you could even get famous.
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Pornography, too, had its beginning from the streets.  In fact, vendors on the QT would peddle what were labeled as “French Films,” to willing customers who would pay cash,.  Perhaps there is irony that the early smokers were often peddled under the counter at newsstands.  The films themselves were scratchy and grainy.   But in an emotionally suppressed nation they provided nervous relief for a good many stalwart Americans. take them home and run these 8 millimeter wonders for their friends and colleagues.

These sessions were called “smokers,” and they hinted of the dark but playful corners of small town and suburban America where the Rotarian, Elks and other clubs held their smoker sessions as not so secret, special events.  Male bonding at its bondiest.   It was a fun time.   A few beers, some scratchy black and white silent sex extravaganzas, punctuated by corny subtitles, and there you were.

With the sixties and seventies there was sexual liberation, and pornography migrated to movie theaters.   First came the poor excuses for sex films, supposedly educational vehicles that showed  enough actual sex to stimulate public taste.  Then came the seminal “Deep Throat,” and “The Devil and Miss Jones,” and soon it was not only acceptable but hip to go see a porn film.   People took dates to these theaters, which were often converted from mainstream venues that had fallen on hard times.   Still, because some were the older theaters with big screens and many seats, couples could see their sex in near-Cinema Scope.    Giant sex organs projected from the screens like angry lizard space aliens.

Then came the video tape revolution and the sex industry came home.  Couples watched porn in the comfort of their bedrooms, sipped on wine, ate some cheese, and tried out sex acts they saw on their color TV.    Thousands rushed into the industry as the demand grew for these erotic wonders.   Here, the San Fernando Valley became the capitol of the porn industry.   I remember vacant homes on the blocks being rented out for sex sessions.   Production trucks pulled up front and the film crew remained as discrete as possible as they shot sex for a consumer market that was shopping in the local mall, a few blocks away.

Then came the Internet.  Sex exploded on the Internet.  It lead the way in resolving key issues about selling goods and services on the Internet.  The sex industry practically developed E-Commerce.   The sex industry resolved algorithms and search engine puzzles long before mainstream industry.   It was pornography, after all, that issued so many offerings to so many sexual predilections.  Each one had to be cataloged, keyworded and put up for sale.   And sell they did.  entrepreneurs became billionaires.   If not everyone made a fortune then a good many made a decent living from having sex on the Internet.

But now the party is suddenly over.  Not completely over.  No.  But the party has diminished.   If the lights aren’t out, they have been dimmed, for sure.  Like the newspaper industry, the porn industry is going through the tough economic times from which it may never recover.   Sure, some of the icons will still stand, and some of the elements of both institutions will remain.  In some form.

As for those who worked in these industries,  finding work is tough in this economy.   There may be some opportunities for those who can make the transition.   As for most, it may be time to wipe the slate clean and start again.   Meanwhile, while searching for work, the news people are going on the Internet, and the porn stars are going to college.   What strange times are these.

Author: Gordon Basichis

Gordon Basichis is the Co-Founder of Corra Group, specializing in pre-employment background checks and corporate research. He has been a marketing and media executive. He is the author of the best selling Beautiful Bad Girl, The Vicki Morgan Story, a non-fiction novel that helped define exotic behavior in the late twentieth century. He has recently published The Cuban Quarter, The Blood Orange, and The Guys Who Spied for China, dealing with Chinese Espionage in the United States. He is the author of The Constant Travellers. He has been a journalist for several newspapers and is a screenwriter and producer.