Little Puck Nabs 2025 XMA Award

Little Puck Nabs 2025 XMA Award

LOS ANGELES — Little Puck has scored the 2025 XMA Award for Best Sex Scene — All-Girl (“Come Out to Play”).

“Winning an XMA Award for Best Sex Scene-All Girl is incredible, especially for a project as unique as ‘Come Out to Play,’” said Puck. “This was an amazing cast, and getting to work with so many talented women in a scene that really pushed creative boundaries was something special. 

“A huge thank you to XBIZ for this award, as well as to our wonderful director Bree Mills and the entire Girlsway crew, my fellow performers and of course my incredible fans who support me every step of the way,” Puck added.

For a complete list of 2025 XMA Awards winners, click here.

Follow Little Puck on X.com.

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Vixen Media Group Scores Multiple XMA Awards

Vixen Media Group Scores Multiple XMA Awards

LOS ANGELES — Vixen Media Group and its casts and crews have nabbed multiple 2025 XMA Awards.

Major awards include Best Comedy Movie, Best Editing, Best Sex Scene – Comedy Movie and Best Acting – Lead (all for “American MILF”), Best Vignette Series (Blacked Raw), Best Gonzo Series (Tushy Raw) and Director of the Year — Body of Work (Non-Narrative) (Derek Dozer), among others.

“Year after year, Vixen Media Group continues to lead the way with groundbreaking content, iconic performances and high-quality productions,” said a rep. “Be sure to stream all of VMG’s award-winning content and more on their all-in-one streaming platform, Vixen Plus.”

For a complete list of 2025 XMA Awards winners, click here.

For more information, visit VixenGroup.

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Cherry Kiss, Derek Kage Cap AEBN’s Top Stars for 4th Quarter of 2024

Cherry Kiss, Derek Kage Cap AEBN's Top Stars for 4th Quarter of 2024

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — AEBN has revealed its most popular performers in gay and straight theaters for the fourth quarter of 2024. 

The top 10 stars in straight theaters were Cherry Kiss, Cory Chase, Penny Barber, Anna Claire Clouds, Syren De Mer, Adriana Chechik, Kenna James, Coco Lovelock, Jane Wilde, and Lauren Phillips.

In gay theaters, the top stars were Derek Kage, Jordan Starr, Sir Peter, Nick Floyd, LeGrand Wolf, Greg Dixxon, Joe Gage, Killian Knox, Cole Blue, and Kosta Viking.

To view the full list, visit AEBNTrends.

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Male Power Debuts ‘Go Wild!’ Collection

Male Power Debuts 'Go Wild!' Collection

HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. — Male Power has introduced its new Go Wild! Collection of men’s underwear.

The collection includes an uplift mini short, sport jock, thong with two rings, and adjustable G-string.

“This exhilarating new line invites fashion enthusiasts to dive into the jungle with its vibrant, multi-colored exotic animal prints that promise to turn heads and ignite your wild side,” said a rep. “With Go Wild! you are not just wearing underwear — you are making a statement.”

For more information on Male Power, click here

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Justin Matthews, Justin Dajock Star in Latest From ASGMax

Justin Matthews, Justin Dajock Star in Latest From ASGMax

LOS ANGELES — Alpha Studio Group (ASG) exclusives Justin Matthews and Justin Dajock star in the latest installment of “Nuru Massage.”

Directed by Micah Martinez, the scene opens with “Matthews hurting his arm at practice; Dajock knows just what he needs — if he’s willing to push the boundaries of their friendship a bit,” said a rep. “It’s full body-to-body contact when the guys let loose and rub each other down.”

Martinez enthused about the scene.

“Making the Nuru scene with Justin Matthews and Justin DaJock was spectacular,” he said. “Seeing the two of them experience a whole new type of massage is totally worth it. I can’t wait to shoot more.”

Added Dajock, “I always have a great time on set with ASGmax. It’s a pretty cool experience to bring the magic to life and make a hot video.”

The scene, titled “Teammate’s Touch,” is streaming on ASGMax.

Follow Matthews and Dajock on X.com.

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A Golden Night in Hollywood: 2025 XMAs Shine on Adult Entertainment’s Best

LOS ANGELES — To paraphrase the unofficial U.S. Postal Service motto: Neither rain nor cold nor the chaos of natural disasters can stop members of the adult entertainment community from the completion of their appointed duty every January: to honor the artistic and commercial achievements of their peers.

Defying doomsayers, the 2025 XMAs — the Adult Industry’s Biggest Night® — renewed the yearly ritual at its now-traditional home, the historic Hollywood Palladium in the heart of Tinseltown. Virtually every major industry figure gathered in the landmark Los Angeles venue to witness the celebration of nominees and winners in all the major categories, culminating with much-anticipated accolades for Anna Claire Clouds as Female Performer of the Year, Alex Jones as Male Performer of the Year, Gal Ritchie as Best New Performer, Lilly Bell as Girl/Girl Performer of the Year, Penny Barber as MILF Performer of the Year, Derek Kage as Gay Performer of the Year, Ariel Demure as Trans Performer of the Year and Best Feature Movie “Project X.”

Before the show began, attendees and their dates walked the customary red carpet along Sunset Blvd., with select top nominees invited for on-camera interviews conducted by veteran superstar Tera Patrick. One 2025 innovation was that the red-carpet interviews and the show itself were both broadcast live online as the evening’s events unfolded.

Presented by Fansly, the newly renamed XMAs were hosted by twice-crowned Female Performer of the Year Vanna Bardot and acclaimed Brazzers contract star Ryan Reid. The signature ambience of the evening was gold and glitz, with both presenters coordinating aurific skin-tight outfits translucent enough to reveal their industry-famous bodaciousness.

“I’m really grateful that tonight isn’t anal, because I feel I’m gonna shit myself!” Reid declared, referencing the case of nerves anyone might experience when called upon to host the illustrious XMAs.

“You and me both, girl!” Bardot replied. “Ryan and I are here to make all your dreams come true…”

“…and keep all of your balls from turning sore and blue!” Reid retorted.

After edging the crowd with effortless comedy banter, the hosts welcomed the first presenters: Jewelz Blu and Kazumi. The popular influencers offered a double splash of color, with Blu’s signature hair and Kazumi’s vibrant green gown, before announcing the winner for Best Performer Showcase: Angela White’s self-produced, retro-tinged blockbuster “Fuck Angela.”

Clad in neck-to-floor black, White thanked the crowd.

“This was such an incredible movie and I’m so honored to have so many legendary directors participate in making this film what it was,” she said. “And of course, I have to thank the incredible performers for making some old-school gonzo with me.”

Blu and Kazumi then announced the Best Performer Showcase Sex Scene: the epic gangbang crowning Jules Jordan Video’s “Anna Claire Clouds: Dark Side.” The veritable crowd of top performers involved included Clouds herself, Hollywood Cash, Damon Dice, Chocolate Gold, Vince Karter, Nade Nasty, Slim Poke, Milan Ponjevic, Will Pounder, Jax Slayher and John Strong.

Clouds ascended to the stage in a lingerie-inspired, derrière-baring, curves-hugging translucent black slip skirt.

“This is so freaking cool!” she exulted with her classic fresh nonchalance, admiring the columnated X-topped trophy before thanking Jordan, her agent and her male co-stars.

The next presenters were Nicole Kitt, in a striking chartreuse gown, and Melissa Stratton, in black with her hair in playful micro pigtails. Kitt and Stratton presented the award for Best Featurette to the ambitious Jewelz Blu erotic thriller “Broken Butterfly: The Perfect Shade of Blu,” a Holly Randall production directed by Jeffrey John Hart.

Blu, Hart and Randall took the stage alongside several other members of the cast and production crew.

Director Hart thanked XBIZ and “the amazing cast and crew who worked so hard for this,” and extolled his star, recounting how he had told her, “It’s gonna be the hardest thing that you’ll ever do” and how she delivered in spades.

A visibly moved Blu told the crowd, “I gave everything and more. It was a surreal experience to be a part of this movie, and the movie just happened to mimic some real-life things that were happening to me as well, so I felt I was method acting a lot. I cried on camera for real in the movie, and now I’m also crying for real onstage. I’m so honored to be part of this!”

Randall gave accolades to Hart and his team.

“This was a passion project,” she said. “A lot of people did it for free or for very little money — so thank you, everyone.”

Kitt and Stratton next announced the winners for Best Featurette Sex Scene: Demi Hawks and Seth Gamble for Pure Taboo’s “Do Unto Others.” Gamble, in a dapper brown fedora, accepted the award for both performers.

“Demi is amazing,” Gamble offered, calling for a round of applause for his co-star, and acknowledging producer-directors Michael Vegas and Siouxsie Q. “You guys killed this one!”

The next presenter was the always-luscious Ana Foxxx, in stylish, shiny white shorts and top. “I am wearing panties,” she teased, “so nobody is gonna see my dick tonight.” Foxxx announced Wicked’s “The Hunger” as the Best Couples-Themed Movie. Director Claudia Ross thanked Wicked, star Emma Hix, the other performers and her mentor, Axel Braun, for giving her the script.

Foxxx returned to announce the Best Couples-Themed Movie Sex Scene, which once again went to Seth Gamble — this time with Aiden Ashley, for Wicked’s “American Stud.” The nattily-attired Gamble returned to the stage to thank Ashley and director Dana Vespoli.

Irrepressible Latin dynamo Luna Star and radiant Romi Rain — who, along with pal Laura Desiree, turned heads throughout the evening with their synchronized, glimmering maritime blue outfits — presented next. The pair announced Girlsway’s “Spun” as the Best All-Girl Movie. Director Casey Calvert and much of her cast accepted the award onstage, with Chanel Camryn taking the mic to thank Adult Time, COO Bree Mills, her castmates and Calvert.

“This was actually my first-ever lead role in a feature movie,” Camryn revealed. “I’m so thankful you guys thought of me and made me part of this project!

Recovering from being dumbstruck “by all these amazing women on stage,” Calvert also offered her gratitude for the award.

Moving on to the next category, Star declared, “I don’t know about you guys, but girl-girl sex is the best!” before announcing the winners for Best All-Girl Sex Scene: the truly elite group of ladies involved in the climactic orgy scene in Girlsway’s “Come Out to Play: An All-Girls Warriors Parody.” That all-star cast included Penny Barber, Casey Calvert, Lulu Chu, Ana Foxxx, Leana Lovings, Little Puck, Hailey Rose, Serene Siren, Codi Vore and Jane Wilde, several of whom took to the stage and compelled a reluctant Bree Mills, the mastermind of the project, to address the XMAs crowd.

“I played a homeless cameo, I did not have sex!” Mills protested. “But this was a special scene for the 10th anniversary of Girlsway as a studio, and I brought together an all-star group of amazing talent and it was an incredible day. Pig Machine — Michael Vegas and Siouxsie Q — and the whole crew put in an incredible amount of work. When I yelled “Cut!” like a mom, to get everyone out, they could have kept going for two more hours!”

Kimmy Granger and Emma Rose — striking as always in a black-and-white gothic Lolita gown complemented by psychedelic raver boots — next presented the award for Best Gonzo Movie to Ricky’s Room’s “Superstar Room 3.” Mogul Ricky Johnson accepted the award, yet another accolade buttressing Ricky’s Room’s growing reputation as the little studio that can.

“Shoutout to all the women who were in ‘Superstar Room,’ I cannot do this without them!” Johnson proclaimed. “I love the porn community. If you look around, we’re family. And we can all come together, and we can win together.”

Rose and Granger then announced Chanel Camryn and Kai Jaxon as the winners for Best Gonzo Sex Scene for Tushy Raw’s “Gorgeous Chanel Gets Her Tight Hole Stretched Out.”

Camryn returned to the stage to declare, “I’ve never won before for an anal scene, so here’s to opening my ass!” and to thank Vixen Media Group for casting her.

The next presenters up were head-turning redhead Elly Clutch and the industry’s absolute mistress of outrageous costuming, Little Puck. Puck’s incredible choice for the evening: a Hollywood-quality sexy twist on Pinhead from the cult movie franchise “Hellraiser.” Clutch and Puck announced Chaturbate as Freemium Cam Site of the Year.

Chaturbate top broadcasters Hime Marie, Mary Moody, Lushiana and Vanniall accepted the award, with Marie stating, “Chaturbate is the best webcam platform in the world, hands-down!” before thanking Shirley Lara and the company crew, telling them, “You guys spoil us.”

Added Moody, “I wouldn’t be here without Chaturbate.”

Following intermission, hosts Bardot and Reid returned to joke about how winners should sterilize the phallic trophies before putting them in any orifice.

“Remember, if it ain’t shiny, don’t put it in your heinie!” Reid japed.

The next presenters were Ricky Johnson and mega fan-favorite Violet Myers, who announced the award for Best Vignette Movie. The trophy went to Brazzers’ “HZTV.”

“This series was real!” Brazzers’ Lea Lexis told the audience. “We really renovated a house. It took us a year to finish the series! I want to thank Brazzers for supporting us in all our crazy ventures.”

Myers and Johnson then presented the award for Best Vignette Sex Scene to Jennifer White, Kendra Sunderland and Jason Luv for Deeper’s “Negotiation.” White — in a stunning, leg-baring namesake-color gown — told the crowd this was her first award and expressed gratitude to her agency, Hussie, her fans and her scene partners.

Next onstage were Amirah Adara and Nicolette Shea, who presented the Best Comedy Movie award to MILFY’s high-profile superproduction “American MILF.” Cast members Maitland Ward and Serenity Cox were joined by multi-award-winning director and studio head Kayden Kross, who also thanked Phoenix Marie, Brandi Love and Christy Canyon.

Ward extolled the project, stating that “American MILF” was “an amazing thing to be part of.”

“It was really fun to go back to my comedy roots, and it was so special to all of us,” she said.

“American MILF” also reaped the award for Best Comedy Movie Sex Scene, for a group scene featuring the five titular MILFs and noted studio hunk Jason Luv. Ward and Cox returned to accept the award and thank Vixen.

Jennifer White and Spencer Bradley presented the award for Girl/Girl Performer of the Year to hardworking, multitalented performer Lilly Bell. Stunning in a sparkling, backless gown, Bell thanked her friends and all the people who have helped her along the way.

“I love women!” she reflected upon accepting the accolade. “I’ve been able to experience so many different types of women in this job, and it’s such a blessing to experience those girls.”

White and Bradley also announced Penny Barber as the 2025 MILF Performer of the Year. Barber, in a floor-length metallic silver gown, took the stage to accept.

“I want to thank Erika Icon, my PR agent, who is the reason I’m here,” she told the audience. “My wonderful husband, who has done everything he can to support me. The directors who have hired me. My co-stars, and everyone who’s collabed with me this year. Last year, it was Lauren Phillips. This year it was me. Next year, I want a blonde MILF Performer of the Year so we can have the MILF Powerpuff Girls!”

Euro bombshells Cherry Kiss and Valentina Nappi presented next, announcing Ariel Demure as Trans Performer of the Year. Always the epitome of elegance, the redheaded Demure shared a quotation.

“It means a lot to me and it’s gotten me through a lot over the years,” she explained. “‘You’re never going to be the prettiest in the room, you’re never going to be the most talented in the room, you’re never going to be the smartest in the room — but you’re special.’ This has been a hard year for all of us. We had to work so hard as trans women in this community. I’m so proud of all of us. This award is as much all of ours as it is miner. We deserve this. We deserve to be here. We deserve to be in the front row.”

Kiss and Nappi then announced the 2025 Gay Performer of the Year: superstar Derek Kage, who took home the award for the second consecutive year. Known as both a performer and a community figure, Kage was also this year’s recipient of the Free Speech Coalition’s Advocacy Award.

“Thank you to every director, every producer, every studio, every person who’s taken a chance on me, even down to the production assistants,” Kage said. “Every single one of you has contributed to me being your Gay Performer of the Year. I absolutely love what I do, and I’m sure that everyone in this room can say the exact same thing. And there’s an organization that is helping us make sure to do everything we do: the Free Speech Coalition. They are the reason why we continue to do what we do. I’m going to go to FreeSpeechCoalition.com and I’m going to donate right now. Donate a dollar, donate five dollars — every little bit helps FSC fight to keep us doing what we do. I love everybody in this room, and I cannot wait to keep doing what I love to do!”

Reigning XMA Europa Performers of the Year Christian Clay and Agatha Vega, in an impossibly skin-tight white mini dress, took the stage next to present the Creator Platform of the Year award to Fansly.

“It’s such an honor to be in this space,” Fansly’s Leah Koons said. “To be in the room with all these wonderful creators. Thank you for trusting us. We will always have your back, we will always fight for you, we will always push for discoverability and creator safety. We are so deeply appreciative of every single creator in the room here.”

Vega and Clay next announced VRBangers.com as the Virtual Site of the Year.

“What started as a cool idea grew into something amazing,” said Boris Smirnoff, CTO of VRBangers. Thanking his partner, Daniel Abramovich, he added, “I’m proud to say that this year we celebrated 10 years of innovation. All of this would not have been possible without our incredible team: marketing, design, web development, production, post-production: you guys are the ones who make the magic happen.”

Vega and Clay remained to announce the winners for Best Career-First Performance Sex Scene. The trophy went to Kazumi, Hollywood Cash and Isiah Maxwell for Blacked Raw’s “Beast Mode.”

“I’ve never won a scene award!” Kazumi enthused. “Thank you guys so much for fucking my ass. It was literally my best day ever, and this is now my second-best day ever. I love anal, I love Vixen. Here’s to 2025 and more of both of those things!”

In turn, Maxwell thanked Kazumi for picking him for the scene and for practicing with him.

Adria Rae and Siri Dahl — making a resonant political statement with a full-on Hester Prynne costume showcasing the Scarlet Letter of shame — were up next, to present the award for Streamer Creator of the Year to Cubbi Thompson.

“Thank you to everyone I met in the industry throughout this year,” Thompson told the crowd. “You truly have become the family I needed. I wish I could have my ‘Mean Girls’ moment and break up pieces of this trophy for each of you.”

Dahl and Rae next announced the winner for Clips Creator of the Year: Jewelz Blu.

The blue-haired performer said, “I’ve literally poured my heart, my soul and my pussy into everything I do. I do it for the fans, do it for art, do it for the sex and do it for the love.”

The Premium Social Creator of the Year award went to Violet Myers, who expressed her gratitude.

“I love making content!” she shared. “It’s my dream to be on social media, and shoutout to my YouTube team and everyone who helps me run all my pages.”

As the night reached some of the most anticipated top awards, veteran superstar Tera Patrick took the stage as a presenter.

“Hello, beautiful people!” she said. “I know it’s been a minute, but some of you know who I am, right?” Encouraging the cheering crowd, she added, “I’m not ‘old-school-old school,’ right?”

Patrick announced the Best Feature Movie award, which went to Digital Playground’s “Project X,” directed by Ricky Greenwood.

The bearded auteur invited his cast and crew onstage, offering, “A movie like this is not made by one person, it’s made with a group of people. Thank you, Digital Playground, for trusting me with this movie. It was a very ambitious movie and I had never directed sci-fi before.”

“Project X” cast members Cherie DeVille and Mick Blue also took the award for Best Feature Movie Sex Scene.

“This was such an amazing movie to be a part of,” DeVille enthused. “It was an honor to work with Mick and with Ricky on ‘Project X,’ and we crushed that.”

“It was angry sex with passion!” quipped Blue, before tenderly embracing his scene partner.

Next, Nicole Doshi presented the award for Best Lead Acting to Maitland Ward for “American MILF.” Ward has dominated the acting categories since joining the adult industry following a successful mainstream career.

“Thank you, Kayden and Vixen, for creating this role for me,” she said. “It was like walking back in time to do my role as Rachel McGuire in ‘Boy Meets World’ — but all grown up, sexy, having fun and being the full person I have become. I will always be so proud to stand here, like I did back in 2020 when I won my first XMA award. It is just as good today!”

Doshi then announced Ricky Greenwood as Director of the Year — Body of Work (Narrative). Greenwood once again took time to recognize the labor of his hardworking team in making him look good and award-worthy, and dedicated his award to crew member Rick, who recently passed away.

Lacy Lennon and Jada Stevens welcomed to the stage the winners of all the fan-voted categories: Fav Female Performer Hailey Rose, Fav Male Performer Parker Ambrose, Fav Girl/Girl Performer Leah Gotti, Fav MILF Performer Serenity Cox, Fav Gay Performer Legrand Wolf, Fav Trans Performer Emma Rose, Fav New Performer Dan Dangler, Fav Female Creator Lily Phillips, Fav Male Creator Thor Johnson, Fav MILF Creator Romi Rain, Fav Gay Creator Silas Brooks, Fav Trans Creator Shiri Allwood and Fav New Creator Mary Jane.

Cherie DeVille, fittingly attired in the evening’s main chromatic element of gold, announced unstoppable British import Gal Ritchie as the Best New Performer. Ritchie, spectacular in lime green, thanked agents Mark Spiegler and George for “taking a chance on a girl from a tiny little village in England.”

“Thank you to everyone who’s fucked me!” she concluded. “I love you all.”

DeVille then announced hardworking stud Alex Jones as Male Performer of the Year. The well-liked Jones, showing surprise at the honor, thanked his girlfriend, agents and Brazzers, along with his family and friends.

It was then time for the climax of the evening: the announcement of Female Performer of the Year. The winner of the hotly contested category: Anna Claire Clouds.

“That ass. In that outfit. Holy shit!” enthused DeVille, welcoming Clouds to come up and get her flowers.

Clouds laughed, “The amount of people who said they were going to pull a Kanye West if I didn’t win this award was absolutely insane! So thank you for giving me this award. Otherwise, I would have been really nervous!

“I love this community so much,” the brand-new Female POTY added, wrapping up her speech — and the evening. “I love porn so fucking much. Thank you. I’m really proud.”

XBIZ Expo Wraps Vibrant Weekend of New Product Reveals, Vendor-Buyer Meetings

LOS ANGELES — XBIZ Expo kept the party going on the mezzanine level of the Loews Hollywood Hotel through the weekend, closing out with a final day that proved to be no less spirited an affair than the days preceding.

Once again, the energy inside the Hollywood Ballroom was electric, as exhibitors showcased a wide range of pleasure products.

Among the prominent booths on the floor this year was the one belonging to CamToyz, which housed the company’s RAW line of ultra-realistic dildos, as well as its Majestic line of vibrators and Onix metal butt plugs.

CamToyz exec Guillermo Correa said that the company is among those leading the charge — pun intended — to ensure that the USB-C charger is the future of the adult industry.

“One of the main issues we see is that people have multiple sex toys, and 10 sex toys often means 10 different chargers,” said Correa. “Remembering which cord belongs to which product is a mess! We’ve avoided that hassle by adopting the same technology adopted by every industry, from vapes to phones and smartwatches.”

Correa also discussed the Lolly line, which he described as “cute and discreet.”

“They don’t look like sex toys at all,” he noted. “No one will know it’s a sex toy if they find it in your top drawer!”

Nearby, Svakom’s Alexandro Feynerol showcased several new products that his company has introduced since XBIZ Retreat in Miami.

“We have a basic app that every toy is going to have, which allows the user to control a partner’s device locally or long-distance,” said Feynerol. “It also allows you to sync your toy to your music or surrounding noises, so if you’re at a concert or a club, the toy can vibrate to that rhythm.”

“You can also do video chatting directly through our app now, so no more sending Zoom links to get down and dirty!” he added.

The rise of interactive porn has inspired further functionalities, opening up a wide range of possibilities that Feynerol touched upon.

“The toys in our Connection series — any toy that has the word ‘Neo’ in its name — are compatible with interactive porn,” he explained. “So you can watch a video on Pornhub that will sync with our toys and masturbate you, or vibrate at the same rhythm as the action in whatever video you’re watching. You’ll also be able to connect and sync toys to webcam livestreams, which cam models can then monetize with our products.”

Of course, one of the worst experiences one can have with a sex toy is being in the heat of the moment and trying to turn it on — only to discover that the battery is dead. Feynerol and his team have just the fix.

“The other update this year is this ’S’ button, which allows you to check how much battery is left on your toy, which can now be charged using a USB-C charger,” said Feynerol. “Stores always hated this element of sex toys, because customers would come in and say, ‘I lost my charger’ or ‘I broke it’ or ‘My dog chewed on it, do you have a spare one?’ But now, you can use your phone or laptop charger to charge your toys. You don’t need a bunch of different cords.”

Feynerol also showed off the Emma Neo 2, which boasts an intense rumble, though that vibration doesn’t travel down the handle. It also comes with rabbit ears that can be used for external or internal stimulation, be it on the penis shaft, testicles or nipples.

There’s also a mini version that is just as powerful; it just doesn’t have the heating function or come with a rabbit ear attachment.

“In about a month and a half, we’re going to be launching the Echo 2, which is our new finger vibrator that comes in two pieces — the toy itself, which is extremely flexible and features a heating function that can warm the device up to 100 degrees in five minutes — and the sleeve, which takes less than a second to put on,” said Feynerol. “It comes in two different colors: pastel blue or lilac. One side is textured, though you can turn it around and use it the other way too, if you don’t like how it feels.”

“Last but not least, we have two new anal plugs,” he told XBIZ. “If you knew our Iker, it was a great product, and a lot of customers requested that we make a bigger anal plug. So we did, but then they complained it was too big and said we went a bit overboard! So we scaled the Iker Neo down in size and improved the thumping action on the toy while maintaining the ergonomic design. It’s also interactive with porn and camming functions.”

Over at the Our Erotic Journey booth, Kevin Young discussed the company’s Zodiac Collection of sex toys that go with every sign, whether you’re an Aries or a Taurus. The company employs an in-house designer who turned each sign into an animal.

Young touted the Zodiac line’s vibrant hook: It’s easy for a salesperson to start a conversation with a customer by asking, “What’s your sign?”

“It’s a great way to get people to look at the product because everybody’s into that stuff,” he said. “On top of that, each toy comes with a Pokemon-like card that tells you what your sexual style is and who you’re sexually compatible with.”

“We’ve been trying to push this into the distribution space, so it’s been a big win to be able to talk to a lot of people here at XBIZ Expo,” said Young, whose company is also introducing a line of pheromone-scented car accessories called EroRide that you can put in your vents to help set the mood.

“It’s not like taking a BlueChew and going for a drive,” he added. “It’s for a bit of sexy time in the car. You may not even be thinking about it, but then you start smelling some pheromones, thoughts come to your mind and maybe there’s a little excitement below the waist. Each one lasts for about 60 days inside a car, depending on weather conditions.”

In the next aisle, XBIZ spoke with Yalissa Davey of The Male Rose, who said, “Coming to XBIZ Expo is just a great way to showcase all of the new products and let people know that we’re around.”

She then touted her booth’s hot product, which was garnering plenty of attention.

“The Male Rose is a great toy to get men more in touch with their emotions,” said Davey. “We are the No. 1 top-selling male sex toy that has taken off on TikTok and Pornhub. We can barely keep the Male Rose Pro on the shelf! We call this the Rolls Royce because this is going to get the job done, and because of the type of silicone it is, it’ll warm up once you get going.”

In the Creative Conceptions booth, Head of Global Sales Brad Taylor praised XBIZ Expo as an enjoyable show with quality customers.

“It was a lovely mix of people we’ve done business with for years and people we’ve never done business with before,” Taylor said. “We debuted the bondage brand Sie Mio at the show, and the reaction’s been fantastic.”

Creative Conceptions also introduced new Unihorns toys, adding variety to the line of stimulators.

“It’s now a bit more of a destination brand than just a single SKU,” he noted. “There are some internal and external toys now, as well as a lower-price bullet. So now there are items at different price points and different types of toys in the brand.”

Elsewhere, Aneros focused on its most recent release: the Psy massager.

“We wanted to give it more love and the attention that it deserved, since it was five of six years in the making,” said Aneros’ Robert Stevenson. “We created the first-ever adjustable massager, so people can customize it to create their ‘perfect massager.’ It’s good for all experience levels, from beginners to intermediate and advanced. Also, because people have different statures, people who are taller, their prostate may be a little bit higher than the average prostate owner is or vice versa — according to basic human anatomy, the prostate is about two to three inches into the body, but it’s different for everybody.”

The morning after the XBIZ Honors ceremony, Aneros proudly touted its freshly won XMA trophy for Specialty Product of the Year.

“Psy is opening up a whole new segment of our brand, of what we can do,” Stevenson said. “It doesn’t have to be all flashy, glitzy, glamorous or electronic. It’s a hands-free device, but it’s still innovative in its own way.”

Director of Sales and Marketing Brent Aldon said retailers can expect marketing support from the Aneros team, adding that in-store marketing material can help drive sales home.

“That means creating online portals and assets for them to access at any time of the day easily,” he said.

In the XR booth, new Creature styles were introduced, expanding the collection beyond dildos with new strokers, wearables and grinding pads.

“We’ve just introduced She-Wolf strokers that have hair that comes off — that was very important,” XR’s Josh Ortiz said. “Any item that has parts that are not silicone will be removable.”

The fur secures with snaps along the edge of the material. Other fantasy-inspired toys in the line include the Unicorn and Hell Hound silicone strap-ons.

Ortiz also held forth on the difference in silicone textures.

“The question I get asked the most about the Creature toys is if they are pure silicone, and the answer is yes,” he said. “There are different densities, and the mold is the only difference between the shiny and the matte silicone. If you sandblast the inside of the mold, it comes out matte. If you don’t sandblast, it’s shiny.”

XR also added to its Master series with new body-affirming wearable male and female chests and pussy and penis panties. On the softer side, the company also is gearing up for Valentine’s Day with a new Bedroom Bliss waterproof throw that’s machine-washable. Additionally, the new Rose Lover’s boxes feature a rose stimulator in a box filled with roses. Ortiz predicts that items for sensation play, such as candles, will also be popular for the holiday.

At the end of one aisle, XBIZ spoke to Nicky from Lovense, who showed off Lush 4, a remote-controlled G-spot egg vibrator that serves as the next generation of the company’s signature toy, Lush 3.

“Everyone loves Lush 3, but we got some feedback asking us to ‘spice it up’ and make the design a little bit different,” said Nicky. “That’s why we’ve added a cool little green LED light, and the shape is slightly different. We also made the neck part a little bit stiffer so it’s easier for users to adjust the position when the toy is inside your body.”

Lovense also addressed the issue of battery life with its latest update.

“Lush 4 lasts an hour longer than Lush 3, plus the vibration level is higher,” said Nicky. “There’s also a cool feature offering fast charging, so you can have an extra hour of battery life with just one five-minute charge.”

Nicky made special mention of Lovense’s Mission 2, which is a vibrating suction cup dildo with advanced touch-sense technology.

Finally, Grace with CyberSkin showed off the company’s Electric Male masturbator, which comes in a variety of styles: the Warrior, the Wing, the GalaxyVoy and the Titan, all of which boast different functions.

The XBIZ Expo concluded Sunday afternoon, after which many participants hurried over to the Hollywood Palladium to attend the star-studded 2025 XMA Awards.

What Changes in DC Could Mean for the Adult Industry

On November 5, 2024, American voters were called to the polls. The results of that election revealed an unquestionably uncomfortable truth for everyone, regardless of party or ideology: the “united” part of United States does not appear to be holding strong.

Yes, the Republican Party — currently in thrall to the populist MAGA movement with incoming president Donald Trump as its figurehead — was the winner of the election, and will be controlling the legislative and executive branches of the federal government following the Jan. 3 swearing in of the new members of congress and the Jan. 20 presidential inauguration. The unbreakable conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court — plus throngs of Trump-appointed federal judges — completes the power trifecta with a GOP-simpatico judiciary branch, ensuring decisive momentum for an expected rightward swing in decision making for, at the very least, the next two years.

But the impressiveness of that trifecta — actually the product of the Electoral College system, some very peculiar district-drawing practices at the state level and the controversial lifetime tenure of Supreme Court justices — hides the real result of the election, which was the confirmation that the country is hopelessly divided on how to move forward.

Of the more than 340 million Americans estimated to live in the U.S., a little over 150 million cast ballots on Nov. 5., out of around 240 million eligible voters. Among those voters, 77,266,801 (or 49.9%) chose Donald Trump, and 74,981,313 (48.4%) chose Kamala Harris. Adding other minor-party candidates, 50.1% of voters cast ballots against the incoming president.

The upcoming 119th Congress will be controlled by Republicans, the party’s slim majority reflects the sharp divisions that continue to characterize American politics. The Pew Research Center described the GOP’s expected five-seat majority in the House of Representatives as “the smallest margin of control in modern history.” In the more typically divided Senate, Republicans will enjoy a three-seat majority, plus the vice-presidential tie-breaker vote.

Unsurprisingly, this national division is also reflected in the U.S. adult industry. Although the fight against the religious conservative-led War on Porn tends to magnify liberal, progressive and Democratic-leaning voices within the industry, a sizable and sometimes vocal number of social and/or economic conservatives, libertarians and Republican-leaning professionals in the adult sector supported Trump and the GOP in the recent election.

With the dust of the heated 2024 campaign finally settling, industry stakeholders on both sides of the ideological and electoral divide must all ask the same question: What happens now?

Project 2025: Bark or Bite?

Trump will be sworn in on Jan. 20. If his previous inauguration day is any indication, he will immediately stage a photo op, sitting behind the Resolute desk in the Oval Office and signing a pile of executive orders prepared by his advisors. Whether and to what degree any of those executive orders — or the ensuing actions of the new administration, Congress and the courts — will directly impact the adult industry remains a matter of conjecture. As of the end of 2024, nobody can be sure.

All industry stakeholders have to go by, as they plan for the upcoming year, are the statements Trump made during the campaign, the statements and track records of those he appoints to run his new administration, and Trump’s own track record from his first term in office between 2017 and 2021.

Trump’s right-leaning supporters within the industry have most frequently invoked the latter as evidence of what Trump is most likely to do, as opposed to what his surrogates and appointees have called for — most notably under the auspices of the controversial Project 2025.

Assembled under the leadership of conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation, Project 2025 is a coalition of conservative organizations that produced a 922-page document titled “Mandate for Leadership,” intended as a road map for the next conservative administration.

“Mandate for Leadership” unequivocally declares that adult content “has no claim to First Amendment protection” and states, “Pornography should be outlawed. The people who produce and distribute it should be imprisoned. Educators and public librarians who purvey it should be classed as registered sex offenders. And telecommunications and technology firms that facilitate its spread should be shuttered.”

Members of the adult industry and sex workers have been warning about Project 2025’s sweeping censorship proposals since August 2023, when Dame magazine’s Brynn Tannehill first reported on the document.

A brighter spotlight fell on Project 2025 in the summer of 2024, after the Heritage Foundation’s firebrand leader, culture war crusader Kevin Roberts, went on Steve Bannon’s podcast and said, “We are in the process of the second American Revolution, which will remain bloodless if the left allows it to be.”

This prompted the Harris campaign to highlight Project 2025 as the de facto platform for an incoming Trump administration. Trump and his campaign staff denied repeatedly that they were connected with or even knew much about the initiative, though several prominent Project 2025 contributors were former Trump staffers, and Trump had vocally praised Roberts and his ideas before the incendiary Bannon podcast appearance.

In August, CNN reported that former Trump staffer and Project 2025 co-author Russell Vought had told undercover reporters that, after the renewed attention, the Heritage Foundation-led initiative had entered its second, more secretive phase with different tactics, including banning pornography “from the back door” through age verification legislation.

Three weeks after the 2024 election, Trump announced that he planned to appoint Vought to head the crucial Office of Management and Budget, the same role which the Project 2025 architect had fulfilled during the first Trump administration.

While those are undisputed facts, their interpretation has been heavily colored by the aforementioned ideological divide in the industry and the country. Many progressives in the industry take those promising to criminalize porn at their word, and are preparing for the worst. MAGA supporters in the industry, however, are quick to point out the lack of major obscenity prosecutions at the federal level between 2017 and 2020, plus Trump’s disavowal of Project 2025 after the Kevin Roberts podcast scandal.

There are also plenty of pragmatists who don’t disbelieve the intentions of the pro-censorship crusaders, but doubt that culture war matters will be prioritized as the new administration pursues what they expect to be a largely pro-business agenda.

Among non-doomsayers in the industry, a common mantra is: “Trump doesn’t really care about coming after porn. He will fix the border first, and also improve the economy through tax cuts and tariffs.” This contention is often coupled with anecdotal, wink-wink references to how the incoming president supposedly “loves porn stars.”

To help put things in perspective, XBIZ consulted industry legal experts and advocates about their forecasts and expectations for the second Trump administration.

Assessing the Risks

“While any new administration is unpredictable, I believe that an all-out assault on the adult industry will be fairly low on the list of priorities,” says industry attorney Lawrence Walters, of the Florida-based Walters Law Group, who runs FirstAmendment.com. “The president-elect has not made this issue a centerpiece of his campaign or discussed it in relation to his cabinet picks.”

But would active prioritization be even necessary? Like the authors of Project 2025, religious-right media voices and several prominent conservative politicians — among them, Vice President-Elect J.D. Vance and Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri — have repeatedly suggested that no new laws may be necessary to come after porn. The Justice Department, they argue, could simply enforce existing obscenity statutes.

“Criminal prosecution priorities will be implemented by the attorney general — presumably Pam Bondi — along with the numerous appointed U.S. attorneys throughout the nation,” Walters explains. “While it is possible that those in the adult industry may be targeted in an effort to placate some conservatives, success will be difficult if history is our guide. The most recent efforts to pursue obscenity charges against adult producers, publishers and distributors ended with some embarrassing losses for the Department of Justice.”

Walters notes that prosecutors must still satisfy the Miller Test to obtain convictions for obscenity. Although the United States does not currently have a national definition of obscenity, jurisprudence has established the Miller Test, which has been a legal standard in federal courts for a half-century.

The Miller test, developed in the landmark 1973 case Miller v. California, establishes three conditions for determining “obscenity”: Whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards” would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct or excretory functions specifically defined by applicable state law; and whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.

Walters predicts that efforts to enforce federal obscenity statutes would prove a daunting challenge “unless the prosecuted content is exceedingly fringe in nature,” as the Supreme Court has demonstrated no propensity toward changing the Miller Test or recognizing new categories of unprotected speech.

Industry attorney Corey Silverstein, who runs MyAdultAttorney.com and Adult.Law, is also counting on the strength of precedent.

“Although it’s never easy to predict how an incoming administration is going to act toward any industry in particular, in this instance we do have some historical context to rely upon,” Silverstein tells XBIZ. “During the first Trump administration, the adult entertainment industry was not a focus.”

A contrasting opinion is offered by Mike Stabile, director of public affairs for Free Speech Coalition (FSC) and a stalwart advocate for industry and sex worker rights.

“While the fight for our rights is an uphill battle in any administration, we’ve historically seen legal harassment and criminalization rise dramatically in more conservative administrations,” Stabile recounts, pointing to Nixon’s “War on Smut,” the insistent obscenity prosecutions under Reagan-era U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese, George W. Bush’s obscenity task force and the 2257-compliance raids targeting adult producers.

“Perhaps notably, most of these were second-term initiatives, a reward to evangelicals and others who stood by embattled presidents,” Stabile adds. “So if you’re betting that a second Trump term will be as uneventful for adult as the first, I’d hold onto your money.”

This historical context is important, Stabile argues, given the turnover among industry players, especially performers and creators.

“Most of the industry wasn’t around for the earlier attacks,” he warns. “Many can’t comprehend what it’s like to have your business raided on a minor pretext or to be demonized at a press conference, be stopped at the border, have your assets seized or face multiple federal counts. I think a lot of the industry thinks, ‘If it does happen, it’ll happen to someone else.’ But history shows us otherwise.”

According to Stabile’s research, when the state is on the attack, it goes after big names and small distributors alike.

“They look for opportunity and they look for headlines, but they also look for wins,” he notes. “Often, those wins are less about securing a conviction than running you out of business or getting you to settle, often on dubious charges.”

The catastrophic threat of total financial destruction and personal ruin is familiar to long-time observers of the industry — or anyone following the Justice Department’s high-profile case against Backpage.com, during which $215 million in assets were forfeited to the U.S. government in a case essentially centered around forcing online classifieds to discriminate against sex workers. That case resulted in the death by suicide of one of the Backpage owners, and the dubious conviction of another on a minor money laundering charge, currently on appeal.

FSC board chair Jeffrey Douglas notes that similar situations have happened in the past.

“Years ago, there was a very dominant player in Minnesota and he was prosecuted for obscenity in his bookstores,” Douglas recalls. “They charged him with RICO and the government got a sympathetic judge, and he just forfeited everything. So he’s in prison and they had a book burning, with all of the videos and books that they seized in the store — books that were not judged to be obscene, but were forfeited because they were his property. They also went after his adult daughter, who had been in a terrible automobile accident and got a large settlement. They tried to seize that too. These prosecutors have no sense of proportion. There’s this self-righteousness that’s incomprehensible to me.”

That being said, Douglas does not foresee the kind of major attacks that occurred in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when the federal government went after dozens of adult companies.

“Nobody in the system wants it,” he explains. “FBI agents hate these kinds of cases. They’re embarrassed by them. They quite reasonably think that there are many more important things that they could and should be doing than sitting around watching dirty movies. At the end of the second Bush administration, they created an obscenity task force to focus on the internet. They handled only four cases — none on the internet. They couldn’t get a single assistant U.S. attorney to agree to be full-time assigned to the job. And that was back when the Justice Department was filled with people who had spent their career advocating for the prosecution of the adult industry.”

Looking ahead, Douglas is more worried about what calls “private-sector censors,” meaning newly empowered nonprofit groups like Exodus Cry and NCOSE.

“Those people have been around for a very, very long time, and now they have friends in the coming administration, so they’re going to be getting support resources to carry on their private censorship work,” he predicts. “They’re going to get a lot of help from the feds. In terms of potential litigation, that’s where the battles are going to be fought — and where business may be lost.

“Whether they call it ‘protecting the children’ or Making America Great Again, the bottom line is a war against human sexuality in every way that it manifests itself,” Douglas adds. “They fundraise off of that.”

Walters agrees that the industry could face significant headwinds, “should certain vocal special-interest groups seize the narrative and push their agenda.”

“It is not out of the realm of possibility that anti-porn legislation will be pursued by these groups and potentially adopted on a bipartisan basis,” he cautions. “If that happens, our firm, along with free speech allies like the FSC, FIRE, EFF, CDT and others, will be positioned to push back.”

Addressing the same scenario, Stabile tells XBIZ, “I don’t want to give anyone a playbook by getting into specifics, but FSC has spent the weeks since the election gaming out potential threats, likely targets and gauging our ability to respond. In the coming weeks and months, we’ll be engaging platforms and workers directly on these issues, so people should stay tuned and get involved.”

A Receptive Audience for Anti-Porn Crusaders

The media tends to spotlight Trump personally. So do both his supporters and detractors. Yet when it comes to anticipating potential challenges to the adult industry, focusing too much on how Trump himself feels about the subject may be a mistake, says FSC Executive Director Alison Boden.

In her view, the key players to keep an eye on are staffers and pro-censorship zealots in Congress, some of them working their way up the leadership ranks.

“Make no mistake: people who are the most motivated to harm our industry are part of the MAGA movement,” she warns. “And they now have the power to enact agendas that they did in the past, including attacking our industry.

Stabile sees several anti-porn Trump appointees and their congressional and judicial allies as an existential threat.

Speaking to fellow industry stakeholders, he warned, “These people absolutely do not believe in your right to exist. They think you are a social cancer. They are already blaming you for falling birth rates and mental health crises and trafficking — and, guaranteed, they’re coming for you.”

Boden observes, “I don’t think you have to look much further than Russ ‘Through the Back Door’ Vought. That man is going to be the gatekeeper of appropriations, and has a lot of influence in how policies are carried out and what priorities are. Point blank, he’s made it clear that one of his priorities is destroying adult entertainment. Does that mean that they’re going to ban porn outright? Probably not — but they don’t have to, if they can pass laws that simply make it impossible to operate.”

Boden points to a raft of such “stealth” bills floated by Capitol Hill’s top proponent of anti-porn censorship, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah — especially one that would require every website that hosts adult material to have all model releases approved by the attorney general.

“Every creator would have to cover every single sex act that happened in a shoot,” she explains. “Cover where every piece of that content can be posted, and for how long. It would allow consent to be withdrawn at any time. You may think, ‘That’s not commercially viable,’ and it isn’t. Mike Lee knows it, and that’s precisely why he drafted it that way.”

Boden also thinks the new Congress is likely to ramp up efforts to change or repeal Section 230.

“That would cause a lot of chaos for us, and I think that it would cause a further crackdown on sexual content,” she predicts. “Social media platforms cannot and don’t want to take the risk of civil lawsuits. If there was a carve-out of Section 230 for ‘obscenity,’ the same way that FOSTA/SESTA carved out ‘human trafficking,’ that would have serious implications — and not only for tube sites or other user-generated content sites. Obscenity is a RICO offense, so one piece of obscene content on your website could mean everyone associated with that company gets their house forfeited to the government in a wide-ranging RICO prosecution. This would be incredibly disruptive and dangerous.”

Walters calls the ongoing debate over reforming or repealing Section 230 “one of the most important issues at stake in the near future.” He sees attempts to tinker with Section 230 protections as dangerous, but remains hopeful that both the new administration and Congress “learn from the disastrous mistake made by passage of FOSTA, and resist the temptation to indirectly censor speech by removing Section 230 protections.”

“If new Section 230 carve-outs are created, we will need to fall back on the First Amendment to protect online intermediaries from liability,” Walters says.

Silverstein agrees that the Republican majority in both chambers, newly packed with MAGA die-hards and avowed culture warriors, pose a serious concern.

“Unfortunately, the anti-porn crusaders will have access to a larger audience through them,” he notes. However, he is not convinced that this change will result in substantial legislation, due to the checks and balances of the protracted, bicameral federal lawmaking process.

Walters concurs, noting that the Republicans’ razor-thin majority could make passage of any controversial legislation difficult.

“However, as we’ve seen in the past, legislation marketed as protective of children or trafficking victims is hard to oppose for lawmakers of either party,” he tells XBIZ.

Walters thinks it likely that bills with the potential to be used against adult industry stakeholders — such as the EARN IT Act, KOSA and the PROTECT Act — will be reintroduced. In addition, he says, industry attorneys are “on the watch” for attempts to use existing laws such as FOSTA, money laundering statutes, the Travel Act or racketeering prohibitions to threaten or prosecute adult companies.

He recommends that industry stakeholders “follow any developments closely and make their voices heard.”

A Tidal Effect on State Efforts

Exactly how Republican domination of the federal government will impact the adult industry remains at present a matter for speculation, but there is nothing purely conjectural about the ongoing, coordinated multifront campaign against the adult industry being conducted around the country at the state level. Legislation in multiple states has already forced some high-profile online porn companies — most visibly Pornhub — to shutter operations in those states under threat of liability connected to age verification practices.

“The states are the bigger concern, currently, and that will likely remain the case in the short term,” Walters confirms. “Age verification laws have created mass chaos for adult website operators, as they try to navigate the hodgepodge of differing and sometimes inconsistent state laws.”

The state and federal arenas are not mutually exclusive, however. Stabile cautions that the federal swing to the right could have a tidal effect on state efforts.

“During more progressive administrations, anti-porn initiatives often drop off because there’s a perceived lack of institutional support at the federal level,” he explains. “But these same people can feel emboldened when it’s clear, as I think it is now, that an attack on adult will be backed up. People like Russ Vought and J.D. Vance have openly called for bans on adult content. This is no longer a fringe element on the right.”

While religious conservative groups and sympathetic legislators have been fighting this battle state by state, many industry stakeholders are hoping the Supreme Court will stop or even reverse the recent wave of state age verification laws when it rules in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, the case challenging Texas’ controversial AV law.

Silverstein calls the upcoming SCOTUS decision “by far one of the biggest legal events that the adult industry has ever seen” and predicts that its ramifications will be felt across the entire industry.

Walters expects the case to be “critical in determining whether these laws are constitutional and what legal test they must satisfy to pass constitutional muster.” He remains hopeful that SCOTUS will render a decision that allows only for federal, rather than state, regulation of online activity under the Supremacy Clause.

“Then we can focus on ensuring any new federal law complies with the U.S. Constitution,” he adds.

Oral arguments before the Supreme Court in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton are scheduled for Jan. 15.

Dark Clouds, Silver Linings

In the meantime, concern about the near future abounds.

Silverstein reports that since the November election, his practice has seen a substantial increase in clients wanting full legal compliance reviews of their businesses.

“Many have expressed concerns about potential new criminal legislation relating to content creation and distribution,” he says.

One already observable phenomenon is a noticeable chilling effect in some industry stakeholders’ willingness to express their opinions on the record about the upcoming administration.

“I’d rather not comment about politics at this time,” was the reply to a request for comment from a notable industry figure who had previously been open about their opinions on legal and policy developments.

Boden admits, “Our industry’s approach to dealing with politics is generally to keep our head down and hope not to be noticed and singled out. I think that’s certainly been the case since the election, perhaps even more so.”

Boden underscores that in the current environment, with adult companies concerned about being singled out, FSC’s work is more important than ever.

“Our job is to put our head out and represent everyone else to the government, in the media, in public, so that no individual company has that burden by themselves,” she says. “Companies that are concerned should absolutely get more involved with FSC, because we are your advocate.”

Stabile emphasizes unity above all.

“What’s important now is that we stick together,” he urges. “FSC was forged in the first of the first Bush prosecutions, when the DOJ was targeting individual companies and stacking charges until it got so overwhelming, so expensive, that companies took a plea deal. The way we’ve gotten through these challenges before, whether it was the obscenity busts, 2257 raids or the current age verification battle, is by maintaining a common defense.

“They want us divided,” Stabile says. “They want everyone for themselves, because they’re stronger that way. If we’re going to survive, we need to share resources and strategy. We need to stand firm.”

Yet Boden also notes that, in private conversations with important industry stakeholders and FSC members who support Trump, there is general consensus that his tax breaks will be ultimately good for business, and that Trump will be no worse for the industry than Harris would have been.

Boden points to at least one potential silver lining, involving financial discrimination against adult businesses and workers. She notes that one of the last things the Trump administration did before leaving office in 2021 was finalize the Fair Access to Banking rule in the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.

“It essentially would have required banks to stop de-risking whole industries and make individualized risk decisions about every customer,” she explains. “Then Biden came in and immediately reversed it, because Democrats wanted to have that weapon against, say, gun manufacturers — which is incredibly short-sighted, because it also could be used against, for example, Planned Parenthood.

“In general, Republicans tend to take the attitude that a legal business should have access to banking, period,” Boden adds. “So if they prioritize a hands-off regulatory approach, this may benefit adult businesses.”

Silverstein also cites banking discrimination, telling XBIZ he is less worried about the Trump administration than about the tremendous amount of rule tightening and enforcement the adult industry has seen under the Biden administration.

“The number of platforms that have lost the ability to process credit cards or even hold a bank account has reached epidemic levels,” he points out.

Walters also puts the view from early 2025 in perspective by pointing out that the industry should be watchful however the political winds blow.

“There is no shortage of free speech violations regardless of who is in power,” he tells XBIZ. “Having fought these battles for over 35 years, we are ready for whatever they throw at us, in order to protect the First Amendment.”

Byborg Acquires Gamma Entertainment

Byborg Acquires Gamma Entertainment

MONTREAL — Luxembourg-based Byborg Enterprises SA has acquired 100% of Canadian adult conglomerate Gamma Entertainment.

“Gamma Entertainment is known for managing some of the most iconic brands in the adult industry, including Adult Time, the premium subscription service that offers a personalized content experience for its viewers,” said a Byborg rep. “This acquisition will enable Byborg to expand its network of industry leading platforms. The two companies share the same values and vision for the future, including a commitment to compliance and a shared desire to make the industry safer for both creators and consumers.”

Byborg, the parent company of LiveJasmin, announced that Gamma management will remain in place, with the exception of company founder and President Karl Bernard, who will step down.

“I am excited to announce the acquisition of our company by the prestigious Byborg group,” Bernard said. “Leading this company has been an extraordinary journey, and I am deeply grateful to our incredible team for their dedication and the remarkable achievements we have accomplished together. As I prepare to step down, I do so with great confidence in Byborg’s leadership. Our shared values and vision for the future set the stage for even greater success in the years ahead.”

Added Byborg co-founder Karoly Papp, “We are thrilled to welcome Gamma Entertainment into the Byborg Network. Their creativity and production capabilities perfectly align with our goal of delivering top-tier experiences to our customers. The synergies between our brands open up exciting possibilities for collaboration, which will drive growth and elevate our platforms to new heights.”

For more information, visit ByborgEnterprises.com.

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Adult Creative Debuts ‘Pornful’ Website Management Platform

Adult Creative Debuts 'Pornful' Website Management Platform

LOS ANGELES — Web design and marketing firm Adult Creative has launched its new Pornful website management platform.

The Pornful platform provides tools to attract members and showcase content, including customisable category pages, intuitive admin panels and membership management tools, among other features.

“We created Pornful with one goal — to give studios a professional-grade platform that’s easy to use and packed with features that matter,” said Adult Creative Managing Director Matt Black.

“It’s one of the best-looking templates on the market today, but more importantly, it’s a complete toolkit for studios looking to thrive in today’s competitive market.”

For more information, visit AdultCreative.com.

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