Pornhub: Canadian MPs Finally Invite Sex Worker Advocates

OTTAWA, Canada — Late last Friday, the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics of Canada’s House of Commons finally caved in to public concerns about bias and invited three representatives from sex worker advocacy groups to ongoing hearings today targeting MindGeek and Pornhub.

After refusing to hear as expert witnesses from anyone but representatives of religiously-inspired U.S.-based organizations, U.S.-based liability lawyers, Canadian law enforcement and Canadian sex work abolitionists, chairman MP Chris Warkentin (Conservative, Alberta) welcomed Jennifer Clamen from the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform; Sandra Wesley, executive director of Stella; and Melissa Lukings, a University of New Brunswick legal scholar and sex worker.

After Lukings introduced herself, Jennifer Clamen delivered a presentation that was a tour-de-force performance of sex work advocacy that laid waste to several weeks of the committee’s relentless platforming of ideologues whose stated goal is to “abolish pornography” and liability lawyers looking to create another FOSTA-SESTA situation north of the border, in spite of Section 230 protections, in the name of “saving children.”

Clamen’s presentation, focused on years of experience advocating for sex worker rights and demonstrable harm reduction, was followed by Sandra Wesley, from Quebec-based sex worker rights group Stella, who provided necessary context for organizations like NCOSE and Exodus Cry and debunked the supposed “authority” of New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof.

Unlike previous witnesses, today’s speakers could boast of personal experience as sex workers, as advocates and even, in the case of Lukins, about tech law and cybersecurity.

The Crucial Need for ‘Meaningful Consultations’ with Sex Workers

Jennifer Clamen delivered her statements methodically, demonstrating her commitment and expertise, and took the committee to task for the biased tenor of its previous hearings, which XBIZ has been covering.

Clamen introduced herself as a representative of the Canadian Alliance for Sex Work Law Reform, an alliance of 25 sex worker rights groups, with a majority led by sex workers working in the sex industry, created in 2012.

The group came together, Clamen explained, precisely for occasions such as these hearings, “as a means to build respect and legitimacy” and “get sex worker voices to parliament.”

The alliance, she told the MPS, has as its mission “building respect and legitimacy for the voices of sex workers and the experiences of sex workers, where we are otherwise ignored and not taken seriously” and “as a mechanism for sex workers to get involved in the policies and practices that affect our everyday lives.”

Clamen told the committee that her focus was to get the parliamentarians to agree on “meaningful consultations” with sex workers, “on the ways and the duty of parliamentarians to take direction and leadership from sex workers, who are really best placed to speak to any policy or practice that may regulate online sex work and online porn.”

Since the hearings supposedly are meant to address exploitation, Clamen acknowledged that it was “important to remain really critical of abusive and exploitative practices,” and noted collective groups where “sex workers have organized against abuse and violence for 50 years.”

“Sex workers are mitigating violence all of the time in the context of criminalization and stigma against the industry,” she added.

‘A Hostile Setting’

And then Clamen told the representatives what they have been doing wrong. “We [were] invited last-minute on a Friday evening for a meeting on Monday morning,” she accurately stated.

Sex workers, she said, were not consulted and were not centered in the debate.

Moreover, she told MP Chris Warkentin — who, last week, had shut down a question about inviting sex workers by claiming the speaker “was out of time” — “your committee has promoted a set of values that has been extremely damaging for sex workers to watch across the country and across North America.”

“Alliance member groups and individuals in both countries have been pushing for a seat at this table since Day One of these hearings,” Clamen told Warkentin, who with fellow Alberta Conservative and religious anti-porn groups mouthpiece Arnold Viersen has been dictating the tone of the proceedings.

Clamen accurately told the MPs that since “Day One” they had framed the issue “as one of exploitation.”

“That has been really clear and really harmful,” she added, with sex workers not welcome at the table and being told this committee “was not for us.”

As Clamen put it, the committee hearings had become “what we consider a hostile setting.”

Dangerous Platforming of Ideologues

Instead, Clamen proposed that the committee should have started with “meaningful consultations,” a concept that she summarized as “treating sex workers like experts on the impacts of sex worker-related laws.”

Instead of lawyers and academics — and, she added about the likes of Exodus Cry’s Laila Mickelwait, “in the case of this committee, people who don’t work in the sex industry” — the committee should have sought the perspective of “sex workers who are currently working and are most affected.”

She spoke about the anger of sex worker advocates when they realized who the committee was platforming as “an expert in sex work issues.”

“Exodus Cry?” she said, or the Canadian federal police? “Hard ‘no!’ How can any of these people explain to you how exploitation happens? They’re merely providing an ideological perspective.”

Sex workers, she continued, were not asked who their allies and organizations are. Even so, they provided “lists and lists of people.”

“And they’ve been ignored,” she said.

Technical Difficulties and Ironies

Clamen also said she wanted this hearing to serve “as an invitation to open and change” and “center sex workers,” particularly “more marginalized sex workers.”

“No other industry would create regulation without the input of the workers,” she said. “Any approach that fails to consider the needs of sex workers, will harm sex workers — I promise you.”

As Clamen’s eloquent plea continued, she told the committee that “sex workers are systematically ignored in policy that impacts on our lives” and that the committee “needs a dose of neutrality, and a dose of evidence” and “not ideology” and that “stigma is deep and pervasive. And it results in bad policy.”

At that point, something strange happened. One of the francophone MPs started complaining that she hadn’t heard much of what Clamen had said due to various technical difficulties.

Warkentin looked confused and soon everyone claimed that they couldn’t hear Clamen properly due to either “static” or “problems with the simultaneous translation.”

After a few minutes of confusion that derailed any point Clamen might have been making, and which could be heard perfectly on the online feed, the sex worker rights advocate smiled.

“The irony of you saying you can’t hear me when I’m talking about sex workers not being heard is not lost,” she told the MPs. “Hopefully, that’ll give you a little smile for the day.”

Clamen only had time for a couple of other informed points. She stated that conflating the issue of “youth exploitation” with claims about all adult content “makes it harder to address actual violence in the industry.”

Moreover, she concluded, facing the MPS, “targeting internet sex work during a pandemic is such a violent and threatening move on your part.”

Dehumanizing Sex Workers

Sandra Wesley, executive director of Stella, l’amie de Maimie (founded in 1995), spoke next. She said she had planned to testify in French but since there were issues with the translation, she would do it in English.

Wesley delivered an impassioned rebuke of the committee, and their guiding lights — the campaigns by NCOSE and Exodus Cry to destroy Pornhub, and their ally Nicholas Kristof’s New York Times editorials.

“This committee’s hostility towards sex workers will contribute to violence against us,” Wesley accused. “The actions, so far, of this committee, have been hostile and have contributed to harming sex workers.”

“This is the level of seriousness,” she stressed. “Every demeaning thing, every dehumanizing thing is heard loud and clear by every aggressor, abuser and exploiter out there.”

Wesley connected the motivations of the Atlanta shooter to the committee’s attitude during the hearings.

If the MPs keep platforming people who “want to eradicate us,” Wesley told them, “people take that in their own hands.”

Wesley said she had “no opinion on any specific company, no third party,” referring to MindGeek and Pornhub. But they delivered technical services that sometimes were used by her sex worker constituents.

Kristof: An ‘Exploitative’ Journalist

“I urge you in your duties as members of parliament,” Wesley said, “to take a step back and to look in an objective and non-ideological manner at the situation and what led you to decide to spend so much time on a followup of a New York Times article which was written by a journalist with a very long history of exploitative reporting, of sensational reporting, not just about sex work but about sexual violence in general.

“This particular reporter,” she said about Kristof, “has been called out in the past for writing an entirely fabricated story about [sound static] organization which raised a lot of money for this completely fake organization.”

Wesley accused Kristof of using his position “to push an anti-sex work ideology.”

Then, paralleling XBIZ’s January 2021 feature on “The New War on Porn,” Wesley entered into the Canadian parliament record that NCOSE is “a recent rebranding of a group known as Morality in Media, founded specifically to eradicate all erotica literature from bookstores because it went again their Christian values.”

Morality in Media, she illustrated, is famous for “boycotting Disney, wanting to eradicate the National Endowment for the Arts, boycotting Madonna.”

“What they want,” she added, “is the eradication of all content from the internet and society that does not meet their view of heterosexual, Christian monogamous relationships.”

Seeing that this wasn’t getting them anywhere, Wesley continued, they rebranded to emphasize panic-triggering notions like “sexual exploitation” and “human trafficking.”

Exodus Cry and SWERFs

She also spoke of Exodus Cry’s rebranding to conceal “fundamentally religious views with very violent views towards specifically the LGBTQ+ community. Their goal is to also eradicate all sex that doesn’t meet their Christian standard. They’re violently anti-gay, violently anti-trans and violently agains sex workers. They despise us and want to eliminate us.”

“Starting an inquiry based on their assessment of the problem will not lead,” to anything positive for the community, she added. “Their only goal is to eradicate pornography.”

Wesley also denounced SWERFs and TERFs, “groups which brand themselves as feminist, based on their own view of feminism,” and which are “increasingly marginalized and excluded from mainstream feminism.”

Speaking to progressive MPs, Wesley asked for “our allies who support sex worker rights to not forget what we’ve learned over the years” whenever they happen to talk about pornography.”

Mr. Viersen’s Intervention

After these two informative presentations, Warkentin recognized his ally Arnold Viersen.

Viersen completely ignored the witnesses and spent all his time adding the most recent Nicholas Kristof article attacking adult platforms (in last week’s case, focused on XVideos) and reading pseudonymous testimonials about illegal videos he had received in his inbox.

He finished with a pointed, “and that’s what this study is about,” tacitly invalidating the three witnesses.

Liberal MP Patricia Lattanzio chastised Viersen about ignoring the witnesses and told the advocates to “know you are all very much welcome at this table.”

“I feel bad that the two witnesses did not get an opportunity to respond to Mr. Viersen’s intervention,” Lattanzi added, ceding the floor to Jennifer Cleman, who used her time to make an example of what Viersen had just done.

“Thank you for your recognition that we actually said something today,” she told Lattanzi.

“Mr. Viersen’s intervention was the reason why we don’t want to come to committees like this and at the same time we are compelled to,” she added.

Viersen, she said, “showed no interest in anything we said, but completely [disregarded] all our testimony and presentation by holding Nicholas Kristof as some ‘god’ and conflating all of the issues.”

This committee, she concluded, “is, in large part, failing to ask the right questions.”

To watch the entire hearing, click here.

Jane Boon to Talk Sex, Kink in Pop Culture on #SexTalkTuesday

Jane Boon to Talk Sex, Kink in Pop Culture on #SexTalkTuesday

LOS ANGELES — #SexTalkTuesday has announced that “Edge Play” author Jane Boon will serve as special guest moderator for tomorrow’s edition of the Twitter-based chat show at 5 p.m. (PDT) which will focus on the topic of sex and kink in popular culture.

“We are beyond thrilled to have Jane return to #SexTalkTuesday. This is such a timely topic, as the themes of sex work and kink increasingly appear in our cultural zeitgeist,” said Angie Rowntree, producer of #SexTalkTuesday and Sssh.com founder.

Boon’s “Edge Play” is described as “where ‘The Big Short’ meets ’50 Shades of Grey,'” noted a rep. “Before diving into writing erotica, Jane studied technology and policy at MIT, and later received a Ph.D. in industrial engineering. Jane has also written for publications like The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg Businessweek, Time.com, McSweeneys.net and TravelandLeisure.com.”

Our first exposure to sexual content is often through popular culture, said Boon.

“I remember the first time I saw a Dominatrix on television, for instance. I was transfixed by her confidence and her clothes. A few years ago, I had the opportunity to play a Dominatrix on the Fox television show ‘Gotham,’ and the experience came full circle. I look forward to discussing those sizzling pop culture moments that inspire and intrigue.”

Rowntree added that many Sssh.com and #SexTalkTuesday participants “frequently bring up both the positive and negative portrayals of sex and the sex industry that they notice, so this segment will undoubtedly resonate with both fans and content creators.”

To take part in Tuesday’s chat, follow the #SexTalkTuesday hashtag. Visit the show online and on Twitter for the latest updates.

Follow Jane Boon on Twitter for updates.

Find Sssh.com on Twitter and XBIZ.tv and direct inquiries to Rowntree at editor@sssh.com.

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3rd GirlsDoPorn Employee Pleads Guilty in Federal Case

3rd GirlsDoPorn Employee Pleads Guilty in Federal Case

SAN DIEGO — A third former GirlsDoPorn (GDP) employee charged by federal authorities with sex trafficking conspiracy pled guilty on Friday, according to a local San Diego news report.

Valorie Moser, identified by NBC San Diego as “a bookkeeper” for the site owned by fugitive Michael Pratt, worked for GDP from 2015 to 2018.

According to the news report, Moser “served a number of administrative functions, including providing travel arrangements and transportation for women arriving in San Diego to appear in GirlsDoPorn videos.”

“Moser’s plea to a conspiracy charge came with admissions that she was aware the women were being falsely assured by the website’s operators that the videos would not be uploaded onto the internet and that they would only be distributed to private customers,” NBC San Diego reported.

According to the federal prosecutors who negotiated Moser’s plea, she testified that “she was told by her co-defendants to block any calls from the women” attempting to get their videos removed from the site.

As XBIZ reported, male talent and videographer Ruben Andre “Dre” Garcia — who has also been accused of rape by some of the models — and cameraman Theodore “Teddy” Gyi, who is presumed to have been cooperating with authorities before the indictments were unsealed, have also pleaded guilty and await sentencing.

New Zealand native and mastermind of the operation Michael Pratt remains a fugitive, with a $10,000 reward offered for information that could lead to his arrest.

Moser is due to be sentenced July 2.

For XBIZ’s full coverage of the GDP case, click here.

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Camgirl ‘Zuarash’ to Anchor Live CamSoda Show Tonight

LOS ANGELES — The camgirl known as “Zuarash” will headline a live CamSoda show tonight at 7 p.m. (PDT).

“We’re ecstatic to have Zuarash perform her first ever cam show on CamSoda tonight! We’re especially excited for her legion of fans to tune in and get to know her better,” CamSoda VP Daryn Parker said.

Parker invited Zuarash’s fans to interact with her during a live video chat and tip her with tokens. Newcomers who sign up before the livestream will receive 50 free tokens to use on the platform during live broadcasts.

The performer enthused about her forthcoming show. “Make sure you tune in tonight to see me live in action,” she said.

Visit CamSoda.com for additional information and follow the platform on Twitter.

Find Zuarash online and on Instagram.

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Marica Hase, Avery Black Star in New VR Fantasy From SexLikeReal

LOS ANGELES – SexLikeReal.com has released a new VR fantasy, starring Marica Hase and Avery Black, from director Alex Nash and Evan Redstar as director of photography.

As they don revealing outfits, the starlets are “ready to indulge the viewer in some fetishistic fun, but, just when the spectator thought it couldn’t get any saucier, the ladies reveal that they’ve added a naughty sci-fi element to the romp: the ability to stop time and freeze either or both of these foxes while the viewer has his way with them,” explained a rep. “The deepest of desires are explored as Hase and Black use every salacious trick in their considerable sexual repertoire to show their lover the time of his life.”

The fantasy was shot in 6K with a 200-degree FOV and can be found at SexLikeReal.com.

“I’m so glad we had the opportunity to bring Avery and Marica together for this preposterously fun fetish scene,” said Nash. “These starlets are not only strikingly beautiful, but they also have an amazing onscreen chemistry and share a sense of impish fun. Their performance is incredibly natural and unrestrained, and they really embrace the quasi-taboo subject matter. Together, these ladies deliver a deliciously satisfying sensual experience that their fans will go crazy for.”

Follow SexLikeReal, Marica Hase and Avery Black on Twitter for updates.

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Alt Erotic Director Ivan Launches GoFundMe for Model Misha Montana

LOS ANGELES — According to director Ivan, Alt Erotic model Misha Montana has suffered a stroke and a GoFundMe has been created to help with medical bills.

Last Thursday, according to Ivan, Montana “woke up in a panic. She immediately noticed something was wrong when she was unable to formulate words and realized half of her face and arm had gone numb and lost all sensation. To add to the horror of an already frightening scenario, Misha was almost two hours away from a hospital. She jumped into her SUV and headed down the mountain with one operable arm and not knowing if she would make it in time to save her life.”

“Imagine losing sensation in half your body, driving yourself to an emergency room and being completely overwhelmed by panicking thoughts, “What is going on? How will this impact my life and my family? How do I recoup from this? Will I survive this? Can I make it to the hospital in time?” the Alt Erotic director continued.

When Montana finally arrived to the hospital, Ivan said, “it was determined that she had suffered a stroke. Complications from blood clots and an undiagnosed heart condition put the starlet in serious danger, and she is lucky and thankful to have lived through a situation that is fatal to many.”

‘A Positive Outlook’

“Misha is one of the strongest people I know,” he added. “She is also a grounded well adjusted intelligent woman who understands the aspects of humanity in sharing and helping others. This is not a set back for this fantastic lady, this in another opportunity for her to show the world her human side as well as the strength of a positive mindset.”

Montana added that this “has been such an emotional and scary time in my life. I have been working extremely hard on building my brand and producing unique, authentic content. While this health situation tests my limits and abilities, it doesn’t define or break me. If anything, I’d like to use this moment as an opportunity of optimism, strength, positivity and perseverance. It’s a pivot to keep creating and sharing my story.”

“I have a positive outlook about making a comeback to porn after a stroke, I’m determined to. I’ll just get better at left-handed, hand jobs,” she added.

To donate to Misha Montana’s recovery fund, visit GoFund.me.

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Satisfyer Joins Forces With Berlinable for Erotic Stories Contest

Satisfyer Joins Forces With Berlinable for Erotic Stories Contest

BERLIN — Satisfyer is inviting its U.K. product users to share their fantasies involving the Satisfyer Connect app for a chance to win prizes as part of a contest being held in partnership with erotica platform Berlinable.

From April 19 to May 2, contestants can submit an erotic short inspired by the use of Satisfyer’s app and be entered to win prizes. The first 100 participants will receive a discount voucher in addition to being put into the running to win a Satisfyer Sexy Secret Layon vibrator or Satisfyer Royal One, as well as free access to the Berlinable platform for a year.

Additionally, the best submissions will be published online as well as will be made available as an audio story.

Berlinable is billed as the world’s first platform for exclusive erotic art, audio and e-books. Founded in Berlin, Berlinable features 70 indie authors and 40 photographers from 20 countries.

For more information about the contest, click here.

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Section 230: Sex Workers, Advocates Warn Against Sen. Warner’s SAFE TECH Bill

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Adult performers and other sex workers are warning against a new legislative attempt to expand on the harms to the community effected by FOSTA-SESTA by further eroding Section 230 protections.

In a piece published today by Vice’s Motherboard vertical, sex worker groups spoke out against the Safeguarding Against Fraud, Exploitation, Threats, Extremism, and Consumer Harms Act — or SAFE TECH Act.

The bill was re-introduced to the Senate in February by Democratic Senator Mark Warner (Virginia) and co-sponsored by Senators Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii) and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn).

“Supporters of the SAFE TECH Act want to further limit the scope of Section 230, making companies responsible for policing user speech on online platforms,” explains Vice’s Lauren Crosby Medlicott in the article, quoting a March interview with Warner when he was promoting the bill.

“What I don’t want is to have these giant providers continue to use Section 230 as this immunity, a kind of ‘get-out-of-jail-free’ card,” Warner said.

However, Medlicott continues, “sex workers and free speech advocates warn that eliminating these liability protections means greater censorship of online platforms as companies try to reduce the risk of landing in legal trouble as a result of third-party user content.”

A Bill That Would ‘Inevitably Harm’ Marginalized Groups

“The SAFE TECH Act would mean I can’t afford to run my own website and will lose income from many other sites,” said performer and activist Mary Moody. “It will impact any social media platforms I use for marketing.”

Other voices in the sex work community also spoke to Vice about their concerns.

Jason Kelley, a digital strategist at digital rights advocacy group Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), explained that Section 230 “underpins much of the internet, offering legal protections for companies, news organizations, creators of all stripes, political activists, nonprofits, libraries, educators, governments and regular users.”

”Without it, any online service that did continue to exist would more than likely opt for censoring more user-generated content — and that would inevitably harm marginalized groups more than others,” Kelley added.

Sex workers, Medlicott wrote, “would be one of those marginalized groups affected by SAFE TECH, and many fear that their work and safety will be compromised if the bill passes.”

SAFE TECH’s Downstream Effect

Blair Hopkins, deputy director of sex worker advocacy group SWOP Behind Bars, told Vice she’s  dreading the “inevitable” Section 230 reform.

“Section 230 protects sex workers in a kind of ancillary way because it allows them to conduct their business on platforms without interruption from the platforms,” she added, expressing concern that SAFE TECH will have “a downstream effect of unintended consequences.” 

According to Medlicott, “while FOSTA was touted as a way to curb human trafficking by creating liability for platforms that facilitated trafficking, it simply didn’t work. In fact, the increased vulnerabilities of sex workers resulting from FOSTA, combined with the new difficulties police had tracking traffickers, actually meant that FOSTA increased cases of human trafficking.”

To read “Sex Workers Explain Why the SAFE TECH Act Will Break the Internet,” visit Vice.com.

Main Image: Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.).

Judge Lambasts Plaintiff’s Memos in ‘Martha’s Vineyard Background Art’ Case

BOSTON — A federal judge rejected yesterday several memos filed by the counsel of the Martha’s Vineyard landlord who is suing Mile High Media and several associates for a 2014 incident involving artwork in her rental property, which she claimed could be seen onscreen in several adult videos.

In an unusually stern ruling, U.S. District Judge Patti B. Saris lambasted three memos filed by attorney John A. Taylor, representing landlord Leah Bassett, which were filed late, deemed too long and filled with “insulting or pejorative” language towards Mile High and the other defendants.

The filings, according to a report by legal news site Law360, “focused in part on Leah Bassett’s efforts to learn how much Mile High Distribution Inc. made in profits from films shot at her home in Aquinnah, Massachusetts.”

‘Emotional Distress’ and Copyright Issues

As XBIZ has reported, in her original 2018 complaint, Bassett — a sometime artist whose paintings decorated her Martha’s Vineyard rental property — had named now-retired producer and director Nica Noelle and her former collaborator, Joshua Darling; the distributor of their content, Mile High; and others as defendants, accusing them in a civil lawsuit of a laundry list of violations against herself (such as fraud and emotional distress), her property and her copyrighted art.

In May 2020, Judge Saris granted Mile High and the other co-defendants their motion to dismiss counts I (Breach of Contract), II (Trespass), III (Negligence), VI (Civil Fraud), X (Civil RICO) and XI (Defamation).

Bassett was allowed to continue the lawsuit on counts IV (Chapter 93A), V (Civil Conspiracy), VII (Infliction of Emotional and Mental Distress) and VIII (Interference with Contractual Relations).

The trial is scheduled for August, 2021, after an August 2020 ruling that allowed Bassett to claim copyright on the artworks.

‘Vexatious and Inappropriate’

Judge Saris gave Bassett one week to cut her 53-page motions down to the 20-page filing limit, Law 360 reported, and “excise their ‘vexatious and inappropriate’ language. Mile High and the other defendants get two weeks to respond, after which Judge Saris said she would decide whether to entertain the motions.”

Bassett’s attorney told Law360 “he will apologize to the court for the filing length oversight,” and added that he “wasn’t certain what specific language in the memos the court took issue with.”

Magic Silk, Male Power Tout Lively SPAM Social Media Takeover

LOS ANGELES — Magic Silk and Male Power are touting a successful SPAM (Sex Professionals and Manufacturers) Facebook takeover last month which included live chat meet-and-greets, games, giveaways and retailer training about the company’s product lines.

“The social network got a lot more sociable recently,” a rep enthused. “The combined companies dominated the SPAM site with images of their bestselling products, a behind-the-scenes look at the headquarters of the intimate apparel giant and a series of casual interviews with their amazing staff members.”

Magic Silk/Male Power is the first lingerie company to hold the spotlight for a SPAM takeover.

“For five successive days, from March 8-12, visitors to the page were given an enlightening and sometimes lighthearted close view of this industry leader. Video postings were created by their talented graphics department and presented a brief history of Magic Silk and Male Power prior to and following their merger,” the rep said.

Magic Silk

“Included were rare photos of Male Power Founder Sam Baker dating back to the 1970s, and images of Magic Silk’s humble beginnings in the basement of President Jeffrey Baker’s home,” continued the rep. “Members of the Male Power team — Ron, MaryBeth and Miss Liz — and the Magic Silk team, including Dina, Dave, and Lori, spoke about their jobs, their interests and their families.”

The company’s social media takeover launched, noted the rep, with “a Facebook live chat conducted by Barbara, the ‘smile behind the style’ of Exposed lingerie, and a live staff meet-and-greet including Jeff Baker himself, the ‘man behind the Magic.’ Taking a page from Oprah, Jeff rewarded all of the event participants with free samples of their best selling Bamboo garments.”

A “provocative pop quiz,” called “Expose the Power,” was the first game of the week.

“Viewers really knew their sexy stuff because three winners emerged in less than five minutes,” the rep said. “The day ended with ‘Lingerie Lingo and Jockstrap Jabber,’ a live presentation by Blanca, the company’s field sales and training representative, who helped organize and oversee the entire event. She conveyed basic but essential information about lingerie and intimate apparel.”

The remainder of the week included demonstrations and instruction about the company’s various lines, including Exposed, Male Power, Sexy Time and Lust and top-selling collections such as Bamboo and the “extremely popular” Exposed Seamless garments.

Daily games, hosted by Blanca, included “Bondage Bingo,” “Jock Strap Jeopardy” and “Panty Raid Word Search.”

“The biggest challenge of the week was a Display Contest, where participants were encouraged to show their creativity,” the rep recalled, noting more than 45 prizes were ultimately handed out. “The two top prizes went to Anjanette from Enchantasys in Ramsey, Minnesota for her brick-and-mortar design; and Kriszy Nicole, CEO of NaughtyDreams.com, and half of the podcast duo Naughty Cherry, for her website layout.”

Baker offered “sincere thanks” to SPAM creator Megan Swartz for helping turn their weeklong company spotlight into “a total success.”

“It was a very exciting week, and created excellent opportunities for our valued customers and talented staff to get to know each other,” they added.

Swartz echoed that enthusiasm. “We had a wonderful week with Blanca learning all things Magic Silk and Male Power,” she said. “She invested so much time and effort and it was very much appreciated. A tremendous amount of planning goes into these takeovers, and we thank your entire team for keeping it fun and fast-moving.”

Visit Magic Silk and Male Power online and direct inquiries to info@magicsilk.com.

Magic Silk HQ