Kendra Sunderland Drops 2022 Calendar, Collectible Magazine via FanGear

Kendra Sunderland Drops 2022 Calendar, Collectible Magazine via FanGear

PHILADELPHIA — FanGear.vip has announced the launch of the new Kendra Sunderland 2022 “Lingerie Issue Calendar” along with her “Collector’s Edition SMD Magazine.”

The 2022 calendar is a 12×18 high-gloss issue and includes new and exclusive lingerie shots.

When asked about the experience, Sunderland said, “I’ve been working with Danny at FanGear for a long time. He built my websites and this is our third calendar and I would never let anyone else touch my web stuff.”

FanGear also announced that five new models have been added to its branded merch roster this week, including Tasha Reign, Sabrina Sidoti, Gemini Babe, Kara Leigh and Brazilian model Heloine Moreno.

“We’re ramping up for the holidays,” said a rep, “so we’re letting performers and models know that now is the time to sign on if they want to reach most shoppers.”

“Branded merch is great for gifting and makes unique and fun stocking stuffers,” the rep added.

For more information, visit FanGear.vip and follow the company on Twitter.

Related:  

Angel Youngs Is Hustler ‘Cover Honey’ for November

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Angel Youngs is a first-time “Cover Honey” for Hustler’s November issue with a 12-page centerfold spread.

The issue also features Mila Monet, Mina Moon, Jaye Summers and Agatha Vega; additionally, the “Hustler Classic” layout is 2007’s “She’s Gotta Have It” featuring Aria Giovanni and photographed by Holly Randall. Giovanni was Hustler’s 2000 “Beaver Hunt” grand prize winner.

Elsewhere, reporter Travis Kelly investigates the origins of the novel coronavirus and filmmaker and musician John Carpenter and his wife and longtime collaborator Sandy King Carpenter discuss the recently released feature film “Halloween Kills” and the comic book anthology “John Carpenter’s Tales for a HalloweeNight.”

“Finally, in a celebration of women who go au naturel in nature, Huslter revisits fan-favorite pictorials showcasing Blake Bartelli, Nova Lane, Deidre Holland, Rahyndee James and more,” noted a rep.

“In her publisher’s statement, Liz Flynt discusses President Biden’s handling of the Afghanistan withdrawal and makes the point that over 60% of Americans say the war was not worth the costs and the withdrawal was long overdue,” the rep said. “She further states that the rationale of ‘preventing terrorism’ by occupying a whole country is ludicrous and cites figures showing Afghanistan to be a long, profitable boondoggle for our military-industrial complex: ‘Eisenhower warned us about this complex and its ability to pervert our democracy for its own selfish interests.’ Flynt concludes that only by learning lessons from the past will we avoid future hopeless missions.”

The November issue of Hustler is available on newsstands and online; visit Hustler on Twitter.

Related:  

Concept to Consumer Collective Announces New Appointments

LOS ANGELES — The Concept to Consumer Collective (CtCC) and its sister company Wingpow International have announced several new appointments.

Paula O’Reilly, previously the global accounts manager at Wingpow, has moved to CtCC in the same position. “Her role will include client relations and project management. In addition, Paula will be supporting Gary Ayckbourn and Nina Saini with new business,” noted a rep.

Reach her directly at paula@ctoccollective.com.

CtCC has additionally announced that Saff Hewitt joined the team earlier this year in the position of senior graphic designer.

“Handling all design work from branding, product concept design and packaging design — and more — Saff has been sprinkling her creative magic with huge success and high client praise,” the rep said.

Another new hire is Tor Kajrys as accounts manager for Wingpow.

“She will be handling the day-to-day operations for manufacturing. Returning to the U.K., after five years in China, Tor brings with her extensive manufacturing and sourcing experience and is, conveniently, a Mandarin speaker,” noted the rep.

CtCC brings together “a team of industry professionals with established, successful businesses within the sexual wellbeing sphere worldwide. The company offers a unique strategic insight and global industry knowledge and in-house experts including services in branding, marketing, product and packaging design, engineering, logistics and fulfillment,” the rep explained.

“Through its sister company Wingpow, the company has its own manufacturing facility, which is managed through a U.K. team,” they continued. “By offering clients a fully integrated service, the company is in a globally unique position to seamlessly support clients at every step of the way.”

Visit CtoCCollective.com and Wingpow.com.

Related:  

Kentucky Judge Declares Porn Clips ‘More Distracting’ Than Other Visual Content

Kentucky Judge Declares Porn Clips 'More Distracting' Than Other Visual Content

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The legal status of porn videos as a specific kind of content has unexpectedly emerged as a side-issue during a Kentucky murder trial currently underway, with a judge declaring adult content to be more distracting than “a typical movie.”

On Christmas Eve 2018, Roger Burdette hit a police car with his MSD tanker truck, causing a crash and explosion that killed LMPD Detective Deidre Mengedoht in downtown Louisville.

“Prosecutors claim Burdette was watching pornography on his cell phone moments before the crash, and that he had drugs in his system that impaired his motor skills,” local station WDRB reported.

Burdette failed a field sobriety test and initially said that he had taken “non-narcotic prescription drugs.” Prosecutors charged him with murder and DUI.

Yesterday, Burdette’s defense asked Judge McKay Chauvin to “prohibit prosecutors from telling jurors that Burdette was watching pornography when the wreck occurred, arguing that there is a ‘social stigma’ associated with porn and the type of video Burdette was watching is unimportant,” WDRB reported.

“It doesn’t matter what type of video is being played,” Burdette’s attorney argued. “What matters is [the] distraction.”

The prosecutors, however, countered with the allegation that Burdette “specifically was looking for a certain porn video that he had watched before, and was not listening to dialogue, meaning he was more distracted,” according to WDRB.

The judge agreed, ruling pornography is “a visual medium” and would be “a greater distraction than a typical movie.”

The judge did not clarify what this notion may be based on, or how “pornography” would be defined as distinct from other forms of visual content or sexual expression.

Burdette’s trial continues this week.

Related:  

Washington Times’ Latest Anti-Porn Propaganda Piece Actually Written by Priest

WASHINGTON — The Washington Times published today an anti-porn propaganda piece titled “Former Porn Stars Recall Industry Abuses, Struggles” — quoting a handful of performers-turned-religious crusaders who have not been active in the industry for over a decade — without disclosing that the author is actually a Catholic priest.

Writer Sean Salai is only listed by the Washington Times as “the general assignment/culture reporter for The Washington Times” and “a former National desk intern and Metro clerk at The Washington Times, [who] also has served as a City Hall reporter at the Boca Raton News and as a special contributor at America Media.”

But even the most cursory online search will reveal that Sean Salai, S.J., is in fact a Jesuit priest who promotes his book “What Would Pope Francis Do” through a Facebook page where he describes himself as “a longtime Jesuit and journalist with America Media” and author of a book on “how to ‘go to the margins’ like Pope Francis and the saints who formed him, offering a devotional edition of ‘The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius’ to help.”

The Washington Times’ author page shows Salai wearing a suit and tie, in secularizing contrast to other videos readily available online, where he proudly dons full priestly garb.

The Washington Times — a conservative D.C. newspaper controlled by the family of Reverend Sun Myung Moon and a network of companies connected to the charismatic Korean evangelist’s Unification Church —  does not clarify Salai’s priestly status, or the ostensible religious motivation behind today’s anti-porn feature.

Four Marginal Performers-Turned-Religious Activists

Salai’s Washington Times article is built around the testimonies of four cis women — no male or trans performers are cited in this indictment of an entire industry — who have become religious anti-porn activists after short stints as performers going back to 1985.

The article leads with a woman who performed under the name “Elizabeth Rollings” for a few months between 2006-2007, when she performed in less than 30 BBW scenes according to IAFD records.

After leaving the industry, Rollings reverted to her legal name of Jan Villarubia and became active in the Christian ministry Pink Cross, part of the so-called “sex worker rescue” industry.

Father Salai describes Villarubia as “one of a growing number of sex-trade survivors calling for tighter consent and age verification policies in the porn industry — and urging Congress to get behind the bipartisan Stop Internet Sexual Exploitation Act [SISEA], introduced by Sens. Ben Sasse, Nebraska Republican, and Jeff Merkley, Oregon Democrat, in December.”

“The crazy thing is that I’ve been out of the industry since 2007 and adamantly fighting injustices in it since 2008,” Villarubia admits to the Jesuit journalist.

Anachronistic Testimonies of an Evolving industry

Father Salai then links her comments about what she claims to have experienced in the long-gone era immediately before the rise of the tube sites to “the National Center on Sexual Exploitation (NCOSE) last week [asking] credit card giants Visa and Discover to follow the lead of Mastercard in requiring porn websites to more strongly verify the ‘unambiguous’ consent and age of performers in their videos.

Father Salai quotes NCOSE’s CEO Dawn Hawkins, emphasizing the religiously inspired group’s supposedly “nonpartisan” status. NCOSE was started by some of Father Salai’s fellow clergy members in 1961, and was prominent as Morality in Media, before a rebranding in 2015 that concealed its religious roots.

Father Salai briefly quotes the Free Speech Coalition’s Mike Stabile and spokespersons for Pornhub and OnlyFans before turning again to the testimony of three additional marginal former performers. No active adult performer was interviewed by the Washington Times’ priest-writer.

Next was a pseudonymous (and uncheckable) source whom Father Salai calls “Mary” and who claims to be “an ex-performer in her 30s.”

“Mary” told Salai she had been “a Los Angeles-based porn actress from 2005 to 2006,” when she “performed in a series of increasingly violent porn shoots that wounded her emotionally and physically.”

“Mary,” Father Salai reports, “eventually left the industry, sobered up and now has a ‘normal’ job that she loves.”

Hashtag Celebrities

The last cited testimony is from someone named Cyntoia Brown-Long, who Father Salai identifies as “a bestselling author and former sex worker who became a social media celebrity under the ‘free Cyntoia’ hashtag in 2019” and “a 33-year-old activist who recently hosted a webinar about her experiences.”

Brown Long readily offered her notions about “pornography” in general.

“I feel pornography encourages […] men to think it’s OK to treat women like sex commodities,” the alleged social media celebrity told the priest. “No human should be bought and sold — that’s a basic fact we should have learned by now.”

“Ms. Brown-Long takes a hardline stance on porn — make it illegal and shut down the websites,” Father Salai shared.

Closing With Exodus Cry

The last testimony offered by the Jesuit priest in support of legislation to establish a system for censorship of sexual expression in 2021 is from Jewell Baraka, a 51-year-old who told him she was “active in porn from 1985 to 1988.”

“She now writes about her experiences online for Exodus Cry, a Christian advocacy group that seeks to reform the sex industry,” Father Salai added, before introducing one more interviewee — Laila Mickelwait, whose surname he misspells “Mikelwaite.”

The article fails to identify Mickelwait as an Exodus Cry mouthpiece; instead, the most vocal of current anti-porn crusaders is identified as the director of the Justice Defense Fund — a fundraising outfit for which she is currently requesting “investments” — and the signature-gatherer behind the #Traffickinghub petition.

The Washington Times has also recently been platforming the anti-porn writings of columnist Robert Knight, a cheerleader for “biblical investing” who also serves as a writer for “God-inspired” investment fund Timothy Partners, Ltd., one of Exodus Cry’s main backers.

Clea Gaultier Stars in New Promo Campaign for ‘EvryModel’ Platform

LOS ANGELES — Clea Gaultier, 2019 XBIZ Europa winner for “Female Performer of the Year,” has signed on as the face of the first promo campaign and contest for nascent platform EvryModel, whose prize includes the cover of Playboy Czech Republic.

“EvryModel offers creators of explicit content stability and innovation,” a rep said. “We have reached an agreement with Playboy Czech Republic; European and U.S.-based models can now compete for the highly coveted title of ‘Playmate’ and the cover of the print edition of the world-famous magazine.”

The winning model, to be photographed by Brecht Cokelaere, will be announced on January 14, 2022; the competition runs through January 10.

Visit EvryModel on Instagram for terms and conditions.

Related:  

Elegant Angel Releases ‘Threesome Addiction 5’

LOS ANGELES — Elegant Angel’s newest collection, “Threesome Addiction 5,” is shipping pre-orders now ahead of a November 2 street date.

In addition to cover girls Gina Valentina and Kenzie Reeves, the cast includes Alice Chambers, Alexis Monroe, Brianna Banks, Giselle Palmer, Honey Gold, Scarlet Sage, Abella Danger, Lily Lane, Amara Romani and Nikki Delano.

“While it may seem unusual to release three collections of threesomes in one year, we listen to our fans. They always want more threesomes, and we have plenty of amazing scenes to satisfy their hunger,” a studio spokesperson said.

Further details about “Threesome Addiction 5” can be found at ElegantAngel.com; follow the studio on Twitter.

For sales inquiries, contact Jerry at sales@elegantangel.com or (818) 576-9464. Broadcast and foreign inquiries can be directed to juicyvideo@aol.com.

Related:  

Nikki Delano Earns 2021 Fleshbot Awards Nod for ‘Best Fansite Presence’

LOS ANGELES — Nikki Delano has received a nomination from the 2021 Fleshbot Awards in the category of “Best Fansite Presence.”  

“With millions of followers on her verified Twitter and Instagram accounts and her premium social media accounts for Brazzers+ and OnlyFans, Nikki has an insane amount of worldwide subscribers,” a rep enthused.

Delano shared her excitement for the recognition.

“I love Fleshbot, and it’s incredible to get another nomination from them. I’d love to win this time. So I hope mis amores vote for me and tell their friends. It’s quick and easy and would mean so much to me,” she said.

Winners will be announced online on November 15; voting continues through October 28. Find a full list of winners here and click here to cast a ballot.

Follow Nikki Delano on Twitter and find her premium social media linkage here.

Related:  

Ricky Greenwood Scores Noms From 2021 Fleshbot Awards in Multiple Genres

HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Ricky Greenwood’s work over the past year has earned multiple nominations from the 2021 Fleshbot Awards across straight, gay and trans genres.

He is nominated for “Director of Year” and his features “Blue Moon Rising” (MissaX), “Sweet Sally Mae” (Adult Time) and “Written in the Stars” (AllHerLuv) are “Movie of the Year” nominees.

In the gay genre, the Greenwood-directed “Man in Uniform” (Icon Male) earned a “Movie of the Year” nomination; the studio’s “Don’t Tell My Wife 2” is a “Best Sex Scene” for Colby Jansen and Johnny B; and “Painful Love” snagged a “Best Oral Sex Scene” nom for Nick Fitt and Casey Everett.

Greenwood’s trans worked garnered a “Director of the Year (Trans)” nomination for Mile High’s TransSensual label.

“I was really blown away when the nominations but also extremely humbled that so many fans on Fleshbot enjoy my work. Nominations in all the genres I work in was an incredible thing to see. It would be great to win any or all of these awards. I know the fans and industry are busy, but if they could take a few moments out of their day over the next few days to vote for me before voting closes, that would be incredible,” Greenwood said.

Winners will be announced online on November 15; voting continues through October 28. Find a full list of winners here and click here to cast a ballot.

Follow Ricky Greenwood on Twitter.

Related:  

Scarlet Lyone Launches Free OnlyFans Profile

LOS ANGELES — Australian performer and content creator Scarlet Lyone has launched an OnlyFans profile for “intimate and select XXX content,” noted a rep.

“My extremely loyal member base on the website will always be my top priority and they will always keep my attention,” Lyone said. “I know that some viewers prefer to stick to OnlyFans over any other sites to watch their favorite performers. From Day One, I have always recognized that because of the incredible fan base I have and how much I’m embraced, I could build my own platform.”

“I want all of my fans to have access to my content no matter what their preference of platform or budgets are, to make it accessible to everyone,” she continued. “I’m really excited to announce that select XXX content made for my site members will be available for purchase on OnlyFans.”

Her website will remain “the only place to see all of my content, get your hands on my merchandise, request custom videos, see me live and the only place to see my new content first.”

Visit ScaretLyone.com and follow the content creator on Twitter and OnlyFans.

In related news, Lyone is the subject of a new profile for Cam Life Magazine.

Related: