Raven Bay Dead at 31

Raven Bay Dead at 31

LOS ANGELES — Raven Bay died earlier this month at 31 at a private residence, the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner has confirmed.

The cause of death has not been reported. Bay died on October 2, although news of her passing was not public until yesterday.

Bay, an accomplished visual artist, grew up in Florida and attended college in New York before joining the adult industry in 2012.

She amassed over 200 IAFD credits, tapering off in 2019, and was a 2014 XBIZ Awards nominee for “Best Starlet.” Bay also received acclaim for her work as a cam performer.

Her credits include work for top studios including Brazzers, Naughty America, Reality Kings, Wicked, Hustler, Twistys, Penthouse, Digital Playground, Bang Bros, Jules Jordan, Evil Angel and many others.

The death is still officially under investigation.

Main Image: Raven Bay, early 2021 (Source: Raven Bay’s Instagram)

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Girlfriends Announces Release of ‘Lesbian Ghost Stories 6’

Girlfriends Announces Release of 'Lesbian Ghost Stories 6'

VALENCIA, Calif. — Girlfriends Films (GFF) is marking the release of “Lesbian Ghost Stories 6” headlined by contract stars Serene Siren and Aubree Valentine.

The three-hour release includes two separate storylines and pairings that include Valentine in two trysts opposite Charlotte Sins and Olive Glass, respectively. Elsewhere, Tiffany Watson pairs with Marilyn Johnson and Siren enjoys a sensual coupling with Charlotte Stokely.

During the filming of their scene, Siren posted a love note on Twitter. “My wish came true! Girlfriends granted me dreamy Charlotte Stokely today for ‘Lesbian Ghost Stories,'” she said. “I thoroughly enjoyed our time.”

“Lesbian Ghost Stories 6” is now available on-demand here; find BTS information and other details about the movie here and follow GFF on Twitter.

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Goddess Lilith Returns to Exxxotica New Jersey

LAS VEGAS — Goddess Lilith is set to appear at Exxxotica New Jersey this weekend as part of the CAM4 booth lineup.

Lilith will be “go-go dancing the entire weekend at the mega CAM4 booth,” a rep said. “Plus, attendees can score some swag for stopping by.”

When Goddess Lilith is not stage dancing, she will be available for interviews.

“It’s going to be a wild weekend, and my fans who come to see me go-go dance will remember for some time. Be there and be prepared to see me like you’ve never seen me before,” Lilith enthused. “Tributes are appreciated and expected while I’m on stage. If you’re in the area, definitely come down.”

More about Exxxotica New Jersey can be found online and on Twitter.

Follow Goddess Lilith on Twitter and find her premium social media links here.

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Joanna Angel Skewers Sex Work Censorship in Burning Angel’s ‘Shadowbanned’

Joanna Angel Skewers Sex Work Censorship in Burning Angel's 'Shadowbanned'

MONTREAL — Burning Angel has announced the release of Joanna Angel’s “Shadowbanned,” described as an acerbic commentary on social media strictures on sexual content.

Toplined by Jessie Lee, the cast includes Rocky Emerson, Maddy May, Codey Steele and reigning XBIZ “Performer of the Year” Dante Colle.

“Jessie takes center stage as an adult film star who is trapped inside another dimension with no voice to be heard, while popular influencers Joanna, Rocky and Maddy get away with freely posting anything and everything on their high-profile social accounts,” a rep explained.

The story “fuses Angel’s comedic sarcasm with a campy, spooky setting just in time for Halloween.”

Angel, who also penned the script, noted the concept is “an open letter to Instagram — with sex in it.”

“The entire cast and crew worked very hard on this labor of love. I’m so incredibly proud of this for so many reasons, and I can’t wait for the world to see it,” she added.

Find “Shadowbanned” on BurningAngel.com and Adult Time; follow the studio, Adult Time and Joanna Angel on Twitter.

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Hustler’s Liz Flynt Profiled by Los Angeles Times

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — The Los Angeles Times today published a profile of Hustler’s Liz Flynt, highlighting the ongoing successes of the adult empire built by her late husband Larry Flynt.

Penned by Times staff writer Hugo Martín, the article emphasized Liz Flynt’s embrace of the moniker “pornographer” and a no-shame attitude she learned from her soulmate, the Free Speech icon himself.

“Since she took the helm of [Larry Flynt’s] empire after his death eight months ago,” Martín wrote, “she says she has taken on all the monikers that defined his rise in the industry, and she vows to continue his rebellious legacy.”

“If they are going to give me that label, I’ll wear it,” Liz Flynt said.

According to the Times, “Flynt is one of the latest women to take on a leading role in what was once a male-dominated industry. For several decades, women have increasingly replaced men in the C-suites of some of the most profitable pornography and adult-oriented businesses.”

Noting that “the way adult entertainment is produced and consumed is fast-changing,” Southern California’s leading newspaper asked Flynt how she plans to compete with websites such as OnlyFans.

Hustler doesn’t offer entertainment created by users, she explained, because “verifying the age of the performers is difficult and Hustler wants to provide only ‘high-quality content.'” Instead, she plans to grow the company’s audience by “expanding the reach of its videos and movies through Hustler TV on more than 500 cable and satellite providers around the world.”

The feature touches on many of the areas surveyed by XBIZ Premiere earlier this year for its August cover story penned by News Editor Gustavo Turner.

The Times noted the Flynt empire now publishes “15 specialty magazines throughout the year, plus the monthly adult-oriented publications, dozens of which are displayed on a desk in the foyer of the 10th floor of the company’s headquarters.”

“The company oversees 37 retail outlets — purveyors of sex toys, lingerie, books and DVDs — with two more planned to open in the next few months,” the article continued. “The shops continued operating during the pandemic. When the company opens at least 50 stores, Flynt said she may consider taking the retail branch public.”

Read the complete profile at LATimes.com.

Main Photo: Liz Flynt (source: XBIZ)

New York Times Publishes Rare Op-Ed by a Sex Worker

NEW YORK — The New York Times’ Opinion section — which has routinely foregrounded the voices of anti-porn activists, SWERFs and assorted sex-work deniers under editor Kathleen Kingsbury — yesterday published a rare op-ed penned by a sex worker.

The op-ed, titled “This Is What Will Make Sex Work in New York Safer,” was written by Cecilia Gentili, founder of Transgender Equity Consulting, director of gender inclusion at CAI Global and Stonewall Community Foundation board member.

The Argentine-American sex worker and activist described how she has spent the last decade of her life fighting for the decriminalization of sex work for adults, to “heal all of those times [she has] been harassed, beaten and raped — not by clients but by law enforcement officials.”

Gentili focused her piece on two competing bills “purporting” to decriminalize sex work in the New York State Legislature.

“But while both attempt to address the very valid concerns about sex trafficking,” Gentili noted, “only one meets the needs of sex workers.”

Gentili urged New Yorkers to support the “Stop the Violence in the Sex Trades” bill sponsored by State Senator Julia Salazar.

“This bill aims to decriminalize the industry — including sex workers, clients and managers — though carefully continuing to protect minors and trafficked people,” she wrote. “The origin of this bill dates back three years, to ideas promoted by a group I helped found, Decrim NY. Our lobbying led to the overturning of a criminal statute against loitering that law enforcement had long used as a pretext to harass trans women regardless of their involvement in the sex trade.”

“We knew that the best way to help sex workers was not to decriminalize only their actions but also those of their clients,” she added. “The legal pressure that clients face is absorbed by sex workers: A smaller client base means lower wages and poorer working conditions, with clients who are more likely to act in ways that make sex workers’ lives more difficult.”

Writing in support of Salazar’s bill, Gentili affirmed that “criminalization of either side of the sex trade does not help protect sex workers but rather merely perpetuates the social stigma that treats sex work as an inherently harmful activity — a stigma that I have long worked to eradicate.”

The competing bill — endorsing the so-called “Nordic model” — is called the “Sex Trade Survivors Justice and Equality Act” (aka, the “Survivors Bill”). Sponsored by State Senator Liz Krueger, this is a bill that is “threatening to derail the Salazar bill for total decriminalization” by decriminalizing “only sex workers but not their clients or their managers,” Gentili pointed out.

“Partial decriminalization doesn’t work, and we have evidence,” the activist noted.

To read “This Is What Will Make Sex Work in New York Safer,” click here.

House Dems Introduce Bill to Further Erode Section 230 Over ‘Harmful Content’

WASHINGTON — Four House Democrats introduced another Section 230 reform bill last week, titled the “Justice Against Malicious Algorithms Act” (JAMAA, or JAMA Act).

According to the legislators’ announcement, the bill aims to “remove [the] liability shield when a platform knowingly or recklessly promotes harmful content.”

The new bill would mean the first erosion of Section 230 protections since FOSTA-SESTA in 2018, and only the second one ever.

Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone, Jr., D-N.J., Communications and Technology Subcommittee Chairman Mike Doyle, D-Pa., Consumer Protection and Commerce Subcommittee Chair Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill. and Health Subcommittee Chair Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., announced the bill on Thursday and introduced it to the House on Friday. The timing follows on the heels of the so-called “Facebook whistleblower” testimony earlier this month.

According to a statement by Rep. Pallone’s office, JAMAA “would lift the Section 230 liability shield when an online platform knowingly or recklessly uses an algorithm or other technology to recommend content that materially contributes to physical or severe emotional injury.”

Pallone stated that the bill was prompted because in his view, “social media platforms like Facebook continue to actively amplify content that endangers our families, promotes conspiracy theories and incites extremism to generate more clicks and ad dollars.”

“These platforms are not passive bystanders,” Pallone added. “They are knowingly choosing profits over people, and our country is paying the price. The time for self-regulation is over, and this bill holds them accountable. Designing personalized algorithms that promote extremism, disinformation and harmful content is a conscious choice and platforms should have to answer for it.”

Co-sponsor Doyle also said their proposal for a radical revision of Section 230 — the 1996 piece of legislation known by digital right activists as  “the First Amendment of the internet” — is necessary to address “the harm [social media platforms] do to our society.”

Co-sponsor Schakowsky referred to what she deemed “the severe harm” caused by platforms, while co-sponsor Eshoo said JAMAA builds onto her previous proposal, the “Protecting Americans from Dangerous Algorithms Act” (PADA or PADAA).

According to the legislators, the bill “would remove Section 230 immunity if an online platform knowingly or recklessly uses an algorithm to recommend content to a user based on that personal information, and if that recommendation materially contributes to physical or severe emotional injury.”

The group clarified that their proposal “does not apply to search features or algorithms that do not rely on personalization. It would also not apply to internet infrastructure such as web hosting or data storage and transfer or to small online platforms with fewer than five million unique monthly visitors or users.”

For the text of the bill, click here.

Main Image: Rep. Frank Pallone (Source: Rep. Frank Pallone’s Twitter)

Sabrina Night Leaves Cherry.tv for SugarBounce

Sabrina Night Leaves Cherry.tv for SugarBounce

BARCELONA — Sabrina Night (aka Sabien DeMonia) has announced she has left her ambassador position with Cherry.tv and is now working as a growth strategy advisor and model liaison for SugarBounce.

After over a year as the first official Cherry.tv ambassador and the face for their ads and marketing materials, Night has left the platform. Her exit is effective immediately, and she will no longer be doing live shows.

“Sabrina has inked a deal with SugarBounce, a blockchain ecosystem that’s fully decentralized,” said a rep. “The adult entertainment platform is currently offering livestreaming services, and then will venture into NFTs, crowdfunding and much more.”

Night will be working closely with SugarBounce CEO Navin Ray. “Her role will be growth strategy and she’ll serve as a model liaison,” the rep added, “helping them choose what models to sign and assisting with the onboarding process.”

Night described the career move as “bittersweet.”

“It was a great run and fun to be part of something from the ground up. But it was definitely time to move on and I’ve very excited about my new role at SugarBounce,” she said. “They have given me a position with a lot of responsibility and respect my experience and connections.”

For more information, visit SugarBounce.com and follow Sabrina Night on Twitter.

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Fun Factory Launches Limited-Edition ‘Blow & Glow Kit’ for the Holidays

Fun Factory Launches Limited-Edition 'Blow & Glow Kit' for the Holidays

LOS ANGELES — Fun Factory is launching a limited-edition “Blow & Glow Kit” in time for the holidays.

The new kit includes two sex toys, Manta and Nos; a scrunchie; a massage candle; games “to spark connection”; and access to exclusive sex tip videos from the 2020 XBIZ “Sexpert of the Year” Ashley Manta.

“With an uptick in visits to Fun Factory’s blog posts about blowjobs, and a well-documented downtick in sex between couples during lockdown, we have launched the ‘Blow & Glow Kit’ to reinvigorate couples’ sex and help inject fun back into play,” explained a rep.

The exclusive videos, accessed via a unique QR code received with each kit, include tips for oral and hand sex, and “elevated ways to use sex toys during play,” the rep added.

Manta said, “I couldn’t have made a better kit if I’d designed it myself. The ‘Blow & Glow Kit’ is endlessly versatile, both in terms of the types of stimulation it offers and the acts it facilitates.”

Global Head of Marketing and Education Kristen Tribby noted, “The last 18 months have been hard on couples, but we want to change that and inject fun back into sex — that’s the way it should be.”

Tribby added that the “Blow & Glow Kit” allows users to “explore different ways to have sex with award-winning and bestselling toys, exclusive tips and games to help you expand on your fun and connect through play.”

According to the rep, the Manta toy features “a powerful bass-tone motor which turns the penis into a vibrator. The toy fits around the shaft for stroking or focused sensation and can be used during oral sex for a vibrating deep-throat feeling.”

Nos is a vibrating C-ring “that lets partners sync orgasms,” the rep added. “It has a super-flexible fit and allows for harder, longer-lasting erections. It is also designed to hit the clit during partnered sex with its dual-motor vibration.”

For more information, email contact@funfactory.com for order inquiries and follow the company on Twitter.

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IMC Acquires Legacy Erotica Site DigitalDesire

LOS ANGELES — Erotica site DigitalDesire.com and its assets have been acquired by International Media Company BV (IMC) and is now part of the Adult Prime Network.

DigitalDesire was originally launched in 1997 and features over 3,500 nude photosets and nearly 1,800 videos from the late photographer and filmmaker J. Stephen Hicks, who passed in 2013.

“The content of DigitalDesire is flawless, beautiful and it will be a great expansion of the AdultPrime portfolio,” IMC CEO Roald Riepen said. “I have known this brand ever since I started working in the adult industry and to be able to take over the full collection and continue the legacy is a great honor.”

The site’s content will soon be available for affiliate promotion via PayBig.com.

Visit DigitalDesire.com and follow AdultPrime on Twitter.

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