Leana Lovings Lands Cover of Barely Legal, Tops AdultEmpire’s ‘Pulse’ Ranking

Leana Lovings Lands Cover of Barely Legal, Tops AdultEmpire's 'Pulse' Ranking
 

 

MIAMI — Leana Lovings is featured on her second magazine cover and has landed atop AdultEmpire’s “Pulse” ranking.

The starlet lands the cover spotlight for the May issue of Hustler’s Barely Legal magazine, following her cover of Score Group’s 18eighteen in March.

“Knowing that my Barely Legal shoot made the cover is like icing on the cake to an amazing week,” Lovings said. “I’m so grateful to the team that’s made everything happen for me.”

For more information, visit BarelyLegal.com and follow the magazine on Twitter.

AdultEmpire’s Pulse rankings “allow fans and adult industry players to put their finger on the ‘pulse’ of what’s going on in the business by giving the lowdown on the most popular movies and stars on AdultEmpire, and content that is new and notable,” a rep said.

As such, Lovings recently landed atop the ranking with “But I Have A Girlfriend Now,” costarring Johnny Love, from MyPervyFamily; click here for details.

“Leana does such a great job working [Johnny] up that you can feel his intense satisfaction just by watching. It is shot POV, which makes it so you can almost jump into the scene for yourself,” noted an AdultEmpire rep. “There are reasons why MyPervyFamily is so popular and this [scene] showcases them all.”

Follow Leana Lovings on Twitter and find her premium social media links here.

 

 

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Leana Lovings Lands Cover of Barely Legal, Tops AdultEmpire's 'Pulse' Ranking

Larry Flynt Wins Latest Battle Against California Casino Rules

Larry Flynt Wins Latest Battle Against California Casino Rules

Federal judge says rule preventing casino owners from operating out-of-state should be revisited.

LOS ANGELES—Hustler magnate Larry Flynt took home a partial victory last week is his nearly four-year fight to overturn a California state regulation that prohibits casino owners from owning or investing in gambling establishments in other states. In June of 2020, United States District Judge John Mendez blocked the state’s attempt to throw out Flynt’s ongoing lawsuit. But on January 14, Mendez granted Flynt an even more significant win.

The 1986 law was designed to keep organized crime elements out of California’s then-two-year-old gambling industry. But Flynt has contended in his lawsuit that the rule is “archaic” due to strict regulations in California and other states designed to banish the criminal syndicates, such as the Mafia, who once held a tight grip on the gambling business nationwide.

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