Tuesday, 28 December 2010

Rhetoric of Sex

The latest episode of Ryan Sullivan's ongoing documentary about Treasure Island Media is online now, titled 55. Rhetoric of Sex. Compelling as ever, this one includes a very interesting analysis of the porn that Paul Morris and I make. It dissects footage from an unreleased scene that I shot last year, with three guys, Ross Fuller, Zack Elias, and Frank Klein. (I don't entirely recognise Ryan's description of these guys, but he's entitled to put his spin on what he sees and I'm not complaining). All three guys (pictured below) are also in my new dvd FULL TILT, out now on the TIM website. Ryan's documentary, including this episode, can be viewed here.

Ross Fuller

Zack Elias

Frank Klein

Wednesday, 22 December 2010

FULL TILT new video release

The new dvd FULL TILT is finished and available to download or pre-order on DVD now. I'm REALLY excited about this one because it's just full of the kind of guys and sex that I aim to get in my porn (check out the trailer for proof). There's full-on double-fucking, fisting, tons of ass-to-mouth, and an 8-man gang fuck that is so obviously real that it feels like being there.

Big thanks to the fearless awesome fuck pigs who feature in FULL TILT and live the life it depicts. Thankyou for letting me join in with my camera: Peto Coast, Lucky Joe, Frank Klein, Jack Lewis, Darren Hawke, Ross Fuller, Brent Bow, Paul Mann, Ed Gunn, Jason Stormme, Bruce, Nikos, Anton Dickson, Marc Dann.

Thanks also to Clay for designing the hot cover, to the TIM editors, Damon Dogg, Reuben, and Elliott, for their brilliant work turning hours of my disorganised fuck tapes into a coherent video, to Matt for cracking the whip, and to Paul Morris for presiding over the only authentic man-sex cult in the world.

FULL TILT is available to download direct, or if you prefer to have it on dvd then you can pre-order your copy and it'll be shipped to you in mid-January 2011.

For more info, stills, and my lurid descriptions of every scene, check out the FULL TILT page. Thanks for your ongoing support, I think TIM fans must be the most loyal in the history of porn. I hope you get off on watching this as much as we got off on making it. Happy Holidays!

Sunday, 19 December 2010

A picture of me

This is me shooting "behind the scenes" footage on a friend's video project. Hopefully this picture will be acceptable to the administrators of twitter, who recently suspended my account because my last picture (below) was deemed "pornographic". I must be jaded. I thought this was about as pornographic as a builder's butt cleavage.

Tuesday, 14 December 2010

Setting the record straight

The last post received this anonymous comment:

"HIV and Dying of AIDS is not intensly pleasurable or beautiful. You got insurance? your going to need it...don't forget lots of diareah and wasting away to disfigurement...but go ahead and have this "beautiful" sexual experience. Hey Try some heroin while your at it."

There's a confusion here between description and advice. Speaking honestly about a pleasurable activity is not the same as recommending it. It's up to us to make informed choices of our own.

To answer the points about HIV and AIDs:

"Wasting away to disfigurement" presumably refers to lipodystrophy: body-fat changes including fat-loss from the face and buttocks. This isn't a symptom of HIV or AIDs. It's a side-effect of drugs used to treat the virus (AZT and d4T). Fortunately, newer HIV drugs have been developed without this side-effect (efavirenz, tenofovir, abacovir, etc). For this reason AZT and d4T are no longer recommended to people starting HIV treatment.

Diarrhea is a possible side-effect of some HIV drugs, but it doesn't effect everyone and often only occurs during the first few weeks or months of treatment. Diarrhea caused by HIV drugs can be treated with ordinary tablets (loperimide, Imodium) available at pharmacies.

The aim of current HIV treatment is to reduce the viral load to "undetectable" and prevent AIDs for life. That's becoming possible because of continuing progress in HIV drug development (which we should be celebrating as a fucking triumph of human ingenuity).

Increasingly, the problem is not whether these drugs work, but whether they are available and affordable to all people with HIV, from San Francisco to Sub-Saharan Africa. This is the politics of healthcare, and it requires all of us (poz or neg) to be clear-headed, informed and engaged. So, the commenter is right to bring up insurance, but wrong to cloud the topic with stigma and fear-mongering.