Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On | |
---|---|
Genre | Documentary series |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 6 |
Production | |
Producers |
|
Running time | 41–58 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Netflix |
Release | April 21, 2017 |
Hot Girls Wanted: Turned On is a six-part Netflix series that premiered on April 21, 2017. A follow-up to the 2015 documentary film Hot Girls Wanted , it was produced by Jill Bauer, Ronna Gradus, and Rashida Jones. The series explores pornography, technology, and relationships.
It aimed to include more diverse narratives than Hot Girls Wanted, which was criticized by sex workers for not containing positive stories about the sex industry. However, many sex workers featured in Turned On stated that their consent was violated and they and their families were put at risk, including two women whose content was displayed in the series without their knowledge. The pornographic actor Gia Paige, featured in the episode "Money Shot", said that the production violated her boundaries, that they included her in the series despite agreeing to edit her out, and that they included part of her real name. Other than criticism on ethical grounds, the series received largely positive critical reception. [1]
The series is a continuation of the 2015 documentary film Hot Girls Wanted , and has the same producers: Jill Bauer, Ronna Gradus, and Rashida Jones. [2] Jones said that she became interested in the sex industry after watching pornography and searching for content that matched her desires, rather than more extreme content presented to her on tube sites. [3] Hot Girls Wanted drew criticism within the sex industry for its omission of any positive side of the industry. [3] Turned On was released on April 21, 2017. [2]
The first episode, "Women on Top", is about women's pornography and feminism in porn: it features Holly Randall and Erika Lust. The second episode, "Love Me Tinder", is about a former reality television figure's experience of dating apps. "Owning It" depicts a woman working in recruitment for pornography, and one female performer that she brings into the industry. "Money Shot" is about the pornographic agent Riley Reynolds and his then-girlfriend Gia Paige, a pornographic actor. "Take Me Private" stars a cam girl, who the documentarians introduce to one of her viewers. "Don't Stop Filming" details an incident where an 18-year-old girl filmed her friend being raped on the livestreaming website Periscope, and was charged with rape and kidnapping offences.
In response to criticism of Hot Girls Wanted, Jones said that Turned On set out to "show that there are many stories in the porn industry", such as the more positive "Women on Top" episode that she directed. She commented that a theme of the series is "self-empowerment versus self-objectification". [3]
First reported by Vocativ , at least four of the sex workers featured in Turned On were unhappy with the production, saying that it violated their consent. Gia Paige initially agreed to appear in "Money Shot" but was uncomfortable with the directors pressuring her to talk about her family, and the camera crew filming her after she asked them to stop. The filming process gave her a panic attack. According to Paige and Reynolds, producers agreed that Paige would not appear in the final edit in exchange for additional filming with Reynolds. However, she was included in the series, and her Facebook profile and part of her legal name was displayed unobscured. Paige only discovered her inclusion when messaged by a fan who had used the information to work out her full legal name and other personal information. [4] [5] Bauer and Gradus said that Paige's claims were false. [1]
Turned On also featured a public Perisope clip of two women who wrote that the production did not inform them of their appearance. It is used in "Don't Stop Filming" to explain the nature of the website. While one of them reached out to the production, who said they could "explain fair use" to her, the other told Vocativ that the display of the clip to a wide audience put her family's safety at risk. [4] [5] [1] Bauer and Gradus said that the Periscope depiction was legal, and that the women featured are "never ever" labelled as sex workers. Gradus stated that "the viewers never would have known" the women's identities had they not "identified themselves". Asked by Variety interviewer Daniel Holloway whether the women's aims were to "grow their profiles", Gradus said "that's a fair question". [1]
A pornographic agent featured in the series said that he asked whether the production was part of Hot Girls Wanted and was told it was not; he stated that he would not have participated if he had known, and did not discover the association until the program's debut. [6] Another criticism came from Reynolds, whose father's face is partially shown in the series despite agreements that he would not appear. [7] The pornographic trade association Free Speech Coalition said that if the sex workers' allegations were true then "the producers may be perpetuating unfair labor practices against adult performers". [1] They urged that Netflix "immediately pause the distribution" of the program. [7] A pornographic agent told The Daily Beast that the documentary's subjects were not treated ethically, while a pornographic actor told the same publication that she disliked how unprofessional and abnormal actors were centered in the stories. [6]
Jones has not apologized for the decisions made in Turned On. In 2021, an announced documentary adaptation of Sell/Buy/Date, a one-person play about the sex industry, drew backlash for Jones's involvement. [8]
Overall, the series received positive critical reception. [1] Some critics compared it favorably to the technology-focused science fiction anthology series Black Mirror . [9] [10] Shirley Li of Entertainment Weekly gave the documentary series an A−, praising the first, third and fifth episodes. She praised that the production had learned from Hot Girls Wanted criticisms and that the longer format lets the producers "simply sit back and tell six stories". Li criticized the second episode as "staged" and less interesting, and the fourth as "largely a sequel to the original doc that tries to cover too much". [11]
Ed Power of The Daily Telegraph rated it four out of five, describing "the sordid truth of the business" as "impossible to ignore" despite the narrative's "pains not to lecture the viewer regarding the morality of pornography". [12] Julia Raeside of The Guardian reviewed that it "largely succeeds" in its mission to "stand back and remain nonjudgmental about its subjects". Particularly praising the final episode, Raeside wrote that "director Peter Logreco draws the story out of Marina and her devastated father with skill and lack of sensationalism, creating a truly important work". [9]
Robert Lloyd of the Los Angeles Times believed that "most every episode packs the weight and complexity of a good feature film", displaying sufficient variety and "the photographic sophistication of other Netflix documentary series", an improvement over Hot Girls Wanted. Lloyd said that the narrative is feminist and that it "deals with issues like class and race in ways you will not have seen before". [13] Kate Lloyd of Time Out praised the first two episodes, saying that the series will "probably challenge your behaviour and complicity" in relation to "sex, intimacy and relationships". [10]
Jo Livingstone of The New Republic criticized the ethical standards of the production, saying that they "enact precisely the kind of objectification and dehumanization that they aim to critique" and that the documentary's "lack of interest" in consent "should alarm viewers interested in journalistic ethics, women's safety, or both". [5]
Rocco Siffredi is an Italian pornographic actor, director and producer. Known as the "Italian Stallion", Siffredi has starred in more than 1,300 pornographic films since 1986.
A facial is a sexual activity in which a man ejaculates semen onto the face of one or more sexual partners. A facial is a form of non-penetrative sex, though it is generally performed after some other means of sexual stimulation, such as vaginal sex, anal sex, oral sex, manual sex or masturbation. Facials are regularly portrayed in pornographic films and videos, often as a way to close a scene.
Ovidie is a French director, actress, producer, journalist, former porn actress and a writer. First known as a porn actress from 1999 to 2003, she has since directed pornographic films as well as documentaries and has written several books.
Rashida Leah Jones is an American actress and filmmaker. She is best known for her roles as Louisa Fenn on the Fox drama series Boston Public (2000–2002), as Karen Filippelli on the NBC comedy series The Office, as Ann Perkins on the NBC comedy series Parks and Recreation (2009–2015), and as the eponymous lead role in the TBS comedy series Angie Tribeca (2016–2019).
Michele Watley, better known by her stage name Midori, is an American singer, dancer, model, actress and former pornographic actress. She was inducted into the AVN Hall of Fame in 2009 and the Urban X Hall of Fame in 2023. She was the first African-American woman to win an AVN award, when she was named "Best Supporting Actress" in 2001. Watley was also named one of the top 10 "hottest black porn stars" of all time by Complex and The Independent named her "the queen of the black hardcore market".
Erika Lust is a Swedish erotic film director, screenwriter and producer. Since the debut of her first indie erotic film The Good Girl in 2004, Lust has been cited as one of the current leading participants in the feminist pornography movement, asserting that an ethical production process sets her company apart from mainstream pornography sites.
A pornographic film actor or actress, pornographic performer, adult entertainer, or porn star is a person who performs sex acts on video that is usually characterized as a pornographic movie. Such videos tend to be made in a number of distinct pornographic subgenres and attempt to present a sexual fantasy; the actors selected for a particular role are primarily selected on their ability to create or fit that fantasy. Pornographic videos are characterized as either softcore, which does not contain depictions of sexual penetration or extreme fetishism, and hardcore, which can contain depictions of penetration or extreme fetishism, or both. The genres and sexual intensity of videos is mainly determined by demand. Depending on the genre of the film, the on-screen appearance, age, and physical features of the actors and their ability to create the sexual mood of the video is of critical importance. Most actors specialize in certain genres, such as straight, bisexual, gay, lesbian, bondage, strap-on, anal, double penetration, semen swallowing, teenage, orgy, age roleplay, fauxcest, interracial or MILFs and more.
Feminist views on pornography range from total condemnation of the medium as an inherent form of violence against women to an embracing of some forms as a medium of feminist expression. This debate reflects larger concerns surrounding feminist views on sexuality, and is closely related to those on prostitution, BDSM, and other issues. Pornography has been one of the most divisive issues in feminism, particularly in Anglophone (English-speaking) countries. This division was exemplified in the feminist sex wars of the 1980s, which pitted anti-pornography activists against pro-pornography ones.
Feminist pornography, also known by other terms in internet such as 'ethical porn' or 'fair-trade porn' is a genre of film developed by or for those within the sex-positive feminist movement. It was created for the purpose of promoting gender equality by portraying more bodily movements and sexual fantasies of women and members of the LGBT community.
Rachel Swimmer, known professionally as Tasha Reign, is an American pornographic actress, nude model, producer, and sex columnist known for her appearances in Playboy and Penthouse magazine.
Porn for women, women's porn or women's pornography is pornography aimed specifically at the female market, and often produced by women. It rejects the view that pornography is only for men, and seeks to make porn that women enjoy watching instead of what is being offered in male-centric mainstream pornography.
JC's Girls is an evangelical Christian women's organization in the United States whose members evangelize to female workers in the sex industry. The organization supports women wishing to leave the industry, but does not try to persuade them to do so. The group does not focus upon conversion but rather on communicating its message that Christians exist who are not judging female sex workers and are willing to accept them. The organization also helps both women and men seeking to overcome pornography addiction.
xHamster is a pornographic media and social networking site headquartered in Limassol, Cyprus. xHamster serves user-submitted pornographic videos, webcam models, pornographic photographs, and erotic literature and incorporates social networking features. xHamster was founded in 2007. With more than 10 million members, it is the fourth-most popular pornography website on the Internet after XVideos, XNXX and Pornhub. As of January 2024, xHamster was the 20th-most trafficked website in the world.
Miriam Weeks, known by her stage name of Belle Knox, is an American former pornographic film actress. She is known for performing in pornography while studying at Duke University.
Hot Girls Wanted is a 2015 American documentary film directed by Jill Bauer and Ronna Gradus. The film follows the lives of several 18- and 19-year-old pornographic actresses. The film premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival and was released on Netflix on May 29, 2015.
Casey Calvert is an American pornographic actress and film director. She has won several awards in the pornographic film industry, and has written about it in mainstream media publications. Calvert entered the adult media industry with early work as an art model and fetish model at age 21. She chose her stage name after one of her college professors, Clay Calvert.
Jill Bauer is a Hearst and SPJ journalist, documentarian and non-fiction author. Bauer and Ronna Gradus co-directed two documentary films, Sexy Baby (2012) and Hot Girls Wanted (2015). Bauer also authored a non-fiction humor book called From ‘I Do’ to ‘I’ll Sue’: An Irreverent Compendium for Survivors of Divorce. Sexy Baby won the Founders Prize for Best Film by a First Time Director at the 2012 Traverse City Film Festival and Hot Girls Wanted was nominated in 2015 for a Primetime Emmy and the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
The Naked Director is a Japanese semi-biographical comedy-drama television series co-directed by Masaharu Take. Based on the biography Zenra Kantoku Muranishi Tōru Den by Nobuhiro Motohashi, it tells the story of Japanese adult video director Toru Muranishi.
Rashida Jones is an American actress, writer, and producer, best known for starring on the NBC comedy series Parks and Recreation (2009–2015) as Ann Perkins, and as Karen Filippelli in The Office.
Money Shot: The Pornhub Story is a 2023 Netflix documentary about Pornhub and its parent company Aylo. It presents interview footage from sex workers, ex-Pornhub employees, journalists, and anti-sex-trafficking figures. The documentary focuses on a 2020 scandal over Pornhub hosting non-consensual pornography, including of children, and how the aftermath affected pornographic performers.