CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“PROSPECTS IMPROVE FOR CONDOMS-IN-PORN
INITIATIVE”
For
years, the loudest arguments against expanding a landmark Los Angeles law
requiring condom use by adult film actors in sex scenes to the rest of
California were financial and geographic:
The pornography industry argued any
locale requiring safety in filmed sex would see a production exodus and a big
loss in revenue. The most likely place for porn producers to go was Las Vegas.
That city embraced the possibility of
immigration by pornographers, its mayor even issuing a supportive statement.
And some production quickly moved there.
Well, as the advertising slogan goes,
what happens in Vegas may stay in Vegas, but its effects are not necessarily
static.
Just one case of AIDS has changed a
lot. It was diagnosed in an adult performer with a role in a movie that
actually migrated there from the porn industry’s longtime capital in the San
Fernando Valley portion of Los Angeles.
This case may have terrible effects on
the infected actor, or not, but it will definitely help the AIDS Healthcare
Foundation and its campaign committee as they work to qualify and pass a
statewide condoms-in-porn initiative for the fall 2016 ballot.
The foundation would have liked to see
such a law pass legislatively, but had no success with that, just as it could
not push the Los Angeles law through the City Council there, but had to take it
to voters as the 2012 Measure B, which passed with about 56 percent of the
vote.
The single AIDS infection in Las Vegas
last fall may have a large effect in California because of the response it drew
in Nevada, a state which carefully regulates legal prostitution in rural county
brothels within easy reach of places like Las Vegas, Carson City and Reno.
As soon as reports of the porn actor’s
infection became public late last fall, Nevada officials announced they will
probably apply their brothel rules to film production sites. Legal prostitutes
in Nevada get regular blood tests and health exams; male customers are required
to use condoms for any interpersonal contact involving even one person’s
genitalia. Since 1988, when those rules took effect, not one AIDS case has been
tied to a legal Nevada brothel.
Meanwhile, when porn actors’ health
was monitored voluntarily by California producers, more than 25 cases were
linked to porn shoots.
If, as now seems likely, Nevada
imposes its brothel rules on adult film shoots, there will be no reason for
pornographers to migrate there. Films made there would show the same condoms
the producers want to avoid.
And where might they head if there’s
no point going to Las Vegas? To the blue-nosed likes of Idaho, Texas or Utah,
where state officials fight against same-sex marriage? To the even more
stultified likes of Louisiana or Georgia? To New York, where polling has shown
support for condoms in porn filming?
No, the likelihood is that a
California-wide law essentially adopting the Los Angeles rules will end the
migration of pornography that has seen adult filming permits drop by about 90
percent in L.A. over the last two years. Many shoots moved to nearby
counties, where it’s tougher for producers to find performers, but condoms are
not required.
Others went underground in L.A., not
applying for permits and refusing to comply with the condom mandate.
A statewide law likely would not stop
those scofflaws, but they would continue to find insurance hard to get, at the
same time exposing themselves to lawsuits from actors who become infected or
otherwise injured on site.
One thing for sure: Because the Los
Angeles law has been challenged in federal court and found not to infringe on
constitutional free expression, the path will be smoother for the statewide
initiative, if it passes.
And chances are it will pass, once
qualified. A poll of more than 1,100 likely voters last fall found 71 percent
support. If voters are informed that opposition ads are funded by
pornographers, as likely will happen, that initial support won’t erode much.
The bottom line: One AIDS case in Las
Vegas has largely removed the arguments that such a measure would lead both to
financial loss for California and continued use of unsafe sex in adult films.
So this is one initiative that will likely qualify easily for the ballot, and
then pass late next year.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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