Why the Feminist Porn Awards Are Important
What other awards show hands out glass butt plugs? They're just so... functional.
As Josey Vogels, one of the announcers noted, you wouldn't want to use an Emmy in the same way. An Oscar might work but it would require one helluva warm-up.
All kidding aside, of much greater importance than the sexual possibilities presented to the winners are the films that brought them the attention they deserve.
The Feminist Porn Awards are not about supporting either mainstream pornography. We have the AVNs for that. Unlike most awards shows, they want to recognize porn that isn't content with the same, old conventions of the cultural entity we are all wank off to.
Why be boring when you can actually show female pleasure or people of diverse backgrounds, body-types and fantasies getting it on? Whatever your sexual orientation, I would imagine most people are into the idea of getting off to people they like the look of getting it on because they want to.
We live in a world where people are slowly coming around to the idea that there's no right or wrong way to get off and though the mainstream porn industry is usually one of the first adopters when it comes to technology, they are notoriously reticent when it comes to pushing social boundaries. Try finding a bisexual porno...
--
Sure, there is plenty of material catering to every conceivable niche of fetishist but when it comes to more controversial issues around gender and race, it can seem like much of what is being produced is slightly anachronistic and caters to prejudices which have no place in our world.
The argument that these purveyors of antiquated ignorance are merely providing "what the customer wants" don't hold much weight with me. John Donne famously stated that "no man is an island" and when the media and the communities around that man make clear what is acceptable and what is not, it leaves him little choice beyond falling in line or opting out.
Thankfully, the "avant-garde of pornography" is gaining ground; exposing us to new scenes and opening our eyes to the spectrum of sexual possibilities presented to humanity.
Appropriately, the first winner of the night was Buck Angel, who was the "Boundary Breaker of the Year". A clip was shown of Buck's work and, having never viewed any transsexual porn before, I was somewhat surprised at the incongruity presented by the image of a very masculine person with a vagina.
I suppose it seems rather naive but while I'd read a fair bit on the subject and seen my fair share of pictures, I'd never been presented with a video like that. Mind you, I'm not one of those people who deliberately seek out everything the Internet has to offer them and my address book is not known for sending me every latest dirty clip posted to XTube either but it was still something of a revelation.
Buck also happened to look a lot like a friend of a friend (which added to the personal dissonance) and while I wasn't particularly turned-on by what I was seeing, it was definitely interesting.
In contrast, I did enjoy the clip from Tristan Taormino's Expert Guide to Oral Sex but thought the scene accompanying Kelly Holland's win for Sexiest Straight Film was straight out of a soft-focus/soft-core porno of yesteryear.
Quite a few of the clips I saw had a very appealing rawness du moment, being shot on video and featuring seemingly non-professional participants who were having what appeared to be some very hot sex.
In all fairness to the films that did win, it's hard to judge 'em from a simple clip and I'm less inclined to give a shit about whether they get me hot 'n bothered or not and simply give them props for what they represent: a breath of fresh air in an industry that seems desperate to take on the trappings of its cinematic brethren.
Many of the winners (Buck Angel obviously excepted) didn't seem to be making all that much money from their films (at least not the kind of dough you hear about in their mainstream counterpart) but they all came across as really passionate and dedicated to providing alternate perverted media for whatever scene they catered to.
Shine Louise Houston, for example, started her own production company while working at Good Vibrations after years of post-art school graduate depression (I know how that feels...). Bren Ryder nearly became a fireman! Sure, there stories might not seem that different from anyone who changed careers to pursue a passion but these women are making a difference and they deserve recognition for that. It's also nice that, unlike the solipsistic wankfests that comprise the vast majority of awards shows, everyone involved had a good time.
And I know I'm not the only one who enjoyed Dainty Box.
So let's see:
Butt plug trophies
Honest porn
Sexual activism
Trey Anthony (the MC)
What's not to love? Seems pretty important to me.
For a full list of the winners, check out Good for Hers' website.

Bottom photo coutesy of David Waldman.
Comments (15)
What scares the shit out of me is that anyone thinks that this important given what's going on in the city right now.
You must be one of those people who thought comedy had no place in our society following 9-11.
Or maybe I should be writing about the latest news on the situation with our transit? Oh, wait, we have people who do that and this is a (mostly) weekly column about sex.
I'm sorry I'm so terribly superficial.
I like how the first picture is sponsored by the TTC - a representation of the people getting fucked in the ass.
As for feminist porn, not my kind of action. But I'm sure it's important ~snicker~.
feminist porn, normal porn.. plus size lover porn,
midget porn, disabled persons porn.. what ever.
write about it.
its what your interested in writing about,
and if your interesting in writing it..
theres Bound (
interested in reading it.
so some people can't get around on ttc..
the world still continues,
the sky isn't falling
and while some people have no where to go, or no
way to get there..
they may as well read something new and interesting.
Write On ! :)
James.
(ponders why isn't there more wheelchair related porn..hmmm)
You need to lighten up a bit Japhet. Taking personal strikes at readers, and making ridiculous assumptions about how i felt about 911 is out of place.
I wasn't saying that you should be writing about the ttc. All i was doing was pointing out how the title of your article was a bit ridiculous as the first headline this morning given all the other headlines in the city yesterday:
Economy crisis - 2 years of pain
Fuel prices to soar to $2.50
Food prices begin steep rise
TTC strikes without notice
Why Feminist Porn is Important
I disagree with the creation and production of porn and I also disagree with this article. All that is being said is here are some Pornographic films, but with substance... Ok. It's still the samething, it's just not catering to the typical audience. It's still porn, it's there to gain interest and excitement. Two or three or four individulas having sex on camera not matter how "artistic" it is, it is still just porn.
So is this important, to me "No."
I don't quite understand what your expectation is.
Should I modify my headline to reflect the crisis of the moment? Maybe I should hold off on posting until the afternoon because that's the time for "soft news"?
@Elliot
I am talking about the representation of a variety of types and their pleasure. The narrative and any artistic sensibilities have very little to do with why I think feminist porn is important.
Do you watch porn?
@bb
Then why not the fuck to be you stepping up and writing said missives, please and thank you? Fact of the matter is, the issues surrounding sexuality - getting, having, exerting, taking, receiving - are very much at the center of our psychological life, and the attitude we have towards sex both inform and illuminate the core reasons as to why the world is as fucked up as it is. Lighten up - go take a roman shower.
AS for you, greasy little Jay-muffin, your journalistic stylings be improving by leaps and bounds. Reading this article made my brain feel like Buck Angel's pussy after a good fisting.
Great article, Japhet!
I remember speaking to a friend right after I attended last year's awards and he said he'd been berated by a female co-worker after he admitted he enjoyed turning on the TV and watching porn. She went on about how all porn is disgusting, degrades women, how anyone involved or who watches it is disgusting, etc. Hopefully, the FPA will open up that attitude.
I don't know if I can say I really dabbled in the porn industry - I was a camgirl for a well-known company for about a year. But for many virtual co-workers and myself, it was in a way, about feminism. Expressing ourselves sexually - we were in control on how much skin we wanted to show. And it did feel pretty liberating in the end.














RSS