The site offers original movies that are all ethically made (and have won numerous adult entertainment awards), livestream discussions called MindBrowse, radio, and a virtual world.
Not sure if you’ll be into it? Sssh also has a $5 two-day trial membership so you can get your *ahem* feet wet. Offers: Movies, VR (no headset required), photos, novels, and storiesįounded by director Angie Rowntree, this feminist porn site is members-only and costs $20 a month, with options for a three-month membership for $55 and a yearly membership of $100.
SsshĬost: $5 for a two-day membership, $20/month, $55 for three months, or $100 for a yearly membership Also cool: Richards has sex therapists write guest posts on the site, so you know they’re all about sex-positive education in the name of female pleasure. The site is also popular for sex therapists to recommend to their clients, as Richards says she gets lots of emails from members who sign up after hearing about it from professionals. FrolicMe was started in 2015 by Anna Richards, who wanted to cater to those who found typical mainstream porn more of a turn-off than a turn-on. If you like more romantic porn that’s high in production value, this is your best bet.
Ĭost: $7 for a weeklong trial, $14/month, $31 for a single month, or $81 for a yearĬomprised entirely of exclusive content, FrolicMe offers tasteful, erotic, feminist porn films, audio, stories, and photo galleries. Regardless of what you use the feminist app for, this female-focused pleasure center can help anyone achieve their sexual goals.
You can go on “journeys” that’ll help you harness your own eroticism, you can listen to their vast selection of audio porn, or you can do a lil of both. The app’s goal is to help women reach their sexual peaks by learning all about arousal, self esteem, and sex. Okay, Emjoy is the least in-your-face ethical porn offering we have, but we have to start with it because it’s perfect for newbies. EmjoyĬost: Free for limited access, $35/year or $17 quarterly for premium This is guilty pleasure trash media entertainment to appeal to the target audience that made MTV’s ‘Jersey Shore’, ‘The Real World’, ‘Real World/Road Rules: The Challenge(s)’ such hits.Here’s How Often Women *Actually* Masturbate 1.
Viewers who watch it do not expect some PBS docu series where issues are handled with tact, respect, and decensy (yeah, producers try to pretend like what they are doing some serious social commentary or experiement). I have to say that the trailer for Broke Straight Boy does seem to have MTV Real World production value which, for a web series, is high enough (for example the house looks pretty fantastic).īut let’s be honest. Well, if it works for MTV and how its The Real World turned out (guys and girls drinking, partying, sleeping around, having fights, featuring the token lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transexual cast member of the season, etc.) it sure will work as a web series. Almost two years after its initial announcement, a premiere date has still not been set. It’s like an updated version of Fratpad, only there is nothing inherently gay about it - the straight boys are straight, they party with women, and argue over their girlfriends.
Broke Straight Boys TV is a concept that has been floating around the web for years now, though its become a hot topic again now that the production company has managed to make a first-peak trailer. The latest project touting itself as the industry’s first “reality television crossover” is perhaps the most absurd. The series was packaged as a film and went on to win six of its 14 award nominations, including a “Best Newcomer” tie for Jake Bass and Max Ryder, the super twinks who went on to bring the studio to its current glory. Though much of the six-part series was scripted, it was structured as a “reality” series that mirrored the real-life drama these part-time gogo boys/porn stars were facing. Consider Cockyboys’ Project GoGo Boy more of a social experiment than an actual reality show.