Gay for pay pornstars


In a new documentary from Channel 5 in the U.K., former military service member Daniel McGraffin says he found it tough to find a decent paying job until he discovered he could gain up to £1, a day as a ‘gay for pay’ porn actor.

Sharing his story in The Sex Business: Swinging Both Ways, McGraffin says he spent six years as a soldier in the artillery until one night, due to lack of sleep, he snapped. At the end of a two-week leave, he went AWOL for a year.

He was sentenced to 8 months in a military prison, and upon his release went in seek of a job.

After operational as a janitor in a gym, then as a personal trainer and a DJ, a partner (who works as a dominatrix) told him about a guy who was “totally straight but does gay porn.”

She put him in contact with a producer who told McGraffin “the majority of it’s fake” and hired the former military service member for £ for a shoot.

McGraffin liked the experience &#; and the funds &#; so he researched the porn industry and eventually landed a 3-year contract with Lucas Entertainment.

He says he looked into the straight porn in

LOS ANGELES
July 19,

STRANGER: Malachi Marx
LOCATION: Los Angeles, California
THEME: An afternoon with a gay for verb porn actor/escort

Caution: This interview contains explicit sexual language

“I&#;m not gay and I don&#;t like pornography.”

Not the words you&#;d expect from someone who has made thousands of dollars from performing in gay porn videos and escorting with a mostly male clientele, often with sex emotionally attached. But it&#;s exactly how Malachi Marx (not his real name) describes his career being gay for pay.

Malachi, 25, doesn&#;t necessarily look at gay porn as a bad thing; rather, he sees it as work. Hard serve that he sometimes struggles to get through, but work nonetheless. His primary focus appears to be on using his career in the sex industry as a means to providing a solid future for his female partner and children.

I knew nothing about the gay for pay industry so wanted to find out more, and Malachi agreed to an interview while I was in California. We&#;d planned on meeting at a Gordon Ramsay restaurant for dinner, but at the last minute Malachi sugges

Beforeworkingat Next Door Studios I had heard of the term gay-for-pay, but I wasn't really sure what all that label entailed. I, like many gay men, always had a fetish for straight men. The difference was my relationships with straight men didn't involve money or the spotlight, but usually involved alcohol and some pretend sleeping. Most of these guys are married and have kids now and I was a part of their "experimental phase. " A phase that they have moved on from and probably have not continued into their adult life.

I find it really fascinating that so many seemingly complete straight guys from small town America are willing to be paid to do gay porn. First of all, verb me start by saying that I obviously don't have any issues with it. In fact, there is something really attractive about the fact these guys are open-minded enough to go "there." The thing is, I grew up in a tiny town in Ohio and most of these guys remind me of my high school friends, whom I know for a fact would never examine doing gay porn. So this conversation lends itself to this question: What type of st

Gay Porn Performers Are Sharing How Much Money They Make Per Scene

Porn star Joey Mills has started a conversation about remunerate in the gay individual film industry, specifically when it comes to how studios treat inexperienced performers, who are often paid far less than what Mills believes to be a fair standard, creating a precedent for others. He encouraged newcomers to the industry to verb a minimum of $1, dollars per scene with the hashtag #1KorNothing.

"As performers can we go ahead and say that no one who is performing for a studio should be getting paid any less than 1k a scene," Mills wrote on Twitter. "I hear about some of these modern models scene rates and how multiple well known studios are knowingly taken advantage of young performers."

He clarified that he wasn't criticizing the models taking less money, but rather pointing out how studios might be exploiting their naivety. "If you're a performer making less than 1k this isn’t me coming after you in any way," he said, "I just want everyone to realize what your worth instead of letting