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Recap from the 2014 Feminist Porn Marathon (And Award-Winners!)

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I’m back in the bay, and wow. What a whirlwind of events up in Toronto! Did I say Feminist Porn Retreat? More like Feminist Porn Marathon. The last few days have been a bit of a blur, as I’m winding down from jam-packed weekend of screenings, panels, and meetings. And I’ve just barely begun to catch up on emails and return to my regularly scheduled programing here in San Francisco. (Speaking of which: I’m training — and fundraising — for a 191 mile relay race next month, and I’ve got my eyes set on my first Olympic Triathlon coming around the bend! More on that later…)

As I mentioned in my last post about the awards and conference, I was there with my new behind-the-scenes job at Pink & White Productions. Shine’s film BED PARTY was nominated — and it won Best Boygasm! The Feminist Porn Awards gave it a special honor — and a cheeky name — that importantly recognizes male sexuality and pleasure within the feminist porn framework. I’m proud to have been a part of production. Special congrats to its staring kinky porn couple Eden Alexander and Sebastian Keys. I’m grateful for their bravery and trust in sharing such an intimate part of their lives with us. (You want to see my favorite picture of them? NSFW for adorably big balls, so click here. A close second place is his puppy mask.) You can watch the trailer — and full film — on PinkLabel.tv.

Jiz Lee and Shine Louise Houston from Pink and White Productions at the 2014 Feminist Porn Awards

Shine and I are STOKED! (Cool butt toy trophy designed by Fucking Sculptures!)

As 2013 Heartthrob of the Year, I had the honor of passing the torch to this year’s Heatthrob: Zahra Stardust! A few years ago I had the pleasure of working with her first-hand ;-) and she’s a fucking firecracker: smart as hell, proud progressive politics, stunningly beautiful, and a versatile switch performer who has the magic touch. And she’s a fellow fisting freedom advocate! In my speech announcing her award, I said that strong performers are essential in feminist porn; and to me, she’s one of the brightest. I love that the Feminist Porn Awards recognize performers who are not only sexy as hell, but also incredibly kind and outspoken individuals. Brava!

Jiz Lee and Zahra Stardust 2014 Feminist Porn Awards

Fistbump to 2014 Heartthrob of the Year, Zahra Stardust!

A beautiful moment happened at the awards show, that just blew me away. The event coordinators held a remembrance for my late friend, Carlos Batts, complete with showing some of his work, and a heartfelt speech by Tristan Taormino. They awarded him Indie Porn Icon (he was a truly innovating artist) and then his late wife and muse, and my Doll, April Flores accepted his award on stage with a moving speech which incorporated some of his own words from past interviews about his art.

Art is the strongest form of activism. Art encompasses everything. It encompasses the queer movement, fat activism, racism, all the “isms”—that’s our job… My motivation is to cross boundaries and create a dialogue, and that’s what I’ve done it for since I was a kid. – Carlos Batts (RIP)

It was one of the most powerful remembrances of an artist that I’ve witnessed in person, and the room seemed united in love for someone so important to our community, and a dear friend. Even people in attendance who had never met Carlos were in tears, visibly moved. We had celebrated his birthday at the Bloor Holiday Inn last year, and this year I was inspired again and grateful to have known him. This photo below captures the moment beautifully. 

April Flores Feminist Porn Awards

April accepting Feminist Porn Award’s Indie Porn Icon for Carlos Batts. RIP CBattsFly

The awards ceremony was incredible and I’m so fortunate to be able to go every year and participate. Each year there are more and more producers creating exciting new works, and it feels like the conversations and dialogues are growing, public perception of porn is changing, and as I continue to work on both sides of the camera, I’m grateful for all the support and encouragement along the way.

While I was in Toronto, I also shot porn! I had barely enough time to squeeze in a quick scene for a new queer porn site. (To be announced soon!) What was really special about this shoot, besides my co-star being ANDRE SHAKTI, was that I was reminded how lucky I am to be able to negotiate what I’d like to do for the camera. That’s one part of what makes queer porn so special to me, which is that it’s not necessarily bound by the same constraints as other kinds of pornography. So for what was less than a quarter of my mainstream rate, Andre and I simply made out and dry-humped on a bed. Though they only wanted about 15 minutes of footage, they let us go for as long as we like, and we ended up grinding for almost an hour. Let me say that I was so wound-up and horny, that I got off  – hard. It was super satisfying, and I love that I can not even take off my underwear to have one of the hottest scenes. Here’s a sneak peek:

Andre Shakti Jiz Lee

Perving on Andre Shakti, before my dirtiest-tamest scene yet!

I also attended the Feminist Porn Conference, and was booked solid with presentations and seminars. My favorites were the Business Track sessions. This year I presented a “CrashCourse” Affiliate Marketing 101 seminar (More Buck for your Bang) designed to empower performers and producers with the knowledge of affiliate programs and how to use them to encourage ethical porn consumption (by helping fans with a direct link of where to purchase) and very importantly, helping to narrow the financial gap between performers and producers. Performers often think that there’s only one paycheck for a scene — but with just a little know-how, we can add affiliate links — like the kind on my blog — and continue to be supported by our work, like royalties! I teach an ongoing workshop at Pink & White especially for the adult community. I also had the pleasure of presenting for the first time with Pink & White’s web developer Chris Lowrance in which we attempted the impossible — how to build a website (in a 90 minute session). Entitled, “If You Build It, They Will .com”, we presented web development and troubleshooting specifically for porn sites focused on queer and feminist content. You can find the handout on Pink & White Productions, and look forward to a video presentation soon (our new CrashCourse project will help educate new content creators.) Can you tell I’m totally jazzed about this new direction in my work-life? I love my job! 

There were so many wonderful people I met, some in person for the first time, I can’t possibly name them all here. But I’m eagerly awaiting next year, when the Feminist Porn Awards celebrates its 10th Anniversary, which will also be my 10th year in porn. It will be epic!

Without further ado, here’s the winners. (You can also browse the complete list: Feminist Porn Awards Winners 2006-2014.)

The 2014 Feminist Porn Awards

Sexiest Short
No Artificial Sweeteners
Sonya JF Barnett (The Madame)

Sexiest Short
Trains | Paul Deeb (Pillow Book Productions)

Best Boygasm
Bed Party: Eden Alexander & Sebastian Keys | Shine Louise Houston (Pink & White Productions)

Steamiest Straight Movie
The Temptation of Eve | Jacky St. James (New Sensations)

Golden Beaver of Canadian Content
Power at Play | Carey Gray (House of Switch)

Best Direction
Sexual Freedom (Sex Stories 3) | Ovidie (Frenchlover TV)

Feminist Porn Awards Smutty School Teacher Award for Sex Education
Tristan Taormino’s Guide to Bondage for Couples | Tristan Taormino (Adam & Eve)

Hottest Dyke Film
Hard Femme: Lesbian Curves 2 | Courtney Trouble (TROUBLEfilms)

Honorable Mentions
Something Better: Performers Talk About Feminism & Porn | Ms. Naughty (Indigo Lush)

Best Slumber Party Ever | Samuel Shanahoy (tee vee dinner)

Doing It Again Vol 1: Playful Awakening | Tobi Hill-Meyer (Handbasket  Productions)

Honorable Websites
www.juicypinkbox.com
www.naughtynatural.com
www.welovegoodsex.com
www.wendywilliamsxxx.com

Hottest Straight Vignette
Xconfessions | Erika Lust (Lust Productions S. L)

Hottest Lesbian Vignette
Women Reclaiming Sex on Film | Madison Young (Madisonbound Productions)

Hottest Kink Movie
Rubber Bordello | Soma Snakeoil (Snakeoil Media Productions)

Tantalizing Trans Film
Trans Grrrls: Revolution Porn Style Now! | Courtney Trouble (TROUBLEfilms)

Heartthrob of the Year
Zahra Stardust

Movie of the Year
Silver Shoes | Jennifer Lyon Bell (Blue Artichoke Films)

 


Wet Dreams: Jiz Lee & Lyric Seal

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Jiz Lee and Lyric Seal Going Here, Wet Dreams

About two years ago, I spoke at Smith College and afterwards, met someone who would reignite within me a passion for performance, artful sex, and creative embodiment: Lyric Seal. Fast-forward and we’re on porn-date #2, scheming ideas for our collaboration with Courtney Trouble for the forthcoming film, Wet Dreams. We — Lyric especially — had a lot of grandiose ideas for the shoot, but we ended up with Lyric’s vision of filming within an elevator shaft. In their own words:

“Once in high school I had a horrific experience of being trapped in a very small, very old elevator for an hour at my school. Cops had to drag me out by my arms (I don’t like cops) and the front page of our county newspaper read, “GIRL IN WHEELCHAIR EXTRICATED FROM ELEVATOR.” Humiliating. So I thought, what if I was with someone really cool and hot when that elevator stopped? What if I knew and loved my body? What if I got to have sex I like to have with my strange queer crip body, and when the elevator starts working again, I didn’t even notice? What if the headline read, “GIRL IN WHEELCHAIR GIVES ORAL SEX.” I wouldn’t say that’s a particular fetish, but it is a way I am taking back my memories, and owning my survival, rather than letting trauma own me. And duh I got to have sex with one of my best friends and porn crush, Jiz Lee, so that’s a dream right there.”

Description: What if we could turn places of trauma into places of pleasure? What if we could close our eyes and dream, what if sound guided us through our fantasies? What if our heart beats were louder than halting stops, if we were open to love in scary places? In Going Here, Lyric and Jiz explore the edges of danger, public sex, experimentation, and lust. This exclusive excerpt from Courtney Trouble’s upcoming film Wet Dreams is about letting our fantasies take over all else.

Stars: Jiz Lee & Lyric Seal

WATCH NOW: QueerPorn.tv

Safer Sex in Queer Porn and the Condom Debate

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I added a sticky to this post because even though it was written in 2011 for Measure B, the issue of mandating condoms in sex is still rearing it’s ugly head with a California Assembly Bill, AB1576, and this time it has terrifying legal consequence. My thoughts haven’t changed much on the subject, so I’ve included updates below. 

Published June 6th, 2011

It’s late afternoon on a grey, overcast Monday in the SOMA district of San Francisco.

For the last few months — and especially this weekend — I’ve been reading about changes happening in Los Angeles in the mainstream porn industry. I’d like to think there’s more difference between San Francisco’s little queer porn hub and LA’s porn valley, but like today’s weather, there’s a lot of grey.

Tomorrow, June 7th, at 10am, there is a Medical Meeting with the Cal-OSHA (California Division of Occupational Safety and Health) Board of Directors addressing Adult Industry Regulation. (Address: CalTrans Building, 100 S. Main St., Los Angeles, CA 90012). Porn performer Danny Wylde has been one of the most vocal industry bloggers about the recent news; his position as a performer and his writing skills as a blogger put him on the forefront as a key player within a pool of increasingly visible sexually progressive adult stars. Click on over to read his blog post “The Condom Debate,” because I think he most succinctly describes the issue at hand. Additionally, Violet Blue wrote a fantastic article “Real Sex and Porn Sex” not too long ago, which also serves as a must-read to more fully understand safer sex issues within porn.

Akira Raine and Chocolate Chip use a dental dam on queer porn site Crash Pad Series, 2012 Feminist Porn Awards Winner and 2014 XBIZ Awards Specialty Site of the Year. Photo: CrashPadSeries.com

I decided to add my own story to the “debate” because my experience is somewhat isolated as a queer porn performer. And this grants me interesting and conflicting thoughts around the issue. Just earlier, I was prompted to write and share my thoughts when I saw some posts on the subject by LA Girl-Girl porn performers:

“Think the condoms/porn debate doesn’t effect you? A girl-girl sex scene will require dental dams & gloves & there is no testing requirement.”

“So those condom regs, they are a lot worse than just condoms. Gloves, dams, face shields etc. This passes and porn’s done in CA.”

What’s wrong with barriers? I happen to be someone who adores gloves, and reading these made me feel shamed for enjoying safer sex in my personal life as well as on the screen, especially when the company is open to it. If you don’t like using dental dams or gloves, that’s okay but it’s good to note that the tests required for most mainstream porn studios, including Girl/Girl performers, are designed for heterosexual sex risks. In the queer porn that I’m familiar with, using barriers and opting not to have a straight porn test is a common choice among performers, who even bring their own dental dams to set along with their preferred lube.

One of the main differences I see between “mainstream” porn and San Francisco-based “queer” pornography* is the focus on sex-positive values which includes allowing diverse models to make the choice to best protect their sexual health. (*What is queer porn? It’s a term currently used to describe the work I perform in, where models span a range of queer sexual orientations and gender identities — queer women and men, trans and cisgender, and genderqueers for example — so it’s not simply defined as gay, lesbian, trans, or bisexual.)

How does giving models the choice best protect their sexual health? I believe a choice with a range of protections is better than one blanket-level standard (whether it’s barriers, or testing) for a number of reasons: mainly, it allows for flexibility depending on the models’ diverse needs. All our needs are different. Some models are real-life partners who are fluid-bonded and monogamous with their own testing precautions, or, poly/non-monogamous lovers who have specific arrangements. Some models are sex workers and have boundaries in porn that they may or may not have with their clients. For some models, they are topping in the scene and will not be exposed to any bodily fluids. For some models who work in LA or other industry porn, it’s a special shoot that allows them to have whatever kind of sex they want, or to perform with partners who are outside mainstream aesthetics. Models have different sexual histories, so choices in safer sex practices may vary based on our needs.

In addition, models have different sexual anatomy, regardless of gender expression, which may lend to different sexual risks. Different sex acts also pose varying sexual risks. So there’s a lot of variables and the awareness of all these different situations and kinds of risks, and using the information to apply to sexual practice is called “risk-based assessment.”

When I perform in porn, I make decisions within each scene based on risk-based assessment. My sexual health is put at various risks based on the anatomy of my co-star and what sexual acts we will do together. Here’s a chart I found which I modified to read as penis/vulva (as opposed to man/woman):

What You Can Get if Your Partner is Infected

KNOWN RISKS

POSSIBLE RISKS

UNKNOWN

Giving oral sex to someone’s penis
Giving oral sex to someone’s vulva none
Receiving oral sex if you have a penis none
Receiving oral sex if you have a vulva none
Anal sex – penetrating with your penis none
Anal sex – receiving from a penis none
Penis/Vaginal sex, if you have  a penis none
Penis/Vaginal sex, if you have a Vagina none
Oral-anal Sex none

* You could be at risk if the receiver has just topped someone else.

** Very low risk.

*** Unprotected anal sex is a very high risk activity for a bottom, much more so than for a top. The risk of HIV transmission to a bottom during unprotected anal sex is 15 in 1,000 versus 3 in 10,000 from a bottom to a top.

  • Kissing, mutual masturbation, and frottage or dry humping are considered safer sex activities, with little to no risk of STD transmission.
  • Using latex condoms (male or female) significantly reduces the risk of contracting STDs during anal, vaginal and oral sex.
  • Washing hands and the genital area thoroughly before and after oral-anal sex reduces the risk of transmission of most of the listed STDs and conditions. Condom use reduces transmission risk even further.

Source: SF City Clinic, via Pink & White Productions (who provides safer sex resources to models). There’s also this guide with risks and tips for Queer Trans Men.

New info sent to me by Metis Black of Tantus Inc: “HPV isn’t an unknown for oral sex- 35% of the throat cancer in men is from HPV and rising.” [source: Wall Street Journal" Throat Cancer Linked to Virus"]


In queer porn scenes, my costars who are lovers and friends, the sexual acts are up to us, including what safer sex practices we use to help protect ourselves and each other. This sometimes takes the form of testing, gloves, condoms on toys, whether or not to go down on each other, whether or not to have anal sex, and a multitude of other choices.


Nina Hartley and I use gloves, condom on a silicone dildo, and water-based lube in our scene for CrashPadSeries.com.

Up until about a month ago, industry professionals in Los Angeles, and sometimes in SF such as Kink.com models, did routine testing at AIM (Adult Industry Medical Heath). It is industry standard that an AIM Panel test with negative results be current within 30-days (two days for some companies).  Some people call this a “clean” vs a “dirty” test; I dislike those terms as it furthers cultural stigma around sexually transmitted diseases, the people who have them and even the industries they work in. Because of this, I often use the phrase “clear” or “current;” which implies that my test results are satisfactory and it hasn’t expired. After AIM closed, Talent Testing Services and Cutting Edge Testing took its place, which includes trichomoniasis, syphilis, and more.

I don’t recall when I did my first test for porn, though it wasn’t for a few years after I had already been in the industry working in queer porn with friends and long-term fluid-bonded partners. When I did get tested specifically at AIM for porn, I found it interesting that the same test is required in LA for both Boy/Girl and Girl/Girl shoots. (Note that while I am female-bodied. I don’t identify as a girl, and many of my scenes — as well as those of many trans male friends  – are often categorized within mainstream as G/G.) As a performer working with a cisgender female costar, I paid out-of-pocket for the $130 test which at the time covered: HIV-1 DNA, Chlamydia & Gonorrhea by PCR. These are high risk for sex that is heterosexual, penis/vagina and penis/anus sex with the female performer receiving. I’ve had to have this test for a scene where I was performing strap-on sex, topping a female co-star. In this situation, my risk is very very low; I’m more at risk for HPV and herpes which are not required tests. However the standard was to have this test so I complied. Naturally, I’m happy to be tested regularly; it’s never a bad thing to have too many tests. I’m just using the example to point out how the testing standards are skewed towards heterosexual sex. (UPDATE: Tests now run $240 and are good for 14 days, covering: HIV-1 NAT, HBsAg, Anti-HCV, Chlamydia, Gonorrhea, Trichomonas Vaginalis, Syphilis (RPR), TREP-SURE EIA – Treponema pallidum Antibody, IgG by ELISA. When I showed my most recent lab result to my Kaiser doctor, she was impressed.)

Personally, I love performing safer sex practices on screen because it makes me feel safer and comfortable. I also think it’s great to have examples of people using gloves and demonstrating other safer sex practices because it shares with our community to those who may be new to the idea of safer sex. While no substitute for good sex education, safer sex demonstrated in queer porn can provide examples of communication and healthy sex practices. The sex education I received in school didn’t include homosexuality or bisexuality. At some point condoms were introduced as pregnancy prevention. It wasn’t until I was in college that I learned about STD risks, and discovered the joy of lubricant. (As a youth, I learned the hard way that suntan and massage lotions break condoms.) There’s a lot about sex ed that we aren’t taught in schools or in our culture in general. To this day, I still meet people who think it’s good to “double-bag” condoms — don’t, it only makes them more likely to break — or the idea that all lube will give them yeast infections (try a water-based non-glycerine or silicone lube). There’s a lot of sex information lacking in our education system, so it’s no surprise that many people turn to porn as a default source for sex ed. Director Chi Chi LaRue spent a good 20 years in the gay porn business fighting for visibility of condoms and the safer sex consideration of porn performers. Showing safe sex as an example of how to have good sex is particularly important.

Ultimately what it boils down to for me is my belief that all performers should be able to have sex as they feel safest. Whether that means testing, barriers, a combination, or whatever they’ve consented to. I don’t think safer sex barriers should be REQUIRED, nor do I agree that performers should feel pressured not to use them. Production companies can provide as much resources, safer sex supplies, or testing reimbursement as they can afford, and allow porn performers the freedom to choose what they feel most comfortable with. The top three examples of companies and directors I have worked with so far who provide additional safer sex supplies to help models feel safer are: Pink & White Productions (Directed by Shine Louise Houston), Kink.com (on set with Princess Donna), and Vivid-Ed (on numerous sets with Tristan Taormino, whose performer-conscious work was recently featured in CNN posted “Prevent STDs like a Porn Star“). Thanks in part to an increasing diversity of progressive pornography, our culture is becoming more and more educated and sex-positive. Let’s continue to support each other in the adult industry, and also learning more — as I am — about how to be the safest we can be.

UPDATES:

I followed along via Twitter as Ela Darling, Michael Fattorosi, and others shared agenda topics and reactions of those present online. This morning I’m reading articles as they are published, which I’m including here.

If you’re curious, here is the draft created from the meeting.
Feedback on it can be sent to Deborah Gold at DGold@dir.ca.gov

I appreciated what looks like a really thorough AVN article by Mark Kernes (Industry Expresses Its Feelings—Loudly—at Cal/OSHA Meeting) and Danny Wylde’s Abbreviated Account of the June 7th Cal-OSHA Advisory Committee Meeting. Here’s his conclusion.

“There are many more points to cover. But this is an abbreviated version, so I’m going to end here:

As it stands, nothing has actually changed except for that fact that we are now very much aware that Cal-OSHA considers our industry practices to be illegal, and AHF is very insistent in making sure we are penalized until we change those practices.

The problem is that those practices are the basis for our livelihood and they have gone unchallenged for years.

Further, performers in attendance were in near unanimous agreement that our testing practices under AIM healthcare were sufficient and effective, and we do not want mandated barrier protection in our industry.”

Read his entire post on trvewestcoastfiction

My sense is that the experiences I’ve had with progressive producers who work within the industry’s current testing standards and who have been open and encouraging around performers’ individual sexual health needs is essentially what the rest of the adult industry wants. I’m curious to see how “adult entertainment” is defined in terms of creating definitions for pornography (which may relate to free speech concerns). It seems like the debate is primarily concerned with heterosexual/straight sex — particularly at one point when “they Gay Industry” was brought up, as if it were outside the conversation (perhaps because condoms are the standard in this genre). It will be interesting to see how regulations effect things, and it was exciting to see performers speak up about their rights; even from another city in San Francisco.

More articles:
Shaya Tayefe Mohajer, Associated Press – Porn Stars Oppose California Condom Plan
Lyla Katz, X-BIZ Porn Performers Unite Over Proposed Cal/OSHA Safety Regulations
Free Speech Coalition Blog – Study Finds LA County Health Dept Reports on Adult Industry STI Data Flawed, ‘Without Basis in Science’

UPDATE 1/18/2012
Well, it’s passed — so in about 90 days LA production companies (at least, those who get permits) will have to use condoms for heterosexual scenes. It doesn’t really effect me much at all, though it does the people I know who work down there in those types of scenes. Here are some other updates in the meantime:
Lorelei Lee wrote a great piece about this in Salon. LA’s Porn Mistake
I was interviewed for an article in CounterPunch’s “The Condom: Friend or Foe in the Adult Film Industry”.

UPDATE 10/17/2012
Measure B is now up to votes in LA. There’s a lot of support from pornographers for NO on Measure B. Though I don’t live in Los Angeles, I side with those voting AGAINST Measure B so that it continues to be performers’ choice. However I’m also seeing some “backlash” from performers that is pretty sex-shaming about using barriers. I’d like to remind people that many of us enjoy using latex and non-latex barriers in sex scenes and in off-screen sex, and while it’s probably not their intention to do so, making fun of gloves and dental dams can put others down, and does discourage their use. Once again, I’m for performers’ choice, be it barriers testing, basing risks of sex acts, or any combination. Here’s a new blog post on the subject: Safer Sex CAN Be Hot!

UPDATE 5/14/2014
Measure B passed, but porn didn’t start using condoms. Instead, Los Angeles companies stopped getting permits. Others relocated to Nevada. (And coincidentally, around the same time it became very apparent that a company called Manwin (which then changed their name to MindGeek) started buying up companies left and right. Either there’s something fishy going on or I’ve been watching too many government conspiracy shows.) Anyhow, the “condom mandate” didn’t just stop in LA. Assemblyman Isadore Hall brought a version of the bill to Sacramento for a statewide vote as AB 1576, however, it removed specific language, not even mentioning the word “condom” which makes the bill very dangerous because it’s so vague that it could potentially be used to criminalize any form of porn. Even movies by queer, feminist, safer-sex loving indie porn peeps. Pink & White Productions has posted an open letter. (Full disclosure: I now work for the San Francisco-based queer porn company, and we’re considering the logistics of moving to Nevada.)

It’s heartbreaking to see the bill pass the CA Arts & Entertainment Committee despite producers and performers in attendance, such as Princess Donna and Lorelei Lee, who stood and advocated for their rights. As it stands, I’m concerned about the future of shooting porn in the Bay Area. Re-reading this post before I made this update, I realize I had written about how it “doesn’t really effect me much at all” as someone who prefers barriers. But now with the vague language of the new bill, the chance is high that it could be manipulated to criminalize whoever the state chooses to make an example of. In this case, the smallest companies have the most to loose. I’m beginning to see the size of this unfold, and am uncertain about what lies ahead. Until then, we do what we can and will prepare for the worst. Pink & White is a company that has grown from its silver linings, so I’ll raise my half-full cup and keep my eyes open.

UPDATE 5/19/2014
On Wednesday 21st there will be an Assembly Appropriations hearing in Sacramento. I will try to make the trip up there to lend my voice in opposition to AB1576.
Groups opposing it include the Adult Performers Advocacy Committee, the Erotic Service Providers Union, and the Free Speech Coalition which has gathered a petition of performers names to be presented at the hearing.

In the meantime, the website ab1576.org has a form that allows people to FAX (Online! So easy.) their letters to California State Assembly Members. Let’s show our strength in numbers and flood them with our feels. Though the site also has petitions, the biggest thing to do right now is to send the letters, and share the news with others to do the same. Together, we can be a loud enough voice where they’ll have no choice but to listen.

UPDATE 5/31/2014
The bill passed the Assembly Floor by a very narrow margin, and so it’s on to the Senate Committee in a few weeks. We’ve gotten some press about the issue, including a spot on Fox News, though most of it reports false information from Hall and AFH. For example, here’s news from the LA Department of Public Health which confirms Hall provided false information. More to come… (in the meantime, if you’re a performer who lives in the district of the following Senators (or if you’re a member of the press who would like to write on the subject) please contact Diane Duke of the Free Speech Coalition.)

I’ll tri anything once: my first triathlon!

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I’m doing my first triathlon! On Sunday June 8th I’ll compete in Vineman Monte Rio, an Olympic-sized event with a 1.5K swim, 40K bike, and 10K run.

What does a triathlon have to do with the sex-related things I usually post about? Well, those who follow me on Twitter, Facebook, Vine, Instagram, etc… know that I value sharing my non-adult interests from time to time. While not all porn performers want to share personal parts of themselves, I think doing so can help change social perceptions about people who get involved with sex work. After all, we’re just like you. Complex individuals with passions and interests, be they scholastic pursuits, caregiving, visual or performing arts, and even hopeful new triathletes. ;-)

While on a run the other day, I got the idea to use the triathlon as a means to raise funds and awareness for sex worker health. As you may have heard, AB1576 (AKA the “Condom Law”) is currently making its way towards a Senate vote, under the false guise of “protecting” sex workers’ health. But you know who IS looking out for sex workers’ health? St. James Infirmary, a non-profit health clinic run by/for sex workers which administers HIV/STI testing and counseling services, provides advocacy, and serves marginalized communities and those who are actually at risk. I’m excited to fulfill my dream of competing in my first triathlon while supporting St. James. Help me make my goal!

Genderflux: Jiz Lee & Nikki Hearts

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Jiz-Lee-Nikki-HeartsI’m quite smitten by Nikki Hearts, who got her start with Burning Angel. We had an opportunity to met while I was Production Assistant at CrashPadSeries.com (Check out Nikki’s shoot, it’s impressive and she’s so professional!)

When she invited me to shoot with her for her new project, I could only say yes! Also? We both agreed upon exactly what we wanted to do, which in this case was a safer sex shoot = go queer porn! She’s just what LA needs, and I can’t recommend her enough. 

Stars: Jiz Lee & Nikki Hearts
Watch the trailer and full film on IndiePornRevolution.com

Pornography in Helsinki: WONDERLUST Festival of Diverse, Conscious Sex

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I’m off for Finland tomorrow to appear as a special guest June 13-14 at WONDERLUST, a new “diverse and conscious sex” festival in Helsinki, Finland.

While there, I’ll present an evening of short films I’ve curated (Spectacular Porn) and my workshop (Fucking for REEL). I’ve presented versions of the workshop at PornFilmFest Berlin and Princeton University, and am excited to bring it to Finland’s new festival.

“We grew up thinking that the sexual revolution is a historical event, yet now recognize that it is an ongoing process instead.” – Wonderlust

When we watch sexual media, we can learn much about other people’s sexuality, and ourselves. In “Watch & Learn”, we’ll observe diverse sexual scenarios that span age, ability, gender, sexuality, and film genre — from documentary to sex guide, mainstream gonzo, queer indie porn, and music video. As a film genre, pornography can take us into fantasy realms exploring sexuality in deep ways. How does a film portray a relationship? Can a script create characters to safely break cultural taboo? What is the connection between sex and violence, and, how can porn heal traumatic experiences? This screening will contrast portrayals of real couples with those in fictitious relationships. Each presentation will be followed by a Q&A moderated by Marjo Pipinen.

I love the inquisitive, open-minded nature of WonderLust. Here’s a quote from their FAQ about what “Conscious Sex” means to them.

What is conscious sexuality? 

With this term we want to suggest intelligent and reflective approach to sexuality. We want to encourage discussion and experimentation on what sex could be for each individual and inspire more ‘do it yourself ’ mentality. We wish to emphasise, that anyone is free to explore their own sexuality and desires, without necessarily following any pre-determined norms.

Curating films is HARD. There’s too much porn, too little time! Papers could be written about why I chose what I did and not other films alone. At the end of the day, while not everything could be included, I decided to choose films that were easy for me to contact and obtain permissions, spanning indie shorts and Feminist Porn Award-winning titles from PinkLabel.tv’s curated selection of films, including Shine Louise Houston (BED PARTY, CrashPad’s Guide to Fisting), N Maxwell Lander (Emile, 98bit), Tobi Hill-Meyer (Doing it Again), Sadie Lune (Baby, You’re Frozen), and which I’ve come across at festivals or online such as Bruce LaBruce’s Offing Jack, Clark Matthew’s KRUTCH, Marc Silver’s Ageless Sex, Danny Wylde’s This is Love. Then there’s a few I’m in as a performer. For this screening, I’ve selected behind the scenes footage from CrashPadSeries.com, as well as Courtney Trouble’s Going Here, Dana Vespoli’s Girl/Boy. Christian Slaughter’s BIODILDO, Tristan Taormino’s Expert Guide to Pegging, and Cheryl Dunye (Mommy is Coming).

Find more information and tickets online at wonderlust.fi. The venue is wheelchair accessible; please contact wonderlusthelsinki@gmail.com or phone 0449715285 for assistance. Here’s the some press around the festival, so far on Nyt and Sylvi, and more to come!

 

WonderLust

Strap it and snap it for #STRAPWEEK

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It’s like SharkWeek, but with more bite.

International Strap-on Week (or #strapweek, because Twitter) is up on us with a week full of events, promotions, and hot images of strap-on sex. For example, watch straps-in-action and worn by all genders at CrashPadSeries.com, see my strap-on sex against the wall with Lyric Seal in Going Here, and in my gay porn-inspired Genderflux shoot for Nikki Hearts. And then of course there was that one time when Bianca Stone and I shot for Strapped Dykes 2. Straps on Straps on Straps.

Wanna get in on the fun?! Post a #straponselfie and enter to win prizes from Spareparts Hardwear and Pleasure Works. The contest is judged by myself and fellow sexies: Q-Tip, Sophia St. James, and Queerie Bradshaw. Read more or check out the press release below. Show me how you strap it!

 

#straponselfie Twitter & Instagram We'll judge you... in a good way. Photo: Digital Playground

SAN FRANCISCO—Good Vibrations is ready to help customers “Harness your pleasure! Strap it on!” as they celebrate International Strap-On Week, June 16-22, with free classes, in-store and online promotions, and an entertaining #straponselfie social media contest.

Strap-on sex can be enjoyed by people of all genders. Most recently, Good Vibrations has seen a rise in the number of heterosexual couples who are interested in exploring sex where the man is on the receiving end of the strap-on. Cisgender male penetration can be an intimate and incredibly enjoyable experience, especially if the prostate is stimulated safely, as highlighted in The Ultimate Guide to Prostate Pleasure. Good Vibrations has led the way in sexual education and promoting not only lesbian and transgender strap-on use, but also the act of “pegging,” made famous by the Bend Over Boyfriend series starring Good Vibrations’ staff Sexologist, Dr. Carol Queen.

Good Vibrations celebrates International Strap-On Week with online and in-store events. On Wednesday, June 18, a sex educator/sales associate will lead a free Humpday Happy Hour workshop on Strap-on Sex at Good Vibrations’ Polk Street store. Store shoppers who want to strap one on can enjoy 50 percent off a Pleasure Works dildo with the purchase of any harness retailing at $50 or more.

Online visitors can read up on strap-on topics such as “How to Choose a Harness,” “How to Choose a Dildo,” and [targeted to cisgender heterosexual couples] “How to Have Strap-on Sex with a Male Partner.” Strap-on Harness Comparison Charts help show the differences in a side-by-side view. Good Vibrations prides itself on educating customers so that they can make an informed purchase and find the best toy for them. Online shoppers will also enjoy a 20 percent discount on any strap-on dildo with the purchase of a harness during Strap-On Week.

In the age of the selfie, why not strap it and snap it? Good Vibrations, in the spirit of light-hearted fun, encourages the community to participate in our first ever #straponselfie contest. Participants should take a selfie photo while wearing a strap-on harness and share via Twitter and Instagram using @goodvibestoys #straponselfie #strapweek. Contest judges include Lauren Marie Fleming, A.K.A. Queerie Bradshaw from FriskyFeminist.com, the infamous genderqueer porn performer Jiz Lee, award-winning porn performer and burlesque star Sophia St. James, and porn performer Q, best known for his roles in the CrashPad Series. Official rules, exceptional prizes, and example #straponselfie photos can be found on the Good Vibes Blog.

Good Vibrations is the San Francisco Bay Area based retailer trusted for more than three decades to provide a comfortable, safe environment for finding quality products, trusted information and educational materials to enhance one’s sex life. Visit online at GoodVibes.com.

Petra Joy’s (S)he Comes: Jiz Lee, Liandra Dahl, Wolf Hudson

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Winner of numerous Feminist Porn awards and producer of the HER PORN film series, UK-based pornographer Petra Joy has established leadership in Europe’s porn-for-women market. So, it was with great excitement — and slight trepidation — that we got together over Skype to discuss the possibility of working together. After seeing my gender-bending film Justify My Jiz with Wolf Hudson, and sharing our erotic fantasies, we decided to give it a shot! Petra took a risk in casting outside the traditional cisgender realm to pair genderqueer me, with gender playful Wolf Hudson, and the sexy-as-hell Liandra Dahl .

Our scene was highly erotic. When Petra asked us to work with a slow and sensual build-up, we filled her videographers’ cards with hours of organically paced, orgasmic sex. Being greedy, I took FULL advantage and we gave her some hard decisions in the editing chair. I can’t wait for it to hit the Internet. It was a brilliant shoot, and Petra was respectful of my pronouns, negotiating the title and description to find an inclusive fit for her market. I hope the experience brings joy and discovery to new audiences.

Description: (S)he Comes is the latest erotic creation from award-winning director Petra Joy. The film features five new exciting scenes of authentic lust and sensual passion: from hot couples that fulfil each others’ every desire to an explosive male solo and a passionate threesome – (S)he Comes is an inspirational movie where women call the shots and the (multiple) orgasms flow freely. She comes, he comes, they come!

Stars: Jiz Lee, Liandra Dahl & Wolf Hudson
Watch the trailer and buy the DVD through PetraJoy.com

SheComes-LUST-1 SheComes-LUST-4 SheComes-LUST-6 SheComes-Lust-9 SheComes-Lust-10 SheComes-LUST-14

 

 


Own the camera that started it all. CrashPad Camera Up for Auction!

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In 2005, I filmed my first porn scene. The film was The Crash Pad, a movie that paved the way for sex-shop produced, queer-made porn in the San Francisco Bay Area. It became a dyke sex cult classic that coalesced with a burgeoning online generation to form the backbone of my career in adult. It’s been an incredible journey. And now you can actually own — and use — the video camera that started it all! Pink & White Productions is putting the original camera on auction at eBay.

A little history:

Pink & White’s camerawoman Shae Voyeur says: “The Panasonic AG-DVX100A still sells online for about $800.00 from trusted retailers. I picked it up brand new at $2,750 when it came out in 2004. At that time it was the hot camera for independent filmmakers. In 2004, CNET called it ‘the kind of camera that sends shivers down the spines of pro videographers and serious amateurs with modest budgets.’ The site boasted that it was a digital camera that could shoot video that looked like film. It offered various frame rate options, including the infamous 24 frames a second. At the time it ‘made news by being the only 24P camera available for less than $25,000,’ CNET wrote.”

A little porno magic:

Shae met Pink & White Co-Producer Shawn in 2005 when they were both volunteering for LadyFest Bay Area. As they chatted about the films they had just seen, Shae mentioned wanting to shoot porn. Shawn shared that her friend Shine Louise Houston was writing a script and wanted to start a porn company. Things were in motion. Shine met with Shae at Muddy Waters, where they struck a chord. Shae offered to shoot the demo scene for free, just to try out her new camera. Shine’s short film, “The Contract”  (which starred a budding Madison Young), would be the ticket to help Shine secure the financial backing to produce The Crash Pad and launch Pink & White Productions. And the rest, as they say, is queer porn history.

CrashPad Porn Movie Video Camera

Camerawoman Shae Voyeur films the classic boi-on-boi wrestling shot. (My first scene!)

After The Crash Pad, the camera went on to shoot the CrashPadSeries.com for a few years with the amazing DIY lenses that Shine built. And, it may have been squirted on a few times. (Sorry, not sorry!) Fear not; the camera was not harmed in the making of any of these scenes!

A little love: 

The proceeds from the auction will benefit Communities United Against Violence (CUAV), a Bay Area-based non-profit that works with LGBTQQ communities to transform violence and oppression. Let me just copy and paste part of their mission statement, because it rules: “We support the healing and leadership of those impacted by abuse and mobilize our broader communities to replace cycles of trauma with cycles of safety and liberation. As part of the larger social justice movement, CUAV works to create truly safe communities where everyone can thrive.”

The org offers counseling around harassment, violence, abuse, threats, and trauma. And about 7 or 8 years ago, I found a CUAV postcard on identifying healthy and unhealthy communication in relationships. It helped me sort out personal health and, along with the lessons of many other special individuals, lead me to become the more in-tune person I am now. So, I hope the auction throws some consensual kisses back their way via a sizable donation!

I hope this video camera finds a happy owner and continue to document more monumental sex.

Place your bid now!

If Not Now: Support Tylyn Anson’s Coming of Age Story, and Trans & Genderqueer Media

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Next month I travel to New Orleans! (Quick sidenote: this will be my second time visiting, and though I wont have much free time to enjoy and explore, I’m really looking forward to the brief return. NOLA is a super special place and I’ve loved all the sweet people I’ve met there. I’m so lucky to come back!)

I’ll be there acting in a (non-explicit) short film called If Not Now, a poignant coming-of-age story about trying to find home in a new community after you’ve left the last one behind. I am in love with the script and its themes of home, community, gender identity, and self. It strongly resonates with my own journey, and it’s personally powerful for me to be able to play a genderqueer character. And hone my acting chops!!

(And, we decided I’d shave my head again for the role, so it’s also a fun excuse to go back to bald for a little bit.)

Jiz-Lee-Rae-Threat

Envisioning Talon. Photo: Rae Threat

The Story

A thesis film about feeling lost in the city that was supposed to have all the answers.

Katie is a recent transplant to the city of New Orleans, having left her small hometown after being exiled by her family and friends after coming out as queer. However, New Orleans hasn’t been the perfect safe haven she’s expected it to be so far. Her boss is just as bad as the people in her hometown, and aside from two friends she’s made, she feels isolated by the shifting nature of the local queer community. Worse still, she has this nagging feeling that she still hasn’t figured out exactly who she is in life, and so she begins to plan to leave New Orleans for another city.

Soon after, she meets Talon (Jiz Lee), and genderqueer person from San Francisco, and the two quickly enter into a whirlwind romance. This chance encounter-turned-romance sets Katie on a journey to discover where she belongs, how she fits into the queer community, and how she relates to herself.

(“Romance” means there’s a sex scene… my first simulated sex scene!)

Pre-order and Support Queer Cinema

The film’s director is Tylyn Anson, a third-year graduate student at the University of New Orleans, and someone who is a lifetime NOLA resident and genderqueer, trans woman filmmaker. It’s Tylyn’s final year in the MFA program, and we hope If Not Now will be a launching pad for her future projects. I think she a gifted and passionate director. It was at last year’s San Francisco Transgender Film Festival that I saw one of her most recent films, Seven Stages of the Closet. Watching Tylyn’s talented work sealed the deal. Here it is (7 minutes):

Help support the work of this young and talented director as she graduates from her program and works to get our stories out into the world. The funding raised from the IndieGoGo campaign (isn’t it frickin’ awesome to live in a time where a global community can support one another?) will help fly me out and cover production costs for cast and equipment. It also ensures that supporters can essentially “pre-order” the film, and every donor has the option to get their name in the credits.

It’s also great to hear that Tylyn’s advisors at University of New Orleans didn’t have a problem with the film staring a porn performer. Beyond lending my acting abilities, I hope I can use my reach within the queer porn and genderqueer/trans communities to help her film career really take off!

Donate today!

Please help us spread the word, share the IndieGoGo link on Facebook and Twitter — tag me and I’ll repost! — and look forward to posts from behind the scenes of If Not Now, and then film festival circuit, and then larger projects from Tylyn Anson!

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: How to Come Out Like a Pornstar, the Book!

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The ways in which we “come out” — or DON’T — say a lot about who we are and how we are perceived.

Coming out can expose shame as much as it can reveal open-minded acceptance. Porn is not something many people openly talk about, often out of protection and privacy. Stories about the reactions from our family and friends, or the ways in which we guard our decisions through alias and discretion can present an honest look at what it’s like to work in the field of sexuality, within an industry so often misrepresented. While some denounce pornography as obscene, and others praise its associates brazen liberation, the actual accounts of what happens when we live with our choices off the set walk the line and offer a refreshingly honest look at the complexity of sexuality. I want to hear your story.

I’m seeking submissions of personal narratives from porn performers, videographers, photographers, producers, directors, web producers, industry writers and reviewers, and anyone else who works in the field of pornography. Posts by family members of porn people, parents, children, siblings or even lovers will also be considered.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:

  • Write about your experience coming out (or not) and whatever details you’d like to share.
  • Pen names/pseudonym or changing the names of people in your story are accepted.
  • Submissions should be approximately 1,000 words in length. (All lengths considered.)
  • Please send as a Word, Text, or Google Doc, or in the body of the email.
  • If your work is selected, I will contact you in regards to publishing information, payment, and contracts.
  • Writers retain rights and may publish their work at any time, as they see fit. Exclusivity is not required.
  • Multiple submissions will be accepted.
  • DEADLINE is ongoing. (Please contact me if you’d like to submit!)

Email: Jiz@JizLee.com
Accepted entries will be compensated $50-100.

So, what was your experience like? What information do you withhold? Do you generalize what you do when asked? Are you more open to disclosing your job to close friends, or to complete strangers? Do your children know about your work? Do their teachers know? Do you have any advice to share with others? Did you find acceptance and excitement about coming out? Did it surprise you to find support? Did it disgust you to find the people you love place judgement on you? Did you have to educate or defend yourself or others? Did you withhold information or details? Is there a component about coming out that felt freeing? Is coming out necessary? I’m looking forward to your submissions.

And I have to say: thank you everyone, for the support you’ve given to me through your emails and messages, for purchasing my work, for respecting my gender pronouns and sexuality, for inspiring me to write and share my experiences, and more. I will also have a story in the book, and I’m looking forward to hearing from you!

TRICKS of the TRADE: Porn Best Practices Article in September 2014 XBiz Magazine

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Tricks of the Trade: Porn Best Practice for Content Trades Queer Porn Feminist Porn Indie Porn Advice

“Didn’t you shoot a scene with her? When’s the video going to come out?”

Whenever the topic comes up, my porno candle dims a little. This summer marks the second anniversary of one of the hottest performances of my career, and I’m beginning to think the video will never be released. Even worse, I have no one to blame but myself.

Excerpt from Tricks of the Trade: Porn’s ‘Best Practices’ for Content Trades and Shares.

It’s live! I recently wrote a mammoth of an advice article on content trades and shares for porn performers. It appears in the September 2014 print issue of XBiz Magazine (Digital Subscription here) and is also republished on PinkLabel.tv (where it includes glorious links to all the performers and producers who gave me sage advice). Mahalo: Andre Shakti, Arabelle Raphael, Bella Vendetta, Danny Wylde, James Darling, James Deen, Jimmy Broadway, Kelly Shibari, Kimberly Kane, Lorelei Mission, Mickey Mod, Ms. Naughty, Owen Gray, Siri, Stoya, and Tobi Hill-Meyer.

Please click on over and give it a read!

UNSHAVEN (I want to live in a tide pool for Nikki Silver’s upcoming book on gender and body hair.)

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Here’s a peek at my photoshoot with Nikki Silver for her upcoming book, UNSHAVEN!

As someone who rarely shaves and has a lot of feels about the social constructs around gender and hair, it was a powerful collaboration and I’m honored to be included in her photo collection. (And the last pic is my absolute favorite. I could spend the rest of my life playing in tide pools at high tide!)

Jiz Lee Unshaven NaughtyNautral tide pool

Jiz Lee Unshaven NaughtyNautral tide pool Jiz Lee Unshaven NaughtyNautral tide pool

Jiz Lee Unshaven NaughtyNautral tide pool

Jiz Lee Unshaven NaughtyNautral tide pool

Stay tuned, book coming soon!

Fisting Day 2014

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International Fisting Day is October 21st!

You ready for a monster post? Well grab your lube, lay back, and relax. It’s late on Thursday night and I’m typing this out at one of my favorite bars, El Rio. San Francisco just felt it’s second earthquake today. It makes me shiver thinking about the fragility of our lives, the great divides between the earth and our existence. And then, you know, there’s fisting. Crossing my fingers the ground below my feet withhold a mighty quake, let’s get this blog going.

In 2011, I was chatting with queer pornographer Courtney Trouble, about her recent film LiveSexShow, which was a fundraiser for the Center for Sex and Culture filmed during the non-profit’s annual Masturbate-a-Thon. I performed with Nina Hartley, for an audience of ‘pleasure activists’. The chemistry was high with me and Nina and we jumped into each other. We had a grand time, during which, her fingers and then her whole hand went inside my cunt. And then I came for the crowd and for myself, and for Courtney holding a video camera for the world to see.

At least, we hope the world could see.

For as long as I’ve done porn (2005), distribution companies and retailers have banned the act of fisting in the films I’ve been in. It feels like it’s always been this way, but that’s not true. It’s only been a little over a decade.

Anti-porn movements, in particular the administrations which coincide with them, have had a bone to pick against pornography. For obvious reasons, I’m pro-porn, sex-positive, and a firm advocate of consensual, ethical, and artistic erotic imagery. The act of making porn is a brave, powerful, and righteous thing. We’re often representing marginalized communities, taking power through creating our own images of desire. As Shine Louise Houston infamously says, that as a queer woman of color, it’s especially important for her to create her own sexual images. And I completely and passionately, agree. Explicitly demonstrating our pleasure shows examples of healthy sexuality that have long been denied in queer stories from Hollywood, or sex education classes. Safer sex? Check. Communication? Check. Equal gender agency, right here. Lube? Stays in the picture.

I’ve appeared in DVDs I knew would not include fisting, beginning with my very first porn scene with my lover at the time, Syd Blakovich. It didn’t make sense that fisting couldn’t be shown, but I tossed it up to it being the fact that porn is marketed and driven by a lot of assumptions about what sells, what sex should look like, what the people who have sex should look like, yada, yada, yada. To the director’s credit, she let us do it and shot from the elbow up. Still, what’s the harm in it being shown? How could fisting be important enough to see?

Some Fisting FAQs:

Why is fisting important to you?
My first experiences with hand sex, where my body took in the entire fist of a lover, happened around a time of galactic sexual exploration. I was in my early twenties and it was mind-blowing. The orgasms were intense and I was in an open relationship and was dating a lot of people so it was exciting for me to have sex with friends and teach them how to fist me, to fist others, and to really enjoy practicing sex in a safe way and to experience this with lovers of all kinds of genders and sexual orientations. It was so much fun. Fisting is about being really present and in your body, and ready for a good time.

Why do you love fisting?
What I love about fisting someone vaginally (or through their front hole, if they don’t associate with the v-word) is feeling them TAKE ME IN. There’s a moment where the person just opens up to you. Once inside, they’re warm, wet, and every little movement you make can be felt. It’s something that may take time. Fisting is something that doesn’t necessarily happen right away. You put a finger in. Then two. Then three, four, and then… and sometimes after long and gentle coaxing, the thumb. Sometimes lovers can try several times in sex before fisting happens. But once you’re in, it’s golden! You can angle your hand for G-Spot stimulation. You can find your lovers’ “A Spot”, which is just under the cervix towards the back. Some like to feel a bit of pressure there. You can carefully stroke and “jerk-off” the cervix, as if it were a small, internal cock. Unlike using a strap-on or dildo toy, my hand can feel every motion. It’s incredibly intimate and really sexy. If the chemistry and connection with my partner is strong, I can come from penetrating with my hand!

As someone who loves to receive a fist, I enjoy an unparalleled feeling of fullness. The most sensitive areas of the vagina are just within the first few inches inside. I like to use my kegel and pelvic muscles to grip snugly around a lovers’ wrist, which can be compared to the girth of a medium-large dildo. Deeper inside, pressure feels really good for me. I like to rock my hips against a lover’s hand, or hold very still and squeeze hard, creating a game where I try to hold their hand tightly in place as they move against me. I do my kegel exercises and am pretty strong so I have a lot of control over my vaginal muscles and can make myself very tight, or, allow myself to stretch open. Or pulse between the two extremes. Combining clitoral and vaginal stimulation, the network of nerves and contracting of muscles orchestrate some of the most amazingly intense orgasms I’ve ever had.

What do you say to people who think it’s dangerous or scary?
Some people think fisting is intense in a bad way — that it hurts. But anyone who loves fisting knows that it can be the most intimate and beautifully connecting experience with a lover. Or a really fun in a three-some — I’ve held the hand, fingers locked, with a lover while the two of us have fisted a friend. I’ve also had both my fists inside two different lovers at the same time, while they kissed intensely. I’ve 69’ed with fisting, and I’ve even fisted myself!

Fisting isn’t any more scary than any kind of unwelcome sexual advance. However many people don’t know that much about it. We learn about sex as only being penis-vagina intercourse. But sex is so much more! We don’t learn much about sexual anatomy, how to communicate with lovers, or about pleasure. In fact, when we see a fist, we may be more inclined to think of it punching someone in the face because we see images of violence more common and at a younger age than we do sex. (ie: Cartoons show characters throwing punches and shooting guns, yet wont show even a bare breast.) In “This Film Will Not Be Rated”, we see the MPAA approve violent scenes with more leniency than they do sex scenes, especially ones featuring female pleasure. So when we as a culture are more familiar with a fist being used to harm someone, it’s no wonder that someone who hasn’t had a healthy sex-positive education about fisting would assume it is painful. In our culture, we see fists as weapons. Let’s embody the revolutionary icon of the fist as a symbol of progress.

What’s your experience with fisting?
Personal love of the topic aside, my work in adult has primarily featured fisting. In fact, I fist in my films more often than I’ve worn a strap-on. This may come as a surprise to many DVD buyers, who would never see the act as it’s been edited or angled out of the scenes, with the exception of online website content for queer porn sites such as CrashPadSeries.com. I’ve also performed as a demo model for Fisting Demonstrations in adult classes such as Reid Mihalko’s Iron Slut: Sex Educator Showdown, and for couples’ sex education nights at Kink.com’s armory. I have also covered fisting as a guest lecturer on sex ed at colleges and universities.

Why is it okay to show fisting ONLINE, but not in a hard copy DVD?

Well, here’s what I know.

DVD distributors, retailers, and porn producers, are afraid to SELL porn if it means they might be charged with an obscenity. To date, some men are in jail or have had court orders for showing “obscene” content, such as John Stagliano and Seymore Butts. This content includes female ejaculation, enemas, and in 2001, fisting. The charges in the case of fisting were dropped with an plea bargain for a meager $1,000 fine. However this scared distributors because since that date, at least in terms of the companies who have distributed my films, fisting was NOT to be shown. If fisting was present, footage was edited out if it was visible, or left in if the camera angle was such that you couldn’t tell fisting was occurring. Why fisting?

Fisting is on the Cambria List of sex acts not allowed for inclusion in content meant for physical distribution.

From PBS:

On January 18th, 2001, Adult Video News reported on the so-called “Cambria List.”  Paul Cambria, a longtime attorney for the porn industry, was involved in the list’s preparation. The list is controversial within the industry and interpretations differ on how it was meant to be applied. Some in the industry say it represents guidelines for the box-covers of adult videos, not for the sex acts they depict. Nevertheless, there is wide agreement that the Cambria List shows how the adult industry is seeking to be more careful, fearing a potential crackdown on pornography by the Bush Administration.

The Cambria List:

Box-Cover Guidelines/Movie Production Guidelines

Before selecting a chrome please check facial expression. Do not use any shots that depict any unhappiness or pain.

Do not include any of the following:

  • No shots with appearance of pain or degradation
  • No facials (bodyshots are OK if shot is not nasty)
  • No bukakke
  • No spitting or saliva mouth to mouth
  • No food used as sex object
  • No peeing unless in a natural setting, e.g., field, roadside
  • No coffins
  • No blindfolds
  • No wax dripping
  • No two dicks in/near one mouth
  • No shot of stretching pussy
  • No fisting
  • No squirting
  • No bondage-type toys or gear unless very light
  • No girls sharing same dildo (in mouth or pussy)
  • Toys are OK if shot is not nasty
  • No hands from 2 different people fingering same girl
  • No male/male penetration
  • No transsexuals
  • No bi-sex
  • No degrading dialogue, e.g., “Suck this cock, bitch” while slapping her face with a penis
  • No menstruation topics
  • No incest topics
  • No forced sex, rape themes, etc.
  • No black men-white women themes

Curious about the legal significance of the list, I emailed Queery Bradshaw, who has a legal background and she confirmed what I expected about the aspects behind several porn obscenity trials when they come to bringing visibility to marginalized sexual practices. Particularly in terms of freedom of expression.

She wrote back:

It’s a double edged sword because the more a topic, scene, or act becomes mainstream, the least likely it is going to be considered obscene against the community standard. But, if you’re constantly censored for fear of being prosecuted, you can’t make those acts known or common place. I know authors that have had fisting (or the mention of sex at all even) censored out of their beautiful non-erotic literary works of art. People are afraid and the only way to stop that fear is to talk about it, but you don’t know if you talk about it if you’re going to be prosecuted. And that is why I totally agree with you Jiz that this is completely and totally a free speech censorship issue and that we need to talk about how healthy it is so people stop seeing fisting as this thing that people do to degrade and dishonor another (which is justification often for censoring anything).

Despite the Cambria List, there’s also the Miller Test, which courts have used in efforts to determine what might be obscene when there’s no written rule. Here’s Constance Penley talking about obscenity and pornography.

The Miller test was developed in the 1973 case Miller v. California. It has three parts:

  • Whether “the average person, applying contemporary community standards”, would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest,
  • Whether the work depicts/describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by applicable state law,
  • Whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.

The work is considered obscene only if all three conditions are satisfied.

The first points are up to the standards of the community. Which community? Whichever applies! That’s what makes it so vague. The last one in particular is held up to whatever is reasonable to a person of the United States as a whole. The Miller Test is basically the reason why it’s okay to have more freedom of sexuality online, where it’s more difficult to determine online community, than in physical DVDs, where a community can be deemed as a geographical space. There are many zipcodes in the United States where it is illegal to mail pornography.

You’d think as porn consumption shifts from DVDs to digital streaming, we’d see the ban from fisting lifted. Not so. Due to the residual fear of being charged, especially if it’s seen as not being work the risk, most large VOD sites now ban the act as well.

So, here we are. An unnecessary censorship of a common sex act is what prompted Fisting Day. The desire to have education lead the way. We have to let people know it’s okay, even political, to love fisting.

If you want to watch me fisting, I recommend most of my scenes on CrashPadSeries.com, including cool double fisting and simultaneous fisting.

And make sure to check out the first “expert’s guide” sex ed movie to cover fisting, CrashPad’s Guide to Fisting by Shine Louise Houston, available on PinkLabel.tv (streaming for just $9.99) or as part of a membership to CrashPadSeries.com. (Look for my funny cameo!)

Spread the word about Fisting Day, and celebrate by trying, doing, reading, watching, talking, learning, or teaching.

Birthday Wish: IRONMAN 70.3!

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I don’t often ask for birthday gifts, but this year I have a big goal.

Last summer, I completed my first Olympic Triathlon. It was incredible. Immediately after, I signed on for another race in Santa Cruz, and beat my prior record! Next year, I want to compete in my first half-Ironman triathlon, the IRONMAN 70.3 Vineman on July 12, 2015. (Registration opens November 1st!)

Swimming, biking, and running are not very expensive sports. In fact, I already have most of the equipment I’ll need. But costs will add up for this next race. And that’s where you come in!

Will you be a sponsor for my race?

I’ve estimated the IRONMAN 70.3 to cost $1000. It’s $300 to register, but will need more things along the way: For the race, I’ll need to renew my USA Triathlon Membership, and getting there will have travel and lodging costs. Training will also see some expenses, including replacing my running shoes, getting a bike tune-up, buying more entree passes for swim workouts at the pool, new bras and socks (who knew I’d go through so many!?), and not to mention all of the food I’m inhaling to replace burned calories. I’m estimating at least $1000.

1. Swim! 2. Bike! 3. Run! Moments after Vineman! Moments after Santa Cruz! Gear!

Become my community of sponsors! I don’t want flowers, candy, or cards. What makes me really happy right now has been an immense sense of accomplishment and feeling my body get faster and stronger. Help push me to finish a 1.2 mile swim, 56 mile bike, and 13.1 mile run — my longest race yet!

As a thank you, I’ll send you a special card. And if I see you in person: a big, sweaty hug.

Donate any amount and help me get there!

UPDATE 10/31/2014: WOW. I’m blown away by the support and donations, thank you so much everyone! With your support, I’ll not only be able to compete, but can enter more race events and even travel to some further away. I’m pumped by the encouragement and am loving this new passion in my life. Thank you for being my community sponsors!

UPDATE 11/1/2014: Today I went to the website to register, as it opened November 1st, but found the event sold out and it’s waiting list full! Apparently it’s an extremely popular race because it’s a world championship qualifier. Having missed it, I’ve decided to once again race in the Olympic sized Vineman in May 2015, and will make sure to catch the next 70.3 event in 2016. In the meantime, I’ll stop kicking myself for missing the wave, and will find another 70.3 length race to enter next year — which I’m still really excited about. This taught me a big lesson; next time I’m setting an alarm!


2014 Holiday Cards! Get on my list.

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It’s that time of the year for my special, limited-edition holiday cards! Past years have seen cards created by designer Jamee Baiser (see), comic artist Erika Moen (see), and erotic embroiderer Alicyn Murphy (see).

This year my 2014 Holiday Cards are by surreal collage artist Eugenia Loli. Her design is based on a photo of myself and galactic porn star Justine Joli by Ellen Stagg. Here’s a tiny sliver of a peek…

Jiz-Lee-Eugenia-Loli-Holiday-Card-Preview-Peek

The whole card is pretty stellar. I’ll be sending them to everyone who has purchased a signed DVD from me in 2014, as well as anyone who has donated to my Triathlon fundraiser for St. James Infirmary, my AIDS Walk fundraisers in SF (Pink & White) and LA (APAC), and my recent fundraiser fueling my dream to complete an IRONMAN 70.3. If you missed a donation opportunities, it’s not too late to get on my list by December 20th.

3 Ways to Get a Holiday Card:

1. Buy a Card

Buy one directly from me for $5. (Or 5 for $20, supplies limited.)

2. Pay for my Porn

Buy a DVD: Select one of these for $50, including shipping. (Email jiz@jizlee.com to order.)

Or watch online: DVDs not your thing? Purchase a CrashPad membership or buy minutes on the fair-trade VOD site PinkLabel.tv via these links below, to help support my work at Pink & White Productions:

(Make sure you email me payment confirmation, along with your mailing address!)

3. Donate for a Good Cause

Make a donation of any amount over $5 to a queer-friendly, sex worker-friendly, kink-friendly, sex-positive organization. Here’s some of my favorites:

All of these are located within the United States and are tax deductible. Or, donate to an organization of YOUR choice and let me know why it rocks you! After you donate, email me (jiz@jizlee.com) a receipt confirmation along with your mailing address.

I’m sending cards on Friday, December 20th, so ACT NOW!

Happy New Year!

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Introducing this year’s Karma Perv Holiday Card image… created by Eugenia Loli and based on a photo of myself and galactic porn star Justine Joli by Ellen Stagg! Thank you, Eugenia, for your out-of-this-world design.

Thank you everyone, for supporting my passions, for paying for porn, and for donating to sex-positive, kinky, eco-sexy, queer and trans-focused non-profit organizations. Through the card’s donation drive, we raised a total of $1,629.65! Mahalo nui loa for making the world a more pleasurable place. Here’s to another trip around the sun.

Jiz

JL+DD: Jiz Lee and Danni Daniels

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Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-feature

In the summer of 2012, I collaborated on a shoot with trans porn superstar Danni Daniels. I could barely contain my crush on her. (I mean, literally couldn’t contain myself, if you see how much I gushed in the video.) Soon after, travel took Danni out of contact, and after years without communication I feared the shoot would be lost forever. To my relief, she returned and though the original footage is gone, a video has been salvaged from a prior edit. Enjoy an hour of kissing, shower sex, athletic fucking, and so many orgasms. I couldn’t be happier! 

Description: 

Danni, how do I love thee? Let me count the ways: 1) snuggled in bed; 2) gazing out the window over San Francisco; 3) in the shower, twice; 4) next to the bed; 5) in the bed; 6) practically falling OFF the bed; 7) and then back in bed again…

If you want connected, high-chemistry queer and sex in a marathon of various (and fun, athletic) positions, JL+DD will give you what you want, and then some! Enjoy an hour of kissing, oral, penetration, fisting, squirting, scissoring, and crush-worthy fucking from trans woman superstar Danni Daniels and little genderqueer me. :)

Stars: Jiz Lee & Danni Daniels
Watch online at PinkLabel.tv

Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-1 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-2 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-3 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-4 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-5 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-6 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-7 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-8 Jiz-Lee-Danni-Daniels-9

 

 

“Ethical Porn” Starts When We Pay for It

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I’ve been invited to be a part of Firestarter 2015: The Sex and Money Connection. On January 16th, Amy Jo Goddard will host 15-minute interview segments on the top of every hour, with various guests on the topics of sex, money and business. I’ve decided to speak about ethical porn viewership. (Subscribe here to listen in.) I’ll talk about how the biggest issues in porn all break down to the one simple fact that almost nobody pays for it.

While there’s a lot of talk about whether or not porn is ethical, there’s not much discussion about the fact that most people are watching porn illegally. Forget “ethical porn” – let’s talk ethical porn consumption.

Though a small handful of Robin Hoods will feel they’re liberating porn to the masses, or take pride in being savvy enough to scam what they feel entitled to watch for free, the folks who go the extra mile to break the law are not actually the biggest culprits. It’s everybody else.

Let’s face it, free porn is easy. It’s the first (FIVE?) page results on Google. There’s no need to pull out a credit card (if you’re lucky enough to own one). You don’t even need to register or log in to press play. (A big step in preventing underage users from gaining access.) But figuring out where to go and what to click is not the first priority for someone horny.

I believe most viewers don’t think what they’re doing is that bad. Some may not even be aware they’re in the wrong to begin with. Who could blame them? A lack of media literacy around how porn is made leads fans to make a lot of assumptions. I know this first-hand, as I continue to learn more and more about the industry as I move from performing in front of the camera, to helping behind the scenes.

One of the most common questions I’m asked is, “How can I be sure what I’m watching was ethically produced?” Without getting to sidetracked by topics of fantasy and film, marketing transparency and performer interviews, or going right to the source via social media — all of which help discerning viewers better research their options – the simplest answer is that paying for porn is the most direct way to ensure key ethical production values.

Jiz Lee Kimberly Grey and Tobi Hill-Meyer

Kimberly Gray and I check-in on the set of Tobi Hill-Meyer’s Doing it Again: Trans Woman Porn Project.

Without a credit card processor overlooking distribution, there’s no way to know for sure if basic labor rights took place. There is no 2257 Affidavit to prove performers were of legal age, no STI test results, no W9 or 1099-Misc IRS Forms, and there’s certainly no Model Release Form to ensure the people on film consented to have their image shared online. Unless it features a major star, most pirated content doesn’t even include performers’ names, let alone Custodian of Records addresses. There’s a mountain of paperwork missing. Paperwork that, for better or worse, is designed to protect performers’ rights and safety.

(I should take a moment to add, that of course porn is not perfect. Like any other industry, there are people who will use their position to take advantage of others. Working in the business has helped refine my ability to assert my boundaries, something that’s vital in the work we do. I don’t regret anything I’ve done, but if I could go back in time I would have stood up for myself more and been more explicit about my needs and opinions. There are lessons I carry with me moving forward. Shit may happen, but we learn from it and continue to try our best and avoid the bad apples.)

To be honest, the only time I’ve ever felt exploited, as a performer in porn, is when my work is pirated. When I sign a contract, it’s between the producer and myself. For someone else to assume that right feels non-consensual. (Technically, it’s illegal and a breach of site usage and copyright.) But it also hurts the profit margins that allow us to keep making work. I once came across a video I was in that had been viewed over 50,000 times. If even a fraction of those views had been paid for, the small porn company would have been able to produce another feature, pay performers more, and increase the quality and frequency of their work.

Imagine an independent adult filmmaker being able to pay top prices, cover all tests and travel expenses, produce high-quality content, and put forth the kinds of amazing images that push the representations of human sexuality. Instead of soaring to new heights and taking the world by storm to show the magnificent possibilities of human desire, small companies are slowly-but-surely making by on shoestring budgets. (Some days, working in porn feels a lot like my days in arts administration, minus the state funding.)

So, what can we do?

  1. Pay for Your Porn. This is the best and most direct way to support companies who make the work you love. We’ll be ever so grateful. Check out Siri’s article, Here’s Why You Need to Pay For Your Porn, as well as the Twitter hashtag full of performers’ voices: #payforyourporn
  2. Help others find porn you like. If you’re in the position to blog or share posts about porn, help others find companies to watch. If you’re a sex blogger, journalist, or sex educator, you’re in a unique position to educate your readers and students about how paying for porn can shape the kinds of sexual representation available for all to enjoy. (Plus, can earn affiliate commission from your recommendations. It’s a win-win.)
  3. Keep enjoying porn. If you’re going to watch porn for free and you’re finding videos you like and aren’t convinced you need to change, then there’s not much I can do to stop you. Go forth, but please keep in mind where the work comes from. Allow me to plant a seed, a promise that you’ll support us in a more direct way when you can.

We can still make right of the issue. Ethical viewers have incredible potential to shape the industry by ‘voting with their wallets’ and encouraging producers’ interests, in everything from distribution methods to casting decisions. Increasing production quality, broadening diversity, building sustainable businesses. People put off by not finding what they want (remember, there’s more to porn than PornHub…) can seek it out and encourage – through supportive words, network, or wallet – the content that gets them truly excited.

Shine Louise Houston PUT THE NEEDLE ON THE RECORD

CrashPadSeries.com stars Drew DeVeaux, Andre Shakti, with director Shine Louise Houston.

 

Now that you know how to help… here’s the best way to support my work behind the scenes with Shine Louise Houston at Pink & White Productions, which runs CrashPadSeries.com and the VOD hub for indie and emerging adult filmmakers, PinkLabel.tv. (Really, there are truly unique films on PinkLabel that would be censored or too artsy for the conventional porn outlets, plus the site’s studios get the most generous percentage I know of in the US. It’s as ‘fair-trade’ as it comes!)

You can watch my work on both sites. (If it’s your thing.) My most recent proud porn moments are Justify My Jiz, JL+DD: Jiz Lee and Danni Daniels, two collaborations that I directly profit from. (BESIDES the fact that I was so aroused by my perfect co-stars!) And CrashPad will always be my porno home.

My motto in porn has been “Be the Porn you want to see in the world.” But in this case, a better fit is “BUY the Porn you want to see in the world.” Let’s enjoy sexuality, ethically.

Subscribe to listen in on January 16th to my Firestarter chat!

Call for Papers – Porn Studies Special Issue: Porn and Labour

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Porn Studies is an international, peer-reviewed journal, which publishes original research examining specifically sexual and explicit media forms, their connections to wider media landscapes and their links to the broader spheres of (sex) work across historical periods and national contexts. I’m proud to announce that I’ve been invited to be a co-editor, along with Professor Rebecca Sullivan of the Women’s Studies Program at The University of Calgary. Please see our call for papers below, and if you have any questions let us know!

FeaturedImage-porn-studies-pornography-labour

Porn Studies Special Issue: Porn and Labour

Guest Editors: Jiz Lee and Rebecca Sullivan

Critics of the porn industry are quick to claim its deleterious effects on consumers, and too often presume exploitative abuse of performers. Yet, such arguments ignore the voices of porn performers and producers. It has been the performers and producers themselves who have refused the silencing tactics of stigmatization and shame and spoken candidly in a variety of news and social media venues about their working experiences, their attention to craft and skill, and their efforts towards more ethical, respectful labour conditions. Yet, their strategies of negotiation toward greater self-determination remain problematically under-theorized.

Media and cultural entertainment industries are under greater critical scrutiny around precarious labour, problematic gender and sexual relations, entrenched racism and other forms of prejudice and exclusion, industry convergence, and occupational health and safety. At the same time, critical media and cultural industry scholarship notes an expansion of independent and DIY production, new forms of labour exchange and commercialization, collective and collaborative networking, and audience engagement. Pornography is no different and is, in many ways, leading this entertainment revolution.

This special issue of Porn Studies invites scholars, critics, artists and producers, activists, and educators to explore the contours of Pornography and Labour. Topics may focus on any aspect of pornography production that foregrounds the experiences of workers both above and below the line. Some potentially exciting areas of inquiry include but are not limited to:

  • Analyses of groundbreaking performers/producers
  • Ethical porn production and shared labour practices
  • Occupational health and safety issues for pornography performers
  • Pornography and its relationship to other forms of sex work
  • Casting, stereotyping, and niche performance
  • Pornography as craft
  • The commercial segregation of adult business, payment and advertising
  • Mainstream commercial pornography and workers rights
  • Piracy and the #payforyourporn movement
  • Studio systems and contract performers
  • Legal and social restrictions on porn performers
  • Critical ethnographic studies of porn production sets
  • Histories of the pornography industry and its labour regulation

Articles for peer-review should be between 5000-8000 words. Shorter thought pieces of approximately 2000 words may also be submitted, and the editors will make a selection for the Forum section. In the same document as your submission, on the first page, please also include a brief author bio of approximately 200 words and an abstract of 200 words.

Who can Submit
This is a scholarly, peer-refereed publication but authors do not need to hold an academic appointment. The editors welcome submissions from artists, critics, producers, scholars, activists, and educators. No affiliation with an academic institution, or adult industry organization, is necessary. Due to the mature nature of this subject, contributors must be over 18 years of age, or as legal to view such material in your location.

How to Submit
All submissions must be made online. Please consult the Authors and Submissions tab in the journal website, tandfonline.com for more information.

Journal Deadline
The deadline for submission is July 1, 2015. Authors will be notified by August 15, 2015 if their article has been selected for peer review, or for the Forum. The special issue will be published in Winter 2016.

Editor Contacts
Jiz Lee – jiz@jizlee.com
Rebecca Sullivan – rsulliva@ucalgary.ca

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