Vivid Entertainment

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Vivid Entertainment
Private
Industry Adult Entertainment
Founded 1984 (1984)
Founder Steven Hirsch
David James
Headquarters Los Angeles, United States
Key people
Steven Hirsch (Founder/Co-Chairman)
Bill Asher (Co-owner/Co-Chairman)
Marci Hirsch (VP of Production)
Products Adult films, brand licensing program that extends to sex toys, books, skateboards, snowboards, condoms, apparel, etc.
Website http://www.vivid.com

Vivid Entertainment Group is an American pornographic film production company,[1][2] featuring a catalog of VHS and DVD titles and internet content.

Overview

In 2006, it was described by Reuters as one of the handful of studios that dominate the U.S. porn industry.[3] It is based in Los Angeles, California. Founder Steven Hirsch is Co-Chairman, along with Bill Asher, who is also a Co-owner.[4]

List of Vivid Girls

The following is a list of notable Vivid actresses (known as "Vivid Girls") during the first twenty-five years of Vivid.[5] The most recent Vivid Girl, Allie Haze, terminated her contract with Vivid in 2012.[6]

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Operations

In the 1990s, Vivid began to win industry honors. Vivid Girls in the 90s included the actresses who were known by their first names alone: Janine, Lexus and Savannah, plus stars such as Christy Canyon, Nikki Tyler, Racquel Darrian, Chasey Lain, Heather Hunter and Kobe Tai. Those who have attained fame in more recent years include Jenna Jameson, Tera Patrick, Savanna Samson, Sunny Leone and others.

Vivid became the first studio to introduce celebrity sex tapes, including Pamela Anderson & Tommy Lee: Hardcore & Uncensored, Janine & Vince Neil: Hardcore and Uncensored, Kim Kardashian Superstar, Jimi Hendrix: The Sex Tape and others.

Vivid also runs several websites, including Vivid.com, featuring its Vivid Girls. These websites prominently promote the "Vivid Girls" and their various videos. The sites also allow users to view scenes from various Vivid productions, as well as Internet-only content.

The company also has marketing and licensing programs for Vivid branded vodka, condoms, snowboards, skateboards, tee shirts, playing cards, advertising, calendars, comic books and book publishing. How to Have a XXX Sex Life: The Ultimate Vivid Guide,[12] was co-authored by several Vivid Girls and published by HarperCollins.

The 2004 documentary series "Porno Valley" followed Vivid Girls and Vivid Entertainment.

Policies and production values

Vivid produces over 60 titles a year. The company has a small number of high budget movies that it produces and aggressively markets. This is different from many other San Fernando Valley production companies, which routinely film, edit and release a two-hour title in less than a week, spending relatively little on advertising or promotion. According to Forbes magazine Vivid's annual revenue is estimated to be $100 million USD.[13] The same estimate was given by Business Week in June 2006.[14] However, Vivid also aggressively repackages its original material in compilations, which are relatively inexpensive to produce. Forbes also reported that approximately one third of all the titles sold in U.S. adult DVD stores are Vivid films.

Its titles are sold through retail stores across the United States, the rental market and direct to consumers through various online mail-order sites. Vivid also distributes the films to cable and satellite channels and offers its Internet subscribers full access to the largest archive of titles in the adult industry.

In February 2006, Vivid changed its condom-only policy to a condom-optional policy that lets performers decide whether or not to use them.[15][16]

In October 2010, Vivid stopped production as a precaution when an actor tested positive for HIV.[17]

An October 2012 open letter, from Steven Hirsch, took aim at a Los Angeles County plan that would require performers to wear condoms on set. Hirsch said the proposal would be costly and ineffective and was an example of unnecessary government intrusion into private bedrooms.[18]

Divisions and ventures

Vivid and alt-porn

In February 2006, Vivid made its foray into alt-porn with the signing of director Eon McKai and the formation of the Vivid-Alt imprint.[19] Vivid-Alt in turn hired erotic photographers—Dave Naz and Octavio "Winkytiki" Arizala[20] to direct features for the imprint.

The first film directed by Eon McKai under that imprint, Girls Lie, was nominated for an AVN Award, one of 13 nominations in 2008 for various Vivid-Alt imprint releases.[21] In 2009, the company won the AVN Award for Best Music Soundtrack for The Bad Luck Betties[22] and in 2010, for the musical soundtrack of Live in My Secrets.[23]

Vivid Ed

In March 2007, Vivid signed award-winning author, columnist, editor and sex educator Tristan Taormino to head up the Vivid Ed imprint,[24] which has produced several how-to DVD sex guides including The Expert Guide To Sex, The Expert Guide to Oral Sex, Part 1: Cunnilingus, The Expert Guide to Oral Sex, Part 2: Fellatio and The Expert Guide to the G-Spot. In 2010, Vivid Ed's director Tristan Taormino received several AVN Awards as well as the Trailblazer Award from the Feminist Porn Awards in Toronto, Canada on April 9, 2010.[25]

Vivid-Celeb

In 1998, Vivid pioneered the development of the celebrity sex tape, when it distributed Pam & Tommy Lee Hardcore & Uncensored. Some of the Vivid Celeb videos are obtained directly from the celebrities while others are acquired through third parties. Vivid's collection of celebrity sex videos includes Janine & Vince Neil Hardcore & Uncensored (1998); The Tom Sizemore Sex Scandal (2005); Karrine Steffans Superhead (2006); Lil Jon's Vivid Vegas Party (2006); Toastee Exposed (Flavor of Love's Jennifer "Toastee" Toof) (2007); Kim Kardashian Superstar (2007); Jessica Sierra Superstar (2008); former Miss USA Kelli McCarthy in Faithless (2009); Mindy McCready Baseball Mistress (2010); The 11th Hole (2010) starring Tiger Woods' mistress Joslyn James; Kendra Exposed (2010) featuring TV personality Kendra Wilkinson; Montana Fishburne (2010) starring the daughter of actor Laurence Fishburne; Backdoor Teen Mom (2013) and its sequel Backdoor and More (2014) starring Farrah Abraham of the hit MTV program Teen Mom; Scandal in Atlanta (2014) starring Mimi and Nikko.

Vivid Radio

Vivid supplied content for a channel on the Sirius XM Radio network that features its various stars. The channel moved to online only on July 17, 2014.[26][27]

SuperXXXHeroes

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In 2010, following the successful distribution of Batman XXX: A porn parody from Axel Braun Productions, Vivid announced it would launch an on-going series of parodies under the Vivid SuperXXXHeroes imprint with Axel Braun as lead director. The first title is Superman XXX: A Porn Parody. Vivid will also continue to distribute parodies from Braun's production company. The initial lineup includes Star Wars XXX: A Porn Parody, to be followed by spoofs of the popular TV shows Law & Order, Starsky & Hutch, and The Addams Family, as well as classic movies like Grease, A Clockwork Orange (film) and The Godfather.

Google TV

On November 7, 2011 Vivid Entertainment launched its Vivid for Google TV channel as "the first TV app designed to make sexually explicit content available through the new Google TV set-top device." It will broadcast in high definition "award-winning adult movies, celebrity sex tapes, XXX parodies of popular superheroes, educational videos and other content", to who also subscribe to the company's website.[28]

Ownership

Vivid Entertainment LLC is owned by Steven Hirsch, Bill Asher, and David James.[29]

Legal controversy

On December 6, 2007, Vivid Entertainment filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against PornoTube.[30][31] The lawsuit alleged that the YouTube-like site profits from the illegal posting of Vivid's copyrighted films, and failed to comply with the Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act, a federal age-verification and record-keeping law that applies to the adult film industry.[32] The case was settled out of court.[33]

In April 2010, country singer Mindy McCready sent Vivid a cease and desist letter ordering them not to distribute copies of her sex tape.[34][35] Vivid produced proof that it had a signed release form from McCready.[36]

Awards and recognition

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See also

References

  1. "The (Porn) Player" by Matthew Miller, Forbes magazine, July 4, 2005.
  2. Adult-film-studio-blames-Google DigitalEdge, February 18, 2008.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  4. "Vivid Entertainment LLC: CEOs and Executives", BusinessWeek
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  15. Rubbers Revolutionary: AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Michael Weinstein by Patrick Range McDonald, LA Weekly. January 28, 2010
  16. "LA Weekly: Profiles AHF's "Adult Film Condom Campaign" by Patrick Range McDonald, LA Weekly. January 28, 2010
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  19. "Eon McKai Goes Vivid" Fleshbot, February 16, 2006
  20. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  22. 22.0 22.1 22.2 22.3 2009 AVN Award – 'Best Music Soundtrack' – The Bad Luck Betties; 'Best Educational Release' for Tristan Taormino's Expert Guide to Oral Sex 2; 'Best Film' for Cry Wolf.
  23. 23.0 23.1 23.2 23.3 23.4 23.5 2010 AVN AwardsThroat: A Cautionary Tale won 5 awards; 'Best Overall Marketing Campaign – Company Image'; 'Best Music Soundtrack' – Live in My Secrets; Vivid Ed for 'Best Educational Release' – Tristan Taormino's Expert Guide to Threesomes; 'Best Pro-Am Series' Brand New Faces.
  24. "Tristan Taormino Debuts Vivid Ed Line" by Eddie Adams AVN March 30, 2007
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  29. PrivCo.com Private Company Financial Report on Vivid Entertainment LLC – 'PrivCo.com Private Company Financial Report on Vivid Entertainment LLC'.
  30. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  31. "Home porn gives industry the blues", guardian.co.uk, December 16, 2007. Retrieved March 4, 2009.
  32. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  33. Copyright Lawsuit Against PornoTube Withdrawn by Janko Roettger. October 24, 2008.
  34. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  35. Mindy McCready Wants Vivid to Destroy Her Sex Tape posted March 31, 2010.
  36. Vivid Moves Forward with Release of Mindy McCready Sex Tape posted April 28, 2010.
  37. 1987 AVN Award – 'Best Video Feature' for Blame it on Ginger.
  38. 1991 AVN Award – 'Best Vignette Release' for Beat the Heat.
  39. 39.0 39.1 39.2 1992 AVN Award – 'Best Vignette Release' for Scarlet Fantasy; Renting Release of the Year' for The Masseuse; 'Best Film' for On Trial.
  40. 1997 AVN Award – 'Best Film' for Bobby Sox.
  41. 1998 AVN Award – 'Best Film' for Bad Wives.
  42. 2000 AVN Award – 'Best Film' for Seven Deadly Sins.
  43. AVN Award – 'Best Film' for Fade To Black.
  44. 44.0 44.1 2003 AVN Award – 'Top Selling Release of the Year' and 'Top Renting Release of the Year' for Brianna Loves Jenna.
  45. 2004 AVN Award – 'Best Film' for Heart of Darkness.
  46. 46.0 46.1 2005 AVN Award – 'Best Film' for The Masseuse; 'Best Video Feature' for Bella Loves Jenna.
  47. 47.0 47.1 2006 AVN Award – 'Best Film' for The New Devil in Miss Jones; 'Top Renting Release of the Year' for The Masseuse.
  48. 48.0 48.1 2007 AVN Award – 'Best Gonzo Release' for Chemistry; 'Best Interactive CD-ROM – Game' for Virtual Vivid Girl Sunny Leone.
  49. 49.0 49.1 49.2 2008 AVN Award – Top Renting Title of the Year – 2007' for Debbie Does Dallas...Again; 'Best Film' for Layout; 'Best Pro-Am Series' for Filthy's First Taste.
  50. 50.0 50.1 50.2 50.3 XBIZ Announces Finalist Nominees for 2010 XBIZ Awards, XBIZ, Wednesday, December 16, 2009
  51. XBIZ Award Winners, XBIZ, February, 2011
  52. XBIZ Award Winners, XBIZ, January, 2012
  53. XBIZ Nominees 2013, XBIZ, January, 2013
  54. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  55. XBIZ Award Winners 2013, XBIZ, January, 2013
  56. XBIZ Award Winners 2014, XBIZ, January, 2014
  57. 57.0 57.1 XBIZ Award Winners, XBIZ, January, 2015

External links