Patrick2 wrote:You may not think it's different but it is actually quite different. A guy who hires an escort and films himself having sex with her is breaking the law because he hired the woman to have sex with him. Just because he filmed himself doing that doesn't change the fact that he only hired the escort to have sex with her. A girl like Tori who is hired to shoot a scene with another person is not there because the other person wants to have sex with her since that person is also being paid to have sex. Both of them are being paid by a third party who doesn't want to have sex with either person but wants to film them doing it and who will then make money from the release of the scene.
Yes, it is different, but whether a girl is a porn star, a webcam girl, or a prostitute, they are all working in the sex industry. Sometimes I wonder what the purpose is of saying "Hey! I'm not a hooker", because it sounds a lot like those girls are looking down on other girls who work as a prostitute, which is quite hypocritical. Yes, the person who is paying them is different from the person who they have sex with, but is it really so much different??? Also, Tori says in her interview that her work is "more than being a pussy", but to be honest, to be a prostitute demands a lot more from a woman than being a porn star, and therefore it should be respected at least at the same level. You can have a hot body and be a porn star, but to be a prostitute requires a lot more. Like she already says herself, the emotional aspect is important for a prostitute, because very often they are social workers as well, they keep men company instead of fuck, cash, and leave, like a porn star does. About the theorem "I'm not for sale", what does it really mean? Do prostitutes sell their bodies, but porn stars do not?
