• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

Pictures of the year: Technology

A look at the year's best science and technology photos.   Slideshow 

    Web TV shows porn, without the sex

    LOS ANGELES
    Thu Oct 9, 2008 9:28am EDT
    Writer/director James Gunn arrives at the premiere of Halloween in Hollywood August 23, 2007. REUTERS/Max Morse

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It started when three brothers joked about making pornography for fans of the genre who happen to be offended by on-screen sex. Out of that joke came an idea for a website, and they called it "PG Porn."

    Entertainment  |  Technology  |  Television  |  Media

    In creating pornography that appeals to viewers who want their titillation toned down, brothers James, Sean and Brian Gunn are banking on web-surfers' growing acceptance of porn.

    Sean starred in the television show "Gilmore Girls" and James wrote the screenplay for the 2002 movie "Scooby-Doo." Their latest production, a short spoof called "Nailing Your Wife," premiered on Wednesday at their site ( here ).

    With pornography all over the Internet and the video store, the Gunn brothers rely on viewers' familiarity with all its conventions -- the goofy acting, the bad music, the lace-thin plots -- to create movies that look like the real thing but skirt nudity. Comedy substitutes for hard-core sex.

    The actor in "Nailing Your Wife" is Nathan Fillion, who appeared in the ABC show "Desperate Housewives," and his castmate is porn star Aria Giovanni. PG Porn will feature similar pairings in the future.

    "This is a place where the porn and the mainstream film industries meet and get to have some understanding of each other," said James Gunn, a writer, director and producer.

    "We like to pretend that we're miles and miles away from pornography, but we're not," he said.

    PARENTAL GUIDANCE NOT ADVISED

    Pornography's size as an industry is often overstated, but Web-based porn generates at least $2 billion a year, said Frederick Lane, the author of "Obscene Profits: The Entrepreneurs of Pornography in the Cyber Age."

    "People are getting more blase about porn, I don't think there's any question about that," Lane said. "I think the Internet has played a huge role in that, it sort of lowers everybody's threshold."

    PG Porn will also sell its content elsewhere under the direction of "Disaster Movie" producer Peter Safran.

    The principals behind PG Porn take the name "PG" from the rating "Parental Guidance Suggested" given to movies largely free of objectionable content. But they do not expect viewers to watch their webisodes with their parents.

    Instead, they said they expect men to visit the site in greater numbers than women -- at least initially -- and they assume most men see plenty of porn.

    Their site features racy photos of porn stars Aria Giovanni, Belladonna and Sasha Gray. PG Porn's creators recruited them, asking porn fans about their favorite stars.

    Bob Peters, president of New York-based Morality in Media, said PG Porn is not as bad as regular porn sites, but he worries viewers will move on to the real thing.

    "In the real world of pornography, if you want to get your start in pornography you start in the gutter," he said. "So real people are abused in the production of pornography."

    (Editing by Mary Milliken and Miral Fahmy)



    More from Reuters

    Photo

    Democrats gain 60th vote on health bill

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Democrats reached a compromise on Saturday with the last holdout senator that secured the 60 votes they need to pass a broad healthcare overhaul sought by President Barack Obama.

    A woman shops at a Sam's Club store, a division of Wal-Mart Stores, in Bentonville, Arkansas June 4, 2009. REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi

    The food-stamp economy

    On the last day of every month, shoppers at Walmart load their carts with food and household items and wait for the midnight hour. Is this the new normal in America?  Full Article 

    Two men shake hands in a file photo.    REUTERS/File

    Let's make a deal

    The battered M&A sector will make a tepid recovery in the coming year and three hot sectors will lead the way, according to a Thomson Reuters analysis.  Full Article