HOTEL CHAINS
Marriott, Westin, and Hilton
These major hotel chains all offer in-room X-rated movies delivered to the
hotel by one of two major distribution companies, LodgeNet or On Command. Some analysts say these in-room sex movies generate more money for the
hotel chains than revenue from the hotels' mini-bars.
"The 5 percent or 10 percent of revenue that the hotel chain gets, that's pure
profit to them because they have no cost," says Dennis McAlpine, an
entertainment industry analyst. "They didn't put in the wiring system, they
didn't supply the programming." (Read more of McAlpine's analysis.)
A Hotel Chain That Said 'No'
In late 1999, Omni Hotels announced that it would no longer offer adult
pay-per-view movies in its rooms. The company's statement noted that it made
the decision "in response to what it perceives as a growing need for corporate
America to support pro-family issues."
Based near Dallas,Texas, Omni has hotels and resorts throughout North America
and ranks 45th in the list of the top 50 U.S. hotel chains.
In an October 2000 New York Times article, Omni's president, Jim
Caldwell, said that his company's decision to remove the sex-videos would cost
it an estimated $1.8 million per year. The company stated that "[t]he
anticipated loss in revenue demonstrates the company's commitment to the issue.
Omni Hotels has already removed adult magazines from the gift shops at its
owned and managed properties."
. . . . . .
CABLE & SATELLITE COMPANIES
Cable and satellite companies channel pornography into millions of homes and
take approximately 80 percent of the pay-per-view dollar that gets spent by the
consumer, according to Bill Asher, president of Vivid Entertainment, which
produces adult movies.
AT&T - Comcast
AT&T's cable division, AT&T Broadband, distributed to
subscribers the explicit porn channel, The Hot Network. But At&T sold its cable company and its connection
to pornography to Comcast.
For AT&T, porn distribution had been great business, but there was no mention of
adult material in the company's annual report, nor how much it contributed to
the company's bottom line.
In the spring of 2001, an interfaith coalition of religious leaders brought
their concerns about AT&T's connection to porn directly to the top at
AT&T. Cardinal William Keeler, co-chairman of the Religious Alliance
Against Pornography, met with AT&T Chairman C. Michael Armstrong, and told
him, "Ma Bell shouldn't be selling smut." Keeler says that "when a company like AT&T, which
has won the hearts and allegiance of so many, gets into this business, it's a
way of legitimating it, saying it's OK, it's alright. That's the Good
Housekeeping Seal of Approval we don't want to see put on this kind of
business."
While AT&T refused to grant FRONTLINE an interview about The Hot Network,
the company had publicly stated its position. It said that competitive
pressures with companies like General Motors, which owned rival service DirecTV,
was keeping AT&T in the business. (Read AT&T's letter of
explanation, which cited competitor companies that also offer The
Hot Network.)
General Motors - News Corporation
General Motors at one time owned the national satellite distribution service DirecTV, which
channels pornography into millions of American homes for a nice profit. But General Motors sold
its stake in DirecTV to Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation which continues to offer pornography
channels.
. . . . . .
THE INTERNET
Yahoo!
Yahoo! has made lots of money selling ads and links to porn websites.
"When Yahoo! first launched, getting a site listed, even a commercial business
site, was free," says Sam Agboola in his 2001 interview with FRONTLINE. He is director of marketing for Danni's Hard
Drive, one of the most popular softcore sites online. "Nowadays it costs $200
to get a website listed unless you're an adult website, in which case they
charge $600."
But Yahoo! ran into trouble in early 2001 when it announced that it was opening
a virtual sex shop where millions of users could buy hardcore videos and DVDs. The anti-pornographers' assault began.
"I think what Yahoo! did was go one step beyond and say, 'OK, my customers want
to see sex, I'll make it easier for them, and I'll categorize it," says Dennis
McAlpine, an entertainment industry analyst. "Here's bestiality, here's whips
and chains, here's whatever."
Overnight Yahoo! was bombarded by hundreds of thousands of email complaints.
"The very next day, Yahoo! made some statement that they were getting out of
this business, that they would no longer sell hard-core videos and were going
to clean up their site," says Patrick Trueman, former chief of the U.S. Dept.
of Justice's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section. Trueman protested
Yahoo's actions in a letter to U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft.
Since then, Yahoo! has been in full retreat. As of January 2002, the company had closed its sex shop
and began to hinder access to other porn sites.
. . . . . .
Mainstream Businesses and Porn: Tracking the Money
"The Perils of Covering Porn"
There are some significant roadblocks in accurately reporting on the porn
industry's size and revenues, as this July 2001 Online Journalism Review
article outlines.
"Will the Religious Right Make the Tech Slump Even Worse?"
In this May 2001 report on WSJ.com, Lewis Purdue researched the Web-hosting
industry's reliance on adult websites -- which he estimates generate, at the
minimum, hundreds of millions of dollars a year. Two examples: MCI owns the
Web-hosting firm UUNet, which hosts the giant adult site, Cyberotica; and a business
unit of Digex hosts the No. 2 adult site, adultrevenueservice.com, and two other adult sites.
"Mutual Fundamentals: Fending Off Stealthy Growth of Porn"
This February 20001 article in The Christian Science Monitor advises those who want to
invest in stocks that reflect their values to look carefully at their
holdings. "Most socially responsible mutual funds don't screen out
pornography explicitly," writes Laurent Belsie.
"Wall Street Meets Pornography"
"The General Motors Corporation, the world's largest company, now sells more
graphic sex films every year than does Larry Flynt, owner of the Hustler
empire," reports Timothy Egan in this October 2000 report in The New York
Times. Egan dissects some of Wall Street's under-reported ties to the adult
industry.
(New York Times, Oct. 23, 2000)
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